448 



INDEX. 



epicures bonum theatrale, i. 229 ; 



the answer to that, i. 230. 

 Visibles and audibles, consent and 



dissent between, iv. 130. 

 Vitellius undone by a fame scattered 



by Mucianus, i. 195. 

 Vitrification of earth, iv. 54. 

 Vitrification of metals, vii. 207, 210. 

 Vitriol, commixed with oil of cloves, vii. 



222 ; sprouts with moisture, iv. 281 . 

 Vivification, nature of, iv. 362. 

 Vorstius, the heretic, vi. 147. 

 Voice, divine, above the light of nature, 



ii. 300. 

 Voices of eunuchs and children, iv. 



101. 

 Vulcan, compared with flame, iv. 21 ; 



a second nature working compen 

 diously, ii. 131. 



WAADE, lieutenant of the Tower, re 

 moved, vi. 212. 



Wales, prince of, vi. 421. 



Wales, prince of, Henry, letter to, in 

 1612, with the third edition of the 

 essays, i. x. 



Walls, stone ones unwholesome, iv. 

 503. 



Walsingham, Mr. Secretary, good in 

 telligence received in his time, v. 

 287. 



Wandering mind fixed by mathema 

 tics, ii. 145. 



War, its true sinews, v. 71, 324; ge 

 nerally causes of poverty and con 

 sumption, v. 235 ; requisites to a 

 successful war, v. 229, 238 ; defen 

 sive wars for religion are just, v. 239 ; 

 unjust offensive wars, evil effects 

 of, illustrated by the insidious sur- 

 prisal of Thebes by the Lacedaemo 

 nians, v. 240 ; and by the Venetians 

 sharing Milan, v. 241 ; a voluntary 

 offensive war turned to a necessary 

 defensive war, becomes just, v. 242 ; 

 fear a sufficient ground of preventive 

 war, v. 244, 249 ; many illustra 

 tions of it, v. 244, 249 ; a secret war 

 is ever between all states, v. 248 ; 

 multis utile bellum, v. 329 ; requi 

 sites for, typified, iii. 23 ; lawful 

 cause of, i. 65 ; warlike people love 

 danger better than travail, i. 104 ; 

 religious questions on, vii. 145 ; holy 

 advertisement touching, vii. 118 ; 

 holy, extent of, vii. 131 ; holy, vii. 

 1 12 ; to disseminate Christianity, vii. 

 132 ; on pirates, vii. 139 ; against 

 Turks, vii. 126 ; on an invasive, vi. 

 80; keeping fit men ready for, vi. 



433 as to providing against, vi. 

 433 to propagate Christianity, vii. 

 127 on behalf of a party not justi 

 fiable, i. 106 ; a just, the true exer 

 cise to a kingdom, i. 106 ; encou 

 ragement of warriors greater among 

 the ancients than the moderns, i. 

 108. 



War and peace, the crown invested 

 with an absolute power of making, v. 

 219 ; petitions in parliament inter 

 meddling with, receive small suc 

 cess, v. 219 ; several precedents 

 thereof, v. 220222. 



Wars, not entered upon unless upon 

 some at least specious ground, i. 

 106 ; vicissitudes in, i. 190 ; moved 

 from east to west, i. 190 ; arise from 

 the breaking of a great state, i. 191 ; 

 foreign, neither just nor fit, vi. 431 ; 

 different sorts, vi. 429; no massa 

 cres, but the highest trials of right 

 between princes, v. 384 ; nothing in 

 them ought to be done against the 

 law of nations, v. 384. 



War with Spain, notes of a speech on, 

 v. 229 ; considerations touching, v. 

 237. 



Ward, when a woman shall be out 

 of, vii. 310. 



Wards and tenures, speech on, vi. 26. 



Wards, care of, by the king, vi. 37 ; di 

 rections for the masters of the, vi. 33. 



Warren s, Sir W., conference with Ty 

 rone, vi. 311. 



Warts, how removed, iv. 530. 



Warbeck, see Perkin Warbeck. 



Warwick, Earl of, see Plantagenet. 



Warnham, Dr., his speech to the Arch 

 duke Philip, iii. 290. 



Washing, soft water best for, iv. 194. 



Waste, injunctions against, vii. 280 ; 

 case of impeachment of, xiii. 252. 



Water, salt, experiments on, iv. 1 ; 

 oysters fattened by fresh, iv. 371 ; 

 sea fish put into fresh, iv. 371 ; into 

 crystal, congealing, iv. 180 ; turns 

 to crystal, vii. 214 ; in a glass, weight 

 of, vii. 218 ; of Nilus sweet, iv. 405 ; 

 aptness to corrupt or putrify, iv. 427 ; 

 practice of getting fresh, in Barbary, 

 iv. 1 ; stillicides of, iv. 12 ; sand 

 better than earth for straining, iv. 2 ; 

 clarifying, iv. 4 ; dulcoration of salt, 

 iv. 476 ; rising, loses its saltness 

 sooner than by falling in straining, 

 iv. 2 ; turning into ice, iv. 15 ; boil 

 ing of, to different heats, iv, 355 ; 

 working of, upon air, contiguous, iv. 

 469 ; version of, into air, iv. 56 ; 



