[Bacon by Richard William Church]@TWC D-Link book
Bacon

CHAPTER IV
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To attend some time his repasts, or to fall into a course of familiar discourse.

To find means to win a conceit, not open, but private, of being affectionate and assured to the Scotch, and fit to succeed Salisbury in his manage in that kind; Lord Dunbar, Duke of Lennox, and Daubiny: secret." Then, again, of Salisbury-- "Insinuate myself to become privy to my Lord of Salisbury's estate." "To correspond with Salisbury in a habit of natural but no ways perilous boldness, and in vivacity, invention, care to cast and enterprise (but with due caution), for this manner I judge both in his nature freeth the stands, and in his ends pleaseth him best, and promiseth more use of me.

I judge my standing out, and not favoured by Northampton, must needs do me good with Salisbury, especially comparative to the Attorney." The Attorney Hobart filled the place to which Bacon had so long aspired, and which he thought, perhaps reasonably, that he could fill much better.

At any rate, one of the points to which he recurs frequently in his notes is to exhort himself to make his own service a continual contrast to the Attorney's--"to have in mind and use the Attorney's weakness," enumerating a list of instances: "Too full of cases and distinctions.

Nibbling solemnly, he distinguisheth but apprehends not;" "No gift with his pen in proclamations and the like;" and at last he draws out in a series of epigrams his view of "Hubbard's disadvantages"-- "Better at shift than at drift....


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