Of the Advancement of LearningJ.M. Dent, 1950 - 244 sider |
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Side 44
... princes , ( to keep still the law of brevity , by using the most eminent and selected examples , ) doth best appear in the age which passed from the death of Domitian the emperor until the reign of Commodus ; comprehending a succession ...
... princes , ( to keep still the law of brevity , by using the most eminent and selected examples , ) doth best appear in the age which passed from the death of Domitian the emperor until the reign of Commodus ; comprehending a succession ...
Side 47
... princes in those days , that they would have it as a perpetual addition in all the emperors ' style . In this emperor's time also the Church for the most part was in peace ; so as in this sequence of six princes we do see the blessed ...
... princes in those days , that they would have it as a perpetual addition in all the emperors ' style . In this emperor's time also the Church for the most part was in peace ; so as in this sequence of six princes we do see the blessed ...
Side 51
... princes , that they counsel their masters according to the model of their own mind and fortune , and not of their ... prince , howsoever transported with ambition , Henry Duke of Guise , of whom it was usually said , that he was the ...
... princes , that they counsel their masters according to the model of their own mind and fortune , and not of their ... prince , howsoever transported with ambition , Henry Duke of Guise , of whom it was usually said , that he was the ...
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according action Advancement of Learning affections Alexander amongst ancient Apophthegms Arist Aristotle Augm Augustus Cæsar Bacon better body Cæsar Callisthenes causes Cicero civil cometh conceit consisteth deficient Demosthenes discourse diversity divine doctrine doth doubt duty edition error excellent fable felicity fortune FRANCIS BACON handled hath honour human humour imagination inquiry invention judgment Julius Cæsar kind King knowledge labour Latin likewise Livy Majesty maketh man's manner matter medicine memory men's ment Metaphysique method mind moral natural philosophy natural theology nevertheless Novum Organum observe opinion Orat Ovid Paracelsus particular passage perfection persons Plato pleasure Plutarch poesy precept princes profession Prov quæ reason religion rhetoric saith Salomon sapience sciences Scriptures seemeth sense Socrates sophisms sort speak speech spirit Tacitus things tion touching true truth unto Virg virtue whereas wherein whereof whereunto wisdom wise words writing