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| Alphabetical [« »] fairly 3 faith 12 faithful 3 fall 23 fallacies 1 fallacious 3 fallen 2 | Frequency [« »] 23 effects 23 enough 23 errors 23 fall 23 hardly 23 rare 23 remain | Francis Bacon The new Organon IntraText - Concordances fall |
Book, Aphorism
1 1, LX | variety of subjects that fall within the range of the 2 1, LXVI | recover themselves, and fall back to their old volume 3 1, LXX | only from things as they fall out, they fetch a wide circuit 4 1, LXXV | in their more sober moods fall to complaints of the subtlety 5 1, XCIX | subtle causes, which do not fall under popular judgment and 6 1, XCIX | without any other art, to fall into my form of interpretation. 7 1, XII | let the rays of the moon fall through a burning glass 8 1, XII | somewhat warm when they fall. Air in motion, however, 9 1, XX | in intense frosts nails fall out from walls, brazen vessels 10 1, XXV | enough to follow, then they fall in round drops, which is 11 1, XXVI | third, it must be words that fall into the verse; and thus 12 1, XXXV | the earth itself and not fall unless thrust down. But 13 1, XXXVI | with rivers, which rise and fall on both banks at the same 14 1, XXXVI | consent therewith, and then fall back again. Let us now dismiss 15 1, XXXVI | the rest must follow and fall away from the sides.~Thus 16 1, XXXVI | the earth itself, and not fall at all. With regard to this, 17 1, XLVII | instance stands fast; its parts fall. The waters in seas ebb 18 1, XLVII | Light dews, again, never fall in the air but are dispersed 19 1, XLVII | bullet of two ounces ought to fall twice as quickly, which 20 1, XLVIII| distance; these motions seem to fall properly neither under the 21 1, L | the oak, but while they fall equally on all leaves, they 22 1, L | of a gentler heat, which fall in most with the ways of 23 1, LII | over nature. For man by the fall fell at the same time from