The Works of Francis Bacon ...J. Cundee, 1802 |
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Página 97
... doth not reprehend the fallax , whereof the reprehension is a law , that virtue ( such as is joined with labour and conflict ) would not be chosen but for fame and opinion , yet it followeth not that the chief motive of the elec- tion ...
... doth not reprehend the fallax , whereof the reprehension is a law , that virtue ( such as is joined with labour and conflict ) would not be chosen but for fame and opinion , yet it followeth not that the chief motive of the elec- tion ...
Página 100
... doth value every moment , and then the hour doth rather sum up the moments , than di- vide the day . So in a dead plain the way seem- eth the longer , because the eye hath preconceived it shorter than the truth ; and the frustrating of ...
... doth value every moment , and then the hour doth rather sum up the moments , than di- vide the day . So in a dead plain the way seem- eth the longer , because the eye hath preconceived it shorter than the truth ; and the frustrating of ...
Página 103
... doth help it , not by way of adding a shew of magnitude unto it , but a note of excellency and rarity ; whereof the forms are , where shall you find such a concurrence ? Great , but not compleat ; for it seems a less work of nature or ...
... doth help it , not by way of adding a shew of magnitude unto it , but a note of excellency and rarity ; whereof the forms are , where shall you find such a concurrence ? Great , but not compleat ; for it seems a less work of nature or ...
Página 104
... doth not follow , that because death , which was the privation of the burden , was ill , therefore the burden was good . And in this part , the ordinary form of malum necessarium aptly reprehendeth this colour for privatio mali ...
... doth not follow , that because death , which was the privation of the burden , was ill , therefore the burden was good . And in this part , the ordinary form of malum necessarium aptly reprehendeth this colour for privatio mali ...
Página 106
... doth deprive and deceive them of sap and nourishment ; so he saith well , divitis servi maxime servi : and the comparison was pleasant of him , that compared courtiers attendant in the courts of princes without great place or office ...
... doth deprive and deceive them of sap and nourishment ; so he saith well , divitis servi maxime servi : and the comparison was pleasant of him , that compared courtiers attendant in the courts of princes without great place or office ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Works of Francis Bacon: Lord High Chancellor of England, Volumen2 Francis Bacon Vista completa - 1851 |
Términos y frases comunes
Æsop amongst answered Aristippus asked Augustus Cæsar Bensalem Bettenham better body Cæsar Cato the elder cause chamber Cicero Cold maketh colour cometh conceived countries death desire Diogenes divers divine doth earth evil excellent executors father fortune forty pounds gave give glory gold greater hand hath heat heaven holy honour hundred pounds invention inventor Julius Cæsar kind king knoweth knowledge labour land light likewise live lord Lord Bacon lordship majesty man's matter means memory mind natural philosophy never Phocion Plato Pompey pray Queen Elizabeth quod reprehended rich saith seemeth servant shew ship sick Sir Francis Bacon sir John Constable Sir Thomas sir Thomas Crewe Solomon's house soul speech stood strangers sun-beams thee Themistocles ther things thou thought Tirsan twenty pounds unto Vespasian virtue whereas wherein whereof Whereupon wise wont to say