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Declarations, distinguished from grants, vi'.

362. Dedications, Seneca's, vii. 13. Deed ever imports a consideration, vii. 403,

404.
Deer pasture, vii. 342.
Deformed people envious, vi. 393.

commonly even with nature, vi. 480, 570.
extreme bold, vi. 480, 571.
observers of the weak points of others, ib.

sometimes excellent persons, vi. 481, 571. Deformity, essay on, vi. 480, 481, 570, 571.

not a sign of character, but a cause, vi.

480, 570. in a great wit is an advantage in rising,

vi. 480, 571.
Deipara, vii. 223.
Delamer's case, vii. 400, 406, 622, 635.
Delapole, William, committed to custody by

Henry VII. vi. 221.
Delays of men in authority, vi. 400, 551.

essay on, vi. 427, 428.
Deluges, vi. 512.
Demades, Antipater to, vii. 141.
Demeanour, the art of, vi. 435—437, 565–

567. Demetrius, when he had refused a petition to

an old woman, vii. 147. Demetrius of Macedon, when the fever left

him, vii. 147. Democritus, charged with Atheism, vi. 413,

559. his philosophy illustrated by the fable of

Cælum, vi. 723. his opinion that the world might again

revert to chaos, vi. 724. his atomic theory, vi. 730. more to be approved than Aristotle, vi.

749. truth, like ore, needs refining, vii. 162. philosophia ejus non multùm discrepat a

fabulâ Cæli, vi. 649. opinio ejus mundum in antiquam confu

sionem posse relabi, vi. 650. de motu atomorum, vi. 655. philosophia ejus magis probanda quàm

Aristotelis, vi. 672. Demonax, concerning his burial, vii. 128. Demosthenes, his conduct in banishment, vii.

12. his grounds of hope for Athens, vii. 87. his reproof to the Athenians, vii. 90. when upbraided by Æschines, vii. 141. when charged with cowardice, vii. 148. when warned that the Athenians would

kill him, if they waxed mad, vii. 154. Demurrer on evidence, vii. 341. Denization, vii. 648, 649. Deportment, the art of, vi. 435—437, 565–

567. Deptford Bridge, action at, between Lord

Dawbeney and the Cornish rebels, vi. 181. Derby, Ferdinand Earl of, lawsuit for the

Isle of Man at his death, note in Camden by Bacon, vi. 358

Derogatoria clausula, vii. 369-372.
Descent, the rules of, vii. 478—480.
Description, certainty of, vii. 380—384.

of such things as have no certain de

nomination, vii. 384.

where the notes are of equal dignity, ib. Desemboltura, vi. 472, 574. Desire described in the person of Bacchus,

vi. 741. Detraction, vii. 209. Detractor portat Diabolum in linguâ, vii. 200. Deucalion and Pyrrha, meaning of the fable,

vi. 737.

interpretatio fabulæ, vi. 661. Devonshire, Cornish rebels against Henry

VII. march through, vi. 177.
Earl of, relieves Exeter, besieged by

Perkin Warbeck, vi. 192.
Devil, envy his proper attribute, vi. 397.
Diana ind Actæon, interpretation of the

fable, vi. 719.

interpretatio fabulæ, vi. 645, 646. Diaries of travels, how to be kept, vi. 417. Diem solvit extremum, the writing made

into a patent office, vii. 699. Diet, how to regulate, vi. 453, 563. Digby, Sir John, Lieutenant of the Tower, in

charge of Perkin Warbeck, vi, 202.

ambassador to Spain, vii. 3, 4. Digestion, vi. 434, 556. Digg's case, vii. 560. Dighton, John, one of the murderers of the

two princes in the Tower, vi. 141-143. Dilatories, the king's prerogative of, vii. 700,

701-703. Diogenes, when asked how he would be

buried, vii. 128. to Plato, vii. 140. begging of a prodigal, vii. 144. looking for a man, vii. 157. when the mice came about him, vii. 160. Alexander's visit to, vii. 163. to a young man dancing daintily, called an ill musician, cock,"ib.

seeing a bastard throwing stones, ib. Diomedes, or religious zeal, explanation of

the fable, vi. 732–734.

interpretatio fabulæ, vi. 657, 658. Dionysius, when a schoolmaster, to one that

insulted him, vii. 137.

the elder, to his son, vii. 143. Dionysus, or Desire.

See Bacchus. Disclaimer, vii. 355. Discontentment, vi. 396.

public, how to remove, vi. 410-412. Discontinuance, vii. 351, 352. Discourse, Essay on, vi. 455-457, 564,

565. Dishonour, or Juno's suitor, meaning of the

fable, vi. 728. Disinteress, vi. 78. Dismes imposed by Henry VII. vi. 170. Dismissions of causes in Chancery, vii. 761. Dispatch, essay on, vi. 434, 435, 556,

557.

