The Works of Francis Bacon, Volumen6Longmans, Green, Reader, and Dyer, 1872 |
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Página vii
... thought about things , not that what he thought was always wise and virtuous , I am supposed to renounce the right of dis- cussing the morality or the policy of any business in which he was engaged . When I endeavour to show that an ...
... thought about things , not that what he thought was always wise and virtuous , I am supposed to renounce the right of dis- cussing the morality or the policy of any business in which he was engaged . When I endeavour to show that an ...
Página viii
... thought and acted in the various cases with which he had to deal . The question how well and wisely might come after , but the first question was how . The record of his thoughts and actions was to be found in the letters , papers , and ...
... thought and acted in the various cases with which he had to deal . The question how well and wisely might come after , but the first question was how . The record of his thoughts and actions was to be found in the letters , papers , and ...
Página ix
... 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 be assumed as a ...
... 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 be assumed as a ...
Página xii
... thought it unjust . In speaking of the reader , ' I have hitherto been thinking of the average reader , -such a one as one's self . For those of a higher order , who already know more about all these things than I can tell them , and ...
... thought it unjust . In speaking of the reader , ' I have hitherto been thinking of the average reader , -such a one as one's self . For those of a higher order , who already know more about all these things than I can tell them , and ...
Página xvii
... thought not that ever I should have found that cause so palpable an one as it proved . Which yet when I came quickly afterwards to observe , I found also very clearly that the summer must needs be cold too ; though yet it were generally ...
... thought not that ever I should have found that cause so palpable an one as it proved . Which yet when I came quickly afterwards to observe , I found also very clearly that the summer must needs be cold too ; though yet it were generally ...
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answer Bacon brought your Lp Buck Buckingham Captain Carleton cause Chamberlain Chancery charge Chief Justice command commission Commissioners copy Council councillors course Court Declaration desire divers Docketed by Meautys doth doubt Earl Earl of Buckingham England favour friend and servant Gibson Papers give Gorhambury hand Harl hath hear heard honourable Lord Ireland Judges judgment Justice of peace Keymis King King of Spain King's kingdom Lady letter Lord Brackley Lord Chancellor Lord Darcy Lord Keeper Lordship Majesty Majesty's Mannowry matter Newmarket occasion officers omits opinion patent persons Prince proceeding Ralegh rest Your Lordship's Rowland Cotton saith sent shew ship Sir Edward Coke Sir John Sir John Digby Sir Walter Raleigh Spain Spaniards speech Star Chamber Stephens's taken thereof things thought tion touching town true unto viii Villiers voyage warrant wherein Winwood words writing