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Estates-continued.

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will in writing, vii. 496-499.
Estovers, vii. 342.

Eternity, three parts of, vii. 225.
Ethelwald, Bishop of Winchester, sold the
church plate to relieve the poor, vii. 141.
Ethiops in the phial of Nemesis, vi. 662,
737, 739.

Eunuchs, envious, vi. 393.

why trusted by kings, vi. 480, 571.
Eure, Lord, vii. 577–582.

Euripides, of the autumn of life, vii. 145.
Evil comes in contact with good, how, vii. 86.
whether God the author of, vii. 253, 254.
Evil eye, vi. 393.

Exchequer, Court of, its jurisdiction, vi. 85.
Excommunication, Pope's Bull of, published
at Paul's Cross, vi. 221.

Excusat, aut extenuat, delictum in capitalibus,
quod non operatur idem in civilibus, vii.
347, 348.

Executors, vii. 339, 352, 353, 502—504.
Exercises, appropriate to each disease, vi.

498.

the efficacy of exercise or practice, vii.
101.

Exeter, besieged by Perkin Warbeck, vi,

190.

visited by Henry VII. vi. 193.
Exile, no punishment to an excellent artisan,
vi. 735.

abjuration and exile, offences of, vii. 742,

743.

Exilium præstanti artifici vix supplicium, vi.

659.

Expense, essay on, vi. 443, 444, 530, 563,
564.

ought to be but to half the receipts, vi.
443, 530.

Experientia, res stupida, et plena moræ, vi.

673.

Extortions of Henry VII. vi. 218.
Eye, evil, vi. 393.

putting out, felony, vii. 464.

Faculties of the mind of man threefold, hence
three classes of written books, vi. 17.
Fædera per Stygem pacta vi. 633, 634.
Fairley's case, vii. 572–574, 579.
Faith, confession of, vii. 219-226.
Falinus, his reply to Clearchus, vii. 127.
Fall of man, vii. 222.

Fallacies, and the Elenches of them, vii. 78

92.

Falsehood, the shame and wickedness of, vi.
379.

Montaigne on, ib.

Fama omnis e domesticis emanat, vi. 505, 531
soror Gigantum, interpretatio fabulæ, vi

645.

Fame, her pedigree, vi. 407, 589.

Fame-continued.

like a river, bears up things light and
swollen, and drowns things weighty
and solid, vi. 502, 581.

of learning, her flight slow without
some feathers of ostentation, vi. 504,
586.

Essay on, vi. 519, 520.

sister of the Giants, vi. 718.

the spur to virtue, vii. 80.
good, like fire, vii. 174.
Family, old, vi. 406, 550.

Farnaby, Thomas, published a poem by Lord
Bacon, vii. 269-272.

Faro, Katheren de, mother of Perkin War-
beck, vi. 134.

Fata, cur Panis sorores, vi. 637.

Fates, why sisters of Pan, vi. 709, 710.
Father his authority over his family, vii.
644.

to the bough, son to the plough, vii. 740.
Favour of law, what, vii. 663.
Favourites of Princes, vi. 438.
Fawcon, one of our pursuivants, vi. 98.
Fealty, vii. 482.

Fee simple, estates in, vii. 492.
Felo de se, vii. 364, 464, 741.
Felony, cases of, vii. 737-739.

punishment, trial, and proceeding, in cases
of, vii. 739-741.

Feme covert, vii. 328, 329, 340, 344, 345,
348, 351, 367, 432, 436, 437, 439, 443.
Fennel-stalks, with which Prometheus stole
the fire, vi. 745, 748.
Feoffments, vii. 493.
Ferdinando of Spain, vi. 120.

his wars in Grenada, vi. 108.

his share in the execution of the Earl of
Warwick by Henry VII. vi. 204, 205.
according to Sir James Mackintosh, vi.
204, 212.

his policy respecting Castile, vi. 228.
rumoured marriage with Madame de Fois,
vi. 227.

his power strengthened by the death of
Philip, King of Castile, vi. 233.
Ferdinando, Louis XI., and Henry VII,
tres magi of kings, vi. 244.
Ferdinando and Isabella, send letters to
Henry VII. to report the conquest of
Grenada, vi. 125.

make peace with Charles VIII. vi. 129.
proposed marriage, between their daugh

ter Katherine, and Prince Arthur of
England, vii. 185.-See Isabella.
Ferdinando the younger, King of Naples,

vi. 158.

