Wholesome seats, i. 172, trial for them, 177, moist air not good, ib. inequality of air naught, ib. Wife, excused by law, if she acts in obedience to her husband in felony, i. 554, but not in treason, and why, ib. loseth no dower, though the husband be attainted of felony, 580. Wife and children hostages to Fortune, i. 266, reckoned only as bills of charges by some, ib. Wives good and bad, ib. are mistresses, companions, nurses, ib. Wives of kings, 276. Wilbraham, Sir Roger, ii. 176. Wildfires, why water will not quench them, i. 173. Wild herbs show the nature of the ground, i. 155. Wilford, Ralph, counterfeit earl of Warwick, i. 782. Will, conveyance of lands thereby, i. 584, the want of this before 32 Henry VIII. was justly thought to be a defect of the common law, ib. what shifts people were forced to make before this method, 585, the inconveniences therefrom of putting lands into use, as they then did, ib. the method of preventing this by several statutes, ib. how lands are to be disposed of by will, by statute of 27 Henry VIII. ib. what limitations several lands are under in this way of disposing, ib. what it is to have one proved, 587, how a man's goods were formerly disposed of when he died without a will, ib. what bishop shall have the right of proving them how determined, ib. Will of man, branches of knowledge which refer to it, i. 56. William I. declines the title of Conqueror in the beginning of his reign, i. 732, and claims by the will of Edward the Confessor, ib. William, duke of Mantua, i. 365. duke of Bavaria, i. 367. duke of Lunenburgh, i. 367. duke of Juliers, Cleve, and Bergen, i. 368. Williams, Dr. John, bishop of Lincoln, and lord keeper, Williams, John, discovered to be author of a libel against king James I. ii. 164 note t; executed, ib. Willoughby, Sir Robert, sent to sheriff Hutton, i. 733, conveys Edward Plantagenet, and shuts him up in the Tower, ib. created lord Brook, 735. Winch, Sir Humphry, commended, i. 714. Windham, Sir John, beheaded by Henry VII. i. 787. Winds vary sounds, i. 114. Winds, southern, dispose men's bodies to heaviness, i. 128. Winds, southern, without rain feverish, 173. Winds gathered for freshness, 172, breathing out of the earth, 177, prognostics of winds from animals, 178. Windsor treaty, with the king of Castile, i. 790. Wine and water separated by weight, i. 84, trial thereof in two glasses, ib. when it will operate and when not, ib. spirit of wine burned, 126, mingled with wax, the operation of it, ib. Wine, whether separated from water by passing through ivy-wood, i. 83. Wine burnt inflameth less, because the finer spirit is evaporated, 85. Wine sparingly to be used in consumptions, 90, retards the germination of seeds, 131, said by the ancients to make the plane-tree fruitful, 152. Wine best in a dry vintage, 156, new wine let down into the sea presently made potable, 158, for what bodies good, and for what hurtful, 165, how to correct the Greek wines, that they may not fume or inebriate, 173. Wine for the spirits, 250, against melancholy, ib. Wine in which gold is quenched, recommended, 252. Wines and woads not to be imported but upon English bottoms, 751. Winter and summer sicknesses, i. 128, warm winters destroy trees, 156, signs of a cold winter, 166, 177. Winter sleepers, i. 189. Winwood, Sir Ralph, reflected on by the lord keeper Bacon, ii. 193 note †, dies, 200 note +. Wisdom for a man's self, or self-cunning, not to be overindulged, i. 280, suits better with princes than private persons, ib. no prime officers to be chosen of this character, ib. the self-cunning often unfortunate, ib. Wise men learn more by fools, than fools by wise men, i. 326, difference between a wise and cunning man, 278, such as are wise only in appearance, 281. Wit, we should distinguish between the saltness and the bitterness of it, i. 288. Witches and conjurors are guilty of felony, i. 644, how to be punished, 674. Witches said to eat man's flesh greedily, i. 184, their con fessions not rashly to be credited, 190, 191, of what