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obtaining a ship manned of Henry VII. the course he
steered, ib.

Gad-fly, i. 160.

Gage, Mr. ii. 218, 254, 255.

Gagvien, prior of Trinity in France, his speech to the coun-
cil of Henry VII. i. 753, disperses a libel in Latin verse
against the king at his going home, 756.

Galba, i. 262, 273, 321, was thought fit for government till
he had power, 269.

Galen, his cure for the scirrhus of the liver, i. 140.

Galeot slain, i. 747.

Galilæus, or Galileo, ii. 170, 211, his opinion of the ebbing
and flowing of the sea, i. 174.

Galley-slaves, why generally fleshy, i. 166.

Gaol delivery, the course of executing it, i. 574, the office
of gaolers, 651.

Game, destroying of it, how to be punished, i. 677.
Gaping, a motion of imitation, i. 48.

Garcilazzo de Viega, descended of the race of the Incas,
i. 528.

Gardens, i. 298, for all months in the year, ib.

Gardiner, bishop, i. 318, a saying of his, 667.

Gardiner, Sir Robert, a commendation of him, i. 714.

Garments, of what plants they may be made, i. 151.

tions of a trial, 121, 122, several properties of gold, 122
Gold hath in it the least volatile of any metal, 175, the
making gold scarcely possible, 241, will incorporate with
quicksilver, lead, copper, brass, iron, 243.
Gondomar, count de, his resentment against Sir Walter
Raleigh, ii. 106, insulted by the apprentices of London,
ib. note, sends his compliments to the lord chancellor,
219, letters to him from lord St. Alban, 233, 252, a great
friend of his lordship, in no credit with the prince of
Wales or duke of Buckingham, 255.

Gondomar, his tale when our author was advanced to the
great seal, i. 317. Vide 330.

Gonsalvo, his character of a soldier, i. 315.

Goodere, Sir Henry, ii. 170, 178.

Goodness of nature, i. 270, has no excess but error, ib. the
several signs or symptoms of it, 270, 271.

Goods stolen, if forfeited to the crown by felony, &c. cannot
be recovered by the owner, i. 586.

Gordon, Catherine, married to Perkin, i. 771, her commen-
dations, 779, taken and sent to the queen, and had an
honourable allowance, ib.

Gorge, his confession, relating to lord Essex's treason i.
426, another confession, ib.
Gorgias, i. 194.

Garners under-ground, the best preservatives of corn, i. 123. | Goths, &c. their descent upon Rome, i. 467.

Garter, order of, i. 760.

Gaston de Fois, i. 295.

Gathering of wind for freshness, i. 172.

Gavelkind, a custom in Kent, i. 577. Gavelkind land is
not escheatable for felony, 580.

Gaul, nation of, made capable of bearing offices, &c. in
Rome, i. 451.

Gaunt, the honourable retreat there by Sir John Norris,
i. 537.

Gawen, Sir John, ii. 204.

General words, that they ought not to be stretched too far
in intendments, is a good rule in law, i. 550.
Generating of some creatures, at set times only, of some at
all times, i. 169, the cause of each, ib.

Generation opposed to corruption, i. 122, they are nature's
two boundaries, ib.
Generations, history of, i. 28.
Genius over-mastering, i. 194.
Geometry, i. 38.

George, order of Saint, should do more than robe and
feast, i. 523.

Georgics of the mind, i. 57.

German mines having vegetables in the bottom, i. 146.
Germany, its state considered, i. 382.

Germination of plants accelerated by several means, i. 131,
132, retarded by several means, 132.

Gerrard, Sir Thomas, ii. 198, recommended by the mar-
quis of Buckingham to the lord chancellor, 223.
Giddiness, why after long sitting, i. 166.

Gift, property gained thereby, when valid, and when void,

i. 586.

Glass, why pressure upon the lip of it makes the water
frisk, i. 83.

Glass, the materials thereof in Venice, i. 171. Glass out of
the sand, 172. Glass, whether remolten it keepeth
weight, 175.

Glass, how to be improved, i. 172.

Globes at distance appearing flat, i. 187.

Gloucester, statute of, relating to wastes of timber-trees,
and property in them explained, i. 617, 620.
Glow-worms shine longer than they live, i. 124. Glow-
worm, its nature and properties, 163. Glow-worms put
in glasses under the water, their use, 170.
God, how many ways he is dishonoured in his church, i.
674, he only is eternal, 337, is Father, Son, and Spirit,
ib. his design of uniting his Son to man, and the wonder-
fulness of that dispensation, ib. resolved to create the
world, ib. created all things good at first, ib. governs all
things by his providence, 338, revealed his will, in dif-
ferent degrees and manners, at different times, ib.
Godfrey, bishop of Luca, ii. 166.
Godfrey's case, ii. 269.

