Plutarch - continued. good fame like fire, vii. 770, 771. Plutus timidus, vii. 59. Poco di matto, vi. 473, 574. Poesy, vinum Dæmonum, vi. 378. the best writers, next to those who write Poison, intended for A. taken by B. vii. Poland, cause of its martial greatness, vi. 447. malignant men make great politiques, vi. Polycrates, his daughter's dream, vi. 463. Pomegranate eaten by Proserpine, vi. 758,760. his treatment of Sylla, vi. 438. his war on the Cilician pirates, vii. 32. 160. his saying to Lucullus, vii. 140. when advised not to embark during a Pons, Gaspar, emissary from Pope Alexander Pope likes no Tramontanes in Italy, vi. 118 Popish recusants, vii. 743. Population, effect of inclosures on, vi. 93–95. should not exceed the stock of the king- Porcelain, vii. 529. Portugal, Perkin Warbeck sent to, vi. 136. Postnati, Bacon's argument in the case of, corrected by himself, vii. 302. suprema seipsum dissolvere potest, ligare principis non est inclusa legibus, ques- Poverty, the origin of seditions, vi. 408, 409, 590. its removal their cure, vi. 410, 590. Power, a good thing, vii. 81. knowledge itself is, vii. 253. sent as ambassador by Henry VII. to the sends the Earl of Kildare prisoner to introduces the law of England into Ire- Ireland quieted by his commission, vi. Præmunire, cases of, vii. 741, 742. punishment, trial, and proceedings in Præsentia corporis tollit errorem nominis ; et Prætor fidei commissarius, vii. 408. from malice, ib. Prayer, a great office in the church, vii. 249. Precedents, Sir Fulke Greville on, vii. 153. Premier seizins, vi. 218. Prentise, Mr. Anthony Bacon's man, vii. 184. 557. Prerogative, royal, in the reign of Henry VIL nature and exercise of, vi. 597–600; notes on by Bacon, vii. 305. may dispense with politic statutes, vii. power of denizenation, vii. 650. in war and peace, ib. in matters of money, vii. 777. Prices to be regulated by government, vi. 410. Priests, scandal of, a cause of Atheism, vi. Prime, or cycle of weather, vi. 514. Primitive ages, their wisdom either great or Primum mobile, vi. 408. a new, brought in by superstition, vi. Principum concilium, what, vi. 74. Privation, that which it is good to be rid of is Privilegium non valet contra rempublicam, Probus, his saying "Si vixero, non opus erit Proclamation, draft of one relating to the Welsh Procus Junonis, sive Dedecus, interpretatio Prodicus, his character in the Protagoras, vi. Profession, every man a debtor to his, vii. 319. Prometheus, meaning of the myth, vi. 745— signifies Providence, vi. 746. attempts the chastity of Minerva, vi. 752. Promise, a woman's, vii. 174. 'romus, of formularies and elegancies, vii. 67, 197-211. preface, vii. 189–195. 'roperty, in lands gained by entry, vii. 476 -478. descent, vii. 478–480. escheat, vii. 480-488. conveyance, vii. 488-499. in goods and chattels, gained by gift, vii. 499. sale, ib. stealing, vii. 500. waiving, vii. 501. straying, ib. shipwreck, ib. forfeiture, ib. executorship, vii. 502. administration, vii. 502-504. arguments of, are three, damages, seizure, Prophecy, respecting the successor of Pope essay on, vi. 463–465. of the Pythonissa to Saul, vi. 463. Prophecy-continued. Seneca's of the discovery of America, ib. of Christ in the time of Vespasian, ib. of Regiomontanus, ib. three causes which have given them credit Proselytism by the sword, vi. 383, 543. interpretatio fabulæ, vi. 680-682. its virtue Temperance, ib. Protestantism in France, leagued against by Proteus, or Matter, interpretation of the fable, interpretatio fabulæ, vi. 651, 652. Proverbs collected by Bacon, vii. 193, 200, Providence signified by Prometheus, vi. 746. must not be out of proportion to the seat Provost of Perin, killed at Taunton, vi. 177. Psalms translated by Lord Bacon, vii. 277, 286. XII. vii. 278, 279. XC. vii. 279, 280. CXXVI. vii. 284. CXXXVII. vii. 266, 284, 285. Publius Syrus, Mimi of, vii. 189. Puebla, Doctor De, Spanish ambassador to Punctuality, vii. 173. Pussle of business, vi. 550. Puteanus, Petrus, depositary of Camden's Annals of Queen Elizabeth, vi. 351. Putrefaction, retardation of, vi. 761. Pyonner in the myne of truth, vii. 205. Pyrrha and Deucalion, meaning of the fable, Pyrrhus, Such another victory, and we are un- Pythagoras his parable, Eat not the heart, vi. 440. describing his own condition to Hiero, vii. 160. Quadlins, vi. 487. Quarrels, the causes of, vi. 418. Queen, cannot be seized to a use, vii. 435. her dower whether restored, ib. Queen's College, Cambridge founded, vi. 51. Rabelais, on his deathbed, vii. 131. on the art of reconciliation, vii. 170. Raleigh, Sir Walter, of the Ladies of the to a cowardly fellow who was a good of a nobleman who grew fat soon after Madam, is the piggy served? vii. 165. Rape of Proserpine, vi. 758. Rat, Gondomar's