Bacon's EssaysUniversity Press, 1897 - 302 |
Z wnętrza książki
Wyniki 1 - 5 z 67
Strona v
... thought , and of the allusions . With regard to Bacon's language , Mr Reynolds says that ' almost every page of the Essays bristles with difficulties , some of them the more likely to mislead because even careful reader , not familiar ...
... thought , and of the allusions . With regard to Bacon's language , Mr Reynolds says that ' almost every page of the Essays bristles with difficulties , some of them the more likely to mislead because even careful reader , not familiar ...
Strona vi
... thought remains obscure . Sometimes the relevance of a remark is not obvious : sometimes the terseness of a sentence conceals its drift . In such cases an explanation or a paraphrase is given in the Notes . Lastly , though obscurities ...
... thought remains obscure . Sometimes the relevance of a remark is not obvious : sometimes the terseness of a sentence conceals its drift . In such cases an explanation or a paraphrase is given in the Notes . Lastly , though obscurities ...
Strona viii
... thought with fact , and afterwards for the virtue of truthfulness , which is quite a different matter . ' Envy ' is used to denote , not only what we commonly understand by the name , but also malevo- lence and popular discontent ...
... thought with fact , and afterwards for the virtue of truthfulness , which is quite a different matter . ' Envy ' is used to denote , not only what we commonly understand by the name , but also malevo- lence and popular discontent ...
Strona xii
... thought with fact , and afterwards for the virtue of truthfulness , which is quite a different matter . ' Envy ' is used to denote , not only what we commonly understand by the name , but also malevo- lence and popular discontent ...
... thought with fact , and afterwards for the virtue of truthfulness , which is quite a different matter . ' Envy ' is used to denote , not only what we commonly understand by the name , but also malevo- lence and popular discontent ...
Strona xiii
... thoughts which have occurred to me ; weigh them well , and take them or leave them1 His expressions are often obscure . Perhaps the obscurity was sometimes intentional . At any rate the fault was of old standing . His mother forwards to ...
... thoughts which have occurred to me ; weigh them well , and take them or leave them1 His expressions are often obscure . Perhaps the obscurity was sometimes intentional . At any rate the fault was of old standing . His mother forwards to ...
Inne wydania - Wyświetl wszystko
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
¹³ Actions Æneid Alleys amongst Atheisme Augustus Cæsar Bacon Bacon's Essays better Businesse Cæsar cause certainly Church Cicero commonly corrupt Counsell Court Cunning Custome danger death Dio Cassius Discourse doth Dr Abbott Epicurus Epist Estate Faire Fame farre favour Fortune Frend Frendship Galba Garden generall Greatnesse Ground hath Henry Henry VII himselfe Honour Iudge Iudgement Iustice Kings Latin Latin Version likewise Lives Love maketh Man's Selfe Matter meaning Men's Merchant Minde Naturall Nature never noun Number Opinion Persons Pertinax Philip of Macedon Place Plutarch Poets Pompey Princes Prophecies Proverbs Publique Envy Publius Syrus quoted Religion Reynolds Riches Roman Rome saith Seditions Sejanus Seneca sense Servants severall Shakespeare shew Side speake Speech subiect Suetonius Sunne Tacitus Themistocles thereof Therfore Things thinke thou thought Tiberius tion true Unity unto Usury Vertue Vespasian Vitellius Vulgate Warre wise Wisedome word