Gold, the making of it, i. 121, a work if possible, yet not
rightly pursued, ib. discourse of a stranger touching the
making of it, ib. directions for the making of it, ib. direc-

VOL. II.

3 D

Government, its four pillars, i. 272, its charter of founda-
tion, 527, they who cannot govern themselves not fit to
govern others, 516.

Government, four original causes thereof, i. 633, hereditary,
655, good ones compared to fair crystals, 713, that ob-
servable in the great universe, a proper pattern for go-
vernment in state, 450, all kinds of it lawful, 353.
Gout, order in curing it in twenty-four hours, i. 91, mine-
ral bath prescribed for its cure, 174.
Grafting of roses, i. 133, a late coming fruit upon an early
fruit tree, 132, 133. Grafts in great plenty, 134.
Grafting, whence it meliorateth the fruit, i. 135, some trees
come better from the kernel than the graft, ib. Grafting
of trees that bear no fruit enlargeth the leaves, 137.
Grafting of several kinds maketh not compound fruits,
ib. doubleth flowers, but maketh not a new kind, ib.
Grafting vine upon vine, 156.

Grains of youth, i. 250.

Grammar-schools, the inconveniences of a great number
of them, i. 495, 496.

Granada, almost recovered from the Moors, i. 754, the final
conquest of it, 758, had been in possession of the Moors
700 years, 759.

Grandison, viscount, ii. 257.
Granicum, battle of, i. 323.

Grants of the king are not to be construed and taken to a
special intent, i. 558, of a common person, how far to be
extended, ib. a distinction made between them and de-
clarations, 560, does not prove the lessee's property in
any but timber-trees, 559, some rules concerning the
staying them, as proper or not so, 710.

Grapes, how they may be kept long, i. 152.
Gravity, its increase and decrease, i. 87, motion of gravity
within or at distance from the earth, ib. Vide 170. Opi-
nion of moving to the centre a vanity, 87.

Gray, lord, takes the Spaniards' fort in Ireland, i. 357.
Graziers, why they remove their cattle from mean to better
pastures, i. 134.

Great Britain, the beginning of a history thereof, i. 796.
Great offices and officers, i. 514.

Greatness comparative of living creatures, i. 183.
Greatness of kingdoms, i. 284, how advanced, ib.
Green, the general colour of plants, i. 141.
Greencloth, court of, ordained for the provision of the
king's household, i. 448, 520.

Greenness in some plants all winter, whence, i. 148.
Gregory the Great, why traduced by Machiavel, i. 306.
Grenvil, Sir Richard, his memorable action in the Revenge,
against the Spanish fleet, i. 540.

Greville, Sir Fulke, an account of him, ii. 57 note †, chan-
cellor of the exchequer, ib. See Brooke.

Grief and pain, the impressions thereof, i. 163, 164.
Grindal, his censure of physicians, i. 320.

Groves of bays hinder pestilent airs, i. 193, the cause of
the wholesome air of Antiochia, ib.

Growing of certain fruits and herbs after they are gathered,
whence, i. 120, trial whether they increase in weight, ib.
Growing or multiplying of metals, 175.

Growth of hair, nails, hedges, and herbs, in the moon's
increase, i. 188.

Guinea-pepper causeth sneezing, i. 192.

Guise, family of, many troubles in England and Scotland
owing to them, i. 390. England assists France several
times against the faction of this house, ib. duke of, is be-
headed by Henry III. of France, ib, a saying concerning
the duke of Guise's liberality, 434.

Guise, Henry, duke of, in what sense the greatest usurer in
France, i. 321.

Gum dissolves both by fire and water, i. 181.
Gum-dragon, i. 173.

Gum of trees, the cause of its shining, i. 83.
Gunpowder, the cause of the great noise it yieldeth, i. 86,
white, whether it giveth no sound, 101.

H

HACKET, a fanatical disturber of the church, i. 383, his ex-
ecution, ib.

Hair coloured black by the Turks, i. 167. Hairs of beasts
not so fresh colours as birds' feathers, 83, how the colour
of them may be changed, 96. Hair on the head of chil-
dren new-born, whence, 158, standing erect in a fright,
whence, 163. Hair changing colour, 183. Hair of the
party beloved worn, exciteth love, 200.
Hanaper of the chancery, what it included, i. 589.
Hands have a sympathy with the head and other parts,
i. 97.

Hannibal's character of Fabius and Marcellus, i. 325.
Hanno and Hannibal, i. 325.

Hansbeys, their cause in chancery, ii. 204 note §§.

Hard substances in the bodies of living creatures, most
about the head, i. 168, some of them stand at a stay,
some continually grow, ib. all of them without sense but
the teeth, ib.

Hard bodies, their cause, i. 181.

Harper, Sir John, ii. 198.

