Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
honor 7
honored 1
honors 3
hope 40
hoped 5
hopeful 1
hopes 4
Frequency    [«  »]
40 distance
40 find
40 good
40 hope
40 off
40 reason
40 something
Francis Bacon
The new Organon

IntraText - Concordances

hope

   Book, Aphorism
1 Pre | combination of forces — when they hope great things either from 2 Pre | speculations of mine, let him not hope that he can do it in passage 3 1, XIV | superstructure. Our only hope therefore lies in a true 4 1, XLIX | things, because they narrow hope; the deeper things of nature, 5 1, LXX | and sometimes are full of hope, sometimes are distracted; 6 1, LXXXV | alchemist nurses eternal hope and when the thing fails, 7 1, LXXXV | and supplies the rest in hope. Not but that the alchemists 8 1, LXXXVIII| disturbs the auguries of hope, but also cuts the sinews 9 1, XCII | aside the lighter breezes of hope, we must thoroughly sift 10 1, XCII | therefore to speak touching hope, especially as I am not 11 1, XCII | strongest means of inspiring hope will be to bring men to 12 1, XCII | which preparation to give hope is no unimportant part. 13 1, XCII | conjectures of mine which make hope in this matter reasonable, 14 1, XCIV | importance as an argument of hope; I mean that drawn from 15 1, XCIV | you would not have even a hope left you that further improvement 16 1, XCIV | your own errors, you may hope that by dismissing or correcting 17 1, XCIV | many arguments are there of hope for the time to come. And 18 1, XCVII | already said, there is no hope except in a new birth of 19 1, XCIX | there be good ground of hope for the further advance 20 1, XCIX | more than if a man should hope by force of memory to retain 21 1, XCIX | then, and then only, may we hope well of the sciences when 22 1, XCIX | induction that our chief hope lies.~CVI~But in establishing 23 1, XCIX | see the dawn of a solid hope.~CVII~And here also should 24 1, XCIX | stem. For without this the hope of progress will not be 25 1, XCIX | despair and the raising of hope through the dismissal or 26 1, XCIX | else there is to ground hope upon. And this consideration 27 1, XCIX | CIX~Another argument of hope may be drawn from this — 28 1, XCIX | taken as an argument of hope, namely, that there is a 29 1, XCIX | There is another ground of hope that must not be omitted. 30 1, XCIX | rather encourage him to hope. For the particular phenomena 31 1, XCIX | think that men may take some hope from my own example. And 32 1, XCIX | Lastly, even if the breath of hope which blows on us from that 33 1, XCIX | left unsaid, that there is hope enough and to spare, not 34 1, XCIX | an attempt. Neither can I hope to live to complete the 35 1, XCIX | to give more ground for hope than the primary one.~In 36 1, XCIX | themselves. For let no one hope to decide the question whether 37 1, XCIX | strike the sense, no one can hope to govern or change nature 38 1, XLVIII | off, there is very little hope of any new transformation 39 1, L | configurations we cannot hope for much from an inquiry 40 1, L | philosophy. Nor can we have much hope of discovering the consents


Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (V89) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2007. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License