Date: 1892
"One need not be a chamber to be haunted, / One need not be a house; / The brainĀ has corridors surpassing / Material place."
preview | full record— Dickinson, Emily (1830-1886)
Date: 1892
"Winds of summer fields / Recollect the way,-- / Instinct picking up the key / Dropped by memory."
preview | full record— Dickinson, Emily (1830-1886)
Date: 1898
"Silently we went round and round, / And through each hollow mind / The Memory of dreadful things / Rushed like a dreadful wind, / And Horror stalked before each man, / And Terror crept behind."
preview | full record— Wilde, Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills (1854-1900)
Date: 1892, 1899
"In admitting a new body of experience, we instinctively seek to disturb as little as possible our pre-existing stock of ideas."
preview | full record— James, William (1842-1910)
Date: 1892, 1899
"The flowing life of the mind is sorted into parcels suitable for presentation in the recitation-room, and chopped up into supposed 'processes' with long Greek and Latin names, which in real life have no distinct existence."
preview | full record— James, William (1842-1910)
Date: 1892, 1899
"But be our conceptions adequate or inadequate, and be our stock of them large or small, they are all we have to work with."
preview | full record— James, William (1842-1910)
Date: 1892, 1899
"The more adequate the stock of ideas, the more 'able' is the man, the more uniformly appropriate is his behavior likely to be."
preview | full record— James, William (1842-1910)
Date: 1892, 1899
"This mental escort which the mind supplies is drawn, of course, from the mind's ready-made stock."
preview | full record— James, William (1842-1910)
Date: 1900
"Who stamped us with the minting die / Of this unconquerable need / To know the unknown Deity / And name the nameless in a creed?"
preview | full record— Money-Coutts, Francis Burdett Thomas, 5th Lord Latimer (1852-1923)
Date: 1900, 1901
"Between nature and ourselves, nay, between ourselves and our own consciousness a veil is interposed: a veil that is dense and opaque for the common herd,--thin, almost transparent, for the artist and the poet. What fairy wove that veil?"
preview | full record— Bergson, Henri-Louis (1859-1941)