Ferula Promethei, vi. 669, 671.

Fiatt, Marquis, his compliment to Bacon, vii.
183.

Fides est obligatio conscientiæ unius ad in-
tentionem alterius, vii. 401.

Fines, after five years, to be final, to conclude
ali strangers' rights, vi. 93.

the Statute of, vii. 632.

Fixes-continued.

and recoveries, vii. 332, 493.-See Re-
coveries.

Fire, the invention of, by Prometheus, vi.
745-753.

Firmarius, force of the word, vii. 531.

Fishing on the coast of England, rights of the
Dutch, vi. 232.

Fistula Panis, quid, vi. 638.

Fitz-gerard, Thomas, Earl of Kildare, rebels

against Henry VII. vi. 48.

Fitzwater, Lord, favours Perkin Warbeck,
vi. 140.

apprehended, tried, and beheaded, vi.
148.

Fitzwilliam's case, vii. 559, 562.

Fianders, rebels against Henry VII. assem-
ble in, vi. 52.

rebels against Maximilian, vi. 98.
speech of the French ambassadors concern-
ing, vi. 101.

and England, man and wife, vi. 145.
English merchants ordered to leave by
Henry VII. vi. 147, 162.
trade resumed, vi. 172, 173.

Flammock, Thomas, leader of the Cornish
rebels against Henry VII. vi. 176.
taken prisoner at Blackheath, vi. 182.
executed at Tyburn, ib.

Flattery among lovers, vi. 397, 557.

of a man's self, vi. 441.

Flower de luces, non laborant neque nent, vii.
151.

Flowers commended for gardens, vi. 486—

488.

sweet-scented, vi. 487.

of spring, why sacred to the infernal
deities, vi. 706.

Flux of matter perpetual, vi. 512.
Foderingham, burial place of Cecile, Dutchess
of York, vi. 159.

Fois, Madame de, report of her marriage
with Ferdinando of Castile, vi. 229.
Followers and Friends, essay on, vi. 494,
495, 527, 528, 578, 579.

Fool learns less by the wise than the wise
learn by fools, vii. 148.

how different from a wise man, vii. 160.
hath said in his heart, There is no God,
vii. 251.

more of, than of the wise, in human na-
ture, vi. 402.

Forget him awhile, and he will remember
himself, vii. 144.

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Formularies and elegancies, vii. 197–211.

Preface, vii. 189-195.

Formulæ, vii. 208.

Forrest, Myles, one of the murderers of the

princes in the Tower, vi. 141.
Fortitude, he who wanteth, let him worship
Friendship, vi. 558.

Fortune, the advancement of, vi. 9.

high, how to bear oneself in, vi. 398-
401, 550-552.

is like a market, vi. 427.

essay on, vi. 472, 473. 574, 575.

the mould of, is in a man's hands, vi. 472,
574.

blind, but not invisible, ib.

her way is like the milky way in heaven, ib.
her two daughters, Confidence and Repu-
tation, vi. 473, 575.

wise men attribute their virtues to, ib.
Fouldrey, in Lancashire, rebels from Ireland
land at, vi. 56.

Fountains in gardens, of two kinds, vi. 490.
Foxe, Bishop of Duresme, strengthens Nor-
ham Castle against the Scots, vi. 184.
with Hialas to treat with James IV. vi.
186.

his meeting with James IV. at Melrosse,
vi. 200.

Lord Privy Seal to Henry VII. vi. 172.
privy counsellor, vi. 40.

subsequent promotions, vi. 41.
ambassador to Scotland, vi, 62.
busied about the marriage of Prince
Arthur with Katharine of Arragon, vi.
213.

negotiates the marriage of the Princess
Mary with Charles, Prince of Castile,
vi. 237.

