The Works of Francis Bacon, Volumen2Longmans, Green, Reader, and Dyer, 1857 |
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Página 345
... leaf of burrage hath an excellent spirit to repress the fuliginous vapour of dusky melancholy , and so to cure mad- ness : but nevertheless , if the leaf be infused long , it yieldeth forth but a raw substance , of no virtue : therefore ...
... leaf of burrage hath an excellent spirit to repress the fuliginous vapour of dusky melancholy , and so to cure mad- ness : but nevertheless , if the leaf be infused long , it yieldeth forth but a raw substance , of no virtue : therefore ...
Página 358
... leaves ; insomuch as the order of the Foliatanes was put down by the pope , as finding leaves unable to nourish man's body . ' Whether there be that differ- ence in the flesh of living creatures , is not well inquired : as whether ...
... leaves ; insomuch as the order of the Foliatanes was put down by the pope , as finding leaves unable to nourish man's body . ' Whether there be that differ- ence in the flesh of living creatures , is not well inquired : as whether ...
Página 363
... leaves and boughs : whereas living creatures put forth ( after their period of growth ) nothing that is young but hair and nails , which are excre- ments , and no parts . And it is most certain , that whatsoever is young , doth draw ...
... leaves and boughs : whereas living creatures put forth ( after their period of growth ) nothing that is young but hair and nails , which are excre- ments , and no parts . And it is most certain , that whatsoever is young , doth draw ...
Página 365
... leaf at the end of the edition of 1635 ; but may be most conveniently introduced here.-J. S. His Lordship's usual ... leaves of red roses two pugils . Let them be boiled in a pottle of water , wherein steel hath been quenched , till ...
... leaf at the end of the edition of 1635 ; but may be most conveniently introduced here.-J. S. His Lordship's usual ... leaves of red roses two pugils . Let them be boiled in a pottle of water , wherein steel hath been quenched , till ...
Página 384
... leaf , or a piece of paper or parchment ; for if they have a greater crassitude , they will alter in their own body , though they spend not . But of this we shall speak more when we handle the title of conservation of bodies . NATURAL ...
... leaf , or a piece of paper or parchment ; for if they have a greater crassitude , they will alter in their own body , though they spend not . But of this we shall speak more when we handle the title of conservation of bodies . NATURAL ...
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absque adeo admodum aër aërem aëris alia alii animalia annos aqua aquæ Arist Aristotle atque autem Bacon body calore calorem cause circa cold colour cometh consort touching corporis corporum corpus doth earth ejus enim Etenim etiam Eurus Experiment solitary touching Experiments in consort fere flame flamma fomites fruit fuerit habet hæc hath heat herbs Historia homines hujusmodi igne illa illis illud instar inter intra Itaque juice licet likewise liquor living creatures magis maketh minus modo moisture motion motus nature neque nihil nisi nonnihil nourishment oleum omnia partium parum paulo plants Pliny possit potius potus præsertim primo propter putrefaction quæ qualia quam quandoque quia quibus quod root scilicet seemeth similiter sint sive sound spirits spirituum sunt super tamen tanquam tantum terræ things trees vapour venti ventorum ventos ventus vero verum vitæ wine Zephyrus
Pasajes populares
Página 419 - Generally the straight line hath the cleanest and roundest sound, and the crooked, the more hoarse and jarring. 222. OF a sinuous pipe that may have some four flexions, trial would be made. Likewise of a pipe made like a cross, open in the midst.
Página 660 - Trials likewise would be made upon plants, and that diligently : as if you should tell a man, that such a tree would die this year ; and will him at these and these times to go unto it, to see how it thriveth.
Página 578 - THE Turks have a pretty art of chambletting of paper, which is not with us in use. They take divers oiled colours, and put them severally, in drops, upon water, and stir the water lightly, and then wet their paper, being of some thickness, with it, and the paper will be waved and veined, like chamblet or marble.
Página 670 - The English ambassador's lady, who was a woman far from superstition, told me one day, she would help me away with my warts : whereupon she got a piece of lard with the skin on and rubbed the warts all over with the fat side ; and amongst the rest...
Página 670 - The success was, that within five weeks space all the warts went quite away : and that wart which I had so long endured, for company. But at the rest I did little marvel, because they came in a short time, and might go away in a short time again: but the going away of that which had stayed so long doth yet stick with me.
Página 670 - I had had from my childhood : then she nailed the piece of lard, with the fat towards the sun, upon a post of her chamber window, which was to the south. The success was, that within five weeks space all the warts went quite away : and that wart tohich I had so long endured, for company.
Página 602 - ... naphtha of Babylon, a great distance off. It is therefore a subject of a very noble enquiry, to enquire of the more subtile perceptions; for it is another key to open nature, as well as the sense; and sometimes better. And besides, it is a principal means of natural divination; for that which in these perceptions appeareth early, in the great effects cometh long after.
Página 602 - IT is certain that all bodies whatsoever, though they have no sense, yet they have perception : for when one body is applied to another, there is a kind of election to embrace that which is agreeable, and to exclude or expel that which is ingrate...
Página 645 - ... we have set it down as a law to ourselves, to examine things to the bottom ; and not to receive upon credit, or reject upon improbabilities, until there hath passed a due examination.