Date: 1715-1720
"To cast one's Eye, means but to reflect upon, or to revolve in one's Mind"
preview | full record— Pope, Alexander (1688-1744)
Date: 1715-1720
"Yet should the Fears that wary Mind suggests / Spread their cold Poison thro' our Soldier's Breasts, / My Javelin can revenge so base a Part, / And free the Soul that quivers in thy Heart."
preview | full record— Pope, Alexander (1688-1744)
Date: 1715-1720
"Ill-fated Paris ! Slave to Womankind, / As smooth of Face as fraudulent of Mind"
preview | full record— Pope, Alexander (1688-1744)
Date: 1715-1720
"He sprinkles healing Balmes, to Anguish kind, / And adds Discourse, the Med'cine of the Mind."
preview | full record— Pope, Alexander (1688-1744)
Date: 1715-1720
Aristotle observes, "that when Homer is obliged to describe any thing of itself absurd or too improbable, he constantly contrives to blind and dazle the Judgment of his Readers with some shining Description."
preview | full record— Pope, Alexander (1688-1744)
Date: 1715-1720
"And yet no dire Presage so wounds my Mind, / My Mother's Death, the Ruin of my Kind, / Not Priam 's hoary Hairs defil'd with Gore, / Not all my Brothers gasping on the Shore; / As thine, Andromache!"
preview | full record— Pope, Alexander (1688-1744)
Date: 1718
Were it not for the Optic Nerves, the eyes might conspire the ruin of the mind: "That They shou'd see and She be blind."
preview | full record— Prior, Matthew (1664-1721)
Date: 1718
"Black Guilt involves the World in horrid Night, / And clouds our Intellectual Sight."
preview | full record— Blackmore, Sir Richard (1654-1729)
Date: c. 1718 [published 1907]
"My mind like Telephus's hurt is found. */ The cause that gave can only Cure the wound."
preview | full record— Prior, Matthew (1664-1721)
Date: 1720
The eyes speak the mind's "the lover's mind"
preview | full record— Sansom, Martha [née Fowke] (1690-1736)