kind, 191, work by imagination, 196, ointments said to be used by them, 198. Witnesses, how to be examined in chancery, i. 720. Woad, the sowing of it recommended, i. 517. Wolf's guts applied to the belly, their virtue, i. 198. Wolsey, Thomas, employed to conclude a match for Henry VII. with Margaret, duchess dowager of Savoy, i. 791. was then the king's chaplain, ib. his remarkable saying ii. 234. Woman's milk, why only good for infants, i. 90. Women making an ill choice generally maintain their conduct, i. 258, 266, made capital to carry them away forcibly, 748, advanced by their husbands, should not alien, 769, the regiment of them considered, 528. Wonder, the impressions thereof, i. 164, in wonder the spirits fly not as in fear, but settle, ib. Wood shining in the dark, i. 124, bathed in hot ashes becometh flexible, 181. Wood's declaration relating to Essex's treason, i. 412, 425. Woodbine, i. 139, 157. Woods, especially of ship-timber, the planting and preserving them recommended, i. 517. Woodseare, found only on hot herbs, i. 139. Woodvile, lord, uncle to the queen of Henry VII. i. 745 governor of the Isle of Wight, ib. against the king's commandment raises 400 men, and passes to the assistance of the duke of Britany, ib. slain fighting valiantly for the Britains, 747. Wool attractive of water through a vessel, i. 94. Worcester, earl of, his declaration concerning Essex's treason, i. 428. Words are to be understood so as to work somewhat, and not to be idle and frivolous, i. 551, this explained by example, ib. if any ambiguity and uncertainty be in them in pleadings, the plea shall be strictly against him that pleads, 552, are so taken in law, as no material part of the parties' intent perish, 629, rules for the exposition of them, 631, of reproach and contumely frequent among the Greeks and Romans, 682. World supposed by some to be a living creature, i. 190. Worsley, William, a Dominican, and dean of Paul's, not tried for Perkin's treason, i. 765. Wotton, Sir Henry, his sentiment how contemptible critics were, i. 327. Wounds cured by skins of beasts newly pulled off, and whites of eggs, i. 157, 158. Wounds made with brass easier to cure than with iron, 173. Wrecks, statute relating thereto explained, i. 559, how property is gained in goods shipwrecked, 586, what is properly a wreck, 587. Wrists have a sympathy with the head and other parts, i. 97. Writs original, no certain beginning of them, i. 590. Writs of covenant, and of entry, 592. Writ of certiorari in the exchequer, 593. Writs which are not to pass without warrant from the chancellor, i. 721. Wyche, Mr. ii. 208, 220. Χ XENOPHON Commends the nurture of the Persian children for feeding on cardamon, i. 125, observes the Medes painted their eyes, 167. Xerxes, how driven out of Greece by a rumour, i. 309. Ximenes, cardinal, calls the smoke of the firc-arms his incense, i. 326. Y YAWNING hindereth hearing, because the membrane is extended, i. 116, it is a motion of imitation, 118, in yawning dangerous to pick the ear, 158. Years steril, cause corn to degenerate, i. 142. Years pestilential, 166. See Pestilential. Yellow colour in herbs, i. 141, less succulent, and generally stand to the north, ib. Yelverton, Sir Henry, solicitor-general, ii. 183, his letter to lord keeper Bacon, 194, letter to him from the lord chancellor Bacon, 201, passes a strange book to one Hall for making denizens, 209, exhibits an information against the Dutch merchants, for transporting gold, 209, 214, reflected on by the lord chancellor, 223, notes of the lord chancellor's speech in his cause in the starchamber, 224, prosecution of him in that court, ib. his case, 224, 227. Yolk of the egg conduceth little to the generation of the bird, only to the nourishment, i. 96. York, house of, the indubitate heirs of the crown, i. 732, the people's affection to it, 737. Young trees, which bear best, i. 153, have more watery juices, and less concocted, ib. Younger brothers seldom fortunate where the elder are disinherited, i. 266. Youth and age, i. 