Date: 1765
"If all [the mind] had was the mere capacity to receive those items of knowledge--a passive power to do so, as indeterminate as the power of wax to receive shapes or of a blank page to receive words--it would not be the source of necessary truths"
preview | full record— Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm (1646-1716)
Date: 1765
"And bid the flame each heart refine, / As silver recent from the mine"
preview | full record— Merrick, James (1720-1769)
Date: 1765
"To give a heart of triple steel / The Lord's humanity to feel"
preview | full record— Smart, Christopher (1722-1771)
Date: 1765
"O Judah, if in this thy day / My Will thou purpose to obey, / Steel not thy breast to truths divine, / As erst the Fathers of thy line"
preview | full record— Merrick, James (1720-1769)
Date: 1765
"I have also used the analogy of a veined block of marble, as opposed to an entirely homogenous block of marble, or to a blank tablet--what the philosophers call a tabula rasa"
preview | full record— Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm (1646-1716)
Date: 1765, 1770
"Wonder they cannot blush, they do not feel, / They must be harden'd like an heart of steel."
preview | full record— Thompson, Edward (1738-1786)
Date: 1765
"What Sculpture is to a Block of Marble, Education is to a human Soul."
preview | full record— Anonymous
Date: 1765
"And as the richest Diamond cannot shoot forth its Lustre, wanting the Lapidary's Skill; so will the latent Virtues of the noblest Mind be bury'd in Obscurity if not call'd forth by Precept, and the Rules of good Manners."
preview | full record— Anonymous
Date: 1765
"For (strange) his soul's materializ'd to gold..... Thus we the stale philosophy renew, / That souls are mortal, and material too"
preview | full record— Stevenson, William (1730-1783)
Date: 1765
"Yet, though the hardy, unreflecting heart / Glows in the chace, as flints are fir'd by steel ... That breast's not human which can never feel."
preview | full record— Stevenson, William (1730-1783)