The Works of Francis Bacon, Volumen4Longmans, Green, Reader, and Dyer, 1868 |
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... things doubtless have bred discontentment in him : and now his age and his burthened conscience , which no absolution can make altogether clear , have of late increased his melancholy , so as he was grown very pensive and passionate ...
... things doubtless have bred discontentment in him : and now his age and his burthened conscience , which no absolution can make altogether clear , have of late increased his melancholy , so as he was grown very pensive and passionate ...
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... things pass in that kingdom . And therefore having begun I pray you con- tinue . This is not merely curiosity , for I have ever ( I know not by what instinct ) wished well to that unpolished part of this And so with my very loving ...
... things pass in that kingdom . And therefore having begun I pray you con- tinue . This is not merely curiosity , for I have ever ( I know not by what instinct ) wished well to that unpolished part of this And so with my very loving ...
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... things pass , whereby to have some occasion to think some good thoughts ; though I can do little . At the least it ... thing to obtain a grant of the money , and another to obtain the money itself . For the King himself must get it ...
... things pass , whereby to have some occasion to think some good thoughts ; though I can do little . At the least it ... thing to obtain a grant of the money , and another to obtain the money itself . For the King himself must get it ...
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... things I will turn back your kindness , in which you say you will receive my wife if she be cast off . For it is much more likely we have occasion to receive you being cast off , if you remember what is passed . But it is time to make ...
... things I will turn back your kindness , in which you say you will receive my wife if she be cast off . For it is much more likely we have occasion to receive you being cast off , if you remember what is passed . But it is time to make ...
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... things which they had refused for themselves , and from which they would have saved their posterity if they could . That this unpopularity was so great and so general as to make it from that time " useless to call upon Parlia- ment to ...
... things which they had refused for themselves , and from which they would have saved their posterity if they could . That this unpopularity was so great and so general as to make it from that time " useless to call upon Parlia- ment to ...
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