id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 13888 Church, R. W. (Richard William) Bacon .txt text/plain 71499 2960 69 men and affairs; and in them the great purpose and work of his life was grandly, "in the eyes of Bacon like the hope of the world." The two men, certainly gave Bacon good reason to think that his words meant nothing. Bacon had, as he says, "good reason to think that the Earl's Bacon's name also had come into men's mouths as that of a time-server said for Bacon: a man keenly alive to Essex's faults, with a strong showed the King, probably for the first time, what Bacon was. From this time Bacon must be thought of, first and foremost, as a Judge good offices beyond what Bacon thought just and right, and asked them Attorney-General of the time, Bacon saw but his duty, even as a judge was almost the only man in the Lords who said anything for Bacon, and, ./cache/13888.txt ./txt/13888.txt