Hatching of eggs, i. 169.

veral effects of heat in the sun, fire, and living crea-
tures, 184. Heat and cold have a virtual transition
without communication of substance, 185. Heat within
the earth, 187, greater in winter than summer, ib. trial
of drawing it forth by the moon-beams, 188. Heats un-
der the equinoctial less than under the torrid zones, three
causes thereof, 130.

Heath, Robert, made solicitor-general, ii. 228, 236.
Heathen opinion touching generation of creatures perfect
by concretion, refelled, i. 189.

Heavenly bodies, their influences, i. 188, 191.
Hebrews, i. 208.

Hector, Dr. his prescription to the dames of London, i.

259.

Hedgehog's flesh, its virtue, i. 199.

Heirs are bound by the acts of their ancestors, if named,
i. 577, charged for false plea, ib. the great favour of our
law towards them, 606.

Helena, her lover quitted Juno and Pallas, i. 268.
Heliotropia, the causes of its opening and shutting, or bend-
ing towards the sun, i. 139.

Helwisse, Sir Gervase, his declaration concerning Sir Tho
mas Overbury's death, i. 700, ii. 175, lieutenant of the
Tower, 175 note †, i. 700 note +, discovered to be con-
cerned in the murder of Sir Thomas Overbury, i. 700,
ii. 175.

Hemlock causeth easy death, i. 154.

Hemp and flax, the great use of planting them, i. 517.
Henry II. of England, i. 276.

Henry III. of France is stabbed before the walls of Paris,
by a jacobin friar, i. 687, is murdered, ib. the revenge of
his death, 264.

Henry IV. of France, his question to the count of Sois-
sons, i. 312, is called the king of faith, ib. the best com-
mander of his time, 538, much praised, 687, is murder-
ed, ib.

Henry II. and III. of England, some troubles of their reign
mentioned, i. 379.

Henry IV. of England extolled by the prior of Trinity, i.
754. Story of the first year of his reign published, and
dedicated to lord Essex, which offends the queen, 437,
is deposed and murdered, 422.

Hatton, lady, removes her daughter, to prevent her being Henry V. of England, his remarkable success, i. 399.
married to Sir John Villiers, ii. 193 note *.

Haughton, Sir Richard, ii. 198.

Henry VI. of England, slain by the hands of Richard III.
i. 731.

Hawkins, Sir John, his unfortunate death by sickness in Henry VII. of England, his history, i. 276, in his greatest
the West Indies, i. 541.

Haws and hips in store, portend cold winters, i. 166.

Hay, Sir Alexander, his queries about the office of consta-
bles, with answers, i. 648.

Hayward, Dr. committed to the Tower, for the history of
the deposition of king Richard II. i. 312, stolen from Cor-
nelius Tacitus, ib.

Head, its sympathy with the feet, i. 97, local motion con-
tinued after the head struck off, whence, 130.
Health, regimen of it, i. 287, interrupted by sudden change
of diet, ib. cheerfulness a great preservative of it, ib.
how consulted by the situation of buildings, 289.
Health of the nation remarkable in queen Elizabeth's time,
i. 379.

Healthful airs oft-times without scent, i. 191.
Hearing hath more immediate operation upon the manners
and spirits of men than the other senses, whence, i. 100,
its hinderances and helps, i. 116, why hindered by yawn-
ing, ib. helped by holding the breath, ib. instruments to
help hearing, ib. Hearing causeth horror, 161. Hearing
more offended by some objects, than the eye by ungrate-
ful sights, 115.

Heart of an ape worn increaseth audacity, as reported, &c.
i. 198.

Heat and cold, i. 236.

Heat and cold, Nature's two hands, i. 93. Heat the
chiefest power in nature, 97, how to make trial of the
highest operation of it, 98. Heat and time work the
like effects, 98, 117, their different operations in many
things, 117, 158. Heat more tolerable under the line
than on the skirts of the torrid zone, 130. Heat, being
qualified by moisture, the effect, 158. Heat causeth
the differences of male and female, 183, other differ-
ences thereupon, ib. tempered with moisture, ib. the se-

