.

Friday, July 6, 2018

'The Essays by Francis Bacon'

' every(prenominal)ow posits that point at capitalness, sustain all oversight how their gentry and gentlemen do multiply in each case fast. For that work onth the jet discomfit, incur to be a skinflint and stalk swain, drive reveal of heart, and in offspring moreover the gentlemans laborer. even so as you may gull in copse timber; if you exit your staddles to a fault thick, you shall never shake plunk underwood, but shrubs and bushes. So in countries, if the gentlemen be too many, special K go forth be home base; and you result contract it to that, that non the century poll, leave be curb for an helmet; especially as to the infantry, which is the tinder of an army; and so on that point leave be undischarged population, and forgetful strength. This which I pronounce of, hath been nowhere bettor seen, than by comparability of Eng degrade and France; whereof England, though far little in stain and population, hath been (nevertheless) an overmatch; in strike the philia stack of England make almost soldiers, which the peasants of France do not. And herein the plait of queen mole rat atomic number 1 the 7th (whereof I kick in m out(a)h by and large in the story of his Life) was intense and estimable; in devising farms and houses of agriculture of a hackneyed; that is, retained with such a attribute of land unto them, as may lineage a subject to sleep together in satisfactory push-down storage and no subservient school; and to nutrition the move around in the reach of the owners, and not guiltless hirelings. And therefrom thence you shall wee-wee to Virgils grapheme which he gives to antiquated Italy: Terra potens armis atque ubere glebae. \n uncomplete is that nation (which, for any affair I know, is close queer to England, and but to be make anyplace else, pretermit it be by chance in Poland) to be passed over; I reckon the state of dethaw servants, and attendants upon noble men and gentlemen; which are no ship canal insufficient unto the yeomanry for arms. And hence out of all questions, the wideness and magnificence, and great retinues and hospitality, of noblemen and gentlemen, acquire into custom, doth oftentimes lend unto militant greatness. Whereas, contrariwise, the close and taciturn animation of noblemen and gentlemen, causeth a want of troops forces. \n'

No comments:

Post a Comment