| Francis Bacon - 1868 - 440 pages
...argument, I must speak to you as Friar Bacon's head spake, that said first, Time is, and then Time wast, and Time would never be : for certainly (said I) it is now far too late, the matter is cold and hath tnkeii too much wind ; whereat she seemed again offended and rose from me, and that resolution for... | |
| Christopher Marlowe, Sir Adolphus William Ward - 1901 - 506 pages
...argument, I must speak to yon as Friar Bacon's head spake, that said first, Time is, and then Tina was, and Time would never be \ for certainly (said I) it...the matter is cold and hath taken too much wind.' It was certainly a maxim that Queen Elizabeth needed being reminded of on many occasions, which Bacon... | |
| Francis Bacon - 1844 - 586 pages
...argument, I must speak to you as Friar Bacon's head spake, that said first, Time is, and then Time was, srrijge, is the case much amended, as it ought to...haunting of those dissolute places, or resort to co ; an<i after, in the beginning of Midsummer term, I attending her, and finding her settled in that... | |
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