The Works of Francis Bacon: Baron of Verulam, Viscount St. Albans, and Lord High Chancellor of England, Volume 1Baynes and son, 1824 |
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Page x
... virtue ; and a strong restraint on the most abandoned , in their career of vice . Whoever undertakes to write the life of any person , deserving to be remembered by posterity , ought to look upon this law as prescribed to him . He is ...
... virtue ; and a strong restraint on the most abandoned , in their career of vice . Whoever undertakes to write the life of any person , deserving to be remembered by posterity , ought to look upon this law as prescribed to him . He is ...
Page xviii
... virtue , private or public , to atone for them an open scof- fer at the obligations of morality , insolent , rapacious , sanguinary , hated by , and hating , all good men . The honester part of the nobility often remonstrated against ...
... virtue , private or public , to atone for them an open scof- fer at the obligations of morality , insolent , rapacious , sanguinary , hated by , and hating , all good men . The honester part of the nobility often remonstrated against ...
Page xxii
... virtue and human nature . Some of those gentlemen have acted at the bar as if they thought themselves , by the duty of their places , absolved from all the obligations of truth , honour , and decency . But their names are upon record ...
... virtue and human nature . Some of those gentlemen have acted at the bar as if they thought themselves , by the duty of their places , absolved from all the obligations of truth , honour , and decency . But their names are upon record ...
Page xxvi
... virtues that of a reasonable economy ? Had he done so , it had preserved him from one transcendent fault : and the other blemishes on his moral name had been lost in the brightness of his intellectual qualities . But he was remarkably ...
... virtues that of a reasonable economy ? Had he done so , it had preserved him from one transcendent fault : and the other blemishes on his moral name had been lost in the brightness of his intellectual qualities . But he was remarkably ...
Page li
... virtue . p . 263 . After a short confinement in the Tower , the king restored him to , his liberty , and forgave the fine in which the parliament had amerced him . As this fine was very considerable , he managed so as to have it ...
... virtue . p . 263 . After a short confinement in the Tower , the king restored him to , his liberty , and forgave the fine in which the parliament had amerced him . As this fine was very considerable , he managed so as to have it ...
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amongst ancient appeareth Aristotle Augustus Cæsar Bacon beasts better birds body Cæsar Callisthenes cause chiefly Cicero cold colour cometh conceive consort touching contrariwise deficient Demosthenes discourse divers divine doth doubt earth effect error excellent Experiment solitary touching Experiments in consort farther flame flowers former fortune fruit glass goeth greater ground handled hath heat herbs honour humours inquiry invention judgment juice Julius Cæsar kind king knowledge labour learning less light likewise living creatures maketh man's manner matter medicines men's ment mind moisture motion natural philosophy nourishment observed opinion particular plants Plato pleasure precept princes putrefaction quantity reason root saith sciences seed seemeth sense shew Sir Francis Bacon sort sound speak speech spirit of wine spirits string substance Tacitus things tion trees true truth unto verjuice virtue whereas whereby wherein whereof wine wisdom wood words worketh