I beheld the distinct, individual, and, to all sense of sight, substantial form, . .the living, moving, reasonable image, . . . in that self-same instant it was gone, as if exemplifying the difference between to be and not to be. It was no dream, of this... Sir Thomas More, Or, Colloquies on the Progress and Prospects of Society - Page 24by Robert Southey - 1829 - 868 pagesFull view - About this book
| Francis Bacon (visct. St. Albans.) - 1819 - 616 pages
...his children, there is little particular memory : only thus much remaineth, that he was very studious and learned, beyond his years, and beyond the custom of great Princes. There was a doubt ripped up in the times following, when the divorce of King Henry the eighth from... | |
| Francis Bacon - 1819 - 616 pages
...his children, there is little particular memory : only thus much remaineth, that he was very studious and learned, beyond his years, and beyond the custom of great Princes. There was a doubt ripped up in the times following, when the divorce of King Henry the eighth from... | |
| Francis Bacon - 1824 - 624 pages
...his children, there is little particular memory: only thus much remaineth, that he was very studious and learned, beyond his years, and beyond the custom of great princes. the lady, was the third part of the principality of Wales, and of the dukedom of Cornwall, and of the... | |
| Francis Bacon - 1825 - 546 pages
...his children, there is little particular memory : only thus much remaineth, that he was very studious and learned, beyond his years, and beyond the custom of great princes. There was a doubt ripped up in the times following, when the divorce of King Henry the Eighth from... | |
| Francis Bacon, Basil Montagu - 1825 - 540 pages
...hu children, there is little particular memory : only thus much remaineth, that he was very studious and learned, beyond his years, and beyond the custom of great princes. There was a doubt ripped up in the times following, when the divorce of King Henry the Eighth from... | |
| Robert Southey - 1829 - 456 pages
...of the rainbow fade gradually till they are lost ; not to the flash of cannon, or to lightning, for these things are gone as soon as they are come, and...him, was lustful, cruel, and unfeeling. SIR THOMAS MORE. The blood of the Plantagenets, as your friends the Spaniards would say, was a strong blood. That... | |
| Robert Southey - 1829 - 452 pages
...of the rainbow fade gradually till they are lost; not to the flash of cannon, or to lightning, for these things are gone as soon as they are come, and...him, was lustful, cruel, and unfeeling. SIR THOMAS MORE. The blood of the Plantagenets, as your friends the Spaniards would say, was a strong blood. That... | |
| Robert Southey - 1829 - 456 pages
...reveries in which we speculate upon what might have been. Lord Bacon describes him as " very studious, ' and learned beyond his years, and beyond the custom...and, like him, was lustful, cruel, and unfeeling. ", » ' .. ., i ' , ' - . -'. -u « ',"<* ,,'•' -'"1' *',' ,*'»»'» , SIR THOMAS MORE. . t V i... | |
| Robert Southey - 1831 - 450 pages
...distinct, individual, and, to all sense of sight, substantial form,.. the living, moving, reasbnable image,... in that self-same instant it was gone, as...him, was lustful, cruel, and unfeeling. SIR THOMAS MORE. The blood of the Plantagenets, as your friends the Spaniards would say, was a strong blood. That... | |
| Thomas Christopher Banks - 1837 - 684 pages
...Shropshire, 2nd of April, 1502, without issue. Lord Bacon says of him, " that he was very studious and learned beyond his years, and beyond the custom of great princes. " He lies buried in a chapel on the south side the choir in Worcester cathedral, with the following... | |
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