295. Youth seldom passed to the best advantage, ib. Youth and age, their advantages and disadvantages, ib. the difference between the errors of young men and old, ib. a mixture of old and young recommended in business, ib. Young men more moral than old, ib. Youth, in the youth of a state arms flourish, i. 308. ZANT, i. 188, 197. Ꮓ Zelim, the first of the Ottomans who shaved his beard, i. 320. Nova Zembla,.i. 189, 192, 238. Zones torrid, less tolerable for heats than the equinoctial, three causes thereof, i. 130. INDEX TO THE LATIN PART. Academiarum arctior conjunctio valde utilis, ii. 310. Academiæ mores progressui scientiarum obstant, ii. 285. Academici et sceptici philosophi scientiæ certitudinem abstulerunt, ii. 300, 357. Acatalepsia opinio, ii. 357. Acatalepsia Platonis, ii. 440. Accentus verborum et pronunciatio, ii. 367. Acedo sive acrimonia potus, putrefactionis genus, ii. 591. Acheloï et Herculis certamen; ad belli expeditiones hæc fabula pertinet, ii. 716. Acida generationi succi roscidi opposita, ii. 587, 600. Acosta de fluxu et refluxu maris, ii. 479. Non satis constat sibi de asseclis ventis, qui spirant ad Peruviam et litora maris australis, 521. Ejus observatio de Plata et Potosa, 524. Acoustica, ii. 330. Acria ad palatum vitanda, ii. 581. Acroamaticum sive ænigmaticum, dicendi genus dehonestatum, ii. 370. Actæonis fabula curiositatem illicitam coërcere excogitata, ii. 710. Adonidis Hercules statuam vidit, 297. Adrianus omnis secreti investigator inexplebilis, ii. 304. Adulatio literarum dignitati nocet, ii. 296. Ejus turpitudo, ib. Magis ex more, quam malitia, 384. Aucupii genus, ib. Advocatum quid commendat, ii. 345. Eorum perorationes, 424. Edificii partes efformare aliud, aliud compaginare, ii. 392. Ægyptus septem annos fertiles, totidem steriles, habuit, ii. 398. Ægyptii vetustissimi indagatores antiquitatis, ii. 302, 355. lis plurimæ artes debent initia, 355. Ægyptii sacerdotis de Græcis vaticinium, ii. 441, 302. Egyptii non pro longævis memorantur, ii. 570. Enigmata Sphingis, ii. 322, 722. Enigmata dehonestata, ii. 370. Eorum usus et fines, ib. Eoli regnum, fictio poëtarum, ii. 524. Eoli regnum sub terra collocatum, ii. 524. Equinoctialis linea, ibi homines bene diu vivunt, ii. 574. Equivocationes sunt sophismata sophismatum, ii. 363. Aëris constitutio pestilens, ii. 335. Aër ambiens prædatorius, 349. Aëres magis et minus salubres dignoscendi, 359. Aëris motus, 362. Aër furentem concipit calorem si concludatur, 460, 462. De aëre concluso inquirendum, 462. Facillime excipit et remittit calorem, 466. Aëris dilatatio et expansio, 468. Frigora intensa in media aëris regione, 475. Aër nunquam exuit fluorem, 477. Aër subter aquam ascendit pressura aquæ, ii. 479. Aër Aër non est flamma accensa, 483. Super aquam se multiplicat, 495. Aëris extensio in ovis vitreis, 492, 489. Aër expirat a terra primo sensim et sparsim, dein invalescit et fit ventus, ii. 524. In terra clausus varias ob causas erumpere compellitur, ib. Aeris tumores sive superonerationes, 525. Aër expansus in ventosis, 545. sibi quædam assimilat, 551. Qualem rarefactionem sustineat, ib. De aëre observationes variæ, 554, 557, 562 Quousque condensari potest, 557. Aër desiccat, nunquam colliquat, 564. Aër aquave ambiens corpora utrum magis noceat, 568. Quo statu minus prædatorius, 574. Aëris salubritas, 575. Equalitas et mutatio ejus, ib. Purus, spiritus densat, 580. Exclusus ad vitæ diuturnitatem confert, 583. Mutatio quatenus utilis et noxia, 585. Quinam optimus ad cor consolandum, 589 Aëris bonitas, ib. Aër substantia fixa, 595, 602. Aër in nive et spuma, 598. Aër et flamma heterogenea, 664. Evolatio spiritus in aërem tanquam ad globum connaturalium suorum, 598. Crassior flamma et spiritu, tenuior aqua, 599. Consubstantialis et homogeneus aquæ, 600, 602. Exclusus confert ad longævitatem, 600. Cum flamma et spiritu comparatur. 