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- cerning business, vi. 441. 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 Creation of the world, vii. 220, 221. Crispus murdered by his father Constantine, 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. vi. 209. 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. 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- 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. of Actæon and Pentheus, vi. 719, 720. returns to England, ib. Custom and education, essay on, vi. 470- examples of the force of, vi. 471, 573. 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. 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- De Thou, memorial of Q. Elizabeth, communi- Death, Essay on, vi. 379, 380, 544, 545. another Essay, not by Bacon, possibly by deaths of remarkable men, ib. we die daily, vi. 600. unagreeable to aldermen and citizens, vi gracious only to those in misery, ib. Deathbed sayings, vi. 380, 545. Declarations, distinguished from grants, vii. 362. Dedications, Seneca's, vii. 13. Deed ever imports a consideration, vii. 403, Deer pasture, vii. 342. Deformed people envious, vi. 393. commonly even with nature, vi. 480, 570. observers of the weak points of others, ib. in a great wit is an advantage in rising, Deipara, vii. 223. Delamer's case, vii. 400, 406, 622, 635. Delays of men in authority, vi. 400, 551. Deluges, vi. 512. Demades, Antipater to, vii. 141. Demeanour, the art of, vi. 435-437, 565- Demetrius, when he had refused a petition to Demetrius of Macedon, when the fever left Democritus, charged with Atheism, vi. 413, his philosophy illustrated by the fable of his opinion that the world might again his atomic theory, vi. 730. more to be approved than Aristotle, vi. truth, like ore, needs refining, vii. 162. opinio ejus mundum in antiquam confu- philosophia ejus magis probanda quàm Demonax, concerning his burial, vii. 128. his grounds of hope for Athens, vii. 87. Deptford Bridge, action at, between Lord Detractor portat Diabolum in linguâ, vii. 200. interpretatio fabulæ. vi. 661. Devonshire, Cornish rebels against Henry Earl of, relieves Exeter, besieged by Devil, envy his proper attribute, vi. 397. interpretatio fabulæ, vi. 645, 646. Diet, how to regulate, vi. 453, 563. Digestion, vi. 434, 556. Digg's case, vii. 560. Dighton, John, one of the murderers of the Diogenes, when asked how he would be to Plato, vii. 140. begging of a prodigal, vii. 144. when the mice came about him, vii. 160. to a young man dancing daintily, ib. the elder, to his son, vii. 143. public, how to remove, vi. 410-412. Discourse, Essay on, vi. 455-457, 564, Dishonour, or Juno's suitor, meaning of the Dissimulation, essay on, vi. 387-389. a faint kind of wisdom, vi. 387. Dissolution of contracts, vii. 372-374. Divers, their power of holding the breath, vii. 99. Divinatio, non interpretatio est, quæ omninò Dixmue, besieged by the French under Lord relieved by Lord Daubigny, vi. 100. Dog, his courage in presence of his master, vi. death of Lord Bacon's, vii. 184. Dogmatical and Empirical faculty, not well Dorset, Marquis of, left as a pledge at Paris committed to the Tower by the King, vi. 55. Double vexation, in Chancery and at Common Dove, the spirit of Jesus was the spirit of the Earl v. Snow, vii. 635. Earls, the turn first held by, vii. 466. Earth gives counsel to Jupiter, vi. 704. East and West, wars anciently moved from east to west, vi. 515. have no certain points of heaven, ib. Ecclesia scripturarum custos, vii. 242. fable of her marriage with Pan explained, Narcissi comes, vi. 632. uxor Panis, vi. 640. Edgecombe, Sir Richard, ambassador to at Rennes, vi. 98. Education, essay on, vi. 470-472, 572, the power of, vi. 471, 573. most perfect when begun in youth, ib. Edward Plantagenet, prisoner in the Tower, vi. 49. paraded through the streets of London, E. Drunkenness, why no defence, vii. 346. their oppressions, vi. 218, 235, 236. Duress, vii. 369, 378, 379. Dutch, free fishing on the coasts of England Dyer, Sir Edward, his story of Kelley the Edward I., the principal lawgiver of our Edward II., vii. 141. Edward IV., his popular reign, vi. 29. invented benevolences, vi. 121. Egerton, Lord Keeper, vii. 171. self lovers will burn the house to roast Egremond, Sir John, heads the rising in flies to Lady Margaret of Burgundy, ib. Egyptians, vagabonds calling themselves, vii. Elias, or Hialas, ambassador from Ferdinando Bacon's notes to Camden's Annals of her her agent at Constantinople, note by Elizabeth-continued. how dealt with, when bills were to be applications of two for the office of secre- not independent of subsidies, vii. 41. her reply to Sir John Rainsford, vii. 125. Sir Nicholas Bacon to, ib. and Pace the fool, vii. 125. to Lord Essex, ib. concerning the Commission of Sales, vii. her instructions to great officers, ib. to Master Sackford in his new boots, vii. when warned of conspiracies against her at Theobald's knighted seven gentlemen, to Lady Paget, vii. 161, 162. of her successor, vii. 167. to Sir Edward Dier, vii. 174. foiled in creating a new patent office, vii. Elizabeth, Queen of Henry VII. her title to ordered to reside with the Queen Dow- again betrothed to the king, vi. 33. dies in childbed in the Tower, vi. 217. Ellesmere, Lord, of a man newly married, vii. 184. anecdote of, vii. 176. Emmanuel, king of Portugal, vii. 21. philosophia ejus magis probanda quàm Empire, essay on, vi. 419-423, 552, 553. great empires enervate their subject na- Empirical philosophers, like pismires, vii. 177. Empson and Dudley, their relation to Henry horse-leeches and shearers for the king, their oppressions, vi. 155, 218, 235, 236. VI. 93. Endymion, fable of, interpreted, vi. 717, 718. Endymion-continued. as explained by Max Müller, vi. 612— England and Flanders, man and wife, vi. 145. Entails, how created, vii. 489. began by statute of Edward I. vi. 490. Entreprenant, vi. 473, 574. Entry, title to lands gained by, vii. 476–— Envy, essay on, vi. 392-397. its relation to love, vi. 392. called in Scripture, an evil eye, vi. 393. what persons apt to envy oth rs, vi. 393, what persons most subject to be envied, redoubleth from speech and fame, vi. 394. mollified by chanting a "Quanta patimur," vi. 395. cure of it, vi. 396. difference between public and private, ib. the most importune and the vilest of affec- the proper attribute of the Devil, vi. 397. vii. 165. Epicurus, his atomic theory, vi. 730. his atheism, vi. 413, 559. tentamenta, vii. 91. got rid of Fate, and made room for For- de motu atomorum, vi. 656. Fatum sustulit, et Fortunæ locum dedit, Epidemic sweating sickness, vi. 34. his followers the improvident, vi. 751. Erasmus, extracts by Bacon frem his Adagia, Erichthonius, or Imposture, meaning of the interpretatio fabulæ, vi. 660. Error, grounds on which it may be assigned, in fact, ib. |