The Works of Francis Bacon, Volumen6Longmans, Green, Reader, and Dyer, 1872 |
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Página iv
... seem as conclusive to those who come new to the whole subject as they do to myself , I should not despair of proving the point to the satisfaction of any com- petent tribunal , if it were seriously disputed by an authority weighty ...
... seem as conclusive to those who come new to the whole subject as they do to myself , I should not despair of proving the point to the satisfaction of any com- petent tribunal , if it were seriously disputed by an authority weighty ...
Página v
... seems to be , that my prejudices in favour of Bacon himself - prejudices induced , according to the writer , by knowledge - dispose me to give him as much credit in every way as I can ; and that , not being able to distinguish one man's ...
... seems to be , that my prejudices in favour of Bacon himself - prejudices induced , according to the writer , by knowledge - dispose me to give him as much credit in every way as I can ; and that , not being able to distinguish one man's ...
Página vi
... seem now things which nobody can fail to see : hands which at first seemed so like that he could not tell which was which , have become with familiarity so different that he can hardly see any resemblance between them . Now the case of ...
... seem now things which nobody can fail to see : hands which at first seemed so like that he could not tell which was which , have become with familiarity so different that he can hardly see any resemblance between them . Now the case of ...
Página vii
... seems to be thought by some readers that I have undertaken to show that Bacon never did anything which was not in accordance with the highest moral ideal , and that I am to be understood as applauding every action which I do not ...
... seems to be thought by some readers that I have undertaken to show that Bacon never did anything which was not in accordance with the highest moral ideal , and that I am to be understood as applauding every action which I do not ...
Página ix
... seem to have been thought superfluous . To resist a motion for a subsidy seems to be set down as an act of patriotism ; to sup- port it , as an act of servility , without reference to the occasion . A prosecution by government seems to ...
... seem to have been thought superfluous . To resist a motion for a subsidy seems to be set down as an act of patriotism ; to sup- port it , as an act of servility , without reference to the occasion . A prosecution by government seems to ...
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