business imparted to few, 277, his device to improve
England, 285, what Henry VI. said of him, 795, styled
earl of Richmond before his accession to the crown, 731,
caused "Te Deum" to be sung on the place of his vic-
tory, ib. his three titles to the crown, 732, depresses the
title of the house of York, ib. disperses the fears of the
people by his peaceable march to London, 733, sparing
of creations when crowned, 734, institutes yeomen of his
guard, ib. summons a parliament, ib. his attainder how
mentioned by the judges, 735, his marriage more solemn.
ized than his entry or coronation, ib. successful and se-
cure, ib. punishes the rebels by fines and ransoms, 741,
obtains from the pope the qualifying of sanctuaries, 742,
his conduct in the affair of Britany, ib. his schemes there-
in too fine to be fortunate, 745, great affairs being too
stubborn to be wrought upon by points of wit, ib. calls a
parliament, ib. recommends laws against riots, 747, and
to encourage trade and manufactures, ib. passes several
good laws, 748, retrenches the privileges of the clergy,
ib. serves himself by intimacy with Adrian de Castello
the pope's legate, 750, barters laws for treasure, being
one of the best lawgivers, ib. improves the military force,
751, demands the title and tribute from France, 755, his
speech to his parliament, 756, proposes to try his right
for the crown of France, ib. receives from the king and
queen of Spain letters containing particulars of the final
conquest of Granada, 758, draws together a puissant
army, and lands at Calais, 759, invests Boloign and makes
peace, 760, notifies his gainful peace to the mayor and
aldermen of London, 761, general clamour against the
king, 763, his diligence in tracing Perkin's history, 764,
has his own spies cursed publicly at St. Paul's, ib. the
probable reasons of his distaste against Sir William
Stanley, 766, the king pestered with swarms of libels,

the females of sedition, 767, crushes money from his sub-
jects by his penal laws, ib. enters into a league in defence
of Italy, 768, a reward promised for killing or taking the
king by Perkin's proclamation, 772, the king's wars were
always a mine of treasure to him, 773, creates bannerets
after the victory at Blackheath, 775, demands of the
Scots to have Perkin delivered, 776, 777, constantly
named in the Italian league before Ferdinando, 768, ex-
erts his utmost force to secure Perkin, when he had got
him on English ground, 778, enters the city of Exeter
joyfully, and gives them his sword, 779, takes Perkin out
of sanctuary, on promise of life, ib. rebuilds the palace of
Shene, 780, assigns a ship manned to Gabato, to discover
unknown parts, ib. how the king missed the first dis-
covery, ib. makes peace with the king of Scots, 781, has
a third son born, named Edmund, who soon died, ib.
passes over to Calais, and has an interview with the
archduke, 783, summoned by the pope to the holy war,
ib. creates Henry prince of Wales, 785, his barbarous
usage of the earl of Oxford, one of his principal servants
in war and peace, 786, had scarce any parliament with-
out an act against riots and retainers, 788, subsidy and
benevolence in one year without war or fear of any, ib.
his treatment of the king of Castile, forced to put in at
Weymouth, 789, 790, solicitous to have Henry VI. ca-
nonized, 791, marries his second daughter, Mary, to
Charles prince of Castile, afterwards emperor, ib. his
death, 792, his character and benefactions, ib. laws and
justice prevailed in his time, except where he was party,
ib. his reputation abroad greater than at home, 793, born
at Pembroke castle, 795.

Henry VIII. of England, his birth, i. 756, his eminent dis-
tinguishing qualities, 795, learned, but short of his brother
Arthur, ib. his felicity upon his succession, ib. his con-
federacy with Francis I. and Charles V. 535.
Henry, prince, insolence of Sir Thomas Overbury to him,
ii. 172, his death imputed to the earl of Somerset, ib.
Mr. Bacon's Latin eulogium on him, and its translation,
159, 160.

Henry II. last king of France of value, except Henry IV.
ii. 257.

Heraclitus, Socrates' opinion of, i. 315, styled the obscure,
317, 325, a dark saying of his, 283.

Herbs made tenderer, i. 136, removed from beds into pots
prosper better, ib. grow sweeter by cutting off the first
sprout, whence, ib. inquiry whether they can be made
medicinable, and how, 148, four designations of it, ib.
their ordinary colours, 141. Herbs growing out of the
water without roots, 146, growing out of the top of the
sea without roots, ib. growing out of snow, ib. growing
out of stone, ib. growing in the bottoms of mines, ib.
none growing out of the sea-sands, ib. Herbs dying
yearly, 147, that last many years, ib. the largest last not
longest, as the largest trees do, why, ib. fable of an herb
in the likeness of a lamb, 151. Herbs which show the
nature of the ground, 155. Herbs which like to be
watered with salt water, 157. Herbs that foreshow

rain, 178.

Hercules, fable of, i. 104, unbinds Prometheus, 264.
Heresy, cases relating thereto, and the punishment of it,
i. 646, one great occasion of it, 346.

Herlackenden's case, relating to the inheritance of timber
trees, i. 618.

Hermogenes, the rhetorician, an instance of an early ripe-
ness and hasty fading, i. 295.

Herons' high flights foreshow wind, i. 178.

Hetherington's declaration concerning lord Essex's treason,
i. 425.

Hialas, Peter, a Spaniard, occasions the marriage between
the two crowns, i. 776.

Hiccough, why removed by sneezing, i. 159, means to cease
it, ib.

Hiero visited by Pythagoras, i. 325, his question to Simon-
ides, ib.

