The Works of Francis Bacon: Popular Edition Based Upon the Complete Edition of Spedding, Ellis, and Heath, Volumen2Hurd & Houghton, 1877 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 77
Página 26
... cause in fact of almost all his troubles . The severity of his exactions again is excused by Polydore Vergil as a politic art to keep turbulent subjects in obedience . Bacon imputes it to a vice of his nature in coveting to accumulate ...
... cause in fact of almost all his troubles . The severity of his exactions again is excused by Polydore Vergil as a politic art to keep turbulent subjects in obedience . Bacon imputes it to a vice of his nature in coveting to accumulate ...
Página 60
... cause . The point in law was , whether any disability in their natural capacity could trench to their politic capacity , they being but procurators of the commonwealth and representatives and fiduciaries of counties and bor- oughs ...
... cause . The point in law was , whether any disability in their natural capacity could trench to their politic capacity , they being but procurators of the commonwealth and representatives and fiduciaries of counties and bor- oughs ...
Página 63
... cause he could not remunerate them with any general pardon ( being prevented therein by the coronation par- don passed immediately before ) ; but chiefly , for that it was in every man's eye what great forfeitures and confiscations he ...
... cause he could not remunerate them with any general pardon ( being prevented therein by the coronation par- don passed immediately before ) ; but chiefly , for that it was in every man's eye what great forfeitures and confiscations he ...
Página 71
... cause this lad to counterfeit and per- sonate the second son of Edward the Fourth , supposed to be murdered ; and afterward ( for he changed his intention in the manage ) the Lord Edward Planta- genet , then prisoner in the Tower ; and ...
... cause this lad to counterfeit and per- sonate the second son of Edward the Fourth , supposed to be murdered ; and afterward ( for he changed his intention in the manage ) the Lord Edward Planta- genet , then prisoner in the Tower ; and ...
Página 91
... cause he was taken into service in his court to a base office in his kitchen ; so that ( in a kind of mattacina 2 of human fortune ) he turned a broach that had worn a crown ; whereas fortune commonly doth not bring in a comedy 1 ...
... cause he was taken into service in his court to a base office in his kitchen ; so that ( in a kind of mattacina 2 of human fortune ) he turned a broach that had worn a crown ; whereas fortune commonly doth not bring in a comedy 1 ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Works of Francis Bacon ...: Popular Ed., Based Upon the ..., Volumen2 Francis Bacon Vista de fragmentos - 1878 |
Términos y frases comunes
actions ambassadors amongst atheism atque Augustus Cæsar autem Bacon Bernard André better Brittaine Brittany Cæsar Calais commonly counsel counsellors crown danger death divers doth Duke Duke of York Earl Edward ejus England enim envy erat esset etiam Eupolis favour Flanders forces fortune France French King fuit hæc hand hath Henry's honour house of York judgment kind King Henry King of England King of Scotland King's kingdom land Latin likewise Lord magis maketh man's marriage matter Maximilian means men's ment mind nature Neque nihil nobility noble omitted Parliament party peace Perkin persons Polydore Polydore Vergil Pompey princes quæ quam Queen quod rebels reign religion rerum saith Scotland sent shew Spain speak speech suæ subjects sunt Tacitus tamen things thought tion translation adds treaty true unto usury virtue wherein whereof wise words