France, all noblesse or peasantry, vi. 95.

Henry VII. of England claims the king-
dom, vi. 112.

Henry VII. his cause of war with, and
preparations, vi. 117.

why overmatched by England, vi. 447.
the League of, vi. 500.

king of, his retort on the ambassador of
the emperor, vii. 83.

statute of Edward III. that the realm of

England should not be subject to the
seigniory of France, vii. 654, 655.
English title to the crown of, ib.-See
French.

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French, feeling of the English towards, vi. 81.
well acquainted with the courage of the
English, vi. 83.

are wiser than they seem, the Spaniards
seem wiser than they are, vi. 435,
565.

army, often ill provided, by reason of
negligence, vii. 56.

pay less reverence to the sacrament than
the Spanish, vii. 150.-See France.
Friends and followers, essay on, vi. 494, 495,
527, 528, 578, 579.

Friendship, essay on, vi. 437-443, 558, 559.
three main fruits of,

peace in the affections, vi. 437-440.
support in the judgment, vi. 440-442.
aid on all occasions, vi. 442, 443.

not to be lost for another man's wit, vii.
173.

there is little in the world, and least of
all between equals, vi. 495, 528, 579.
Frion, Stephen, an emissary of Margaret of
Burgundy, vi. 137.

sent by Charles VIII. ambassador to
Perkin Warbeck, ib.

Perkin guided by him, vi. 157.
Frowicke on the prerogative, vii. 396.
Fulforde's march to the relief of Exeter be-
sieged by Perkin Warbeck, vi. 192.
Fuller, his remark concerning May-games in
harvest time, vi. 361.
Funambulos, vii. 99, 100.

Gabato, Sebastian, sails with three ships be-
youd Labrador, vi. 197.

Gadshill, robbery on, vii. 365.
Gagvien, Robert, Prior of the Trinity, ambas-

sador from Charles VIII. to Henry
VII. vi. 104.

his speech to the council, vi. 104-109.
libels Henry VII. in Latin verse, vi. 113.

G.

Gains, light, make heavy purses, vi. 500, 527,

576.

Galba, his dying speech, vi. 380, 545.

omnium consensu capax imperii, nisi im-
perasset, vi. 401, 552.

his saying, "legi a se militem non emi,”
vi. 412.

prophecy of Tiberius respecting, vi. 453.

Galba-continued.

saying, respecting the licentiousness of his

time, vii. 135.

Galeot, James, the French general killed at
the battle of St. Albans, vi. 83.
Gambling by servants, statute of Henry VII.
respecting, vi. 224.

Gaol-delivery, commission of, vii. 472.
Gaols, patents of, reannexed to the sheriffwicks,
by Henry VII. vi. 223.

Garcilazzo de Viega, vii. 34.
Gardens, essay on, vi. 485–492.

passages resembling, in the Winter's Tale,
vi. 486, 487.

God Almighty first planted a garden, vi.

485.

for all the months in the year, ib.

flowers and fruits commended, vi. 486—
488.

dimensions required, vi. 488.
subdivisions of, ib.

alleys and hedges, vi. 488, 489.
fountains, vi. 490.

heaths, vi. 490, 491.

side grounds, vi. 491, 492.

aviaries, vi. 492.

Gardiner, Bishop. his saying concerning Pro-
testants, vii. 127.

Garter, order of the, sent by Henry VII. to
Alphonso, eldest son of Ferdinando of
Spain, vi. 131.

given to Philip King of Castile by Henry
VII. vi. 232.

Gascoign, wines and woads of, to be brought
only in English bottoms, vi. 95.
Anjou and Gascoigne, united to England
in the reign of Henry II. vii. 673.
subjects of, naturalized in England after
the provinces separated, vii. 673-678.
Gascoigne v. Pierson, case of, vii. 698.
Gaunt. rebels against Maximilian, vi. 98.
submits, vi. 123–125.

