The Works of Francis Bacon, Volume 9Hurd and Houghton, 1872 |
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Page 16
... honour of humanity , if a collec- tion were made of what the schoolmen call the ultimi- ties , and Pindar the tops or summits , of human nature , especially from true history ; showing what is the ulti- mate and highest point which ...
... honour of humanity , if a collec- tion were made of what the schoolmen call the ultimi- ties , and Pindar the tops or summits , of human nature , especially from true history ; showing what is the ulti- mate and highest point which ...
Page 23
... honour accrues to medicine from the works of our Saviour , who was the physician both of soul and body ; and as he made the soul the peculiar object of 1 Tac . Ann . xvi . 18 . his heavenly doctrine , so he made the body the THE FOURTH ...
... honour accrues to medicine from the works of our Saviour , who was the physician both of soul and body ; and as he made the soul the peculiar object of 1 Tac . Ann . xvi . 18 . his heavenly doctrine , so he made the body the THE FOURTH ...
Page 24
... honours or money ( except that one , for giving tribute money to Cæsar ) , but only with respect to the body of man , for the preservation , support , or healing thereof . For This subject of medicine ( namely man's body ) is of all ...
... honours or money ( except that one , for giving tribute money to Cæsar ) , but only with respect to the body of man , for the preservation , support , or healing thereof . For This subject of medicine ( namely man's body ) is of all ...
Page 26
... honoured or disgraced accord- ing to the event ; - a most unfair way of judging . For who can know , if a patient die or recover , or if a state be preserved or ruined , whether it be art or ac- cident ? And therefore many times the ...
... honoured or disgraced accord- ing to the event ; - a most unfair way of judging . For who can know , if a patient die or recover , or if a state be preserved or ruined , whether it be art or ac- cident ? And therefore many times the ...
Page 39
... honoured only for necessity ; but for a gift to men — of earthly gifts perhaps the greatest — of which , next to God , they may become the dispensers and administrators . For although to a Christian mak- ing for the Land of Promise the ...
... honoured only for necessity ; but for a gift to men — of earthly gifts perhaps the greatest — of which , next to God , they may become the dispensers and administrators . For although to a Christian mak- ing for the Land of Promise the ...
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Common terms and phrases
according Æsop ancient APHORISM appear Arist Aristotle Augustus Cæsar better body bowsprit Cæsar called cause cerning Cicero clouds common contrary deficient Demosthenes desiderata diligence discourse diseases divine Division doctrine concerning earth east evil example excellent experience former fortune greater handled heat heaven History honour human inquiry invention judge judgment Julius Cæsar kind king knowledge labour learned less likewise Livy mainsail manner matter means medicine men's ment method mind moral motion namely nature north wind observed opinion Organon Ovid particular pass periodical winds Peru philosophy physicians Plato Pliny Plut Plutarch Pompey praise precepts prince principal Prov PROVERB rain reason received rise rule sails sciences sometimes soul south wind speak spirit syllogism Tacitus things thought tion touching true truth vapours Virg virtue whence whereas Wherefore wherein whereof wind blows wisdom wise words