Date: 1693
"Yet, thy moist Clay is pliant to Command; / Unwrought, and easie to the Potter's hand: / Now take the Mold; now bend thy Mind to feel / The first sharp Motions of the Forming Wheel."
preview | full record— Dryden, John (1631-1700)
Date: 1693
"Thy Chaps are fallen, and thy Frame dis-joyn'd: / Thy Body as dissolv'd as is thy Mind."
preview | full record— Dryden, John (1631-1700)
Date: 1693
"No, I will break this House of Clay, / Which clogs my fleeter Thoughts and Mind."
preview | full record— Hawkshaw, Benjamin (1671/2-1738)
Date: 1693
"From her blest Heart there flows a Line, / Which Nature made, and grapples mine. / Secret as that which tyes the Mind, / When to the Body 'tis confin'd"
preview | full record— Hawkshaw, Benjamin (1671/2-1738)
Date: 1693
"New-minted Mischeifs rumble in his brain, / Each false Stamp'd Coin is melted down again, / 'Till refin'd Fancy fix'd on Woman."
preview | full record— Ames, Richard (bap. 1664?, d. 1692)
Date: 1694
"If Man would understand the Excellency of the Soul, as far as it is capable of comprehending it self, let him, after serious Recollection, descend into himself, and search diligently his own Mind, and there he shall find so many admirable Gifts, and excellent Ornaments."
preview | full record— Aristotle [pseud.]
Date: 1694
The soul is "a spark of the Divine Mind" and "a blast of Almighty Breath"
preview | full record— Aristotle [pseud.]
Date: 1694
A "Mothers strange Imaginations, and divers Phantasms" "deform the Body" of her child
preview | full record— Aristotle [pseud.]
Date: 1694
The Mother's imagination "may sometimes determine the Sex" of an unborn child
preview | full record— Aristotle [pseud.]
Date: 1694
The woman's force of imagination "is certainly very prevalent in the causing of the Child to be of this or that Sex" during the act of coition
preview | full record— Aristotle [pseud.]