INDEX. 



403 



DAMPS in mines, which kill, iv. 497. 

 Daniel s prophecy of the latter times, 



ii. 116. 



Dark, on wood shining in the, iv. 171. 

 Darcy s case, vii. 457, 461. 

 Davers, Sir Charles, first confession 

 of, vi. 375 ; second confession of, 

 vi. 377. 



David sought by Samuel, ii. 183 ; 

 saying of his respecting adversity, 

 vii. 306. 



David s military law, ii. 94. 

 Davis, Sir John, confession of, vi. 373 ; 

 set guard over chief justice and the 

 lord keeper, vi. 336. 

 D Aquila, D Avila, the Spanish ge 

 neral, taken prisoner at Kinsale, v. 

 232, 273 ; his abuse of the Irish, v. 

 276. 



D Aubigny, Lord, iii. 300. 

 D Avila, Gomez, carries letters for Lo 

 pez and Ferrera in their plot against 

 Queen Elizabeth, v. 300 ; brings 

 back answers from Manuel Louis, 

 v. 302 ; apprehended at landing, 

 v. 303. 

 Deafness from sound, persons deaf from 



sound, iv. 83. 



Death, learning mitigates the fear of, 

 ii. 81 ; motion after the instant of, 

 iv. 197 ; the essay of, .inserted from 

 the remains of 1645, remarks upon 

 it, i. xxxvi. ; essay of, i. 6; essay 

 on, i. 432. 

 Debate, haste should not be used in 



matters of weighty, vi. 432. 

 Decemvirs, make the twelve tables, 

 v. 344; grafted the laws of Greece 

 upon the Roman stock, v. 356. 

 Decorations of body, ii. 168. 

 Decree pronounced should be speedily 

 signed, vii. 252 ; breach of, vii. 275. 

 Decrees in chancery after judgment 

 against the, vii. 403 ; special order 

 for reading, vii. 288 ; not inrolled, 

 no exemplification of, to be allowed, 

 vii. 295; in chancery, vii. 273; 

 drawn at the rolls, vii. 282. 

 Dedications to books, ii. 32 ; of new 

 Atlantes, ii. 322; objections to Se 

 neca s, vii. 114. 

 Deer, the nature of, iv. 399. 

 Defects, covering, ii. 280. 

 Defence of Cuffe, vi. 361 ; of Earl of 



Essex, vi. 346. 

 Defendent, when to be examined upon 



interrogatories, vii. 288. 

 Deformity, essay on, i. 146 ; deformed 

 persons bold, industrious,!. 146. 



Delays, essay of, i. 73 ; mature advice 

 should not be confounded with, vii. 

 309. 



Delegates, commission of, vii. 294. 

 Delicate learning, and different kinds 



of, ii. 34. 

 Delivery, style of, ii. 201 ; methodical, 



ii. 203. 

 Deluges, bury all things in oblivion, i. 



187. 

 Demetrius, answers made to him, i. 



384. 



Democritus, ii. 143 ; effect of odour 

 upon, iv. 502 ; opinion of the cause 

 of colours, i. 288 ; of truth, i. 406 ; 

 his doctrine respecting an atom, iii. 

 45 ; his philosophy, ii. 141 ; his say 

 ing of nature, ii. 131. 

 Demonax, his answer respecting his 



burial, i. 356. 



Demosthenes, vii. 113; his scorn of 

 wars which are not preventive, v. 

 247 ; his answer to ^Eschines, i. 

 375; to others, i. 393, ii. 184; 

 said action was the chief part of an 

 orator, i. 37 ; his speech in many 

 orations to the Athenians, i. 240 ; 

 reprehends the people for hearkening 

 to King Philip s condition, i. 245 ; 

 answers of his, i. 386 ; answer to 

 yEschines as to times of leisure, ii. 

 21 ; a water drinker, ii. 255, 282, 283. 

 Demurrers for discharging the suit, vii. 

 285 ; not to be overruled on petition, 

 vii. 291 ; defined, vii. 285 ; reference 

 upon, vii. 283. 

 Denham, Sir John, vii. 264 ; speech 



to, in the exchequer, vii. 267. 

 Denizens, privileges and disabilities of, 



v. 118. 



Denmark, state of, during the time of 

 queen Elizabeth, v. 406 ; king of, in 

 corporated to the blood of England, 

 and engaged in the quarrel of the 

 Palatinate, v. 279. 

 Dendamis, the Indian, ii. 300. 

 Dense bodies coldest, iv. 46. 

 Depatz, Bishop, vii. 94. 

 Desire of memory, ii. 112. 

 Desmond, Countess, teeth of, iv. 397. 

 Deucalion, or restitution, iii. 55. 

 Dew of May for medicine, iv. 413. 

 Dews and rains how produced, iv. 15. 

 Diagoras saying of Neptune s temple, 



ii. 191. 

 Diamonds, Cornish, are the exudations 



of stone, iv. 3. 



Diapason, not the true computation, 

 iv. 69. 



