Celibacy, Essay on, vi. 391, 392, 547-548. Celestial bodies, their influence on earthly Celsus, a wise man, as well as a physician, vi. Centeno Diego, Francis Carvajal to, vii. 146. ceremonies and green rushes are for Ceres, her search for Proserpine, vi. 758, 761. discovered by Pan, meaning of the fable, a Pane inventa, vi. 640. person uncertain, how far within the Sta- Certiorari, vii. 762. See -297. probably not by Bacon, vii. 289-291. Charitas, de exaltatione ejus, vii. 235. Charles the Bald, Scottus' answer to, vii. 141. Charles, King of Sweden, his treatment of Charles VIII. of France, his relations with projects respecting Brittaine, vi. 63, 64. besieges Nantes, vi. 70, 116. ambassadors of Henry VII. outwitted conquers Brittaine, vi. 84. Treaty of Frankfort with Maximilian, vi. contracted to the daughter of Maximilian, ib. Chaste women often proud, vi. 392, 548. not within the Statute of Uses, vii. 424. Chepstow Bridge, who charged with the re- Cheshire proverb, "God send him joy, and Chester, Earldom of, an appanage to the prin- exempt from the jurisdiction of the Court Chester's wytt to deprave, and otherwise not Chievances, unlawful, which is bastard usury, Children, and Parents, essay on, vi. 390, 391, benefit of having children, vi. 390, 548. ib. treatment and education of, vi. 390-394, Chilon on gold, vii. 157. China, ordnance used in for 2000 years, vi. Chivalry, orders of, vi. 451. Chressenor, Thomas, tried for Perkin War- beck's rebellion, and pardoned, vi. 148. a bond among nations, vii. 35. worthy to be received, though not con- Chudleigh's case, vii. 391, 393, 395, 402, 408, Bacon's argument in, vii. 617-636. Church, unity in the, vi. 381. controversies in, vi. 382-383, 543, 544. visible, ib. the keeper of the Scriptures, vii. 254. Churmne of reproaches and taunts, vi. 195. Chymista theorica eorum sine fundamento, practica sine certo pignore, vi. 682. of the vanity of Pompey, vi. 432. of Rabirius Posthumus, vi. 460, 567. to Piso, vi. 436, 566. warned beforehand against Octavius, vi. his conduct in banishment, vii. 12. of a lady's age, vii. 130. to Pompey, vii. 134. on the law against bribery by the gover- quæ miremur, habemus ; quæ laudemus, Cineas to Pyrrhus, of the value of conquests, Cioli, Andrea, his translation of Bacon's Essays Uses in time of Augustus, vii. 407, 408. Clausula derogatoria, vii, 369-372. vel dispositio inutilis, per præsumptionem Clerks convict, to be burned in the hand, vi. 87. and ministers of law courts, vi. 509, 584. Clement, James, murderer of the Duke of 355. Cleon, his dream, vi. 464. Clergy, benefit of, vii. 367, 473, 474. curtailed by statute of Henry VII. vi. an overgrown, brings a state to necessity, Clifford, Sir Robert, vi. 252. joins Perkin Warbeck in Flanders, vi. declares him to be the Duke of York, vi. won over by King Henry's spies, vi. 144. inpeaches Sir William Stanley, ib. vi. 143. Clipping coins, statute of Henry VII. relating Clodius to Cicero, vii. 128. Cloth of estate, the king sat under, vi. 117. circa Bacchum subsultabant, vi. 665. Cocks may be made capons, but capons not Codification of the law, vii. 731–743. his genitals cut off by Saturn, vi. 723. interpretatio fabulæ, vi. 649, 650. genitalia ejus a Saturno demessa, vi. 649. his profitable recoinages, vi. 225. statutes of Henry VII. respecting, vi. 96. counterfeiting foreign coin current, ib. to an unexpected guest, vii. 143. his argument in Chudleigh's case, vii. 402. Cokers, a name given to labourers from Shires Colonization, essay on, vi. 457-459. government of, vi. 459. support of, by the parent country, ib. Colour, beauty of, inferior to beauty of favour, Colours that show best by candlelight, vi. 468. of good and evil, vii. 78-92. Colthurst's case, vii. 560. Columbus sends his brother Bartholomæus to Henry VII. vi. 197. his offer of the Indies to Henry VII. vii. Columbina innocentia, et serpentina prudentia, Comets, their influences, vi. 513. Comineus, on Duke Charles the Hardy, vi. Commandments, the old woman's answer to Commission of Union between England and standing commissions commended, vi. 426. Commissions of the Judges, Oyer and Termi- ner, vii. 472. gaol delivery, ib. assize, vii. 474. nisi prius, vii. 474, 475. of the peace, vii. 476. examinations and depositions in Chancery, Committing a cause, Lord Keeper Egerton's Common, grants of, vii. 342. Common Place, Court of, its jurisdiction, vi. Common Pleas, institution of, vii. 471, 472. little danger to be apprehended from, in his theory contrasted with Bacon's, vi. Composition implies neediness, vii. 83. Condition, collateral, vii. 353. Conditores imperiorum, vi. 505, 506, 532. of faith, vii. 219-226. Constable, the office of, vii. 464. two high constables for every hundred, appointed by the lord of the hundred, answers to questions touching the office origin and election of, vii. 749-751. from what rank of men, ib. duties