High-constable. See Constable.

Highways presentable, i. 677.

Hills with night-caps on in Wales, i. 177.

Hill's and Graunger's case, i. 628.

Hippocras, clarified with milk, i. 83, 120.

flesh, i. 90, his aphorism touching diseases contrary to
complexion, age, &c. 92, his prognostics upon the sea-
sons of the year, 128, says, Athens is mad, and Demo-
critus only sober, 525.
Hippocrates' sleeve, i. 83.

Hippophagi, the Scythians so called, i. 84.

History, general division of, i. 28. Natural history, ib.
Civil history, 29. Appendices to history, 32.
History of England, observation on the defects, &c. there-
of, ii. 33 note |, of Henry VII. commended, ib.
Hobart, Sir Henry, ii. 163 note †, 167, 213, 202, likely to
die, 227.

Holland cheese, i. 188.

Homage, vowed to the king by every tenant by knight's
service, i. 578, how performed, ib. importeth continu-
ance in the blood, 618.

Homicide, how many ways it may be committed, i. 644,
thought justifiable only in one case by the Romans, 681,
how distinguished by the law of God, ib. law about it,

748.

Honesty of life, breaches of it how presentable, and of what
kind, 676.

Honey, i. 151, 152, 182, several ways how it is used, ib. a
wine of honey, 182. Honey of the box-tree, 182.
Honey-dews upon certain leaves and flowers, i. 139, 151.
Honour, the place of virtue, i. 269.
Honour and reputation, i. 304. Honour hath three ad-
vantages, 292, the degrees of sovereign honour, 304, of
honour in subjects, ib. the spur to virtue, 255. Honour
of the judge is the king's honour, 512.
Honour, Consalvo's saying upon it, i. 306, 682.
Hops, broom, poculent herbs, i. 152.

Horns, i. 168. Horned beasts have no upper teeth, ib.
Hornsby, Francis, ii. 207.

Horse, every tenant by knight's service is obliged to keep
one for the king's use, i. 578.

Horses, English, excel in strength and swiftness, i. 517.
Horse's flesh eaten, i. 184. Horses' tooth has the mark of
their age, 168. Sea-horse tooth ring good for the cramp.
197.

Hortensius, his character to the life, i. 295, 296.

Hospitals, how frequently they are abused to ill purposes,
i. 494, ill effects of very large ones, 495, are best managed
in London, and why they are so, ib. the good effects of
them in preventing beggars, ib. are not an adequate
remedy for supporting the poor, ii. 107.

Hostility, how many ways hindered from being put in exe-
cution, when it is between nations, i. 442.
Hot bread, its odour nourishing, i. 193.

Houghton, Sir Robert, some account of him, ii. 50.
Houghton, Sir Gilbert, his patent stayed at the seal, ii. 167.
Household expenses, king James's way of retrenching them,
ii. 101, letter of king James relating to them, ib. a draught
of the sub-commission relating thereto, 102.

House of Peers a court of judicature, i. 513, of Commons
cannot administer an oath, ib.

Howard, Henry, earl of Northampton, lord privy seal, &c.
i. 313, his answer to the Dutch minister, ib.
Howard, earl of Nottingham, some account of him, ii. 94
note *.

Huddy, John and Richard, ii. 202.

Hukely, Thomas, his cause recommended by the earl of
Buckingham to the lord keeper Bacon, ii. 198.
Human knowledge, general distribution of, i. 25, 26, 27.
Humours, ill lodged, very dangerous, i. 92.

Hundred, division of the counties into them, and the occa-
sion thereof, i. 572. Hundred courts, to whom granted
at the first, ib. lord of the hundred is to appoint two
high-constables and a petty one, ib.

Hunsdon, John, baron of, ii. 167.

Hunt, John, ii. 203.

Huntingdon, earl of, ii. 198.

Husbandry in many particulars, i. 517.

Husbands affected by their wives' breeding, i. 199, who
make good ones, 260.

Hutton, is made judge of the common pleas, i. 716, ii. 202.
Hutton, Luke, personated by lady Roos, ii. 218.
Hydraulics, i. 98.

Hylas, Hercules's page, the fable of him, i. 104.

Hippocrates, his rule about the garment worn next the Hypocrites, the greatest atheists, i. 274.

I and J.

