The Works of Francis Bacon, Volumen4Longmans, Green, Reader, and Dyer, 1868 |
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Página 11
... particular favour to seek or expect at his cousin's hands . He had been made Solicitor - General only half a year before , and there was no prospect at present of any vacancy to which he would have aspired . A letter therefore addressed ...
... particular favour to seek or expect at his cousin's hands . He had been made Solicitor - General only half a year before , and there was no prospect at present of any vacancy to which he would have aspired . A letter therefore addressed ...
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... particular favour to ask or expect , —but he had for the first time received from Salisbury substantial help in his pro- fessional advancement . This might be the sign of a change of dispo- sition , and if rightly responded to , the ...
... particular favour to ask or expect , —but he had for the first time received from Salisbury substantial help in his pro- fessional advancement . This might be the sign of a change of dispo- sition , and if rightly responded to , the ...
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... particular time , and meant to bear upon the solution of the most important state - problem with which the statesmen of the time had to deal . The day had come when the ordinary revenues of the Crown were no longer adequate to the ...
... particular time , and meant to bear upon the solution of the most important state - problem with which the statesmen of the time had to deal . The day had come when the ordinary revenues of the Crown were no longer adequate to the ...
Página 24
... particular , upon whom he could count as yet for effectual assistance by wit or purse or power or sympathy , unless it were his own nephew Edmund Bacon , eldest son of his half - brother Sir Nicholas , who seems to have shown a taste ...
... particular , upon whom he could count as yet for effectual assistance by wit or purse or power or sympathy , unless it were his own nephew Edmund Bacon , eldest son of his half - brother Sir Nicholas , who seems to have shown a taste ...
Página 26
... particular subject of Motion , and sets down all the heads of enquiry he can think of ; which fill eleven pages of ... particular danger which he apprehended was a revolt in Scotland . He then proceeds to note " the greatness of some ...
... particular subject of Motion , and sets down all the heads of enquiry he can think of ; which fill eleven pages of ... particular danger which he apprehended was a revolt in Scotland . He then proceeds to note " the greatness of some ...
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answer appears Beccles cause Chamberlain Chancellor charge commission Commissioners concerning copy Council Counsel course Court Crown debt doth doubt Earl Elizabeth England Exchequer favour further give grant Gray's Inn grievances hand hath honour House of Commons Impositions Ireland James Judges judgment Julius Cæsar justice King King's kingdom land letter liberty likewise Lord Chancellor Lord Treasurer Lordships Majesty Majesty's matter means ment Motus nature occasion offence offer opinion paper Parl Parliament person prerogative present Prince Privy probably proceeding proclamation profit question received revenue Robert Mansell Salisbury Salisbury's seems sent Sir Francis Bacon Sir Henry Hobart Sir John Constable sive speech statute subsidies supply suppose taken Tenures thereof things thought tion Tobie Matthew touching tyme unto Vincent Skinner wherein Winw words writing