SirFrancisBacon is an interesting and endearing fellow in many respects.
2
We have already noticed the cure recommended by the learned SirFrancisBacon.
3
To SirFrancisBacon "Hamlet" was presumably only a playactor's play.
4
In one of these plays Jean (three years old, perhaps) was SirFrancisBacon.
5
And that is considerable, which SirFrancisBacon observes in his History of Life and Death, fol.
6
Close, SirFrancisBacon.
7
"To SirFrancisBacon, with thanks for his Novum Organum."
8
Such among the Greeks were Plato and Aristotle; among the Romans, Virgil and Tully; among the English, Milton and SirFrancisBacon.
9
Neither of these peoples lacks the "stout and warlike" quality of which SirFrancisBacon spoke; both have often exhibited it.
10
"To SirFrancisBacon, on the same subject."
11
SirFrancisBacon, the Attorney-General-himselfto appear in the same place not long after to answer charges of bribery and corruption-nowaddressed the judges.
12
The same hath been taught by many, but no man better, and with greater brevity, than by that excellent learned gentleman, SirFrancisBacon.
13
"Isn't this how SirFrancisBacon died?"
14
Harvey was appointed to London's Saint Bartholomew's Hospital, and established a practice whose patients included King James I, King Charles I and SirFrancisBacon.
15
In England an impetus seems to have been given by SirFrancisBacon's writings in criticism and censure of the system of teaching in colleges.
16
It irritated Queen Elizabeth in the highest degree, and she clapped Hayward into prison and employed SirFrancisBacon to search his book for treason.