Date: 1765, 1770
"Passions, and snow balls each by motion swell, / And Kitty finds her little heart rebel; / Full of desires she sighs for this, and that, / Her heart for ev'ry man goes pit-a-pat."
preview | full record— Thompson, Edward (1738-1786)
Date: 1765, 1770
"We've some of hotter, some of colder make, / And some whose drowsy passions never wake."
preview | full record— Thompson, Edward (1738-1786)
Date: 1765, 1770
"This is the man who first impeach'd his friend, / And on his ruin rose, yet could not lend / One cobweb virtue from his scurvy soul, / Which sins by study, and without controul."
preview | full record— Thompson, Edward (1738-1786)
Date: 1765
"Those objects that assimilate the taste / To Nature's standard, ever rightly plac'd; / Stamp on the passive heart each soft impress"
preview | full record— Stevenson, William (1730-1783)
Date: 1765
" Honest alike in mutual praise, or blame; / Whose kindred souls bore one impressive stamp"
preview | full record— Stevenson, William (1730-1783)
Date: 1765
"Such objects, by thy gloom inspiring caught, / No more rush boundless on her crouded thought."
preview | full record— Stevenson, William (1730-1783)
Date: 1765
"Reason ne'er weighs the beauties of the mind, / If but the sordid balance sinks with gold!"
preview | full record— Stevenson, William (1730-1783)
Date: 1765
"You saw what heart-religion meant [...] true religion is not a negative or an external thing; but the life of God in the soul of man; the image of God stamped upon the heart."
preview | full record— Wesley, John (1703-1791)
Date: 1765
"The best Way to prove the Clearness of our Mind is by shewing its Faults; as when a Stream discovers the Dirt at the Bottom, it convinces us of the Transparency and Purity of the Water."
preview | full record— Anonymous
Date: 1766
"His mind had leaned upon their adulation, and that support taken away, he could find no pleasure in the applause of his heart, which he had never learnt to reverence."
preview | full record— Goldsmith, Oliver (1728?-1774)