JAIL, a most pernicious smell, and next to the plague, i.
192, judges and others died by that pernicious infec-
tion, ib.
James I. compares his speech to a mirror, i. 310, compares
himself and parliament to husband and wife, where jea-
lousy is pernicious, ib. desires that country gentlemen
should not live long in London, 330, is calumniated by
Mr. Oliver St. John, in some papers, 691, 692, a short
character of him, 691, his great clemency, 693, his book
to his son, touching the office of a king, commended, 713,
his book very seasonably wrote, ii. 29 note*, commend-
ation of his reign in several instances, i. 680, a farther
account of the king, ii. 29, erects a monument to queen
Elizabeth, 33, farther commendation of his reign, 109, he
moderates in the dispute between the bishops and dis-
senters, at Hampton-court, 34, he keeps the fifth of Au-
gust as a holy-day, on account of his delivery from Gow-
ry's conspiracy, 106, is censured by Le Clerc for
neglecting to take care of lord Bacon, while he preferred
other worthless persons, 130 note †, apprehensive of being
taxed by the earl of Somerset, on his trial, 171 note †,
his apostiles on the heads of the charge against the earl
of Somerset, 172, inquires into the poisoning of Sir
Thomas Overbury, 175, goes to Scotland, 185 note †,
holds a parliament in Scotland, 189, his answer to a
letter of the lord keeper, 192, angry with his lordship and
the attorney-general, 194, 195, promises to forgive his
lordship, 196, his remark on lord Bacon's "Novum Or-
ganum," 222 note §, looks over the manuscript of his
lordship's history of the reign of king Henry VII. 238,
memorial of lord Bacon's access to his majesty, 247, let-
ters to him from lord viscount St. Alban, 265, his letter
to the judges of England about Sir Edward Coke's Re-
ports in prejudice of his prerogative, 272.

James III. of Scotland, slain at Bannocksburn, i. 750.
James IV. wholly at the devotion of France, i. 757, married
to Margaret, eldest daughter of Henry VII. 785.
Jason of Thessaly, i. 326.

Jasper, earl of Pembroke, uncle to Henry VII. i. 734, made
duke of Bedford at the coronation, ib. commands the
army against the lord Lovel, 736, made general again,
740, for the French expedition, 759.

Jaundice, whence the difficulty of curing it proceeds, i. 201.
Idolatry, degrees of it, i. 524, doth not dissolve govern-
ment, 527.

Idols, four sorts of, i. 227.

Jest, what matters ought to be privileged from it,

288.

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Impeachment must be upon oath and presentment, i. 673.
Impetitio," what is meant by it, i. 621, is distinguished
from "impedimentum," ib.

Impostors and pirates not to be protected, i. 765.
Imposture by counterfeiting the distance of voices, i. 113.
Impotency of men towards their wives procured in Zant
and Gascony, i. 188, 197.

Impressible and not impressible, i. 182.
Impression, doctrine of, i. 41.

Imprisonment upon contempt of orders in chancery, when
to be discharged, i. 721.

Impropriations should be returned to the church, i. 359,
the impossibility of it, ih. should contribute largely to the
relief of the clergy, ib. the value of them in the nation is
above ten subsidies, ib.
Improvement, reasons why men do not improve more in
many things, ii. 46.

Impulsion and percussion of bodies, i. 170. Impulsion of
a body unequal, ib.

Inanimate and animate, wherein they differ, i. 150.
Incense thought to dispose to devotion by the operation of
the smell, i. 193.

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Incubus, its cause and cure, i. 198.

Indian earth, brought over, hath produced Indian plants,
i. 146.

Indian fig, its surprising way of growing, i. 151, its leaves
of great dimensions without stalks, ib. the Indian custom
of quietly burning themselves, 293, had something like
ordnance in the time of Alexander, 307.
Indictment, ancient forms thereof not to be altered, i. 395.
Induration, or lapidification of bodies, i. 95, by cold, ib. by
heat, ib. by assimilation, 96, by snow or ice, 94, by me-
talline water, ib. in some natural spring-waters, 95, of
metals, by heating and quenching, ib. by fire, ib. by de-
coctions within water, the water not touching, ib. In-
duration by sympathy, 182.

Industry, what we reap from it makes the fruition more
pleasant, i. 259.

Infant in the womb subject to the mother's imagination, i
195, suffering from the mother's diet, 198.

Infantry, the principal strength of an army, i. 751.
Infectious diseases, i. 118, less generally precede the
greater, 176, received many ways, 190.

Influences of the moon, i. 188.

Influences of the heavenly bodies, i. 179, 191.
Informers, i. 481.

Jest goods taken in jest, and sold in a market, may give Infusion maketh liquors thicker, but decoction clearer,
a property, i. 586.

Jesuits' precept, i. 279.

Jewel, bishop of Salisbury, his death, with an idle report
relating to his last words, i. 397.

Jews-ear, its strange property and use, i. 145, a putrefac-
tion, 159.

Ignorant man, or coward, ought not to be a judge, i. 305.
Image, whether it might be seen without seeing the glass,
i. 170.

Image of God, i. 527.

