Francis Bacon: Bacon's lifeW. Blackwood, 1888 |
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Side 22
... favour- ite undermined favourite , relation slandered relation . Petty jealousies and hates were cloaked in obsequious terms . Suspicions , " among thoughts like bats amongst birds , " brooded about the thresholds of every noble ...
... favour- ite undermined favourite , relation slandered relation . Petty jealousies and hates were cloaked in obsequious terms . Suspicions , " among thoughts like bats amongst birds , " brooded about the thresholds of every noble ...
Side 24
... favour ; that the circumstances in which some of them were made - e.g . , in such post - mortem tributes as the ' In Felicem Memoriam ' -exclude mer- cenary motives . The assertion , when well grounded , but shifts the charge from moral ...
... favour ; that the circumstances in which some of them were made - e.g . , in such post - mortem tributes as the ' In Felicem Memoriam ' -exclude mer- cenary motives . The assertion , when well grounded , but shifts the charge from moral ...
Side 49
... favour , to play over again with Elizabeth the same dangerous game of provocation and reconciliation which he had so often played successfully . He had taken offence at the promotion during his absence of Sir Robert Cecil and the Lord ...
... favour , to play over again with Elizabeth the same dangerous game of provocation and reconciliation which he had so often played successfully . He had taken offence at the promotion during his absence of Sir Robert Cecil and the Lord ...
Side 50
... favour , was exposed to odium as an agent in his disgrace ; but there is no evidence for Dr Abbott's suggestion that he was pleading on his friend's behalf with a view to refusal . The Earl's Return . 51 finement to the people , 50 ...
... favour , was exposed to odium as an agent in his disgrace ; but there is no evidence for Dr Abbott's suggestion that he was pleading on his friend's behalf with a view to refusal . The Earl's Return . 51 finement to the people , 50 ...
Side 54
... un- published revelations afterwards brought to light , is a discrepancy of date in favour of a more lenient view of the traitor's guilt . No amount of scepticism The Confessions of Conspiracy . 55 will get us out 54 Francis Bacon .
... un- published revelations afterwards brought to light , is a discrepancy of date in favour of a more lenient view of the traitor's guilt . No amount of scepticism The Confessions of Conspiracy . 55 will get us out 54 Francis Bacon .
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
Addled Parliament advice affairs afterwards Alice Barnham appears Bacon Ben Jonson Buckingham called career Cecil century Chancellor character Church Coke Commons confession Council Court courtier Crown Dean Church death doubt Earl Elizabeth Elizabethan England English Essays Essex favour favourite FRANCIS BACON friends Gorhambury Government grant Gray's Inn hath honour House Ireland James judges Julius Cæsar justice King King's Lady later letter Lord Keeper Lord Salisbury lordship Majesty marriage matter ment mind monopolies nature never Novum Organum offence Organum P.-XIII Parliament party person philosophical political popular practical prerogative Privy Professor protest Puritan Queen question Raleigh reform regard reign relation royal seemed sentence side Sir Walter Raleigh sovereign Spain Spedding speech spirit Star Chamber suggestions suitors things thought tion Toby Matthews treason trial Villiers whole Winwood writing wrote Yelverton York House
Populære passager
Side 36 - No man ever spake more neatly, more pressly, more weightily, or suffered less emptiness, less idleness, in what he uttered. No member of his speech but consisted of his own graces. His hearers could not cough, or look aside from him, without loss. He commanded where he spoke; and had his judges angry and pleased at his devotion.
Side 171 - Nay, retire men cannot when they would, neither will they when it were reason ; but are impatient of privateness, even in age and sickness, which require the shadow; like old townsmen, that will be still sitting at their street door, though thereby they offer age to scorn.
Side 167 - ... the kings and princes of the world have always laid before them the actions, but not the ends, of those great ones which preceded them. They are always transported with the glory of the one, but they never mind the misery of the other, till they find the experience in themselves.
Side 167 - That he shall for ever be incapable of any office, place, or employment in the state or commonwealth. " 4. That he shall never sit in parliament, nor come within the verge of the court.
Side 171 - Men in great place are thrice servants: servants of the sovereign or state; servants of fame; and servants of business. So as they have no freedom; neither in their persons, nor in their actions, nor in their times. It is a strange desire, to seek power and to lose liberty; or to seek power over others and to lose power over a man's self.
Side 177 - I have been induced to think, that if there were a beam of knowledge derived from God upon any man in these modern times, it was upon him. For though he was a great reader of books, yet he had not his knowledge from books, but from some grounds and notions from within himself; which, notwithstanding, he vented with great caution and circumspection.
Side 177 - I myself have seen at the least twelve copies of the Instauration, revised year by year one after another, and every year altered and amended in the frame thereof, till at last it came to that model in which it was committed to the press ; as many living creatures do lick their young ones, till they bring them to their strength of limbs.
Side 58 - Mr Bacon, if you have any tooth against me pluck it out ; for it will do you more hurt than all the teeth in your head will do you good.
Side 18 - ... the last quarter of the sixteenth, and the first quarter of the seventeenth century; and which, though commonly called the age of Elizabeth, comprehends many writers belonging to the reign of her successor.
Side 135 - Judges ought to remember that their office is jus dicere not jus dare ; to interpret law, and not to make law, or give law.