x Bacon 



Memory). II. Poesy (to Imagination}. III. Philosophy (to 

 Reason). 



I. History. 



1. Natural. 



(a) Of Creatures. 

 (6) Marvels. 

 (c) Arts. 



2. Civil. 



(a) Memorials. 



(b) Antiquities. 



(c) Perfect History. 



i. Chronicles. 



a. Ancient. 

 j8. Modern. 



ii. Lives, 

 iii. Narrations, 

 iv. Annals. 



v. Cosmography. 



3. Ecclesiastical. 



(a) Of the Church. 

 \b) Of Prophecy. 

 (c) Of Providence. 



4. Literary, or appendices to History. 



II. Poesy. (Herein is no deficiency.) 



1. Narrative. 



2. Representative. 



3. Allusive or Parabolical. 



III. Philosophy. (De Augm. iii.) 



1. Divine (or Natural Theology, not = Divinity). Discussion 



of the Philosophia Pvima. 



2. Natural. 



i. Science. 



(1) Physical (of material and efficient causes). 



(2) Metaphysical (of formal and final causes), and 



under Metaphysical come Mathematics, pure 

 and mixed. 



ii. Prudence. 



(1) Experimental. 



(2) Philosophical. 



(3) Magical. 



3. Human. (De Augm. iv.) 



i. Segregate (i.e. of individual men) of (a) Body and (b) 

 Mind, first considered in combination with respect to 

 (a) Discovery and (/3) Impression, and then separately; 



