The Works of Francis Bacon, Volumen7Longman, 1859 |
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Página 13
... be of an earlier date than Rawley's copy , the last sentence stands thus : " I have taken a course to draw it down to the sense , which cannot fall . " 3 a translation of that book into the general language DEDICATORY . 13.
... be of an earlier date than Rawley's copy , the last sentence stands thus : " I have taken a course to draw it down to the sense , which cannot fall . " 3 a translation of that book into the general language DEDICATORY . 13.
Página 26
... course which of myself I was purposed to do . For as Martius noted well that it is but a loose thing to speak of pos- sibilities without the particular designs ; so is it to speak of lawfulness without the particular cases . I will ...
... course which of myself I was purposed to do . For as Martius noted well that it is but a loose thing to speak of pos- sibilities without the particular designs ; so is it to speak of lawfulness without the particular cases . I will ...
Página 42
... course all inferences drawn from memoranda like these , which were not intended to explain themselves to any one but the writer , are uncertain ; but we have other evidence to show that Bacon considered it an essential point of policy ...
... course all inferences drawn from memoranda like these , which were not intended to explain themselves to any one but the writer , are uncertain ; but we have other evidence to show that Bacon considered it an essential point of policy ...
Página 43
... courses taken by the government , then chiefly guided by the Earl of Salisbury , were directly at variance and incompatible with it , and so the chance gone . And he after- wards turned it into a general treatise on the True Greatness ...
... courses taken by the government , then chiefly guided by the Earl of Salisbury , were directly at variance and incompatible with it , and so the chance gone . And he after- wards turned it into a general treatise on the True Greatness ...
Página 80
... impotentiæ genus est , potentia autem bonum . [ That course which keeps the matter in a man's power is good ; that which leaves him without retreat is bad : for to have no means of retreating is 80 COLOURS OF GOOD AND EVIL .
... impotentiæ genus est , potentia autem bonum . [ That course which keeps the matter in a man's power is good ; that which leaves him without retreat is bad : for to have no means of retreating is 80 COLOURS OF GOOD AND EVIL .
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