413 



to name commissioners to purge the 

 common law, v. 344, 359 ; his ac 

 cession, iii. 419 ; character of iii. 

 419. 



Henry Prince of Wales, iii. 52 ; praised 

 by Bacon, iii. 491 ; his death, iii. 

 491 ; his character, iii. 491. 



Heraclitus, his saying, i. 93, 407 ; his 

 censure of men s conceits, ii. 49 ; the 

 two opinions of a book of his not now 

 extant, v. 1. 



Herbert, Mr. Secretary, sent to Essex 

 House, with message from the queen, 

 vi. 330. 



Herbert, dedication to, vii. 98. 



Herbs, some soils put forth odorate, iv. 

 503 ; and trees, experiment touching 

 the lasting of, iv. 268 ; on making 

 them medicinable, iv. 236. 



Hereditary succession, vii. 75. 



Heresy, offence of, v. 102 ; of Adam 

 ites, vii. 142. 



Heresies, meditations on, i. 217 ; and 

 schisms, the greatest scandals, i. 8. 



Heretic, converted by the king, iii. 373 ; 

 Vorstius, a celebrated, vi. 147. 



Heretics, by their morality insinuate 

 against God, i. 213. 



Heretical religion, and fabulous philo 

 sophy springs from the commixture 

 of both, ii. 129. 



Herillus s opinion revived by the ana 

 baptists, ii. 226. 



Hermaphrodites, iv. 284. 



Hethrington, David, declaration of, vi. 

 368. 



Hialus, Peter, brings proposals for the 

 marriage of Prince Arthur and a 

 princess of Spain, iii. 340 ; sent am 

 bassador to Scotland, iii. 341. 



Hiccough, experiment touching the, iv. 

 356. 



Hierarchy, degree of, ii. 54. 



Hieroglyphics and gestures, ii. 197. 



Hippias s dispute with Socrates on his 

 sordid instances, ii. 104. 



Ilippocras, how clarified, iv. 4. 



Hippocrates narrated special cases of 

 his patients, ii. 163 ; rule for dress 

 in summer and winter, iv. 34. 



History, civil, by Bacon, iii. 9 ; of 

 Great Britain, iii. 421 ; of Britain, 

 iii. 3341 ; of Henry VII. iii. 104 ; 

 of Henry, opinion of, iii. 24 ; appen 

 dices of, ii. 1 18 ; of the church mili 

 tant, ii. 118 ; civil, ii. 109, 115 ; of 

 creatures, perfection of, ii. 102 ; Mar- 

 vail s, deficiency of, ii. 102 ; uses of, 

 ii. 103 ; arts, is deficient, ii. 104 ; 

 credulity of, ecclesiastical history an 



example of, ii. 42 ; deficiencies of, 

 ii. 109; ecclesiastical, ii. 116; ec 

 clesiastical mixed with fable, ii. 42 ; 

 just and perfect, ii. 107 ; literary, 

 deficiency of, ii. 101 ; uses of, ii. 

 102 ; natural, and division of, ii. 

 102 ; deficiency of, ii. 102 ; of me 

 chanics neglected, ii. 105 ; of me 

 chanics assists natural philosophy, ii. 

 105 ; natural, instances of fabulous 

 matter in, ii. 43 ; of prophecy defi 

 cient, ii. 117 ; to be done with wis 

 dom, sobriety, and reverence, or not 

 at all, ii. 117 ; relates to the me 

 mory, ii. 100 ; different kinds of, na 

 tural, civil, ecclesiastical, and lite 

 rary , ii. 101 ; varieties of, ii. Ill ; 

 of providence, judgments, &c, ii. 

 117; answering to memory in the 

 mind of man, ii. 119; called narra 

 tions, ii. 108 ; called chronicles, ii. 

 107. 



Histories make men wise, i. 168. 



Holland, our alliance with, vi. 431. 



Holies, Sir John, charge against for 

 scandal, vi. 153. 



Holy orders, examination for, vii. 88. 



Holy war, vii. 112 ; advertisement 

 touching, vii. 118; extent of, vii. 

 131. 



Homer, Alexander s admiration of, ii. 

 71. 



Homer s verses, prosperous men s for 

 tunes compared to, i. 137, 244. 



Homicide, involuntary, vi. 116; Ro 

 man law of, vi. 116. 



Homonymiac, cases of iteration to be 

 purged away in reducing the com 

 mon law, v. 348. 



Honest mind, value set on a friend by 

 an, vi. 246. 



Honey, experiment touching, iv. 456. 



Honour, true, of a strong composition, 

 vi. 134 ; the king is the fountain of, 

 vi. 114; its three things, i. 129; 

 and reputation of, essay on, i. 177; 

 the king is the fountain of, i. 197 ; 

 the spur of virtue, i. 230 ; the saying 

 of Consalvo as to, vi. 120. 



Honours of the ancients to eminent 

 men in civil merit, ii. 62. 



Honours among the Romans, human, 

 heroical, and divine, ii. 62. 



Hope, the portion of great men, ii. 75 ; 

 meditations on earthly, i. 208. 



Horns, the renewing of, iv. 398. 



Horses teeth, iv. 397. 



Hospital, divers have but the name, 

 and are only wealthy benefices in 

 respect of the mastership, v. 375 ; a 



