Bacon's Essays, 2. sējumsLongmans, Green and Company, 1882 |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 26.
25. lappuse
... pleasure . 5 I understand it that the song be in quire , placed aloft , and accompanied with some broken music , and the ditty fitted to the device . Acting in song , especially in dia- logues , hath an extreme good grace - I say acting ...
... pleasure . 5 I understand it that the song be in quire , placed aloft , and accompanied with some broken music , and the ditty fitted to the device . Acting in song , especially in dia- logues , hath an extreme good grace - I say acting ...
26. lappuse
... pleasure ; for they feed and relieve the eye before it be full of the same object . Let the scenes abound with light , especially coloured and varied ; and let the masquers , or any other that are to come down from the 25 scene , have ...
... pleasure ; for they feed and relieve the eye before it be full of the same object . Let the scenes abound with light , especially coloured and varied ; and let the masquers , or any other that are to come down from the 25 scene , have ...
48. lappuse
... pleasure despise ; and it layeth their com- petitors and emulators asleep , as never believing they should be in possibility of advancement , till they see them in possession . So that upon the matter , in a great wit , deformity is an ...
... pleasure despise ; and it layeth their com- petitors and emulators asleep , as never believing they should be in possibility of advancement , till they see them in possession . So that upon the matter , in a great wit , deformity is an ...
54. lappuse
... pleasures . It is the greatest re- freshment to the spirits of man , without which building and palaces are but gross handyworks : and a man shall ever see , that when ages grow to civility and elegancy , men come to build stately ...
... pleasures . It is the greatest re- freshment to the spirits of man , without which building and palaces are but gross handyworks : and a man shall ever see , that when ages grow to civility and elegancy , men come to build stately ...
56. lappuse
... pleasure when you walk or tread . For gardens ( speaking of those which are , indeed , prince - like , as we have ... pleasures ; the one , because nothing is more pleasant to the eye than green grass kept finely shorn ; the other ...
... pleasure when you walk or tread . For gardens ( speaking of those which are , indeed , prince - like , as we have ... pleasures ; the one , because nothing is more pleasant to the eye than green grass kept finely shorn ; the other ...
Citi izdevumi - Skatīt visu
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
action Æneid affection alleys amongst Antitheta Aristotle Atheism Bacon beauty better bold called cause Cicero Compare Coriolanus counsel court cunning custom danger death deformed derived Discourses Dissimulation doth Edition of 1612 envy Epicurus Essay xv Essay xxii fame favour favourite fortune Gentlemen of Verona give grace Grammar Hamlet hath haue hence Henry Henry VI Hist honour Introduction judge Julius Cæsar kind King Latin Latin translation likewise Macbeth Machiavelli maketh man's matter men's Merchant of Venice mind modern motion Nares nature ness North's Plutarch note on Essay one's opinion passage perhaps persons plantation pleasure Plutarch praise Primum Mobile princes quotes Religion reputation Richard II riches saith says sense side speak speech spirit suits suspicion Tacitus things thought tion true truth Twelfth Night usury virtue wherein wisdom wise word youth