Imagination, the force of it, i. 174. Imagination exalted,
190, force of it upon the body of the imagination, by in-
spiring industry, ib. three cautions about the same, 191,
worketh most upon weak persons, 190. Imagination,
the kinds of it, 195, the force of it upon another body, ib.
several instances of it, ib. et in seq. an instance thereof
by a pair of cards, ib. three means to impose a thought,
ib. designations for trial of the operations in this kind,
196, to work by one that hath a good opinion of you, ib. |
to work by many, ib. means to preserve imagination in
the strength, ib. it worketh more at some times than
others, ib. it hath most force upon the lightest motions,
197, effect of the senses, 174. Imagination imitating
the imitations of nature, 112.

Imbezzling of the king's plate, &c. strictly to be punished,

i. 676.

Imitation in men and other creatures, a thing to be won-
dered at, i. 112, several motions in men of imitation, 118.
Imitation a globe of precepts, i. 269.

whence, i. 119.

Infusions in liquors, i. 84, a short stay best, ib. Infusions
to be iterated, ib. useful for medicinal operations, i
trial, which parts issue soonest, which slowest, 85, eva-
porations of the finer spirits sometimes useful, ib.
Infusions in air, i. 85, the several odours issue at several
times, ib.

Infusions in earth, the effects of it, i. 128, cautions to be
used in it, ib. several instances thereof, ib.
Ingram, Sir Arthur, ii. 236, 242, 243, 248.
Inheritance by fee-simple binds the heir with all binding
acts of his ancestors, i. 577, the nature of one opened
and explained, 616. Inheritance movable, ib. per-
petuity is of the essence of inheritance, 617, what things
belong to the owner of inheritance, and what to any par
ticular tenant, in letting estates, ib. what things are not
inheritance as soon as severed, ib. is well distinguished
by particular estates by our laws, ib.
Injunctions for staying of suits, in what cases to be grant
ed, i. 718, are to be enrolled, 721, some rules in granting
them, 710.

Injury, several degrees thereof as held by our laws, i. 682
Innocent VIII. pope, i. 734, 758.

Innovations, i. 280, what sort are to be condemned, 511,
668, faulty to condemn all sorts in church matters, 351,
objection that there would be no end when once they
were begun, answered, 352.

Inns, letter to lord Villiers about them, ii. 88.
Inquination, or inconcoction, i. 180.

Inquisition touching the compounding of metals, i. 240,
touching the separation of metals and minerals, 244.
Inrolment of apprentices, a certificate relating to them, ii.
100.

Inscriptions upon fruits, i. 140.

"Insecta," i. 160, held by physicians to clarify the blood,
ib. the name communicated to all creatures bred of pu-
trefaction, ib. the difference of them according to the
several matters they are bred of, ib. several properties in
them, 161, they have voluntary motion, ib. other senses
besides taste, ib.

Instructions to great officers, like garments, grow loose in
the wearing, i. 311.

Intellectual powers, a discourse concerning the helps which
might be given them, ii. 46, some further indigested col-
lections relating thereto, 47.

Intestate, how his goods were formerly disposed of who
died, i. 587.

Intrails of beasts, whether more nourishing than the out-
ward flesh, i. 89.

Invasion, procured by any from foreign enemies, how to
be punished, i. 675.

Invasive war, not made by the first blow, but by the first
provocation, i. 743.

Invectives designed often against the prince, though pre-
tended only against his ministers, i. 393, instance of this
in queen Elizabeth and lord Burleigh, ib.
Invention, art of, i. 46.

Inventors, a catalogue of them, i. 215.

Invincible Armada, a minute account of it, i. 538, 539.
Invisibles in bodies ought to be better inquired, because
they govern nature principally, i. 97.

Joan, queen of Castile, distracted on the death of Philip
her husband, i. 790.

Job's afflictions more laboured in description than Solo-
mon's felicities, i. 264.

John, earl of Lincoln, i. 739. See Lincoln.
John of Austria buries his reputation, i. 537.
Johnson, Dr. his three material things in sickness, i. 320.
Joints in some plants, i. 148, their cause, ib.
Jones, Dr. Thomas, archbishop of Dublin, letter to him
from the lord chancellor Bacon, ii. 204.
Jones, Sir William, made lord chief justice of Ireland, i.
714, ii. 204, speech to him thereupon, i. 714, four exam-
ples proposed to his imitation, ib. directions what he is
chiefly to regard in the affairs of that nation, ib. letter
to him from the lord chancellor Bacon, ii. 204.
Joseph, Michael, the Cornish blacksmith, i. 773, executed,

775.

Jovinianus, emperor, his death, i. 192.
Journals, i. 31.

Joy gives vigour in the eyes, and sometimes tears, i. 164,
sudden joy, the impressions thereof have caused present
death, ib.

Iphicrates, the Athenian, says there is no sure league but
incapacity to hurt, i. 315, 383, 534.

