Date: 1389
"The soule ... muste suffre for the bonde of the body that he is joyned to."
preview | full record— Trevisa, John (b. c. 1342, d. in or before 1402); Bartholomeus (1203-1272)
Date: 1389
"Remigius diffineth a soule in this manere: a soule is a bodiles substaunce reulinge a body."
preview | full record— Trevisa, John (b. c. 1342, d. in or before 1402); Bartholomeus (1203-1272)
Date: 1389
"The innere witte is departed a þre by þre regiouns of þe brayn, for in þe brayne beþ þre smale celles."
preview | full record— Trevisa, John (b. c. 1342, d. in or before 1402); Bartholomeus (1203-1272)
Date: c. 1420
"Thou woost wel, who shal an hous edifie / Gooth nat ther-to withoute avisament / If he be wys, for with his mental ye / First is it seen, purposid, cast & ment, / How it shal wroght been, elles al is shent."
preview | full record— Hoccleve [Occleve], Thomas (c.1367-1426)
Date: 1741
"But in the middle Stage of Life, or it may be from fifteen to fifty Years of Age, the Memory is generally in its happiest State, the Brain easily receives and long retains the Images and Traces which are impress'd upon on it, and the natural Spirits are more active to range these little infinite...
preview | full record— Watts, Isaac (1674-1748)
Date: Tuesday, March 12, 1751
"There is no snare more dangerous to busy and excursive minds, than the cobwebs of petty inquisitiveness, which entangle them in trivial employments and minute studies, and detain them in a middle state, between the tediousness of total inactivity, and the fatigue of laborious efforts, enchant th...
preview | full record— Johnson, Samuel (1709-1784)
Date: 1788-89
"But on the latter system [Plato's], the soul is the connecting medium of an intelligible and sensible nature, the bright repository of all middle forms, and the vigilant eye of all cogitative reasons"
preview | full record— Taylor, Thomas (1758-1835)
Date: 1797
"Vice with them is rather an accidental and temporary, than a constitutional and habitual distemper; a noxious plant, which, though found to live and even to thrive in the human mind, is not the natural growth and production of the soil."
preview | full record— Wilberforce, William (1759-1833)
Date: 1797
"We learn from the Scriptures that it is one main part of the operations of the Holy Spirit, to implant those heavenly principles in the human mind, and to cherish their growth."
preview | full record— Wilberforce, William (1759-1833)
Date: 1797
"But it is sometimes not difficult to any one who is accustomed, if the phrase may be allowed, to the anatomy of the human mind, to discern, that generally speaking, the persons who use the above language, rely not so much on the merits of Christ, and on the agency of Divine Grace, as on their ow...
preview | full record— Wilberforce, William (1759-1833)