602. Aëris superoneratio unde, ib. Quantum confert ad sonum, 608, 609. Aëris regio superior, 627. Media, ib. Incrassatur in fodinis ad tempora fluxus maris, 629. Aër et flamma quo Aër fœdere maximam partem universi occupant, 663. principium rerum secundum Anaximenem, 691. Natura sua calidus secundum Telesium, 697. Spuma constat ex aëre et liquore, 544. Eschines voluptatibus deditus, ii. 294. Redarguitur a Esculapio quare Circe a poëtis data soror, ii. 345. Estas serena autumnum ventosum præmonstrat, etc. ii. 535. Etates animalium decursu seculorum non minuuntur, ii. 574. Eternitas, non cogitari potest quomodo defluxerit, ii. 436. Ether an continuus, contiguusve, ii. 655. Interstellaris qualis, 664. Etna flammas verisimiliter et aërem evomit, ii. 464. Affectationes vanæ, ii. 294. Affectatio ingenuitatis, putredo lucens, ii. 383. Affectus animorum nemo melius descripsit, quam poëtæ et Affectus animorum senilis et juvenilis, ii. 597, 600. Africa antiquis non cognita ultra citimam Ethiopiæ partem, ii. 442. Africa similes habet isthmos, etc. 475, 480. Africa populus non longævus, ii. 574. Agens, patiens, ii. 390. Agesilai de Pharnabazo dictum, ii. 295. Inchoavit sub Comparatur Timoleonti, 377. versionem Persiæ, 306. Agesilai Spartani longævitas, ii. 571. Agilitas funambulorum, ii. 350. Agricultura, qualis tractatus isti arti inserviret, ii. 395. Agrippina, ii. 308. Tiberium verbis aculeatis commovet, ii. 408. Alacritas nimia cohibenda, ii. 409. Albedinis causa in nive, ii. 338. Albertus notatur, ii. 298. Album prætoris apud Romanos, ii. 421. Alchemia multum habet phantasiæ, ii. 299. Alkermes confectio, ii. 348. Allegoria in antiquorum fabulis admittendæ, ii. 703. Alphabetum vulgare et occultum, ii. 369. Nullum in regno Alpibus et montibus nivalibus non reperitur insignis aliqua vitæ longitudo, ii. 574. Altaris fabrica ab Herone descripta, ii. 546. Altercationes vanæ scholasticorum, ii. 298. Alvus ventris juventute siccior, vergente ætate humidior, Amanuensium inscitia in aulis principum, ii. 369. Ambitio est pestis hominum, ii. 391. Ejus genera, 456. Amici cadant dum modo inimici intercidant, ii. 414. Sunt fures temporis, 399. Cum quibus Amicorum delectis sit prudens, ii. 405. Amor rerum concordia, ii. 325. Varii nominis, 383. Mores optime format, 397. Ejus characteres a Menandro et Xenophonte, ib. Amor, nisi saucians, diffundit spiritus et vitam abbreviat, ii. 582. Anabaptistarum hæresis, ii. 389. Anacreontis poëtæ vita, ii. 571. Anastasii Dicori imperatoris ætas, ii. 572. Anatomia simplex et comparata, ii. 347. Plurimæ dissec tiones ad comparatam necessariæ, ib. Anatomia vivorum recte damnata a Celso, ii. 347. Corporum organicorum commendatur, 459. Anatomicæ disquisitiones ubi desiderantur, ii. 347. Alchemistæ et Paracelsus refutantur, ii. 345. Eorum Anaxagoræ inventio, ii, 337. Ejus philosophia de homoiopera, 445. ib. ib. Alchemistæ in spei amplexibus senescunt, ii. 636. Alexander Magnus, ii. 292. Ejus expeditio in Asiam, quomodo primo excepta, 299. Achilli præconem Homerum invidit, 304. Ab Aristotele, Callisthene, aliisque edoctus, Maluit doctrina quam imperio omnibus præcellere, Cassandrum perstrinxit, Callisthenem clam odio habuit, 304. Assentatores irrisit, ib. Antipatrum perstrinxit et Parmenionem. 305. Noluit suffurari victoriam, ib. Summus logicus, 304. In rhetoricis elegantissimus, ib. In politicis versatissimus, 305. Ejus de Darii arcula judicium, viz. ut Homeri opera in ea asservarentur sententiam tulit, 304. Epistola objurgatoria ad Aristotelem missa, ib. Apophthegma in Diogenem, ib. Magnam vim pecuniæ suppeditavit Aristoteli, 310. Non in finiti mis bellis occupatus, 327. Dictum ejus de somno et venere, 304, 381. omeris, 439. Anaxarchi patientia, cum linguam in os tyranni expueret, ii. 343. Anaximenes aërem rerum principium statuit, ii. 323, 691. Angeli ceciderunt, ii. 397. Eorum et Angli bellicosi, ii. 416. spirituum natura nec Veneratio prohibita, Ordines angelorum Anglia regnum hæreditarium, ii. 319. Anglia historia quam vilis et indigna, ii. 318, 319. Anglic coloni Galliæ rusticos superant, 416. Quæ in Anglia ad potentiam militarem apprime conducunt, ib. Anglica gens vivax, ii. 574. Anguilla piscis, non longæva, ii. 