The National Quarterly Review, Volume 2,Nummer 3Pudney & Russell, 1860 |
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Pagina 2
... less true , however , that the Baconian philosophy gets credit for much more than it has accomplished . Both its ad- vantages and its errors are greatly exaggerated ; but the latter much more than the former . After making all due ...
... less true , however , that the Baconian philosophy gets credit for much more than it has accomplished . Both its ad- vantages and its errors are greatly exaggerated ; but the latter much more than the former . After making all due ...
Pagina 5
... less distinction than the son of the late Lord Chancellor , he turned his attention to the law ; not that he had any taste for its dry technicalities ; but that he was ambitious to realize , if possible , the hope which the Queen seemed ...
... less distinction than the son of the late Lord Chancellor , he turned his attention to the law ; not that he had any taste for its dry technicalities ; but that he was ambitious to realize , if possible , the hope which the Queen seemed ...
Pagina 6
... less in all things except law , which they thought he was too specu- lative to master in such a manner as was necessary to secure \ distinction either at the bar or on the bench . It had been well for the world , and the cause of ...
... less in all things except law , which they thought he was too specu- lative to master in such a manner as was necessary to secure \ distinction either at the bar or on the bench . It had been well for the world , and the cause of ...
Pagina 10
... less to blame when he injures a former friend than one who suffers himself to be made a tool to carry out the resentment of others . There is no reason to suppose that Bacon felt any ill - will towards Essex . He was not a person to ...
... less to blame when he injures a former friend than one who suffers himself to be made a tool to carry out the resentment of others . There is no reason to suppose that Bacon felt any ill - will towards Essex . He was not a person to ...
Pagina 15
... less officer of Alexander , is as well attested as any crime laid to the charge of Bacon . * If Seneca was not as vicious as his pupil Nero , we know that he was unscrupulous enough to attempt a justification of incest and matricide ...
... less officer of Alexander , is as well attested as any crime laid to the charge of Bacon . * If Seneca was not as vicious as his pupil Nero , we know that he was unscrupulous enough to attempt a justification of incest and matricide ...
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The National Quarterly Review, Volume 4 Edward Isidore Sears,David Allyn Gorton,Charles H. Woodman Volledige weergave - 1862 |
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