The Works of Francis Bacon, Volumen11Houghton, Mifflin, 1860 |
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Página 6
... hand ; said to be portraits of Sir Nicholas Bacon , Anne , his second wife , and their son Francis , when twelve years old . I regret that I could not learn anything more about them . They must have been done about the year 1572 , by an ...
... hand ; said to be portraits of Sir Nicholas Bacon , Anne , his second wife , and their son Francis , when twelve years old . I regret that I could not learn anything more about them . They must have been done about the year 1572 , by an ...
Página 16
... hands ; but in this case , from a careful comparison of the two , I am in- clined to think that where the print varies from the manuscript , it is generally by mistake . It is from the manuscript therefore that I have printed the text ...
... hands ; but in this case , from a careful comparison of the two , I am in- clined to think that where the print varies from the manuscript , it is generally by mistake . It is from the manuscript therefore that I have printed the text ...
Página 17
... hand . Bacon's own pen may be recognised here and there throughout , sometimes in the alteration of a stop , sometimes in the insertion of a parenthesis , sometimes in the correction of a letter , sometimes in the interlineation of two ...
... hand . Bacon's own pen may be recognised here and there throughout , sometimes in the alteration of a stop , sometimes in the insertion of a parenthesis , sometimes in the correction of a letter , sometimes in the interlineation of two ...
Página 25
... hand than Bacon's , using a very little of the novelist's or rhetorician's licence , have been turned into a handsome likeness of James or of any- body else . And who can believe that if Bacon had been really studying , not to draw the ...
... hand than Bacon's , using a very little of the novelist's or rhetorician's licence , have been turned into a handsome likeness of James or of any- body else . And who can believe that if Bacon had been really studying , not to draw the ...
Página 26
... hand that the character of Henry as interpreted by Bacon , however unlike it may be to James , is not so unlike Bacon himself ; and that he was therein delineating his own ideal ; it is enough to say that many of the peculiarities which ...
... hand that the character of Henry as interpreted by Bacon , however unlike it may be to James , is not so unlike Bacon himself ; and that he was therein delineating his own ideal ; it is enough to say that many of the peculiarities which ...
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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 hæc 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 seems sent shew Spain Speed suæ subjects succours suppose tamen thereof things thought tion town treaty true unto wise words