The Works of Francis Bacon: Baron of Verulam, Viscount St. Alban, and Lord High Chancellor of England, Volume 1C. and J. Rivington, 1819 |
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Page v
... tion . 2. Fascination , W3327 127 , 129 180 , 131 The Doctrine of the Faculties of the Soul divided into , 1. Logics . 2. Ethics , The intellectual Arts are four , 1. The Art of Inquiry or Invention . 2. The Art of Examina- tion . 3 ...
... tion . 2. Fascination , W3327 127 , 129 180 , 131 The Doctrine of the Faculties of the Soul divided into , 1. Logics . 2. Ethics , The intellectual Arts are four , 1. The Art of Inquiry or Invention . 2. The Art of Examina- tion . 3 ...
Page xi
... tion and judgment beyond what is common to that early season of life . However that was , the am- bassador conceived a very favourable opinion of Bacon ; for he sent him over to the queen with a commission that required secrecy and ...
... tion and judgment beyond what is common to that early season of life . However that was , the am- bassador conceived a very favourable opinion of Bacon ; for he sent him over to the queen with a commission that required secrecy and ...
Page xi
... tion , than that of tracing the history of the human mind , if I may so express myself , in its progression from truth to truth , and from discovery to discovery ; the intelligent reader would doubtless have been pleased to see , in the ...
... tion , than that of tracing the history of the human mind , if I may so express myself , in its progression from truth to truth , and from discovery to discovery ; the intelligent reader would doubtless have been pleased to see , in the ...
Page xiii
... tion knows neither merit nor relation . This un- worthy treatment from so near a kinsman carried Bacon into very free expostulations on his courtly artifices , as he endeavoured in secret to crush the man whom yet he pretended openly to ...
... tion knows neither merit nor relation . This un- worthy treatment from so near a kinsman carried Bacon into very free expostulations on his courtly artifices , as he endeavoured in secret to crush the man whom yet he pretended openly to ...
Page xv
... tion , and , having confined him to his own house , ordered his conduct to be examined in the Star- Chamber . At this usage of him , however gracious and moderate , the people , whose idol he was , loudly exclaimed and their ...
... tion , and , having confined him to his own house , ordered his conduct to be examined in the Star- Chamber . At this usage of him , however gracious and moderate , the people , whose idol he was , loudly exclaimed and their ...
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