The Works of Francis Bacon, Volumen1Parry & McMillan, 1857 |
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Página xxi
... Passing beyond it , every thing is to be found which imagination can conceive or reason suggest . This entrance to ... pass divers inequalities , and ( as it were ) orbs , progresses , and returns , whereby we may produce admirable ...
... Passing beyond it , every thing is to be found which imagination can conceive or reason suggest . This entrance to ... pass divers inequalities , and ( as it were ) orbs , progresses , and returns , whereby we may produce admirable ...
Página xxv
... pass by a jest , was nobly censorious . No man ever spake more neatly , more pressly , more weight- ily , or suffered less emptiness , less idleness in what he uttered : no member of his speech but consisted of its own graces . His ...
... pass by a jest , was nobly censorious . No man ever spake more neatly , more pressly , more weight- ily , or suffered less emptiness , less idleness in what he uttered : no member of his speech but consisted of its own graces . His ...
Página xl
... pass with the furnace , she should be more favourable to the profession of alchymy . " Bacon , who was too wise to cross Elizabeth in the spring - tide of her anger , without waiting till 1 Sydney Papers , p . 204. Her majesty is ...
... pass with the furnace , she should be more favourable to the profession of alchymy . " Bacon , who was too wise to cross Elizabeth in the spring - tide of her anger , without waiting till 1 Sydney Papers , p . 204. Her majesty is ...
Página liv
... passing from poetry , by saying , " but it is not good to stop too long in the theatre : let us now pass on to the judicial place or palace of the mind , which we are to approach and view with more reverence and attention , " he ...
... passing from poetry , by saying , " but it is not good to stop too long in the theatre : let us now pass on to the judicial place or palace of the mind , which we are to approach and view with more reverence and attention , " he ...
Página lxiv
... pass with as easy charge as might be ; and that those same brambles , that grow about justice , of needless charge and expense , and all manner of exactions , might be rooted out so far as might be . 66 Thus was Francis Bacon , then in ...
... pass with as easy charge as might be ; and that those same brambles , that grow about justice , of needless charge and expense , and all manner of exactions , might be rooted out so far as might be . 66 Thus was Francis Bacon , then in ...
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Términos y frases comunes
action Advancement of Learning Æsop affections amongst ancient answered Apophthegmes Aristippus Aristotle atheism Augustus Cæsar Bacon better body Cæsar cause chancellor church Cicero colour command commonly conceit counsel death Demosthenes discourse divers divine doth envy error Essays Essex evil excellent favour fortune give goeth hath honour inquiry invention judge judgment Julius Cæsar justice kind king knowledge labour less light likewise lord Lord Bacon lord chancellor lordship Macedon majesty maketh man's manner matter means men's ment mind motion natural philosophy nature never Novum Organum observation opinion particular persons philosophy Plato pleasure Plutarch Pompey princes queen reason religion rest saith sciences Scriptures seemeth sense servants sort speak speech spirit Tacitus things thou thought tion touching true truth unto usury Vespasian virtue whereby wherein whereof whereupon wisdom wise words