The Moral and Historical Works of Lord Bacon: Including His Essays, Apophthegms, Wisdom of the Ancients, New Atlantis, and Life of Henry the SeventhG. Bell, 1905 - 504 من الصفحات |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-5 من 43
الصفحة xiv
... doubt that Bacon , like many other great men , inherited a large portion of his abilities from his mother , and that she , as the lord - keeper's time was absorbed by more pressing duties , mostly contributed to fashion the infant ...
... doubt that Bacon , like many other great men , inherited a large portion of his abilities from his mother , and that she , as the lord - keeper's time was absorbed by more pressing duties , mostly contributed to fashion the infant ...
الصفحة xxvi
... doubt that Bacon would have climbed back to the woolsack . But a year sufficed to push James off the scene , and when parliament met to hail the advent of a new monarch , Bacon was too enfeebled by premature decay to attend the royal ...
... doubt that Bacon would have climbed back to the woolsack . But a year sufficed to push James off the scene , and when parliament met to hail the advent of a new monarch , Bacon was too enfeebled by premature decay to attend the royal ...
الصفحة xxvii
... doubt may be entertained as to the fidelity of even the leading features . Bacon was invested with mighty intellectual endowments , which struggled to find vent as much by impressing themselves on his own age as by overturning the ...
... doubt may be entertained as to the fidelity of even the leading features . Bacon was invested with mighty intellectual endowments , which struggled to find vent as much by impressing themselves on his own age as by overturning the ...
الصفحة xxviii
... doubt that he made notes of everything important that he read , and distributed his papers under the several heads of human knowledge . No author , however , was less indebted to books for his general views than Bacon , and he seems ...
... doubt that he made notes of everything important that he read , and distributed his papers under the several heads of human knowledge . No author , however , was less indebted to books for his general views than Bacon , and he seems ...
الصفحة xxxiv
... doubt not that , as these pheno- mena relate more particularly to terrestrial objects , they are big with results destined to enlarge man's power over nature , and to lay bare many secrets which veil the confines of the spiritual world ...
... doubt not that , as these pheno- mena relate more particularly to terrestrial objects , they are big with results destined to enlarge man's power over nature , and to lay bare many secrets which veil the confines of the spiritual world ...
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
actions affection alludes ambassadors amongst ancient answered arts atheism Augustus Cæsar Bacon better body Britain Cæsar called cause commonly council counsel counsellors court crown danger death desire divers divine doth duke duke of Britain duke of York earl Edited Edward England envy Epicurus fable fame father favour fear Ferdinando Flanders fortune France French king friends give hand hath honour house of York human judgment Julius Cæsar Jupiter kind King Henry king of Scotland king's kingdom Lady Lambert Simnel land likewise Lord Lord Bacon maketh man's manner marriage matter Maximilian means men's mind nature never nobility noble parliament peace Perkin persons philosopher pleasure Pompey princes queen reign religion saith secret servants side Spain speak speech Tacitus thereof things thou thought tion Translated true unto usury virtue vols wherein wise