414 



INDEX. 



number of hospitals, with competent 

 endowments, more relief to the poor 

 than one hospital of an exorbitant 

 greatness, v. 376 ; houses of relief 

 and correction commended, as mixed 

 hospitals, where the impotent is re 

 lieved and the sturdy buckled to work, 

 v.379. 

 House of commons, power of, vi. 420. 



House of peers, the power of, vi. 420. 



Houses, use is preferable to unifor 

 mity, i. 147 ; ill air, ways, markets, 

 and neighbours make an ill seat, i. 

 148. 



Houses of husbandry, law respecting, 

 iii. 285. 



Howard, Lord Henry, his conversation 

 with the king, i. 409. 



Hugh of Bordeaux, ii. 146. 



Humanity (see human philosophy), ii. 

 153. 



Human knowledge concerns the mind, 

 ii. 170. 



Human nature, capacity of, ii. 154. 



Human philosophy, ii. 153 ; division 

 of, ii. 153 ; man as an individual, ii. 

 153; as a member of society, ii. 153. 



Humiliation, Christian s duty, vii. 305 ; 

 necessity of man s feeling, vii. 296, 

 297. 



Humility of Solomon, ii. 58. 



Husks, most seeds leave their, iv. 299. 



Hurts, judgment of the cure of, iv. 415. 



Hutton, Justice, speech to, on his being 

 made justice of common pleas, vii. 270. 



Hylas, story of, iv. 92. 



Hypocrisy draws near to religion for 

 hiding itself, i. 239. 



Hypocrites, meditations on, i. 211 ; the 

 difference between them and heretics, 

 i. 213 ; Dr. Laud s saying of them, i. 

 408. 



ICARUS wings, comparison drawn, vi. 

 251. 



Ice, turning water into, iv. 15. 



Idolatry, degrees of, vii. 124. 



Idols, of the Egyptians, ii. 178 ; Gre 

 cians, ii. 178 ; of the mind, make 

 men churlish, ii. 21. 



Ignorance, our Saviour s first show of 

 power to subdue, ii. 59 ; makes men 

 churlish and mutinous, ii. 21 ; in 

 convenience of, ii. 82 ; and preju 

 dice, vii. 41 ; its antipathy to change, 

 preface to vol. v. p. xi. 



Illustration, love of, iii. 29. 



Images are said to fix the cogitations, 



a. 173. 



Imaginary sciences, ii. 147. 



Imagination, how to be entertained, 

 ii. 514 ; cures affected by the, iv. 

 532; force of, iv. 489 ; force of imi 

 tating that of the sense, iv. 420 ; 

 effect of on the minds and spirits of 

 men, iv. 504 ; poesy relates to the, 

 ii. 101 ; fable of Ixion as to, ii. 

 19; confederacy of science with the, 

 ii. 43 ; fascination the art of, ii. 

 172 ; how to raise and fortify the, 

 ii. 173 ; commandment of reason 

 over the, ii. 174 ; power of on the 

 body, ii. 157. 



Imrnateriate virtues, emission of from 

 the minds of men, iv. 504 ; touch 

 ing the transmission and influx of, 

 iv. 487. 



Impeachment must be by oath, vi. 85. 

 Impoisoning by odours, iv. 497. 

 Impoisonment, offence of, vi. 154. 

 Importation of foreign commodities, 



advice upon, vi. 443. 

 Imports, impositions on, vi. 45. 

 Impositions on imports and exports, 

 vi. 45 ; on merchandises, argument 

 concerning, vi. 44 ; intermission of, 

 from Richard II. to Queen Mary, 

 vi. 54. 

 Impostors, meditations on, i. 213 ; its 



several kinds of imposture, i. 214. 

 Imposture and credulity, concurrence 



between, ii. 41. 



Impression, a branch of human philo 

 sophy, ii. 155. 



Imprisonment for contempt may be 

 discharged when, vii. 290 ; for con 

 tempts, vii. 274. 



Improper conduct of clergy, vii. 37. 

 Impropriations, vii. 95. 

 Impulsion, experiments touching, iv. 



402. 



Inanimate bodies, sounds in, iv. 108. 

 Incension, use of to windy spirits, vi. 1 1 . 

 Inclination, men s thoughts accord with, 



i. 133. 



Inclosure of common, vi. 435. 

 Incorporation of metals, uses of, vii. 



190. 



Incurable, a wise physician will con 

 sider whether his patient be incur 

 able, iv. 40. 



Induction by nature, better than as 

 described in logic, ii. 180; of logi 

 cians, errors of, ii. 179. 

 Indian wealth, advice concerning, vi. 



445. 

 Indian maiz, its spirit of nourishment, 



iv. 31 ; its use, vii. 228. 

 Indians, their self-sacrifice by fire,i. 134. 

 Indies, the greatness of Spain, but an 



