| William Baptiste Scoones - English letters - 1880 - 644 pages
...once for all, to let you know in plainness what I find of you, and what you shall find of me. You tike to yourself a liberty to disgrace and disable my law,...you, I pray, think of me : I am one that knows both mine own wants and other mens ; and it may be, perchance, that mine mend, when others stand at a stay.... | |
| William Baptiste Scoones - English letters - 1880 - 606 pages
...best once for all, to let you know in plainness what I find of you, and what you shall find of me. You take to yourself a liberty to disgrace and disable my law, my ex perience, my discretion. What it pleaseth you, I pray, think of me : I am one that knows both mine... | |
| Frederick Charles Moncreiff - Judges - 1882 - 204 pages
...best, once for all, to let you know in plainness what I find of you, and what you shall find of me. You take to yourself a liberty to disgrace and disable...you, I pray, think of me: I am one that knows both mine own wants and other men's ; and it may be perchance that mine mend and others stand at a stay.... | |
| William Baptiste Scoones - English letters - 1883 - 624 pages
...best once for all, to let you know in plainness what I find of you, and what you shall find of me. You take to yourself a liberty to disgrace and disable...you, I pray, think of me : I am one that knows both mine own wants and other mens ; and it may be, perchance, that mine mend, when others stand at a stay.... | |
| Edwin Abbott Abbott - England - 1885 - 540 pages
...once for all, to let you know in plainness what I find of you, and what you shall find of me. " You take to yourself a liberty to disgrace and disable...you, I pray, think of me : I am one that knows both mine own wants and other men's : and it may be perchance that mine mend, and others stand at a stay.... | |
| Francis Bacon - Philosophy, English - 1868 - 440 pages
...once for all, to let you know in plainness what I find of2 you, and what you shall find of me. You take to yourself a liberty to disgrace and disable my law, my experience, my discretion. AY hat it pleaseth'* you, I pray, think of me : I am one that knows both mine own wants and other meti's... | |
| Francis Bacon - English essays - 1890 - 460 pages
...at a stay] Lat. in eodem loco haeret. Conf. Bacon's letter to Coke : ' I am one that knows both mine own wants and other men's ; and it may be perchance, that mine mend and others stand at a stay.' Letters and Life, iii. p. 4. " passive etirv~\ Introduced in contrast... | |
| Thomas Babington Macaulay Baron Macaulay - English essays - 1903 - 526 pages
...p. 297). - In an undated letter to Coke, which Spedding assigns to April, 1601, Bacon writes : " You take to yourself a liberty to disgrace and disable my law, my experience, my discretion" (Spedding, Letters and Life, vol. iii., p. 14). 3 " Each had a gravity would make you split, And shook... | |
| Claude Moore Fuess - American letters - 1914 - 136 pages
...best once for all, to let you know in plainness what I find of you, and what you shall find of me. You take to yourself a liberty to disgrace and disable...discretion. What it pleaseth you, I pray, think of me: I arn one that knows both mine own wants and other men's; and it may be, perchance, that mine mend, when... | |
| Catherine Drinker Bowen - Biography & Autobiography - 1993 - 294 pages
...best, once for all, to let you know in plainness what I find of you, and what you shall find of me. You take to yourself a liberty to disgrace and disable my law, my experience, my discretion. . . . You are great and therefore have the more enviers, which would be glad to have you paid at another's... | |
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