INDEX. 



399 



Charcoal, vapour of, iv. 498. 



Charges, judicial, vii. 243 ; judicial, 

 upon the commission for the verge, 

 vi. 85. 



Chariots, invention of attributed to 

 Ericthonius, iii. 55. 



Charitable uses, suits for, vii. 293. 



Charity, on the exaltation of, i. 206 ; 

 what is the height of charity, i. 207. 



Charles XII. iii. 199 ; state of France 

 under, iii. 199 ; embassy to King 

 Henry, iii. 201 ; invades Brittany, 

 iii. 209 ; marries the Duchess of 

 Brittany, iii. 256 ; supports Perkin 

 Warbeck, iii. 281 ; his death, iii. 360. 



Charles, Prince of Castile, marriage 

 with the Princess Mary, iii. 404. 



Charles IX. of France, edict against 

 duels, vi. 113. 



Charles V. melancholy in his latter 

 years, i. 63 ; his rigour to Pope Cle 

 ment, vi. 457 ; forced from Isburgh, 

 v. 233, 281. 



Charles the Hardy, his closeness, i. 90. 



Charles, an imperial name, v. 237 ; 

 considerations touching a war with 

 Spain, inscribed to Prince Charles, 

 v. 237. 



Charterhouse, advice to the King con 

 cerning, v. 374. 



Chemists, principles where, vii. 205. 



Chesterfield, Earl of, a speech of his, 

 v. note C. [v.] 



Children, essay of parents and, i. 21. 



Chilon s remark of kings, friends, and 

 favourites, i. 378 ; of men and gold, 

 i. 398. 



China, ordnance used in, 2,000 years, 

 i. 192. 



Chineses paint their skins, iv. 390 ; 

 mad for making silver, iv. 160. 



Christian, believing, characters of, vii. 

 21 ; paradoxes, vii. 21 ; religion, 

 ^neas Sylvius s praise of the honesty 

 thereof, i. 402 ; church, the, pre 

 served the relics of heathen learning, 

 ii. 60. 



Christianity, injurious effect of Julia- 

 nus s edict against, ii. 60 ; consola 

 tion of, vii. 1 12 ; war to disseminate, 

 vii. 132 ; affection of, vii. 32 ; the 

 lawyers its most violent opponents, 

 v. note N [xx.] ; vii. 144. 



Chuets, when used, iv. 33. 



Church, its government, ii. 315 ; his 

 tory, prophecy and providence, ii. 

 116; music, vii. 83; controversy, 

 five errors in, vii. 36 ; controversies, 

 vii. 28 ; pacification, considerations 

 on, vii. 60 ; contempt of, punishable, 



vi. 89 ; reform, vii. 62 ; fear of the 

 subversion of a just ground for war 

 with Spain, v. 230, 238, 255; its 

 condition is to be ever under trials, 

 v. 410 ; its two trials, persecution 

 and contention, v. 410; missions, 

 vii. 120 ; meditations on the church 

 and the scriptures, i. 220 ; preserved 

 the books of philosophy and heathen 

 learning, i. 317. 



Chylus, iv. 29. 



Cicero, ii. 184, 260 ; was resolute, 

 ii. 19 ; error in forming sciences, 

 ii. 49 ; his idea of a perfect orator, 

 ii. 290 ; complaint against Socrates 

 for separating philosophy and rheto 

 ric, ii. 153 ; complaint of the school 

 of Socrates, i. 273 ; his evidence 

 against Clodius disbelieved, and his 

 reply to Clodius, upbraidings on 

 that account, iii. 355 ; his answer 

 to Decius Brutus, iii. 58 ; his speech 

 on the law against bribery, i. 390 ; 

 of Rabirius Posthumus, i. 120 ; of 

 Hortensius, i. 144 ; his fame lasted 

 because joined with vanity in him 

 self, i. 176 ; his proof that the aca 

 demic was the best sect, i. 227 ; a 

 saying of his to Caesar, i. 243 ; an 

 swer respecting an old lady who af 

 fected youth, i. 358 ; other answers 

 of, i. 364 ; reason for the power of 

 the Romans, i. 56; vii. 113; of fac 

 tion, vii. 262. 



Cineas, his questions and advice to 

 Pyrrhus respecting his intended con 

 quests, i. 391. 



Cinnamon and cassia, iv. 288. 



Ciphers, ii. 200. 



Circuit, judges stay upon, vi. 414. 



Circe and ^Esculapius, exposition of 

 credulity by fable of, ii. 160. 



Cistertians, order of, vii. 374. 



Civet, the strength of its perfume, 

 i. 288. 



Civil law not to be neglected, vi. 421 ; 

 history by Bacon, iii. 9 ; discipline 

 ii. 33 ; history, ii. 109, 113 ; know 

 ledge, ii. 256. 



Clarkson, beginning of his work on 

 the slave trade, v. note E [ix.] 



Clarification, experiment touching, iv. 

 405. 



Clarified hippocras, how, iv. 4. 



Clarifying water, syrups, &c. iv. 4. 



Clay countries, vii. 213. 



Cleanliness of Alexander, iv. 4. ^ 



Clearchus, his answer to Falinus, i. 354. 



Clearing by degrees better than clear 

 ing at once, i. 97. 