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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

vi. 729.
why a child, vi. 731.
why naked, ib.
why blind, ib.

why an archer, ib.
Cupiditas sub personâ Bacchi describitur,

665.
Cupido, a Pane pravou.*us, interpretatio fabu

vi. 639, 654-657.
deorum antiquissimus, vi. 651.
ex ovo Noctis, ib.
Veneris filius, vi. 655.
motus generalis atomi significat, ib.
cur infans, vi. 656.
cur nudus, ib.
cur cæcus, ib.
cur sagittarius, ib.

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D.
Dacre, Lord, his case, vii. 402.
Dædalus, or the mechanic, interpretation of

the fable, vi. 734-736.

interpretatio fabula, vi, 659, 660. Dam, the seaport of Bruges, vi. 123.

taken by stratagem, by the Duke of

Saxony, vi. 124.
Damages, vii. 348, 319.
an argument of property, vii. 533.

De
Dammasin trees, vi. 486.
Dances to song, have extreme grace, vi. 467.

turned into figure, a childish curiosity, ib. 1 Dangers are no more light, if they once seem P light, vi. 427.

fo Darcy, Lord, sent into Cornwall to impose fines, after the rebellion of Perkin Warbeck,

ter vi. 194.

ded Dawbeney, Lord, defeats the Cornish rebels

A at Blackheath, vi. 178, 181.

Prae Giles, Lord, made Lord Chamberlain, vi. De Victor 152.

rium ni William, tried for Perkin Warbeck's re- De Thou, bellion, and beheaded, vi. 148.

cated to Daubigny, Bernard, sent by Charles VIII. Death, Esa to Henry 111. vi. 71.

another Daubigny, Lord, deputy of Calais, raises the

Sir siege of Dixmue, vi. 99, 100.

fear of, negotiates the treaty of Estaples with pains of Lord Cordes, vi. 129.

approach ot Daunus, entertainer of Diomede, vi. 732.

vi. 380, Diomedis hospes, vi. 657.

deaths of David's harp has as many hearse-like airs, as we die din carols, vi. 386.

unagreeal De fide et officio judicis, non recipitur quæstio,

602 sed de scientiâ ; sive sit error juris sive facti, gracious vii. 366-368.

early d De non procedendo rege inconsulto, Bacon's comes argument on the writ, vii. 687-725.

142 Proceedings in the case, vii. 683—686. Deathbed

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Endymion-continued.
hen bills were to be as explained by Max Müller, vi. 612—

614.
for the office of secre- England and Flanders, man and wife, vi. 145.

why an overmatch for France, vi. 447.
sidies, vii. 41.

riches of the kingdom, vii. 61.
1s, vii. 124.

Entails, how created, vii. 489.
hn Rainsford, vii. began by statute of Edward I. vi. 490.

inconveniences of, remedied by Act of
ib.

Parliament, vi. 490, 491.
25.

Entreprenant, vi. 473, 574.

Entry, title to lands gained by, vii. 476–
ion of Sales, vii. 478.

Envy, essay on, vi. 392—397.
officers, ib.

its relation to love, vi. 392.
tors, vii. 135.

called in Scripture, an evil eye, vi. 393.
ised the siege of a gadding passion, ib.

what persons apt to envy others, vi. 393,
new boots, vii.

394.

what persons most subject to be envied,
cies against her

vi. 394, 395.

redoubleth from speech and fame, vi. 394.
ven gentlemen, ever joined with the comparing a man's

self, vi. 394.
62.

mollified by chanting a “Quanta patimur,"

vi. 395.
74.

cure of it, vi. 396.
175.

difference between public and private, ib.
emodelling the public is a disease in a state, ib.

the most importune and the vilest of affec-
Hent office, vii.

tions, vi. 396, 397.

the proper attribute of the Devil, vi. 397.
I. her title to the canker of honour, vi. 505, 532.

predominant in great artists, vi. 734.
Queen Dow- Epaminondas refused Pelopidas that which he

granted to his concubine, vii. 155.
vi. 33.

taught the Spartans to speak long, ib.
1.41, 42. Epictetus, who to be blamed, vii. 160.

Epicureans never join other philosophies,
vi. 217. though other philosophers become Epicureans,
vi. 62.

vii. 165.
married, vii. Epicurus, his atomic theory, vi. 730.

his atheism, vi. 413, 559.
tentamenta, vii. 91.

got rid of Fate, and made room for For-
Jenow no-

tune, vii. 253.

de motu atomorum, vi, 656.
nda quàm Fatum sustulit, et Fortunæ locum dedit,

vii. 241.
52. 553.

Epidemic sweating sickness, vi. 34.

Epimetheus, brother of Prometheus, vii. 411,
boot na

590, 746.