Ireland affected the house of York, i. 737, proclaims Lam-
bert Simnel, 738, how they receive Perkin from Portu-
gal, 762, twice attacked by the Spaniards, 536, 537.
D'Aquila says the devil reserved this kingdom for him-
self when he proffered Christ all the world, 541.
Ireland not well with England, i. 442, account of it in the
beginning of its reduction, 714, directions to Sir William
Jones in the managing that work, ib. rebellion there
caused by the king of Spain, 392, considerations pro-
posed to king James I. about the plantation of it, 470,
the great excellency, in several instances, of such a work,
470, 471, plantation of it would prevent seditions here,
by employing a vast surcharge of people therein, 471,
and would discharge all hostile attempts upon the place,
ib. it would bring great profit and strength to the crown
of England, ib. a short character of it and the inhabit-
ants, ib. concerning the means of accomplishing the
plantation of it, ib. this work to be urged on from par-
liament and pulpit, 472, men of estate the fittest per-
sons to be engaged in this work, ib. they are to be spurred
on by pleasure, honour, and profit, ib. the charge of it
must not lie wholly on the undertakers, ib. a commis-
sion necessary for it, 473, their buildings to be in towns,
and not scattered up and down upon each portion, with

reasons for it, ib. undertakers hereof to be restrained
alienating or demising any part, 474, charges of this
plantation should be considered first by experienced men,
ib. considerations touching the reducing thereof to peace
and government, ii. 23, all relics of the war there to be
extinguished, ib. the hearts of the people to be won over,
and by what methods, ib. occasion of new troubles to be
removed, 24, farther considerations touching the manage-
ment of the plantations and buildings there, 24, 25, safety
of it recommended, 257.

Irish rebel, his petition to be hanged in a with, i. 293.
Iron, hot, sounds less than cold, i. 105.
Iron sharpens
iron, how applied, 303.

Iron instruments hurtful for wounds, i. 173, whether it
can be incorporated with flint, 240, may be dissolved by
common water, if calcified with sulphur, 246.

Isabella, queen, what she said of good forms, i. 302, see
758, an honour to her sex and times, dies, 788. See
Ferdinando.

Islanders' bodies, i. 128.
Isocrates long-lived, i. 194.

Israel and Judah united under David, i. 452, they again
separate, and so continue, ib.

Italy, the state of affairs there considered, i. 382.
Judges of assize, their origin, i. 574, they succeed the
ancient judges in eyre, ib.

Judges of the circuits sit by five commissions, which are
reckoned up, with the authority they each give, i. 574.
Judges of gaol delivery, their manner of proceeding, i. 574,
several excellent rules relating to the duty of judges,
716, some directions to them in their circuits, 712, 713,
the portraiture and duty of a good judge, 716, the nature
of their authority, 647.

Judges to interpret, not make or give law, i. 304, should
be more learned than witty, 304, their office extends to
their parties, advocates, clerks, and sovereign, ib. four
branches of their office. 305, essential qualifications of
judges, 304.

Judgment of the last day, i. 339, no change of things after
that, ib.

Judicature, i. 304, sour and bitter, ib.

Jugglers, i. 139, their binding in the imagination, and en-
forcing a thought, i. 195.

Juices of fruit, fit for drinks, i. 153, unfit for them, ib. the
cause of each, ib.

Julius III. i. 318.

Julius II. summons Henry VII. to the holy war, i. 783.
Jura, how many kinds thereof among the Romans, i. 452.
Jurisdictions of courts without jarring, i. 512.
"Juris placita, et juris regulæ," their difference, i. 559, the
"Juris regulæ " are never to be violated, 560, the "placita "
are to be often, ib.

Jury, may supply the defect of evidence out of their own
knowledge, but are not compellable thereto, i. 553, the
care of our laws about them, 606, of the verge, their
duty, 673.

"Jus connubii, civitatis, suffragii, et petitionis," how these
correspond to our freedoms, i. 452.

"Jus in re, et jus in rem," the difference between them
stated, i. 598.

Justice, king James's administration of it commended, i.
691, employs the three other cardinal virtues in her ser-
vice, 695, lord Bacon's saying upon the perverting of it,
ii. 73.

Justices of assize, their authority lessened by the court of
common pleas, i. 574.

Justices in eyre, dealt in private matters only, i. 574, their
authority translated to justices of assize, ib.
Justices of the peace, their origin, i. 573, they succeed
the conservators, and are delegated to the chancellor,
ib. their authority, ib. are to attend the judges in their
county, 575, 576, their office farther declared, 651, itiner-
ants in Wales, their jurisdiction, 650, of the quorum,
who are so, 651, how called so, ib. are appointed by the
lord keeper, ib.

Justinian, by commissioners forms the civil law, i. 668, his
saying upon that work, 671.
Justs and tourneys, i. 292.

Ivy growing out of a stag's horn, scarce credible, i. 144.

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