Gavelkind land, not escheated for felony, vii.
487.

Gellius, A., on verbal distinctions, vi. 436,

566.

Gemes, brother of Bajazet, vi. 108.

General words shall never be stretched to a
foreign intendment, vii. 336.
Genitings, vi. 487.

Genitories of priests, why supposed to be
adored by the early Christians, vii. 155.
Gentlemen, the more gentlemen, ever the
lower books of subsidies, vi. 94.

if too many in a state, the Commons will
be base, vi. 446, 588.

Georgica Intellectus, vii. 95.

George, St., his fields, Henry VII. encamped
in, vi. 180.

Giants, brothers of Fame, vi. 718.
Gibson, Dr., vii. 171.

Gift, of chattels, vii. 499.

Gigantum soror Fama, vi, 645.

Gilbert, Sir Humphrey, his discovery of a
now passage to Cutuia, vi. 197.

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Gladius gladium juvat, vii. 589.

Glocester, Statute of, vii. 528, 530, 531, 537,
538.
Gloucester, Richard Duke of, murders his
nephews, vi. 163.

Goat's feet of Pan, vi. 711.

God, a jealous God, vi. 381, 543.

Indians have no name for, vi. 414, 560.
no opinion of Him better than a wrong
opinion, vi. 415, 560.

His image, what, vii. 30.

what Simonides thought of, vii. 158.
His nature, vii. 219.

His monarchy over the world, vii. 645.
the Word, typified by Hercules liberating
Prometheus, vi. 753.

Gold, exportation of, prohibited by Henry
VII. vi. 96.

the emblem of duration, vi. 761.

tried with the touchstone, men with gold,

vii. 157.

and silver, the craft of multiplication of,
is felony, vii. 738.

Golden branch, vi. 760.

Goldenston, Thomas, Prior of Christchurch

in Canterbury, sent ambassador to Charles
VIII. vi. 112.

Goldingham, to Lord Leicester, You find
posts, and the country will find you railing,
vii. 168.

Gondebault sent ambassador by Maximilian to
Henry VII. vi. 115, 116, 127.
Gondomar, Count. vii. 176.

his story to Bacon, of the old rat, vii.
170.

discoursing in Latin to the king, vii. 183.
on compliment, ib.

Good, strongest at first, ill in continuance, vi.

433.

and evil, colours of, vii. 78—92.
Goodness, and goodness of nature, essay on,
vi. 403-405, 545, 546.

Philanthropia of the Greeks, vi. 403, 545.
Charity of theologians, ib.

found even among the Turks, vi. 403.
both a habit and a disposition, vi. 404,

546.

Gordon, Lady Catheren, daughter of the
Earl of Huntley, the king consents to
her marriage with Perkin Warbeck,
vi. 166.

seized by Henry VII. at St. Michael's
Mount, vi. 193.

called the White Rose, ib.

Gorge, Mr., Bacon's saying respecting, vii.
182.

Gorgones, Bella significant, vi. 641, 642.
Gorgons, meaning of the table, vi. 714, 715.
Government, four pillars of, vi. 408, 589.
Grææ, meaning of the fable, vi. 716.

proditiones sunt, vi. 642.

Græcia, designs of Charles VIII. on, vi. 107
Granson, battle of, vii. 57.

Grant, an argument of property. vii. 536.
not counterinandable, vii. 362.

Grants-continued.

what the king may not grant by charter,
vii. 509-512.

the king's grants shall not be taken to a
special intent, vii. 356.

by a common person, shall be extended

as well to a foreign as to a common
intent, ib.

distinguished from declarations, vii. 362.
not allowed of without a foundation of
interest in the grantor, ib.

Gratiosi, or favourites of princes, vi. 506,
532.

Grasshopper, Tithonus, why changed into, vi.
727, 728.

Grave, raising of siege of, vii. 136.

Gray's Inn, Bacon a reader at, vii. 304,
305.

his obligations to, vii. 524.

