Character of Lord Bacon: His Life and WorksMaxwell, 1835 - 367 sider |
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Side 17
... less emptiness , less idleness in what he uttered : no member of his speech but consisted of its own graces . His hearers could not cough or look aside from him without loss : he commanded when he spoke , and had his judges angry and ...
... less emptiness , less idleness in what he uttered : no member of his speech but consisted of its own graces . His hearers could not cough or look aside from him without loss : he commanded when he spoke , and had his judges angry and ...
Side 31
... less pains and assiduity , perhaps , yield more lustre and reputation to my name than the others I have in hand ; but I judge the use a man should seek in publishing his writings before his death , to be but an untimely anticipation of ...
... less pains and assiduity , perhaps , yield more lustre and reputation to my name than the others I have in hand ; but I judge the use a man should seek in publishing his writings before his death , to be but an untimely anticipation of ...
Side 35
... less ostentation and more fruit than the manner lately accustomed ; for the use then was , substantially to expound the statutes by grounds and diversities ; as you shall find the reading still to run upon cases of like law and contrary ...
... less ostentation and more fruit than the manner lately accustomed ; for the use then was , substantially to expound the statutes by grounds and diversities ; as you shall find the reading still to run upon cases of like law and contrary ...
Side 47
... less aspired at maintaining the an- cient constitution than at establishing a new one , and a freer and a better .'- Hist . vol . 6 , p . 45. Oxford ed . learned extraordinary , an office which he had also held HIS LIFE AND WORKS . 47.
... less aspired at maintaining the an- cient constitution than at establishing a new one , and a freer and a better .'- Hist . vol . 6 , p . 45. Oxford ed . learned extraordinary , an office which he had also held HIS LIFE AND WORKS . 47.
Side 54
... less pleased with a piece from which they thought they could demonstrate , that the sagacity of modern genius had found out much better meanings for the ancients than ever were meant by them . ' * In August , 1610 , Bacon lost his accom ...
... less pleased with a piece from which they thought they could demonstrate , that the sagacity of modern genius had found out much better meanings for the ancients than ever were meant by them . ' * In August , 1610 , Bacon lost his accom ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
adds Advancement of Learning afterwards Albans ancient appears Aristotle Aubrey Ben Jonson Bishop Bodleian Library Buckingham called cause charge church common conceived confess and declare corruption court decree delivered desire determining notion discourse divine Dugald Stewart Elizabeth favour Galileo gism Gorhambury grace Gray's Inn hath Herschel honour hope House hundred pounds illustration Inductive Instauration judge judgment King king's king's counsel knowledge labour letter live logic lord Bacon lord Chancellor lord Chancellor Bacon lord Keeper lordship majesty majesty's matter ment mind natural philosophy never noble Novum Organum observed opinion Parliament persons Phil philo philoso principal published Queen Rawley Rawley's received remarks Robert Boyle Royal Society says Bacon servant sir James Mackintosh sir John speech syllogism things thought tion true truth twentieth article unto wherein whereof words writings York House