Character of Lord Bacon: His Life and WorksMaxwell, 1835 - 367 sider |
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Side 22
... pioneer in that mine of truth , which , he said , lay so deep .'- Bacon's Works , vol . 12 , p . 6 . * Letter to lord Burleigh , vol . 12 , pp . 5 , 6 . sought for office , he adds , because I see 22 CHARACTER OF LORD BACON :
... pioneer in that mine of truth , which , he said , lay so deep .'- Bacon's Works , vol . 12 , p . 6 . * Letter to lord Burleigh , vol . 12 , pp . 5 , 6 . sought for office , he adds , because I see 22 CHARACTER OF LORD BACON :
Side 26
... truth seems to be , that he hesitated to give to the world what he himself considered an un- finished work . In his proposition to king James , for compiling and amending the law , he speaks of a treatise de regulis juris , ' as of all ...
... truth seems to be , that he hesitated to give to the world what he himself considered an un- finished work . In his proposition to king James , for compiling and amending the law , he speaks of a treatise de regulis juris , ' as of all ...
Side 38
... truth is , the people , strongly attached to Essex , who was endowed with many noble and popular virtues , falsely imagined that Bacon had urged on the ruin of the fallen favourite ; whereas , as it now appears , he Bacon's Works , vol ...
... truth is , the people , strongly attached to Essex , who was endowed with many noble and popular virtues , falsely imagined that Bacon had urged on the ruin of the fallen favourite ; whereas , as it now appears , he Bacon's Works , vol ...
Side 39
... truth of history , to allow the principles or prejudices of party to pre- dominate over the mind of the historian ; mach serveth me not to maintain , one and the same conscience of duty guiding and fortifying me But the untruth of this ...
... truth of history , to allow the principles or prejudices of party to pre- dominate over the mind of the historian ; mach serveth me not to maintain , one and the same conscience of duty guiding and fortifying me But the untruth of this ...
Side 53
... truths , contem- plated , as he supposes , by the original authors of them , but concealed from the common eye . Perhaps it will be thought by the judicious reader , that Bacon often accepts his own reflections for those of another ...
... truths , contem- plated , as he supposes , by the original authors of them , but concealed from the common eye . Perhaps it will be thought by the judicious reader , that Bacon often accepts his own reflections for those of another ...
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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