Naples, designs of Charles VIII. on, vi. 107, 111. conquered and lost by Charles VIII. vi. 158. the Queen, widow of Ferdinando the Narcissus, or self-love, interpretation of the the flower, why sacred to the infernal gathered by Proserpine, vi. 758. takes his name from torpor or stupor, vi. sive Philautia, vi. 632, 633. a Proserpina carptus, vi. 680. Nativity of the French king truly cast, vi. 464. Natura, Pan symbolum naturæ, vi. 636-638. Naturalization, case of the postnati of Scot- privilege and benefit of, vii. 647. grades of, alien enemy, vii. 648. alien friend, ib. denizen, ib. natural-born subject, vii. 649. confutation of false opinions upon, vii. either place or parents should suffice, vii. 664. of foreigners, vii. 52. what suffices for, vii. 665. Nature, essay on nature in men, vi. 469, 470, custom only can alter and subdue, vi. 469, rules for disciplining, ib. is best perceived in privateness, vi. 470, happy they whose natures suit with their runs either to herbs or weeds, ib. described under the person of Minerva, outstripped by art, vi. 744. fable of Proserpine relates to, vi. 759. is nothing but the laws of the creation, the law of, vii. 663, 664. Necessitas inducit privilegium quoad jura pri- publica, major est quam privata, vii. 345. Necessity, why represented by the river Styx, when a good defence, vii. 343-346. for conservation of life, vii. 343, 344. of the act of God, or of strangers, privilegeth only quoad jura privata, vii. Negative more pregnant of direction than the side, easiest to uphold, vi. 436, 566. whether by letter or in person best, vi. 492, 493, 533, 579. choice of instruments, vi. 493, 494, 533, vi. 429. Nemesis, or the vicissitude of things, meaning why crowned, ib. armed with a spear, vi. 739. mounted on a stag, ib. interpretatio fabulæ, vi. 662, 663. Nero, of Seneca's style, vii. 134. called a youth wife, vii. 135. Nerva, at supper, vii. 149. Neville, Sir George, joins Perkin Warbeck New trial granted upon a verdict, in cases Newark, battle of, vi. 57-59. Newbury, Henry, his case, vii. 704. Nicolas, Sir Harris, his proceedings and ordi- 422. Nobility, essay on, vi. 405, 406, 549, 550. of birth, abateth industry, ib. not to be multiplied, vi. 410, 446, 587. Nomination to a church, vii. 354. Non accipi debent verba in deinonstrationem Non obstante, vii. 369-372. Non potest adduci exceptio ejusdem rei, Oath of the gods by the river Styx, vi. 706. of ointments more durable than those of Oes or spangs, vi. 468. Office. how to bear oneself in, vi. 398-401, Offices, false, against his rich subjects by Henry Old age, second childhood not to be desired, Olive branch, rather than a laurel branch, in Opera Dci, vii. 233. Opinion, that which relates to truth is higher Opportuniti s, a wise man will make more Opposita juxta se posita magis elucescunt, vii Opposition, many a man's strength is in, vi. 499. Opus et usus, vii. 410. Orange, Prince of, taken prisoner at the 151. Orators, likened by Solon to winds upon the Order, the life of dispatch, vi. 435, 556. made by Bacon when Chancellor, vii. 759 Ordnance, invention of in India, vi. 516. excellences of, ib. Orleans, Duke of, takes refuge with the Duke of Brittaine, vi. 65. directs him in all things, vi. 69. 0. Orleans, Duke of — continued. taken prisoner by Charles VIII. at the his singing of two kinds, vi. 721. at the islands of the Sirens, vi. 763, 764. musician who like him drew stones, vii. interpretatio fabulæ, vi. 646-648. apud insulas Sirenum, vi. 684-686. a mulieribus discerptus, vi. 665, 667. Ostentation, the use of, vi. 504, 586. Outlawries, one means of extortion used by Overbury, disclosures promised by Frank'in Paget, Lady, to Queen Elizabeth, vii. 161, Painter, who became a physician, vii. 160. may make a better face than ever was, vi. Palace, description of a perfect one, vi. 482— Pallas, birth of, vi. 610, 697, 702. meaning of the legend, vi. 424, 554, 763. interpretatio fabulæ, vi. 683. Pan, or Nature, interpretation of the fable, vi. his origin, vi. 707, 709. why hairy, ib. why biform, ib. bis emblems explained, vi. 711. the god of countrymen, vi. 712. capture of Typhon, vi. 713. discovery of Ceres, ib. matched in music with Apollo, ib. sive Natura, interpretatio fabulæ, vi. 635 origo ejus, vi. 635, 636. universitatem rerun, sive Naturam re- cur hirsutus, ib. cur biformis. ib. pedes capreæ habet, vi. 638. officium, ib. deus venatorum et ruricolarum, ib. montium præses, vi. 639. Pandora, vi. 669, 674, 746, 751. Panici terrores, vi. 639. P. Pannage of timber, belongs to the lessee, vii. 532. Parabolæ, interpretatio earuan, vi. 625—628, argumentis antiquiores, vi. 628. probably not by Bacon, vii. 289–291. general, granted by Henry VII. in the Parental authority, by the law of England, by the law of Nature, vii. 644. Parents and children, essay on, vi. 390, 391. vi. 390. treatment of children, ib. Parker, Sir James, killed at the tournament second of Henry VII. vi. 61. subsidies granted to Henry VII. vi. 82. of the 4th of Henry VII. vi. 91. in the 7th year of Henry VII. vi. 116–122. preceded by a Great Council, vi. 117. in the 11th of Henry VII. vi. 158. of the 12th of Henry VII. vi. 173. distinguished from the Great Council, vi 247-252. have power to extinguish their own au- Parmenio, Alexander to, vii. 142. Parsimony, vi. 461. Parties in a state, vi. 498-500, 532, 533, Parts, plurality of, makes a show of magni tude, vii. 81. Pasquil, saying of the Duke of Sesa respect- Passion or Desire, described in the person of Paston correspondence, vi. 249, 250. Patent Offices, created by Elizabeth, and by James I. vii. 683. list of, vii. 699, 709.