Great place, essay on, vi. 398-401, 550-
552.

its servitude, vi. 398, 550.

dangers and discomforts, vi. 399, 550.
all rising to, is by a winding stair, vi.
401.

Greeks scoffed at, for their want of antiquity,
by the Egyptians, vii. 157.

their mythology as explained by Max
Müller, vi. 610-614.

by Bacon, vi. 611, 695-699.
Greese of the quire, vi. 188.

Gregory the Great, his attempt to extinguish
heathen learning, vi. 513.

Grenada conquered from the Moors, vi. 125.
Greville. Sir Fulke, of precedents in Par
liament, vii. 153.

likened himself to Robin Goodfellow, vii.
158.

Grindall, Archbishop, physicians in England
have only the power to bind and loose, vii.
171.

Grottas for estivation, vi. 484.

Guildford, Sir Richard, sent by Henry VII.
to Kent after Perkin Warbeck's rebellion,
vi. 158.

Guircamp, siege of, by Charles VIII. vi. 98,

116.

Guise, Henry Duke of, the greatest usurer in
France, why, vii. 145.

Gyngham, the siege of, vi. 98, 116.

Hacket, the fanatic, notes by Bacon in Camden,
respecting, vi. 355, 356.

Hadrian, Cardinal, his correspondence in
Latin with Henry VII. vi. 243.
Hæres est nomen juris, filius est nomen na-
turæ, vii. 357.

Hæreses, duplex causa earum, vii. 240.

Hæresium, quæ potestatem Dei minuunt,
tres gradus, vii. 241.

Hair, why Pan covered with, vi. 710.
Hale, Sir Matthew, his Jurisdiction of the
House of Lords, vi. 249.

Half blood, vii. 358.
Halfpenny's case, vii. 407.

Hall, merit of his History, vi. 4, 12.

Hammes, Sir Robert Curson, governor of, vi.
221.

Handmill, a prudent king should be able to
grind with a, vi. 425.

Hannibal, his saying of Fabius and Marcellus,
vii. 137.

of Fabius Maximus, vii. 156.
Hanno, swore by the same gods who had
punished his former perjury, vii. 156.
Harbinger, to a guest, vii. 145.

Hare's flesh, the Moors eat none, vii. 156.
Haste, Stay a little, that we may make an end
the sooner, vii. 176, 200.

Hastings, Lord, an enemy to the Queen
Dowager, vi. 50.

Hatton, Lord Chancellor, his pun on lying,

vii. 136.

Hault justice may be granted by the king to a
subject, vii. 741.

H.

Hawks, stealing certain kinds, felony, vii. 739.
Hay, Sir Alexander, answers to questions
propounded by, touching the office of con-
stable, vii. 749-754.

Hayward, Dr., Bacon's jest respecting his
plagiarisms from Tacitus, vii. 133.
Heads, whether great, or little, have the best
wit, vii. 139.

Heale, Serjeant, case of, vii. 669.

Health, essay on the regiment of, vi. 452—
454, 562, 563.

Hearne, Thomas, his edition of Camden's An-
nals of Queen Elizabeth, vi. 351.
Heart, no

vi. 438.

receipt can open it, but a true friend,

Heaths in gardens, vi. 490, 491.

Hector, Dr., to the dames of London, vii. 91.
Hedera, cur Baccho sacra, vi. 666.
Hedges for gardens, vi. 489.

Helena, he that preferred her quitted the

gifts of Juno and of Pallas, vi. 398, 558.
Helps to the intellectual powers, vii. 97—103.
Henningham, Henry VII. entertained at, by
the Earl of Oxford, vi. 219.

Henricus Princeps Walliæ, elogium Baconi
de eo, vi. 323-325.
obiit, 6° Nov. anno 1612.

mors ejus veneno falsò relata, vi. 325.
Henry VI. his canonization, vi. 233.

pointed out Henry VII. then a lad, as
to be his successor, vi. 245.
Henry VII. History of, vi. 27-245.
preface, vi. 3-22.
text, vi. 5, 6.

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