Date: 1759
"Seek not thus / To multiply the ills that hover round you; / Nor from the stores of busy fancy add / New shafts to fortune's quiver."
preview | full record— Murphy, Arthur (1727-1805)
Date: 1759
"Fatal day! / More fatal e'en than that, which first beheld / This race accurs'd within these palace walls, / Since hope, that balm of wretched minds, is now / Irrevocably lost."
preview | full record— Murphy, Arthur (1727-1805)
Date: 1759
"Mark well my words--discolour not thy soul / With the black hue of crimes like his."
preview | full record— Murphy, Arthur (1727-1805)
Date: 1759
"The moral duties of the private man / Are grafted in thy soul."
preview | full record— Murphy, Arthur (1727-1805)
Date: 1759
"Are not our minds cast in the same mould with those before the flood? The flood affected matter; mind escaped."
preview | full record— Young, Edward (bap. 1683, d. 1765)
Date: 1759
"How have thy Houyhnhunms thrown thy judgment from its seat, and laid thy imagination in the mire?"
preview | full record— Young, Edward (bap. 1683, d. 1765)
Date: 1759
"How amiable does he appear to be, whose sympathetic heart seems to re-echo all the sentiments of those with whom he converses, who grieves for their calamities, who re|sents their injuries, and who rejoices at their good fortune!"
preview | full record— Smith, Adam (1723-1790)
Date: 1759
"Hatred and anger are the greatest poison to the happiness of a good mind."
preview | full record— Smith, Adam (1723-1790)
Date: 1759
"There is, in the very feeling of those passions, something harsh, jarring, and convulsive, something that tears and distracts the breast, and is altogether destructive of that composure and tranquillity of mind which is so necessary to happiness, and which is best promoted by the contrary passio...
preview | full record— Smith, Adam (1723-1790)
Date: 1759
"From their children, if they have less to fear, they have less also to hope, and they lose, without equivalent the joys of early love and the convenience of uniting with manners pliant, and minds susceptible of new impressions, which might wear away their dissimilitudes by long cohabitation, as ...
preview | full record— Johnson, Samuel (1709-1784)