performed gratis, ib. their authority, vii. 751-753, 780, 781. of peace and the crown, ib. for matter of nuisance, disturbance, and their oath, ib. difference between high and petty con- may appoint deputies, ib. Elizabeth's agent at, correction by Bacon Contemplationes in vitam activam translatas Controversies in the Church, how to avoid, Conversation, the art of, vi. 455—457, 564, 110. notes for civil, vii. 1 Copulatio verborum inclinat acceptionem eo- Copyholds forfeited to the lord, and not to the uses compared to, vii. 408, 409. Coranus the Spaniard, vii. 150. Cord breaketh at the last by the weakest pull, Cordal, Master of the Rolls, vii. 171. brings overtures of peace from Charles VIII. to Henry VII. vi. 128, 129. Cork, Perkin Warbeck lands at, vi. 136. Cornage, tenure by, vii. 607. rebel against a subsidy levied by Henry Cornish men-continued. march up to London, vi. 177-179. invite Perkin Warbeck over from Ireland, Coronation of Henry VII. on Bosworth field, in London, vi. 33, 35. of Lambert Symnell at Dublin, vi. 54. Corporalis injuria non recipit æstimationem Corporations, by-laws of, restrained by sta- do not take by descent, vii. 668. Cornua Panis, quid referunt, vi. 637. his saying against perfidious friends, vi. 385. less liberal in that of Henry VIII. vi. 267. Council of the Marches, Bacon's argument on its objects, to bridle the Welch, vii. 589. to facilitate commerce between Eng- to dignify the Prince of Wales, ib. summoned by Henry VII. in his seventh year, before calling his Parliament, vi. 117. distinct from Parliament, vi. 247-252. matters referred to it, vi. 251. Council of York, vii. 569, 576, 577 n., 579, 583. Counsel, essay on, vi. 423-427, 553–556. the greatest trust between men, vi. 423,553. want of secresy, vi. 424. weakening of authority, vi. 425. ask of the ancient, what is best, and of Counsel-continued. of two sorts, concerning manners, con- behaviour of judges towards, vi. 508, 584. Countenance, necessary command of, vii. 109. Country people, Pan why god of, vi. 712. County-courts divided into hundreds, ib. kept monthly by the sheriffs, vii. 467. Court-yards for palaces, vi. 483-485. bowing to lawyers and citizens, vii. 175. William, Earl of Devonshire, committed Covenants to stand seized, vii. 495, 496. his saying of men who shake their heads Crassus, on the death of his fish, to Domitius, Creation of the world, vii. 220, 221. Cretine d'eau, vii. 344. Crispus murdered by his father Constantine, vi. 421. Critics, brushers of noblemen's clothes, vii. 134. v. Kemperden, vii. 711. Cross set up by Ferdinando on the great tower Crusade meditated by Charles VIII. vi. 107. invites Henry VII. to join, vi. 210. Bacon's opinions respecting, vii. 5. Cuckoo, the form assumed by Jupiter, when Cuculus, Jupiter Junonem sub formam cuculi Culpepper's case, vii. 543. Cunning, essay on, vi. 428-431, 546, 547. stratagems of, vi. 428-431, 547. meaning of the allegory, vi. 729-731. Cupid-continued. most antient of the gods, vi. 729. an egg of Night, ib. the son of Venus, vi. 729, 731. signifies the natural motion of the atom, why a child, vi. 731. why an archer, ib. Cupiditas sub personâ Bacchi describitur, vi. Cupido, a Pane provocatus, interpretatio fabulæ, deorum antiquissimus, vi. 651. Veneris filius, vi. 655. motus generalis atomi significat, ib. cur nudus, ib. cur cæcus, ib. cur sagittarius, ib. Dacre, Lord, his case, vii. 402. Dædalus, or the mechanic, interpretation of taken by stratagem, by the Duke of Damages, vii. 348, 349. an argument of property, vii. 533. Dances to song, have extreme grace, vi. 467. Darcy, Lord, sent into Cornwall to impose Dawbeney, Lord, defeats the Cornish rebels Giles, Lord, made Lord Chamberlain, vi. William, tried for Perkin Warbeck's re- Daubigny, Lord, deputy of Calais, raises the negotiates the treaty of Estaples with Daunus, entertainer of Diomede, vi. 732. David's harp has as many hearse-like airs, as De fide et officio judicis, non recipitur quæstio, De non procedendo rege inconsulto, Bacon's D. Curæ, mensura curarum, vii. 235, 236. excessus earum duplex, vii. 236. returns to England, ib. Custom and education, essay on, vi. 470- examples of the force of, vi. 471, 573. the principal magistrate of man's life, ib. Customs of the Realm, vii. 509. Cyclopes, or ministers of terror, interpretation ministri terroris, vi. 631, 632. De non procedendo-continued. antiquity and worth of the writ, vii. the end of the writ, vii. 689, 690-700. two kinds of this writ, vii. 697. De Sapientiâ Veterum, Latin, vi. 629–686. former popularity and present neglect, text, vi. 616. dedicatio Comiti Sarisburiensi, vi. 619. De Victoria, his maxim, non fundatur impe- Death, Essay on, vi. 379, 380, 544, 545. another Essay, not by Bacon, possibly by we die daily, vi. 600. men, ib. unagreeable to aldermen and citizens, vi. gracious only to those in misery, ib. Deathbed sayings, vi. 380, 545. |