Books Essays Free Download

Details Out Of Books Essays

Title:Essays
Author:Francis Bacon
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Anniversary Edition
Pages:Pages: 149 pages
Published:November 1st 1995 by Prometheus Books (first published 1597)
Categories:Philosophy. Writing. Essays. Classics. Nonfiction. History. Science. Literature
Books Essays  Free Download
Essays Paperback | Pages: 149 pages
Rating: 3.83 | 3709 Users | 125 Reviews

Rendition Conducive To Books Essays

Francis Bacon (1561-1626), scientist, lawyer, and statesman, occupies a unique position in English letters. His most widely read work, the Essays, still ranks high among the masterpieces produced during one of the greatest periods of English prose. These richly condensed utterances on human life show, in the matter of conduct, something of the same stress on the pragmatic that Bacon brought to his scientific writing. Together, these great essays are a rich collection of shrewd observations about human passions and pursuits, old age, religion, death, friendship, and even the proper ordering of buildings and gardens.

Point Books As Essays

Original Title: Essayes: Religious Meditations. Places of Perswasion and Disswasion. Seene and Allowed
ISBN: 1573920320 (ISBN13: 9781573920322)
Edition Language: English

Rating Out Of Books Essays
Ratings: 3.83 From 3709 Users | 125 Reviews

Write-Up Out Of Books Essays
Conventional wisdom says that if it was written more than 300 years ago, it really cannot tell us much. Not so! Bacons essays are as fresh and pointed today as when written. There is much wisdom and life lessons contained in these 58 essays. Add to that, they are fairly short and to the point.

1God never wrought miracle to convince atheism, because his ordinary work convince it. it is true, that a little philosophy inclineth man's mind to atheism, but depth in philosophy bringeth men;s minds about to religion

This will be for the Oxford World's Classics edition edited by Brian Vickers....As I will reveal myself a philistine with the following: this can be a wise and treasured book, but you have to spend a lot of time with it and read it more than once. Otherwise the foreignness of the language--a Renaissance English that makes Shakespeare easy to read (the Bard IS easy to read)--and the endless footnotes and endnotes that have one disrupting the meaning of the sentence by always looking down at the

This was another book that I listened to the LibriVox audio version of. I liked most of the essays, the only one that got a little weird to me was the one about gardens. Lots of philosophical thoughts about interesting topics and then, all of a sudden, which flowers he thinks should be in gardens during which months of the year.

I doubt if I knew what a fine literary form the "essay" was until I was lucky enough to chance on this collection. Judging by what Bacon was able to produce here, essays cut through the dross and use simple language to get to the heart of the matter without any attempt to impress. Essay is like a father giving advice to his son, as we have seen it done in the movies. Bacon is wary of ostentation in his advice and he is certainly not going to indulge in any ostentation in his own essays.

It is extremely difficult to establish an opinion on Bacon's philosophy by indulging with his ramblings, which are at times profoundly astute and at times on the verge of vacuity. Among my favourites are the ones on atheism, studies, nature of men and cunning. Overall, I came to like Bacon's informal rhetoric but nothing in comparison to elegance of someone like Montaigne. To borrow from Bacon's himself, this is not the text to be chewed and digested but tasted in parts or whole.

This is a very good book, if not a great one. These essays lack the easy-going charm of Montaigne's and the locquacious eloquence of Emerson's. They ramble, and much of what they contain will hold little interest for the typical modern reader. And yet, they contain a great deal of wisdom, typically expressed as pithy epigrams amid these otherwise rambling discourses.For instance: "He that have wife and children hath given hostages to fortune; for they are impediments to great enterprises, either

Comments

Popular posts from this blog