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Alphabetical [« »] friar 1 friars 3 friend 7 friends 31 friendship 2 friendships 2 fripper 2 | Frequency [« »] 31 except 31 fall 31 felicity 31 friends 31 given 31 greatest 31 liberty | Francis Bacon The advancement of learning IntraText - Concordances friends |
Book, Chapter
1 1, I | question which Job asked of his friends: “Will you lie for God, 2 1, III | only to private and equal friends, or to entitle the books 3 1, VII | when one of Antipater’s friends commended him to Alexander 4 1, VII | he made between his two friends Hephaestion and Craterus, 5 1, VII | gave so large gifts to his friends and servants, and was asked 6 2, XX | vehemency and instance by his friends about him, that he should 7 2, XX | good cheer and meet their friends, and some came to look on; 8 2, XXI | unhappy as they were their friends or enemies, and would give 9 2, XXII | imitation, emulation, company, friends, praise, reproof, exhortation, 10 2, XXIII| men in wronging their best friends use to extenuate their fault, 11 2, XXIII| that in the election of our friends we do principally avoid 12 2, XXIII| when he died he desired his friends about him to give him a 13 2, XXIII| open and obnoxious, their friends, factions, dependences; 14 2, XXIII| Mutianus advanced many of the friends of Antonius, Simul amicis 15 2, XXIII| and abilities from their friends, their customs and times 16 2, XXIII| opinions from their familiar friends, with whom they discourse 17 2, XXIII| in the choice of their friends and dependents, to proceed 18 2, XXIII| see in Caesar, all whose friends and followers were men active 19 2, XXIII| unhappy, as they stood his friends or enemies.” So Caesar, 20 2, XXIII| other the lives of their friends for the deaths of their 21 2, XXIII| men in wronging their best friends use to extenuate their fault, 22 2, XXIII| that in the election of our friends we do principally avoid 23 2, XXIII| when he died he desired his friends about him to give him a 24 2, XXIII| open and obnoxious, their friends, factions, dependences; 25 2, XXIII| Mutianus advanced many of the friends of Antonius, Simul amicis 26 2, XXIII| and abilities from their friends, their customs and times 27 2, XXIII| opinions from their familiar friends, with whom they discourse 28 2, XXIII| in the choice of their friends and dependents, to proceed 29 2, XXIII| see in Caesar, all whose friends and followers were men active 30 2, XXIII| unhappy, as they stood his friends or enemies.” So Caesar, 31 2, XXIII| other the lives of their friends for the deaths of their