Obiter Dicta of Bacon and Shakespeare on Manners, Mind, Morals |
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Page 13
... vice ; but adversity doth best discover virtue . " - Ess . of Adversity . Comp .: " Though the camomile , the more it is trodden on the faster it grows , yet youth , the more it is wasted the sooner it wears . " - 1 Hen . IV . ii . 4 ...
... vice ; but adversity doth best discover virtue . " - Ess . of Adversity . Comp .: " Though the camomile , the more it is trodden on the faster it grows , yet youth , the more it is wasted the sooner it wears . " - 1 Hen . IV . ii . 4 ...
Page 32
... vice , or disease , of learning , . . . brancheth into two sorts : . . imposture and credulity . This facility of credit , or admitting things weakly authorised warranted , we see in ecclesiastical history , which hath too easily ...
... vice , or disease , of learning , . . . brancheth into two sorts : . . imposture and credulity . This facility of credit , or admitting things weakly authorised warranted , we see in ecclesiastical history , which hath too easily ...
Page 37
... vice like virtue's harbinger . " “ Poor I am , stale , a garment out of fashion ; I must be ripped to pieces . With me All good seeming shall be thought Put on for villainy , not born where't grows , But worn , a bait for ladies ...
... vice like virtue's harbinger . " “ Poor I am , stale , a garment out of fashion ; I must be ripped to pieces . With me All good seeming shall be thought Put on for villainy , not born where't grows , But worn , a bait for ladies ...
Page 40
... vice in him ( Tr . Cr . iv . 4 ) . The speakers , it will be observed , are all young . 3. With regard to the opinions of philosophers , it will be found that they all , in some way or another , connect the ideas of errors or faults in ...
... vice in him ( Tr . Cr . iv . 4 ) . The speakers , it will be observed , are all young . 3. With regard to the opinions of philosophers , it will be found that they all , in some way or another , connect the ideas of errors or faults in ...
Page 41
... vice so grafted , That when they shall be opened , black Macbeth Will seem as pure as snow ; and the poor state Esteem him as a lamb , by being compared With my confineless harms . . . I grant him bloody , Luxurious , avaricious , false ...
... vice so grafted , That when they shall be opened , black Macbeth Will seem as pure as snow ; and the poor state Esteem him as a lamb , by being compared With my confineless harms . . . I grant him bloody , Luxurious , avaricious , false ...
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OBITER DICTA OF BACON & SHAKES Francis 1561-1626 Bacon,William 1564-1616 Shakespeare,Henry Mrs Pott, 1833-1915 No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
Adagia Advt affection All's anger Antitheta art thou Bacon beauty behaviour better body Boldness Brutus Cæs Cæsar constancy contempt Coriolanus custom Cymb death deceives deformity devil discourse Dissimulation doth dreams Duke envy evil eyes fair false Falstaff fame fault fear fool fortune Francis Bacon friends Gent give grace grief hast hath heart Heaven honour humour Iago imagination John John iv judgment Julius Cæsar king knowledge Lady Lear Learning live look lord Love's Labour's Lost Macb man's men's mind Nature never noble observe Paracelsus play Polonius praise pride Prince Promus proud Rich scorn Shakespeare sick slander sophism soul speak speech sweet Temp thee There's things thou art thought tongue true truth Twelfth Night vice VIII virtue Winter's Tale wisdom wise woman words youth