568. Apenninus mons, ii. 574. Aperientia, ii. 585. Anguillarum scissarum partes cur diutius moveantur, ii. Apes per integram hiemem dormiunt, ii. 582. Ejus generatio prianimas brutorum Anima sensibilis sive producta, ii. 351. Animarum emanationes duæ, ii. 351. mitiva, ib. Plurimæ ejus supra præcellentiæ, ib. Animæ facultates, sive de objectis facultatum, ii. 352. Facultates ejus notissimae, ib. Non est entelechia, 353. Est forma formarum, 355. Ejus medicina, etc. 394. Et remedium summarium, 396. Ejus status, divinitatis charactere ab Aristotele insignitus, 397. Animæ angustæ et degeneres immisericordes, 402. Animalium ætates variæ, ii. 566, et seq. Animi cultura, ii. 393. Animi impetum cohibere immensum quid, ii. 390. Animi hominum nunc in perfectiore, nunc in deteriore statu reperiuntur, ii. 396. Similis aquis et speculo, 406. Qua clave reserendi certissime, 409. Animi janua sunt oculi, os, vultus, gestus, ii. 408. Animus humanus fabricatus instar speculi, ii. 291. Animus ne sit pensilis anhelat, 362. Quando vere sanus et validus censendus est, 393. Animus humanus quomodo flectendus et effingendus, ii. 412. Annæ Bolenæ, ad Henricum octavum, nuncium, ii. 741. Annæus Seneca, ii. 684. Annales quomodo a diariis differant, ii. 320. Res illustres annalibus mandantur, ib. Anni tempestates salubriores, ii. 359. Antennæ sive virga mali in transversum, ii. 530. Anthropomorphitarum hæresis, ii. 364. In cellis monachorum, orta, ib. Anthropophagi, unde in id vitium prolapsi, ii. 569. Antichristus, omnium seculorum maximus impostor, ii. 332. Antinomiæ legum retractandæ, ii. 422. Antipodes qui primi asseruerunt, impii habebantur, ii. 638. Antiqui, quam exiguam mundi partem noverant, ii. 284. Antiquitas quatenus retinenda, ii. 332. Vel minimum ab antiquorum opinionibus et loquendi more deflectendum, ib. Auctoritatis est patrona, 299. Ejus reverentia, 426. Nimia ejus reverentia homines a progressu in scientiis detinuit, 445. Antiquitatis et novitatis studium immodicum, ii. 299. Antiquitates sunt historia deformata, ii. 318. Historiarum reliquiæ tanquam tabulæ naufragii, ib. Ex quibus monumentis et quanto cum labore colliguntur, ib. Antiquitates legum, ii. 425. Antiquorum scientia qualis, ii. 686. Antiqui mali philosophi in natura, 640. Fabulæ antiquorum explicantur, 704. Antitheta rerum varia, ii. 378-385. Antoninus cymini sector vocatus, ii. 304. Subtilis et scholasticus, ib. Regnum ejus calamitatis expers, ib. Ejus vitium evitandum, ii. 371. Ei grata fuit aurigatio, ii. 391. Apis et philosophiae similitudo, ii. 449. Aphorismi de conficienda Hist. Nat. prima, ii. 681. De auxiliis mentis, ii. 205. Apogæa, ii. 335. Apollo medicinæ deus, ii. 345. Cur musicæ etiam, ib. Apophthegmata secures et mucrones verborum, ii. 321. 546. Apotheosis sive relatio inter divos, ii. 303. Ejus tres gradus, ib. Apotheosis errorum, 439. Pestis intellectus, quia vanis accedit veneratio, ib. Appetitus scientiæ, a quibus causis, ii. 300. Appetituum et motuum duo genera, ii. 336. Appetitus acuitur per varietatem, ii. 599. Appetitus spiritus aëris, ii. 598. Appius Cæcus annosissimus, ii. 573. Aqua non ascendet altius, quam caput fontis, ii. 299. Aqua salsa lucescit nocte, ii. 462. In summo posita vinum dilutum separabit, 358. Plus ponderis et minus dimensionis habet, quam vinum, 359. Balneorum natu ralium, 462. Aqua regis solvit aurum, 463. Fortis argentum solvit, ib. Calida in balneis, quomodo calefit, 464. Aqua ægre patitur compressionem, 489. Aquæ exiguæ cito corrumpuntur, 491. Non subintrat rimas minores, 492. Repositio corporum in fundo aquarum, 498. De Aqua experimenta varia, 545, 552, 555, 557. Aquæductus in quem finem excogitatus, ii. 309. Aquila et Priscilla, apostolorum coadjutores, eorum longævitas, ii. 572. Aquilones anniversarii, circa exortum caniculæ, spirant a mari glaciali, ii. 527. Aquinas reprehenditur, ii. 684. Arabes scriptores fabulosi, ii. 298. Quæ addiderunt in Arbor monarchiæ, ii. 416. Arbores quomodo fructuosiores evadant, ii. 309. Arca in diluvio, in eremo, in templo, ii. 321. |