The Letters and the Life of Francis Bacon Including All His Occasional Works: Namely Letters, Speeches, Tracts, State Papers, Memorials, Devices and All Authentic Writings Not Already Printed Among His Philosophical, Literary, Or Professional Works, Volumen3Longman, Green, Longman, and Roberts, 1868 |
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Página 8
... judgment , and ( the particularities concurring with the soundest advertisements she receiveth nearer hand ) findeth that you have had better intelligence in that corner than hath been received from any others in those parts ; whereby ...
... judgment , and ( the particularities concurring with the soundest advertisements she receiveth nearer hand ) findeth that you have had better intelligence in that corner than hath been received from any others in those parts ; whereby ...
Página 11
... judgment if it prove any matter of worth . So that this legatus per- egre missus will make good his mentiendi causa as well in that as he doth in his last letters ( which I saw yesterday ) , that the Venetians had lost more than a ...
... judgment if it prove any matter of worth . So that this legatus per- egre missus will make good his mentiendi causa as well in that as he doth in his last letters ( which I saw yesterday ) , that the Venetians had lost more than a ...
Página 15
... judgment fully alive to the evil and danger of these abuses , and in her own inclination really desirous to be rid of them , she was not likely to pursue the inquiry very zealously just then . Postponement of decisive action as long as ...
... judgment fully alive to the evil and danger of these abuses , and in her own inclination really desirous to be rid of them , she was not likely to pursue the inquiry very zealously just then . Postponement of decisive action as long as ...
Página 38
... judgment ; neither had he brought to the House a market - bill or mercer's bill con- cerning the state , etc. And so , after many persuasions for the bill , and bitter answers to Mr. Bacon , he ended with desire to put it to the ...
... judgment ; neither had he brought to the House a market - bill or mercer's bill con- cerning the state , etc. And so , after many persuasions for the bill , and bitter answers to Mr. Bacon , he ended with desire to put it to the ...
Página 55
... judgment of her best councillors , than her refusal to let the question of succession be settled , or even discussed . Yet here again , if the event be accepted as judge , it is hard to say that she was wrong . Her own authority endured ...
... judgment of her best councillors , than her refusal to let the question of succession be settled , or even discussed . Yet here again , if the event be accepted as judge , it is hard to say that she was wrong . Her own authority endured ...
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Términos y frases comunes
abuses Act of Parliament alteration answer Anthony Bacon Bill Bishops causes Cecil Chancellor Church Committee Commons conference copy Council counsel course Court Crown debate desire dispute divers doth doubt Earl Earl of Essex England favour Francis Goodwin further give Gray's Inn grievance hand hath honour House Ireland Judges judgment justice King King's King's Counsel kingdom kingdom of England Kingdom of Ireland letter liberty likewise Lord Chancellor Lord of Essex Lordship Majesty Majesty's March matter means ment ministers nature never occasion opinion Parliament particular passed persons petition Prerogative princely principal proceeding Purveyance Queen question realm reason rest Resuscitatio Scotland seems shew Sir Francis Bacon Spain speak Speaker speech statute Subsidy suppose taken thereof things thought tion Toby Matthew touching Townshend true union unto wherein words
Pasajes populares
Página 251 - I do confess, since I was of any understanding, my mind hath in effect been absent from that I have done ; and in absence are many errors, which I do willingly acknowledge; and, amongst the rest, this great one that led the rest ; that knowing myself by inward calling to be fitter to hold a book, than to play a part, I have led my life in civil causes ; for which I was not very fit by nature, and more unfit by the preoccupation of my mind.
Página 125 - I will have one doctrine, one discipline, one religion in substance and ceremony: never speak more to that point, how far you are bound to obey.
Página 100 - CERTAIN CONSIDERATIONS TOUCHING THE BETTER PACIFICATION AND EDIFICATION OF THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND.
Página 144 - I did as plainly see his overthrow chained as it were by destiny to that journey, as it is possible for a man to ground a judgment upon future contingents.
Página 145 - ... if you had my Lord of Essex here with a white staff in his hand, as my Lord of Leicester had, and continued him still about you for society to yourself, and for an honour and ornament to your attendance and court, in the eyes of your people, and in the eyes of foreign ambassadors, then were he in his right element; for to discontent him as you do, and yet to put arms and power into his hands, may be a kind of temptation to make him prove cumbersome and unruly.
Página 204 - ... not the use of the English tongue, it shall be lawful to say or use all their common and open prayer in the Latin tongue.
Página 117 - ... did meet upon a week-day in some principal town, where there was some ancient grave minister that was president, and an auditory admitted of gentlemen, or other persons of leisure. Then every minister successively, beginning with the youngest, did handle one and the same part of Scripture, spending severally some quarter of an hour or better, and in the whole some two hours : and so the exercise being begun and concluded with prayer, and the president giving a text for the next meeting, the assembly...
Página 82 - But above all, if a man could succeed, not in striking out some particular invention, however useful, but in kindling a light in nature— a light which should in its very rising touch and illuminate all the border-regions that confine upon the circle of our present knowledge; and so spreading further and further should presently disclose and bring into sight all that is most hidden and secret in the world...
Página 148 - And when her majesty hastily asked me, Wherein ? I told her, the author had committed very apparent theft; for he had taken most of the sentences of Cornelius Tacitus, and translated them into English, and put them into his text.
Página 103 - ... conduct them ; a just ground I say it is of deliberation, but not of direction. But on the other side, who knoweth not that time is truly compared to a stream, that carrieth down fresh and pure waters into that salt sea of corruption which environeth all human actions? And therefore if man shall not by his industry, virtue, and policy, as it were with the oar row against the stream and inclination of time, all institutions and ordinances, be they never so pure, will corrupt and degenerate.