The Promus of Formularies and Elegancies: (being Private Notes, Circ. 1594, Hitherto Unpublished) by Francis Bacon, Illustrated and Elucidated by Passages from ShakespeareHoughton, Mifflin, & Company, 1883 - 628 pages |
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Page ix
... tell us to how many of these experiments we are indebted for words now current in our language . Many interesting philological or literary questions will be raised by the publication of the Promus . The phrase ' Good - dawning , ' for ...
... tell us to how many of these experiments we are indebted for words now current in our language . Many interesting philological or literary questions will be raised by the publication of the Promus . The phrase ' Good - dawning , ' for ...
Page 28
... Tell a lie and find a truth , and worked up in the plays into various forms . ( See f . 95 , 625. ) Todos los duelos con pan son buenos ' is quoted in a letter to the King ( 1623 ) . It does not appear elsewhere . These ( and No. 145 of ...
... Tell a lie and find a truth , and worked up in the plays into various forms . ( See f . 95 , 625. ) Todos los duelos con pan son buenos ' is quoted in a letter to the King ( 1623 ) . It does not appear elsewhere . These ( and No. 145 of ...
Page 72
... tell what work the indefatigable student produced during those months , for that he knows of none whose date corresponds with the period . Perhaps it was at such a time that Bacon took recreation in the form in which he recommended it ...
... tell what work the indefatigable student produced during those months , for that he knows of none whose date corresponds with the period . Perhaps it was at such a time that Bacon took recreation in the form in which he recommended it ...
Page 95
... tell , good sir , for which of his virtues it was , but he was certainly whipped out of court . His vices you would say - there's not virtue whipped out of court . ( W. T. iv . 3. ) Fool . I marvel , what kin thou and thy daughter are ...
... tell , good sir , for which of his virtues it was , but he was certainly whipped out of court . His vices you would say - there's not virtue whipped out of court . ( W. T. iv . 3. ) Fool . I marvel , what kin thou and thy daughter are ...
Page 105
... tell you ' tis rigour and not law . ( W. T. iii . 1. ) Justice , sweet prince , against that woman there ! . . . that hath abused and dishonoured me , even in the strength and height of injury . ( Com . Er . v . 1. ) This is the very ...
... tell you ' tis rigour and not law . ( W. T. iii . 1. ) Justice , sweet prince , against that woman there ! . . . that hath abused and dishonoured me , even in the strength and height of injury . ( Com . Er . v . 1. ) This is the very ...
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Common terms and phrases
Adagia Advt All's All's W Bacon bear Ben Jonson better Cæs Cæsar Collier's text Compare Cymb death discourse dost doth ears entry Eras Essay evil eyes fear Folio fool fortune Francis Bacon friends give Good-morrow grace grief hath hear heart heaven honour John judgment King Kins L. L. L. iv Latin Lear lord Lucrece M. M. ii Macb mind nature never night noble Noble Kinsmen Ovid passages plays Promus notes proverbs quæ quod Quoted Rich Romeo and Juliet seems Shakespeare sleep Sonnet soul speak Spedding speech sweet tell Temp thee there's thine things thou art thou hast thought tongue truth turns of expression VIII Virg virtue Vulgate words writings