Religio Medici and Other Works: Religio Medici and Other WorksOUP Oxford, 1964 - 383 pages A scholarly edition of an essay by Sir Thomas Browne. The edition presents an authoritative text, together with an introduction, commentary notes, and scholarly apparatus. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 24
Page 263
... called her husband Lord , which if you examine , you shall finde to be noe more then Seignior , or Mounsieur , which are the ordinarie languages all ciuill nations use in their familiar compellations , not to their superiors or equalls ...
... called her husband Lord , which if you examine , you shall finde to be noe more then Seignior , or Mounsieur , which are the ordinarie languages all ciuill nations use in their familiar compellations , not to their superiors or equalls ...
Page 298
... called in question , because he held Antipodes ( which they made a doubt whether Christ died for ) and so by that meanes tooke away the seat of Hell . . . . ' By a misunderstanding Boniface supposed Virgilius to have believed that there ...
... called in question , because he held Antipodes ( which they made a doubt whether Christ died for ) and so by that meanes tooke away the seat of Hell . . . . ' By a misunderstanding Boniface supposed Virgilius to have believed that there ...
Page 348
... called Jacea Pinea . 20. Oak - Rose ( and note ) . J. Bauhin , vii ( 1. ii , p . 86 ) ' Quercvvm Capitula Squammata ' . ( Illustration on p . 87. ) 26-27 . Fathers of their Mother ( and note ) . Browne gives the last of the four lines ...
... called Jacea Pinea . 20. Oak - Rose ( and note ) . J. Bauhin , vii ( 1. ii , p . 86 ) ' Quercvvm Capitula Squammata ' . ( Illustration on p . 87. ) 26-27 . Fathers of their Mother ( and note ) . Browne gives the last of the four lines ...
Contents
HYDRIOTAPHIA with THE GARDEN OF CYRUS | 81 |
APPENDIX I | 247 |
APPENDIX II | 259 |
3 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Ægyptian ancient Antiquity apprehension Aristotle ashes behold beleeve body bones Browne Browne's burnt butt Charity Christian Cicero common conceive corruption creatures dayes dead death decussation Devill Diogenes Laertius disease Divinity doth earth edition Epicurus erased erasure eyes farre felicities figure fire friends Garden Garden of Cyrus generall grave happinesse happy hath haue Heaven Hell Hippocrates honour Hydriotaphia Kirchmann leaves live manuscript Marginal note mercies mortality naturall nature noble obscure observed omit opinion Paracelsus passage peece plants Plato Pliny Plutarch Pythagoras Quincunx reason Religio Medici Religion Rhombus Saint Paul Scripture SECT seeds seems selfe sentence Sir Thomas Browne soule spirits Sunne Tacitus temper thee Theophrastus thereof things thou thought tion Trees truely unto Urnes vertue vices Virtues vnto whereby wherein wisedome written ΙΟ