story to Bacon, vii. 170. Perkin Warbeck's rebellion, vi. 148. Flanders against Maximilian, vi.99, 123. Raw material, vi. 410. Rebellis, Typhon, sive, vi. 631. Receditur a placitis juris, potius quàm inju- Recognisances, vii. 771. Reconciliation, the art of, according to Rabe- Recoveries, vii. 493-495. References in Chancery, vii. 765, 766. Reform, without bravery or scandal of for- Reformation of the English Church, vii. 177. Regiomontanus, his prophecy, vi. 464. Religion of Bacon, vii. 215. his creed, vii. 219-226. a mean between superstition and atheism, essay on unity in, vi. 381-384, 543— origin of discords in, vi. 514. Relligio tantum potuit suadere malorum, vi. 384. Remitter, vii. 350-352. Remuant, vi. 473, 574. Remusat, M. Charles de, on Bacon's confes Rent, cases upon, vii. 334-337, 339, 351, 353. Repugnancy, plea void for, vii. 339. discreet servants a help to, vi. 505, 531. words of, vii. 342, 343. Respect of persons, vi. 401, 552. Rest, the accomplishment of man's, what, vi. Restoration, meaning of the fable of Deuca- Resuscitatio, publication of, by Dr. Rawley. apophthegms from the, vii. 167-173. Retribution, or Nemesis, vi. 737. Revenge, essay on, vi. 384, 385. a kind of wild justice, vi. 384. for wrongs which there is no law to re- public for the most part fortunate, ib. how revocable, vii. 373. differs from a remainder, vii. 492. of uses, Bacon's argument in Stanhope's Rheums, the four causes of, vii. 183. Ribes, vi. 487. Richard III. slain at Bosworth, vi. 27. his murder of the princes in the Tower, Richard, Duke of York, son of Edward IV. are for spending, and spending for honour have wings, vi. 462, 567. in a state, too much ascribed to, vii. 55-61. Riches-continued. profitable according to the hands in which of the realm of England, vii. 61. Richmond, or Shine, tournament at the king's Henry VII. dies there, vi. 20, 237. Riddles of the Sphinx, vi. 756, 757. division of, according to the civilians, vii. Riots and retainers, statute of Henry VII. Risley, Sir John, sent ambassador to Maxi- Rivers of America, vi. 513. Roberts, Jack, when asked by his tailor for a saying concerning marriage, vii. 141. extent of territory a cause of weakness, united by the bond of naturalization, vii. Romans, whence their magnanimity, vi. 415, their method of extending the bounds of policy of their wars, vi. 450. Cæsar to his mutinous soldiers, vii. 143. acceptance of a spiritual benefice from, is Roxalana, murderess of Mustapha, vi. 421. restored by Charles VIII. to Ferdinando S. Sabbath, its nature, vi. 399, 551. at the end of the world, vii. 221. Sacramenta irrevocabilia, vi. 633, 634. Sacraments, of Nature, relationships, vi. 706. Sacrifice of Prometheus, vi. 750. Saint Alban's, victory of Charles VIII. at, Saint Aubin, victory of, vi. 77. Saint Ermin, vii. 145. Saint Paul, repairs of the steeple, vii, 180. Sagitta Cupidinis, quid, vi. 656. alique law, disputed between a Frenchman Salisbury, Earl of, De Sapientiâ Veterum on riches, vi. 460, 567. on novelty, vi. 512. concerning pleasures, vi. 764. Salt, colonists should be provided with store Salus populi supremna lex, vi. 509, 585. Sanctuary, doubts of Henry VII, as to vio- privileges of, curtailed by him, vi. 61, not abolished by him until late in his Sandwich, Perkin Warbeck lands at, vi. Sandys, Lord, case of, vii. 399. Sarisburiensis Comes, "De Sapientiâ Vete- Saturday, Henry VII.'s lucky day, v .181. downfall of his kingdom, vi. 724. Saturnus, castratio ejus, vi. 649. a regno detrusus, vi. 650. Satyri, quid referunt, vi. 639. Savages, how colonists should deal with, vi. Savill, Mr., thought poets the best writers letter to, touching helps for the intellectual Scintilla juris, vii. 446, 449, 615, 622. Schoolmen, like the astronomers, vii. 164. Scotland, a refuge for English malcontents, death of James III. vi. 90. declaration of war against, by Henry VII. Henry VII. his preparations for war 178. reception of Perkin Warbeck by James probability of a union with England con- confluence of, to England, vii. 659. Scribonianus, his conspiracy against Claudius, vii. 137. Scripturæ ab ecclesiâ custoditæ, vii. 242. in the custody of the Church, vii. 254. Scylla and Charibdis, or the via media, vi. Sea, the empire of, is an abridgment of a naval power of Great Britain, ib., land left by, belongs to the Crown, vii. Seamen, anecdotes of, vii. 185. Sebastian, King of Portugal, his expedition Second, place, that best to which all assign the second place, vii. 78. nobles, their value in a state, vi. 422. a great means of obtaining suits, vi. 496, Sects, religious, the vicissitudes of, vi. 514. Seditions and troubles, essay on, vi. 406- the materials of, vi. 408, 409, 590. causes and motives of, vi. 409, 590. to remove want and poverty, vi. 410. |