Date: 1659
If a passion may usurp the intellectual faculties, one may "no more be able to govene" himself than "a little Infant or a mad-man to hold the reynes of a Common-wealth"
preview | full record— Tubbe, Henry (1618-1655)
Date: 1659
"When the minde is in a calme, our advice may saile over it with ease; but in a raging tempest the best admonitions run upon a desperate rock"
preview | full record— Tubbe, Henry (1618-1655)
Date: 1659
Anger "consumes the lodging wherein it lies, the heart; it consumes the object whither it goes; and looks death and destruction upon every thing in the way."
preview | full record— Tubbe, Henry (1618-1655)
Date: 1659
"Nothing puts a man so much out of tune as discontent."
preview | full record— Tubbe, Henry (1618-1655)
Date: March 24, 1659
"[Oliver Cromwell's] body was well compact and strong, his stature under 6 foot (I believe about two inches), his head so shaped as you might see it a storehouse and shop both of a vast treasury of natural parts."
preview | full record— Maidston, John
Date: March 24, 1659
"[Oliver Cromwell's] temper exceeding fiery, as I have known, but the flame of it kept down, for the most part, or soon allayed with those moral endowments he had."
preview | full record— Maidston, John
Date: March 24, 1659
"A larger soul, I think, hath seldom dwelt in a house of clay than his was."
preview | full record— Maidston, John
Date: 1659
"As first the Frame of the Body, of which I think most reasonable to conclude the Soule her self to be the more particular Architect (for I will not wholly reject Plotinus his opinion;) and that the Plastick power resides in her, as also in the Soules of Brute animals, as very learned and worthy ...
preview | full record— More, Henry (1614-1687)
Date: 1659
"For that the Soul should be the Vital Architect of her own house, that close connexion and sure possession she is to have of it, distinct and secure from the invasion of any other particular Soul, seems no slight Argument."
preview | full record— More, Henry (1614-1687)
Date: 1659
"And therefore it is the meer Imperium of our Soule that does determine the Spirits to this Muscle rather then the other, and holds them there in despite of externall force."
preview | full record— More, Henry (1614-1687)