The Works of Francis Bacon, Volumen13Houghton, Mifflin, 1860 |
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Página 77
... told that after the Giants were put down , Fame sprang up as their posthumous sister , he will at once see that it is meant of those murmurs of parties and seditious rumours which always circulate for a time after the suppression of a ...
... told that after the Giants were put down , Fame sprang up as their posthumous sister , he will at once see that it is meant of those murmurs of parties and seditious rumours which always circulate for a time after the suppression of a ...
Página 78
... told which could never have en- tered any man's head either to conceive or relate on its own account , we must presume that it had some further reach . What a fiction ( for instance ) is that of Jupiter and Metis ! Jupiter took Metis to ...
... told which could never have en- tered any man's head either to conceive or relate on its own account , we must presume that it had some further reach . What a fiction ( for instance ) is that of Jupiter and Metis ! Jupiter took Metis to ...
Página 79
... told in different ways by writers nearly con- temporaneous , it is easy to see that what all the ver- sions have in common came from ancient tradition , while the parts in which they vary are the additions introduced by the several ...
... told in different ways by writers nearly con- temporaneous , it is easy to see that what all the ver- sions have in common came from ancient tradition , while the parts in which they vary are the additions introduced by the several ...
Página 127
... told of Diomedes only and in him certainly seems meant to be portrayed the character and fortunes of a man who makes it his declared object to persecute and over- throw by violence and the sword some religious wor- ship or sect , though ...
... told of Diomedes only and in him certainly seems meant to be portrayed the character and fortunes of a man who makes it his declared object to persecute and over- throw by violence and the sword some religious wor- ship or sect , though ...
Página 131
... through the very excess of ostentation perish . And certainly if the truth must be told , they are not so easily bridled by law as convicted by their proper vanity . XX . ERICTHONIUS ; OR IM POSTURE . THE poets DE SAPIENTIA VETERUM . 131.
... through the very excess of ostentation perish . And certainly if the truth must be told , they are not so easily bridled by law as convicted by their proper vanity . XX . ERICTHONIUS ; OR IM POSTURE . THE poets DE SAPIENTIA VETERUM . 131.
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Términos y frases comunes
Achelous additur adeo affectus Alban ancient answered apophthegms apud Aristippus asked atque Augustus Cæsar autem Bacon better Cæsar Cicero collection colour cujus Democritus divine doth ejus enim eorum erat esset etiam Eupolis evil fable Fabula fere fortune friends fuisse gods Gondomar gradus hæc hand hath Hippomenes homines hominum honour hujusmodi illa ille illi illud Itaque Jupiter kind King kingdom KINGDOM OF BRITAIN licet Lord Lordship Macedon magis Majesty Martius materia matter means mind mought nature Neque nisi omnia omnis Orpheus Pentheus persons philosophy Pollio Pompey postquam princes Prometheus Proserpina quæ quam Queen Elizabeth quia quod Rawley Rawley's rerum Resuscitatio saith shew SIR HENRY SAVILL Sir Nicholas Bacon sive speech sunt tamen tanquam tantum things tion true Typhon unto veluti vero Verum Vespasian videtur virtue whereof Whereupon wise wont to say