Hellowers the evident, vi. 751.
ires, vii.

romethej 674.
Εα

variance, vii.
Lo Henry
Ere

dagia,
the king,

Erich
15, 236.

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inter
necting,

vii.
in fact, i
in law, ib.

Error, gro

Decor, Hermes

be

1

Dissimulation, essay on, vi. 387—389.

a faint kind of wisdom, vi. 387.
follows on secrecy by a necessity, vi. 388.
advantages of it, vi. 389.

disadvantages, ib.
Dissolution of contracts, vii. 372–374.
Distress, right of, vii. 339.
Divers, their power of holding the breath, vii.

99.
Divinatio, non interpretatio est, quæ omninò

recedit a literâ, vii. 337.
Dixmue, besieged by the French under Lord

Cordes, vi. 99.

relieved by Lord Daubigny, vi. 100.
Doctors' reports in Chancery, vii. 171.
Dog, his courage in presence of his master, vi.

414,560.

death of Lord Bacon's, vii. 184.
Dogmatica facultas cum Empiricâ adhuc non

benè conjuncta, vi. 673.
Dogmatical and Empirical faculty, not well

united, vi. 750.
Dorset, Marquis of, left as a pledge at Paris

by Henry VII. vi. 40.
committed to the Tower by the King, vi.55.

set at liberty, vi. 61.
Double vexation, in Chancery and at Comnion

Law, not permitted, vii. 762.
Dove, the spirit of Jesus was the spirit of the

Dove, vii. 244,

E.

Dove - continued.

innocency of, and wisdom of the serpent,

vii. 244, 245.
Dower, vii. 367, 421, 432.
Dowry, patrimonial, carries no part of sore

reignty, vi. 147.
Drake, Sir Francis, clause inserted by Barro

in Camden's Annals of Qneen Elizabeth re-

lating to him, vi. 354.
Dream of Lady Margaret, mother of Henry

VII. vi. 245.
of the daughter of Polycrates, ri. 463.
of Philip of Macedon, ib.
of Domitian, ib.
of Cleon, vi. 464.
your old men shall dream dreams, vi. 479,

569.
Droughts, vi. 512.
Drunkenness, why no defence, vii. 346.
Dublin, coronation of Symnell at, vi. 51.
Dudley, and Empson, horse-leeches and shear-

ers for the king, vi. 217.

their oppressions, vi. 218, 235, 236.
made speaker of the House of Commons,

vi. 222.
Duress, vii. 369, 378, 379.
Dutch, free fishing on the coasts of England

not confirmed to them, vi. 232.
Dyer, Sir Edward, his story of Kelley the

alchymist, vii. 162.

Earl v. Snow, vii. 635.
Earls, the turn first held by, vii. 466.

charge of county taken from, ib.
Earth gives counsel to Jupiter, vi. 704.
Earthquakes, vi. 512.
East and West, wars anciently moved from

east to west, vi. 515.

have no certain points of heaven, ib.
Ecclesia scripturarum custos, vii

. 242.
Echo companion of Narcissus, vi. 705.

fable of her marriage with Pan explained,

vi. 713, 714.
Narcissi comes, vi. 632.

uxor Panis, vi. 640.
Edgecombe, Sir Richard, ambassador to

France, vi. 62.

at Rennes, vi, 98.
Edmondsbury, Henry VII. at, vi. 55.
Edmund, son of Henry VII., dies in infancy,

vi, 201.
Education, essay on, vi. 470 472, 572,

573.
the power of, vi. 471, 573.
most perfect when begun in youth, ib.

is but an early custom, ib.
Edward the Confe.sor, title to the crown

founded on his will, vi, 30.
Edward Plantagenet, prisoner in the Tower,

vi. 49.
paraded through the streets of London,

vi. 51.

Edward I., the principal lawgiver of our

nation, vii. 314, 647.
Edward II., vii. 141.
Edward IV., his popular reign, vi. 29.

invented benevolences, vi. 121.
godfather of Perkin Warbeck, vi. 133.
godfather not of Perkin, but of Edururd,

the converted Jew, ib.
Egerton, Lord Keeper, vii. 171.
Egg of Night, Cupid, vi. 729.
self-lovers will burn the house to roast

their eggs, vi, 562.
Egremond, Sir John, heads the rising in

Yorkshire and Durham against Henry

VII. vi. 89.

flies to Lady Margaret of Burgundy, ih.
Egypt, excellence of its geographical position,

vii, 62.
Egyptians, vagabonds calling themselves, vii.

739.
Elias, or Hialas, ambassador from Ferdinando

and Isabella to Henry VII. vi. 184.
Elizabeth, Queen, question of her legitimacy,

vi 215.
Bacon's notes to Camden's Annals of her

reign, vi. 353-364.
her agent at Constantinople, note by

Bacon in Camden respecting, vi. 356.
conspiracy of Roderigo Lopez to poison

her, note by Bacon in Camden respect-
ing, vi. 357.

