Then grew the flowing and watery vein of Osorius, the Portugal bishop, to be in price. Then did Sturmius spend such infinite and curious pains upon Cicero the orator and Hermogenes the rhetorician, besides his own books of periods and imitation and the... The Works of Francis Bacon - Page 27by Francis Bacon (visct. St. Albans.) - 1819Full view - About this book
| A.M.O. Dobbie - Religion - 1993 - 169 pages
...great orators of ancient Greece and Rome respectively. Bacon, Advancement of Learning I, 4, 2 wrote: 'Then did Car of Cambridge and Ascham with their lectures...and writings almost deify Cicero and Demosthenes.' they were written, and the subject matter which they deal with, in alphabetical order. Yet it is a... | |
| Francis Bacon, Rose-Mary Sargent - Philosophy - 1999 - 340 pages
...Then grew the flowing and watery vein of Osorius, the Portugal bishop, to be valued. Then did Sturmius spend such infinite and curious pains upon Cicero...books of periods and imitation and the like. Then did Carr of Cambridge, and Ascham, with their lectures and writings, almost deify Cicero and Demosthenes,... | |
| Wayne A. Rebhorn - European literature - 2000 - 340 pages
...grew the flowing and watery vein of Osorius, the Portugal bishop, to be in price. Then did Sturmius spend such infinite and curious pains upon Cicero...Hermogenes the rhetorician, besides his own books of periods42 and imitation and the like. Then did Carr of Cambridge, and Ascham, with their lectures and... | |
| Stanley Wells - Drama - 2002 - 284 pages
...considered the imitation of Cicero, 'the first distemper of learning, when men study words and not matter.' 'Then did Car of Cambridge and Ascham with their lectures...were studious unto that delicate and polished kind of learning.'25 Different values are at issue here: the elaborate versus the clear, the delicate versus... | |
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