Date: 1854
"Then we shall have that marriage of minds which alone can blend all the hues of thought and feeling in one lovely rainbow of promise for the harvest of human happiness."
preview | full record— Eliot, George (1819-1880)
Date: 1859
"No dust has settled on one's mind then [at breakfast-time], and it presents a clear mirror to the rays of things."
preview | full record— Eliot, George (1819-1880)
Date: 1859
"But you must have perceived long ago that I have no such lofty vocation, and that I aspire to give no more than a faithful account of men and things as they have mirrored themselves in my mind."
preview | full record— Eliot, George (1819-1880)
Date: 1860
"But then, it is open to some one else to follow great authorities and call the mind a sheet of white paper or a mirror, in which case one's knowledge of the digestive process becomes quite irrelevant."
preview | full record— Eliot, George (1819-1880)
Date: 1862
"Thy present ill with pictures of the past / Is oft beguiled; so fresh the colours last / In thy mind 's mirror pure, at will display'd"
preview | full record— Strong, Charles (1785-1864)
Date: 1863
"May, united, love and duty / In my bosom be enshrined, / And reflect each other's beauty / In the mirror of my mind."
preview | full record— Daniel, George (1789-1864)
Date: 1868
"And images, that, in the musing mind, / As in a placid lake, lie mirrored and defined, / If ruffling winds along the surface stray, / Scatter'd and broken, pass like rack away"
preview | full record— Lyte, Henry Francis (1793-1847)
Date: 1870
"All her loveliness / Is Beauty's reflex, when she mirror proves / To man's o'erruling mind, whose powër moves / Upon her aspect,"
preview | full record— Heraud, John Abraham (1799-1887)
Date: 1870
One may be "An honest earnest soul sincere, / An independent spirit true, / Whose mind was as a mirror clear, / And from the world no shadow knew"
preview | full record— Heraud, John Abraham (1799-1887)
Date: August-November, 1871
"[B]ut the mind of Mr. Rossetti is like a glassy mere, broken only by the dive of some water-bird or the hum of winged insects, and brooded over by an atmosphere of insufferable closeness, with a light blue sky above it, sultry depths mirrored within it, and a surface so thickly sown with water-l...
preview | full record— Buchanan, Robert (1841–1901)