The Works of Francis Bacon, Volumen11Hurd and Houghton, 1869 |
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Página 13
... England from the Union of the Roses to the Union of the Crowns was one which he had long before pointed out as eminently worth handling ; but until the time when he saw his retirement from public life inevitable , and that ( to use his ...
... England from the Union of the Roses to the Union of the Crowns was one which he had long before pointed out as eminently worth handling ; but until the time when he saw his retirement from public life inevitable , and that ( to use his ...
Página 21
... England , in Lardner's Cabinet Cyclopædia . The question being too serious to be passed over , and the authority too respectable to be overruled without show- ing reasons , I shall quote his note at length . " Lord Bacon was the man of ...
... England , in Lardner's Cabinet Cyclopædia . The question being too serious to be passed over , and the authority too respectable to be overruled without show- ing reasons , I shall quote his note at length . " Lord Bacon was the man of ...
Página 22
... in these circumstances even his genius sunk under such a patron and such a theme ! " 1 1 Lardner's Cyclopædia , Hist . of England , vol . ii . p . 362 . Now setting aside for the present the general ques- tion 22 PREFACE TO THE HISTORY OF.
... in these circumstances even his genius sunk under such a patron and such a theme ! " 1 1 Lardner's Cyclopædia , Hist . of England , vol . ii . p . 362 . Now setting aside for the present the general ques- tion 22 PREFACE TO THE HISTORY OF.
Página 28
... own wit and his own will . Bacon has accordingly treated the history of his reign as a history of the administration of affairs in England from 1485 to 1509 , and represented Henry as what he really was 28 PREFACE TO THE HISTORY OF.
... own wit and his own will . Bacon has accordingly treated the history of his reign as a history of the administration of affairs in England from 1485 to 1509 , and represented Henry as what he really was 28 PREFACE TO THE HISTORY OF.
Página 62
... England ( book vi . cap . i . ) thinks that the date of Henry's accession was thus antedated by a day , because if he was not king on the 21st , acts done on the 21st could not have been treason against him . The truth is , it mattered ...
... England ( book vi . cap . i . ) thinks that the date of Henry's accession was thus antedated by a day , because if he was not king on the 21st , acts done on the 21st could not have been treason against him . The truth is , it mattered ...
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ambassadors atque attainder autem Bacon Bernard André better blood Brittany Calais castle Charles Council counsel counsellors crown death divers doubt Duchess Duke of York Earl Edward Poynings ejus Elizabeth enemy English enim erat esset etiam favour Ferdinando Flanders forces fortune France French King fuit hath Henry's honour house of York Ireland James King Edward King Henry King of Castile King of England King of Scotland King's kingdom Lady land likewise London Lord Lord Chamberlain Lord Lovell marriage matter Maximilian means ment narrative Neque nevertheless nobles old Chronicle omitted pardon Parliament party passed Patent Rolls peace Perkin person Polydore Vergil Polydore's Pope Prince principal proclamation quæ quam Queen quod realm rebels regis regni reign Richard says Scotland sent shew Sir Robert Spain Speed suæ subjects succours suppose tamen thereof things thought tion town treaty true unto wise words