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.[Bracketed]AnnBacon153; E630| Nature taught to OstentationTXTBacon154; E630| OF SUSPICION TXTBacon154; E630| PAGE 154.Suspicions amongst thoughts are like bats amongstTXTBacon154; E630| birds, they ever fly by twilight; certainly they are to beTXTBacon154; E630| repressed, or, at the least, well guarded.AnnBacon154; E630| What is Suspition in one Man is Caution in Another & TruthAnnBacon154; E630| or Discernment in Another & in Some it is Folly.TXTBacon156; E630| OF DISCOURSETXTBacon156; E630| PAGE 156 Some in their discourse desire rather commendation ofTXTBacon156; E630| wit, in being able to hold all arguments, than of judgment, inTXTBacon156; E630| discerning what is true; as if it were a praise to know whatTXTBacon156; E630| might be said, and not what should be thought.AnnBacon156; E630| Surely the Man who wrote this never talked to any butAnnBacon156; E630| CoxcombsTXTBacon158; E630| PAGE 158 Discretion of speech is more than eloquence; andTXTBacon158; E630| to speak agreeably to him with whom we deal, is more than toTXTBacon158; E630| speak in good words, or in good order.AnnBacon158; E630| Bacon hated Talents of all Kinds Eloquence is discret[io]nAnnBacon158; E630| of SpeechTXTBacon169; E631| OF RICHESTXTBacon169; E631| PAGE 169 Be not penny-wise; riches have wings, and sometimesTXTBacon169; E631| they fly away of themselves, sometimes they must be set flying toTXTBacon169; E631| bring in more.AnnBacon169; E631| Bacon was always a poor Devil if History says true howAnnBacon169; E631| should one so foolish know about Riches Except Pretence to beAnnBacon169; E631| Rich if that is itTXTBacon182; E631| OF NATURE IN MENTXTBacon182; E631| PAGE 182 Neither is the ancient rule amiss, to bend nature as aTXTBacon182; E631| wand to a contrary extreme, whereby to set it right;TXTBacon182; E631| understanding it where the contrary extreme is no vice.AnnBacon182; E631| Very FoolishTXTBacon187; E631| OF FORTUNETXTBacon187; E631| PAGE 187 It cannot be denied but outward accidents conduce muchTXTBacon187; E631| to fortune; favour, opportunity, death of others, occasionTXTBacon187; E631| fitting virtue; but chiefly, the mould of a man's fortune is inTXTBacon187; E631| his own hands.AnnBacon187; E631| What is Fortune but an outward Accident for a few yearsAnnBacon187; E631| sixty at most & then gone TXTBacon190; E631| OF USURYTXTBacon190; E631| PAGE 190AnnBacon190; E631| Bacon was a UsurerTXTBacon191; E631| PAGE 191 The discommodities of usury are, first, that itTXTBacon191; E631| makes fewer merchants; for were it not for this lazy trade ofTXTBacon191; E631| usury, money would not lie still, but would in great part beTXTBacon191; E631| employed upon merchandizing.AnnBacon191; E631| A Lie it makes Merchants & nothing ElseTXTBacon192; E631| PAGE 192 On the other side, the commodities of usury areTXTBacon192; E631| first, that howsoever usury in some respect hinderethTXTBacon192; E631| merchandizing, yet in some other it advanceth it.AnnBacon192; E631| Commodities of Usury can it BeTXTBacon193; E631| PAGE 193 I remember a cruel monied man in the country, thatTXTBacon193; E631| would say, "The devil take this usury, it keeps us fromTXTBacon193; E631| forfeitures of mortgages and bonds".AnnBacon193; E631| It is not True what a Cruel Man saysTXTBacon193; E631| To speak now of the reformation and reglement of usury; howTXTBacon193; E631| the discommodities of it may be best avoided, and the commoditiesTXTBacon193; E631| retained.AnnBacon193; E631| Bacon is in his Element on Usury it is himself & hisAnnBacon193; E631| PhilosophyTXTBacon197; E631| OF YOUTH AND AGETXTBacon197; E631| PAGE 197 The errors of young men are the ruin of business; butTXTBacon197; E631| the errors of aged men amount but to this, that more might haveTXTBacon197; E631| been done, or sooner.AnnBacon197; E631| Bacons Business is not Intellect or ArtTXTBacon198; E631| PAGE 198.and age doth profit rather in the powers ofTXTBacon198; E631| understanding, than in the virtues of the will andTXTBacon198; E631| affections.AnnBacon198; E631| a LieTXTBacon199; E631| PAGE 199 There be some have an over-early ripeness in theirTXTBacon199; E631| years, which fadeth betimes: these are, first, such as haveTXTBacon199; E631| brittle wits, the edge whereof is soon turned; such as wasTXTBacon199; E631| Hermogenes the rhetorician, whose books are exceeding subtile, TXTBacon199; E631| who afterwards waxed stupid [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]

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