-See Letters Patent. Paternoster, wager about repeating, vii. 172. | Perkin Warbeck—continued. Patres patriæ, vi. 506, 532. Patriarchal government, vii. 645. Patrick, an Austin friar, sets up a counterfeit Earl of Warwick, vi. 202. Paulet, Sir Amice, his saying, "Stay awhile, that we may end the sooner," vii. 136. of the news of the conquest of Grenada, black eagle blown from the spire, an Payne, his engraving of Henry VII. vi. 6. commission of the, vii. 476. conservators of, their office, vii. 468.-See Pedigree, dispute as to, vii. 149. Podum Panis cur recurvum, vi. 638. Peers of the kingdom, mode of trial of, vii. 736, Pegasus, interpretation of the fable, vi. 720. Peile, saving of a Lacedæmonian prisoner at, Pembroke Castle, Henry VII. born at, vi. 245. Pembroke, Jasper, Earl of, created Duke of Penal Laws, administration of by Judges, vi. shall not be taken by equity, vii. 360. greatness of suffering endured, vii. 99. utrum Pan filius ejus, vi. 633. Pensions from Charles VIII. of France to the Pentheus, or Curiosity, the fable interpreted, his death, vi. 741, 743. a mulieribus discerptus, vi. 665, 667. Perils commonly ask to be paid in pleasures, Perin, provost of, killed by the Cornish re- Peripatetici, de stimulo materiæ per privatio- philosophia eoruin nimis venerata, vi. 672. held in too great honour, vi. 749. defensive preparations against him perhaps, raised up by Lady Margaret of Burgundy, his qualifications for the part, vi. 133. Edward IV. whether his godfather, . parentage, vi. 134. lives with John Stenbeck, at Antwerp, ib. sent to Portugal, vi. 136. arrives at Cork in Ireland, ib. received by Charles VIII. at his court, as Duke of York, vi. 138. flies again to Flanders, to Lady Margaret, ib. excitement in England at the news, vi. 140. measures taken by the king to expose the Archduke Philip of Flanders declines to lands in Kent, vi. 156. his troops cut to pieces, and the prisoners from Flanders sails to Ireland, vi. 162. his speech to the King of Scots, vi. 162— 166. with the King of Scots, invades Northum- his proclamation, vi. 167-171, 252— 255. James IV. refuses to deliver him up to but dismisses him, vi. 187. invited by the Cornish men, vi. 189. besieges Exeter, vi. 190. takes sanctuary at Bewlay, vi. 192. escapes to the sanctuary at Shyne, vi. 201. again imprisoned in the Tower, vi. 202. Perpetuities, vii. 491, 544. interpretatio fabulæ, vi. 641-643. its geographical position, vii. 63. Person, in Statute of Uses, vii. 424, 425. Personal qualities, descriptions of, vii. 197, Persuasion, the art of, vii. 77. Peru, conquest of, whether justifiable, vii. 21, 22. Peryman's case, vii. 563. Petitions continued. Petronius, his levity at the approach of moriturus, vi. 685. Petrucci, Cardinal, his conspiracy against Phaeton, his car went but a day, vi. 512. Philip of Macedon, of one who spoke evil of the prisoner's appeal, vii. 147. his dream respecting his wife, vi. 463. proposed cross-marriages between their Philip, King of Castile, in right of Joan his on ill terms with Ferdinando, vi. 228. for Spain, vi. 229. driven by a storm into Weymouth, ib. concludes a treaty, the Intercursus malus, dies soon after his arrival in Spain, ib. Philosophia, Orpheus, sive, vi. 684. naturalis, opus ejus nobilissimum est in- can induce contempt of pleasure, vi. 763. Phocion, when the people applauded his to Alexander's messenger, vii. 154. Physicians have the power of the Church to how to select one, vi. 454, 563. Pipe of Pan, an allegory, vi. 711. lawfulness of wars on, vii. 32. Pisistratus, correction in Camden's report of Pius Quintus, worthy to be canonized, vii. Place, great, essay on, vi. 398-401, 550— Placita juris, opposed to regulæ juris, vii. 359. Plague in the 15th of Henry VII. in London Planets, princes should resemble in their mo- Plantagenet, Edward, son to the Duke of confined by Richard III. vi. 46. counterfeited by Lambert Symnell, vi. 48. arraigned of treason and beheaded, vi. Plantations, essay on, vi. 457-459. all knowledge is but remembrance, vi. to one that pitied Diogenes shivering, to Diogenes, vii. 140. to a young man at a dissolute house, vii. enamoured of Stella, vii. 172. Play, the sin against the Holy Ghost, vii. 210. Pleading shall ever be taken strongest against for ambiguity of words, vii. 338-340. ambiguity that grows by reference, incertainty of intendment, vii. 339, impropriety of words, ib. repugnancy, ib. a man shall not disclose that which is against himself, vii. 340. the ancient and exact form of, vii. 642. fable of the Sirens, vi. 762, 764. springs from the union of abundance with Pliny on the arts of self-commendation, vi. Pliny, Caius, made a collection of the mis- of Timoleon, vii. 89. of the commonwealth of bees, vii. 174. of men of weak abilities in great place, ib. |