The Works of Francis Bacon ...J. Cundee, 1802 |
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Seite 48
... reprehended severely a young man for entering into a dissolute house . The young man said to him ; why do you reprehend so sharply for so small a matter ? Plato replied , but custom is no small matter . 169. Archidamus , king of ...
... reprehended severely a young man for entering into a dissolute house . The young man said to him ; why do you reprehend so sharply for so small a matter ? Plato replied , but custom is no small matter . 169. Archidamus , king of ...
Seite 103
... reprehended or encountred , by im- puting to all excellencies in compositions a kind of poverty , or at least a casualty or jeopardy ; for from that which is excellent in greatness , some- what may be taken , or there may be a decay ...
... reprehended or encountred , by im- puting to all excellencies in compositions a kind of poverty , or at least a casualty or jeopardy ; for from that which is excellent in greatness , some- what may be taken , or there may be a decay ...
Seite 113
... reprehended also in respect of that notion , corruptio unius generatio alterius : so that gradus privationis is many times less matter , because it gives the cause and motive to some new course . As when Demosthenes reprehended the ...
... reprehended also in respect of that notion , corruptio unius generatio alterius : so that gradus privationis is many times less matter , because it gives the cause and motive to some new course . As when Demosthenes reprehended the ...
Seite 114
... reprehended , in respect that the degree of decrease is more sensi- tive than the degree of privation , for in the mind of man gradus diminutionis may work a waver- ing between hope and fear , and so keep the mind in suspence , from ...
... reprehended , in respect that the degree of decrease is more sensi- tive than the degree of privation , for in the mind of man gradus diminutionis may work a waver- ing between hope and fear , and so keep the mind in suspence , from ...
Seite 115
... reprehension of this colour is in respect of defatigation , which makes perseverance of greater dignity than incep ... reprehended in such things , which have a natural course and inclination , con- trary to an inception . So that the ...
... reprehension of this colour is in respect of defatigation , which makes perseverance of greater dignity than incep ... reprehended in such things , which have a natural course and inclination , con- trary to an inception . So that the ...
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Æsop amongst answered Aristippus asked Augustus Cæsar Bensalem Bettenham better body Cæsar Cato the elder cause chamber Cicero Cold maketh colour cometh conceived countries death desire Diogenes divers divine doth earth evil excellent executors father fortune forty pounds gave give glory gold greater hand hath heat heaven holy honour hundred pounds invention inventor Julius Cæsar kind king knoweth knowledge labour land light likewise live lord Lord Bacon lordship majesty man's matter means memory mind natural philosophy never Phocion Plato Pompey pray Queen Elizabeth quod reprehended rich saith seemeth servant shew ship sick Sir Francis Bacon sir John Constable Sir Thomas sir Thomas Crewe Solomon's house soul speech stood strangers sun-beams thee Themistocles ther things thou thought Tirsan twenty pounds unto Vespasian virtue whereas wherein whereof Whereupon wise wont to say