1

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Elizabeth-continued.

how dealt with, when bills were to be

signed, vi. 429.
applications of two for the office of secre-

tary, vi. 430.
not independent of subsidies, vii. 41.
playing on the virginals, vii. 124.
her reply to Sir John Rainsford, vii.

Endymion-continued.

as explained by Max Müller, vi. 612-

614.
England and Flanders, man and wife, vi. 145.

why an overmatch for France, vi. 447.

riches of the kingdom, vii. 61.
Entails, how created, vii. 489.

began by statute of Edward I. vi. 490.
inconveniences of, remedied by Act of

Parliament, vi. 490, 491.
Entreprenant, vi. 473, 574.
Entry, title to lands gained by, vii. 476–

478.
Envy, essay on, vi. 392–397.

its relation to love, vi. 392.
called in Scripture, an evil eye, vi. 393.
a gadding passion, ib.
what persons apt to envy others, vi. 393,

394.
what persons most subject to be envied,

vi. 394, 395.
redoubleth from speech and fame, vi. 394.
ever joined with the comparing a man's

self, vi. 394.
mollified by chanting a" Quanta patimur,"

125.
Sir Nicholas Bacon to, ib.
and Pace the fool, vii. 125.
to Lord Essex, ib,
concerning the Commission of Sales, vii.

133.
her instructions to great officers, ib.
her dilatoriness with suitors, vii, 135,
when the archduke raised the siege of

Grave, vii. 136.
to Master Sackford in his new boots, vii.

137.
when warned of conspiracies against her

life, vii. 157.
at Theobald's knighted seven gentlemen,

ib.
to Lady Paget, vii. 161, 162.
of her successor, vii. 167.
to Sir Edward Dier, vii. 174.
concerning magistrates, vii. 175.
her reign a fit time for remodelling the

English law, vii. 315,
foiled in creating a new patent office, vii.

684.
Elizabeth, Queen of Henry VII. her title to

the crown, vi. 29.
ordered to reside with the Queen Dow-

ager, vi, 31.
again betrothed to the king, vi. 33.
marriage, and married life, vi. 41, 42.
coronation, vi. 60.

dies in childbed in the Tower, vi. 217.
Elizabeth, widow of Edward IV. vi. 62.
Ellesmere, Lord, of a man newly married, vii.

184.

anecdote of, vii. 176.
Emmanuel, king of Portugal, vii. 21.
Empedocles complained that we know no-

thing, vi. 749.
philosophia ejus magis probanda quàm

Aristotelis, vi. 672.
Empire, essay on, vi. 419-423, 552, 553.

true temper of, vi. 419, 553.
great empires enervate their subject na-

tions, vi, 515.
Empirical philosophers, like pismires, vii.

177.
Empson and Dudley, their relation to Henry

VII. vi. 22, 240.
horse-leeches and shearers for the king,

vi. 217.
their oppressions, vi. 155, 218, 235, 236.

cause of the overthrow of, vii. 514.
Enclosures, statute of Henry VII. respecting,

vi. 93.
Endymion, fable of, interpreted, vi. 717, 718.

interpretatio fabulæ, vi. 643, 644.

vi. 395.
cure of it, vi. 396.
difference between public and private, ib.
public is a disease in a state, ib.
the most importune and the vilest of affec-

tions, vi. 396, 397.
the proper attribute of the Devil, vi. 397.
the canker of honour, vi. 505, 532.

predominant in great artists, vi. 734.
Epaminondas refused Pelopidas that which he

granted to his concubine, vii. 155.

taught the Spartans to speak long, ib.
Epictetus, who to be blamed, vii. 160.
Epicureans never join other philosophies,

though other philosophers become Epicureans,

vii, 165.
Epicurus, his atomic theory, vi. 730.

his atheism, vi. 413, 659.
tentamenta, vii. 91.
got rid of Fate, and made room for For-

tune, vii. 253.
de motu atomorum, vi. 656.
Fatum sustulit, et Fortunæ locum dedit,

vii. 241.
Epidemic sweating sickness, vi. 34.
Epimetheus, brother of Prometheus, vii. 411,

590, 746.
his followers the improvident, vi. 751.

frater Promethei, vi. 669, 674.
Equivocation, distinguished from variance, vii.

386.
Erasmus, extracts by Bacon from his Adagia,

vii. 193.
Erichthonius, or Imposture, meaning of the

fable, vi, 736.

interpretatio fabulæ, vi. 660.
Error, grounds on which it may be assigned,

vii. 366-368.
in fact, ib.
in law, ib.

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