[Bacon by Richard William Church]@TWC D-Link bookBacon CHAPTER IX 1/27
CHAPTER IX. BACON AS A WRITER. Bacon's name belongs to letters as well as to philosophy.
In his own day, whatever his contemporaries thought of his _Instauration of Knowledge_, he was in the first rank as a speaker and a writer.
Sir Walter Raleigh, contrasting him with Salisbury, who could speak but not write, and Northampton, who could write but not speak, thought Bacon eminent both as a speaker and a writer.
Ben Jonson, passing in review the more famous names of his own and the preceding age, from Sir Thomas More to Sir Philip Sidney, Hooker, Essex, and Raleigh, places Bacon without a rival at the head of the company as the man who had "fulfilled all numbers," and "stood as the mark and [Greek: akme] of our language." And he also records Bacon's power as a speaker.
"No man," he says, "ever spoke more neatly, more pressly, or suffered less emptiness, less idleness, in what he uttered."..."His hearers could not cough or look aside from him without loss.
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