Selections: With Essays by Macaulay & S. R. Gardinerat the Clarendon Press, 1958 - 192 páginas |
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Página 43
... contemplative and active part , I am desirous to give his Majesty and your Highness of the fruits of both , simple though they be . To write just treatises requireth leisure in the writer , and leisure in the reader , and therefore are ...
... contemplative and active part , I am desirous to give his Majesty and your Highness of the fruits of both , simple though they be . To write just treatises requireth leisure in the writer , and leisure in the reader , and therefore are ...
Página 125
... contemplative or active life , and decideth it against Aristotle . For all the reasons which he bringeth for the contemplative are private , and re- specting the pleasure and dignity of a man's self ( in which respects no question the ...
... contemplative or active life , and decideth it against Aristotle . For all the reasons which he bringeth for the contemplative are private , and re- specting the pleasure and dignity of a man's self ( in which respects no question the ...
Página 126
... contemplative and walked with God , yet did also endow the church with prophecy , which Saint Jude citeth . But for contemplation which should be finished in itself , with- Io out casting beams upon society , assuredly divinity knoweth ...
... contemplative and walked with God , yet did also endow the church with prophecy , which Saint Jude citeth . But for contemplation which should be finished in itself , with- Io out casting beams upon society , assuredly divinity knoweth ...
Contenido
From Macaulays Essay on Bacon | 1 |
From S R Gardiners Article on Bacon | 14 |
Personal Estimates | 31 |
Otras 12 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
abroad admiration affairs affections Aldis Wright amongst ancient Aristotle Atlantis Augustus Caesar Bacon better body Cicero civil commandment contemplative counsel counsellors custom death Demosthenes Dio Cassius divers divine doth duty earth Epictetus Essays Essex favour fortune Francis Bacon fruit give hath heaven Henry Henry VII honour human imagination inventor judgement kind king kingdom knowledge land learning light likewise Lord Lord Chamberlain maketh man's manner matter means men's ment mind moral motions mought nature never Novum Organum observations Ovid Pembroke Castle persons philosophy pleasure Plutarch politic Pompey princes profession reason religion rest Romans saith Salomon's House secrecy secret seemeth Sejanus Seneca Septimius Severus servants ships speech strange strangers Tacitus Themistocles things thought Tiberius tion touching Trajan true truth unto Vespasian virtue wherein whereof wise words ΙΟ