Date: 1770-1
"This rather disconcerted his scheme, and set him a scratching, that being a kind of involuntary motion with him, whenever a train of ideas kept whirling in his brain with such velocity that he could not fix on any single one to stick by, and let the rest whirl out the way they came in."
preview | full record— Bridges, Thomas (b. 1710?, d. in or after 1775)
Date: 1771
"When we contemplate a Portrait, without thinking of whom it is the Portrait, such Contemplation is analogous to PHANSY. When we view it with reference to the Original, whom it represents, such Contemplation is analogous to MEMORY"
preview | full record— Harris, James (1709-1780)
Date: 1755, 1771
"In every human breast there lives enshrined / Some atom pregnant with the' etherial mind; / Some plastic power, some intellectual ray, / Some genial sunbeam from the source of day; / Something that, warm and restless to aspire, / Works the young heart, and sets the soul on fire, / And bids us al...
preview | full record— Cawthorn, James (1719-1761)
Date: 1755, 1771
"Tasteless of all that virtue gives to please, / For thought too active, and too mad for ease, / From wish to wish in life's mad vortex toss'd, / For ever struggling, and for ever lost; / He scorns religion, though her seraphs call, / And lives in rapture, or not lives at all."
preview | full record— Cawthorn, James (1719-1761)
Date: 1771
"[T]he fumes of faction not only disturb the faculty of reason, but also pervert the organs of sense"
preview | full record— Smollett, Tobias (1721-1777)
Date: 1771
"My heart seemed to die within me when I entered this dismal bagnio, and sound my brain assaulted by such insufferable effluvia."
preview | full record— Smollett, Tobias (1721-1777)
Date: 1771
"O gracious! my poor Welsh brain has been spinning like a top ever since I came hither!"
preview | full record— Smollett, Tobias (1721-1777)
Date: 1771
"A small stock of ideas is more easily managed, and sooner displayed than a great quantity crowded together"
preview | full record— Smollett, Tobias (1721-1777)
Date: 1771
"BIAS, or BIASS, in a general sense, the inclination or bent of a person's mind to one thing more than another."
preview | full record— Author Unknown
Date: 1771
"That is, let not great examples, or authorities, browbeat they reason into too great a diffidence fo thyself: thyself so reverence, as to prefer the native growth of thy own mind to the richest import from abroad; such borrowed riches make us poor."
preview | full record— Author Unknown