The Advancement of LearningMacmillan, 1905 |
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Side 10
... humour , did Virgil , turning his pen to the advantage of his country , and the disadvantage 10 of his own profession , make a kind of separation between policy and government , and between arts and sciences , in the verses so much ...
... humour , did Virgil , turning his pen to the advantage of his country , and the disadvantage 10 of his own profession , make a kind of separation between policy and government , and between arts and sciences , in the verses so much ...
Side 14
... humour and pleasing conceits toward themselves ; or because it advanceth any other their ends . So that , as it is said of untrue valours , that some men's valours are in the eyes of them that look on ; so such men's industries are in ...
... humour and pleasing conceits toward themselves ; or because it advanceth any other their ends . So that , as it is said of untrue valours , that some men's valours are in the eyes of them that look on ; so such men's industries are in ...
Side 45
... humour , malignity , and pusillanimity , even amongst holy men ; in that he designed to obliterate and extinguish the memory of heathen antiquity and authors . But contrariwise , it was the Christian Church , which , amidst the THE ...
... humour , malignity , and pusillanimity , even amongst holy men ; in that he designed to obliterate and extinguish the memory of heathen antiquity and authors . But contrariwise , it was the Christian Church , which , amidst the THE ...
Side 50
... humour that was long before noted in Philip of Macedon ; who , when he would needs over - rule and put down an excellent musician in an argunient touching music , was well answered by him again , God forbid , sir , saith he , that your ...
... humour that was long before noted in Philip of Macedon ; who , when he would needs over - rule and put down an excellent musician in an argunient touching music , was well answered by him again , God forbid , sir , saith he , that your ...
Side 55
... humour of declaiming in any man's praises . Observe then the speech he used of Diogenes , and see if it tend not to the true state of one of the greatest questions of moral philosophy ; whether the enjoying of outward things , or the ...
... humour of declaiming in any man's praises . Observe then the speech he used of Diogenes , and see if it tend not to the true state of one of the greatest questions of moral philosophy ; whether the enjoying of outward things , or the ...
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acroamatic affections alchemy Alexander Alexander Severus ancient Anti-Cato Antoninus Aristippus Aristotle arts astrology authors Bacon means Bacon says Cæsar Callisthenes causes censure Christ Christian Church Cicero commandment Commodus conceit contemplation Demosthenes dignity Diogenes divine doctrines doth Emperor empire error Essay excellent express fortune give God's Greek H. B. COTTERILL hath heaven Heraclitus honour human humour judgment Julius Cæsar king knowledge labour Latin Latin translation ledge light literal sense lived man's manners Marcus matter men's MICHAEL MACMILLAN mind moral nature object observation opinion passage persons Philip of Macedon philosophy Plato pleasure Plutarch princes reason religion Roman Rome saith scholar Scholasticism Schoolmen Scriptures Sewed signify Socrates Solomon soul speech spirit style Tacitus theology things Thomas Aquinas tion traduced Trajan true truth unto virtue W. T. WEBB wherein whereof wisdom Xenophon