Edmund Spenser and the Impersonations of Francis Bacon |
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Page 115
... living spirit , though it governs them and has some agreement with them , is very different from them , being integral and self- subsisting . " " The lifeless spirits are nearly of the same substance as the air ; the vital spirits more ...
... living spirit , though it governs them and has some agreement with them , is very different from them , being integral and self- subsisting . " " The lifeless spirits are nearly of the same substance as the air ; the vital spirits more ...
Page 117
... living creatures , they call them souls . And such superficial speculations they have . . . . Neither is this a question of words , but infinitely material in nature . For spirits are nothing else but a natural body , rarified to a ...
... living creatures , they call them souls . And such superficial speculations they have . . . . Neither is this a question of words , but infinitely material in nature . For spirits are nothing else but a natural body , rarified to a ...
Page 157
... living at the time , and that the writer was prevented from using the name , and therefore published the book anonymously . The fact that the book begins and ends with a personal address to the Queen , and that the printer pretends that ...
... living at the time , and that the writer was prevented from using the name , and therefore published the book anonymously . The fact that the book begins and ends with a personal address to the Queen , and that the printer pretends that ...
Other editions - View all
Edmund Spenser and the Impersonations of Francis Bacon Edward George Harman No preview available - 2012 |
Edmund Spenser: And the Impersonations of Francis Bacon (Classic Reprint) Edward George Harman No preview available - 2015 |
Common terms and phrases
alluded allusion appears Aristotle Arthegal Astrophel Astrophel and Stella Belphoebe Burghley Canto Cecil Chapter character Court death dedication delight Discourse doth doubt Dyve Earl of Essex edition England English evidence example expression Faerie Queene favour foorth Francis Bacon Gabriel Harvey Gascoigne Gascoigne's Gilbert hand hath haue honour Ibid Ireland Irish King knight Lady learning Leicester letter lines Lord Grey Majesty matter means mind Muses nature opinion passage Penelope Devereux person Philip Sidney piece play poem Poesie poet poetry Prince probably published Queen Elizabeth Ralegh reader reason reference regard seems selfe Shakespeare Shepheards Shepheards Calender shew Sidney's Sir Philip Sidney Sir Walter Ralegh sonnets soul Spedding Spenser spirit stanza Stella style sundry supposed sweet thee thereof theyr things thou thought tion treatise unto verse vertue words writer written youth