25 June

Mankind are earthen jugs with spirits in them.

[Editor's note: these entries were made between 1 June and 5 August 1842.]

Fancy pictures of familiar places which one has never been in, as the green-room of a theatre, &c.

The famous characters of history, to imagine their spirits now extant on earth, in the guise of various public or private personages.

The case quoted in Combe's Physiology of a young man of great talents and profound knowledge of chemistry, who had in view some new discovery of importance. In order to put his mind into the highest possible activity, he shut himself up for several successive days, and used various methods of excitement. He had a singing-girl, he drank spirits, smelled penetrating odours, sprinkled Cologne-water round the room, &c. &c. Eight days thus passed, when he was seized with a fit of frenzy which terminated in mania.

Flesh and Blood, a firm of butchers.

Miss Polly Syllable, a schoolmistress.

Mankind are earthen jugs with spirits in them.

A spendthrift, in one sense he has his money's worth by the purchase of large lots of repentance and other dolorous commodities.

To symbolize moral or spiritual disease by disease of the body; as thus, -- when a person committed any sin, it might appear in some form on the body, -- this to be wrought out.

"Shrieking fish," a strange idea of Leigh Hunt.

In my museum, all the ducal rings that have been thrown into the Adriatic.

An association of literary men in the other world, --or dialogues of the dead, or something of that kind.

Imaginary diseases to be cured by impossible remedies, as a dose of the Grand Elixir in the yolk of a Phoenix's egg. The disease may be either moral or physical.

A physician for the cure of moral diseases.

To point out the moral slavery of one who deems himself a free man.

A stray leaf from the book of fate, picked up in the street.

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