INDEX TO THE LIFE. 



cccclxxxvii 



and the high honours conferred upon 

 the authors of, by the ancients, 

 note, 193 ; Bacon s division of, into 

 literate experience, and Interpretatio 

 Naturae, or Novum Organum, in the 

 Advancement of Learning, 261 ; the 

 principle of Bacon s art of, 284. 



Inversion, of the divisions of the art 

 of experimenting, 263 ; 



Ireland, disturbances in, 44 ; Essex 

 appointed Lord Lieutenant of, 48 ; 

 Bacon s dissuasion of Essex s ac 

 ceptance of the Lord Lieutenancy of, 

 47 ; Essex s administration in, dis 

 satisfaction of the queen with, 49 ; 

 Essex s return from, 51 ; private 

 proceedings against Essex respect 

 ing, see Star Chamber, 53 ; the 

 creation of Knights in, by Essex, 

 and the unwise conduct of his par- 

 tizans, 75 ; letter of the Queen, re 

 specting, to Essex, 76 ; Bacon s 

 political labours to improve the 

 condition of, 137 ; Bacon s tract 

 upon the miseries of, and mode of 

 prevention, 139. 



Irrelevants, exclusion of, in the search 

 after a nature, 290. 



Isle of Man, singular oath by the 

 judges in, note, 252. 



JENKINS, Judge, independent conduct 

 of, 247. 



Journals of the Commons, Bacon s 

 speeches in, upon the Union, 140. 



Journeying instances, or observations 

 of the charges of a nature, 291. 



Judge, Bacon s qualifications as a, for 

 the Chancellorship, from his fre 

 quent meditations and publications 

 upon his duties, see note (6), 198 ; 

 Bacon s sacrifice as, to the feelings 

 of the politician, 223 ; the character 

 of, irreconcileable with the politi 

 cian, 225 ; character of the good, 

 243, et seq, ; gravity becoming in, 

 see note, Fuller, 243 ; dabbling in 

 politics reprehensible in, 243 ; Bar 

 row s opinion as to the requisites to 

 form a good, 244 ; the necessity of 

 his emancipating himself from all 

 passion, see note (g), Sir M. Hale, 

 see note (h), 245, Paley, note (fc) 

 246, Hobbs, note (i) 247 ; his 

 proper indifference to censure, see 

 note (i) Atterbury, 247; his pri 

 vate duties, see anecdotes of Hale 

 and Hardwicke, note (/), 249 ; the 



proper motives of, in the acceptance 

 of office, see Barrow and Tulley, 

 note, 249 ; patience the property 

 of a good, 250; deliberation and 

 caution the properties of a good, 

 251, see anecdote of Eldon, note ; 

 the errors of too great dispatch in, 

 250; the impartiality of the good, 

 see anecdote of Denys de Cortes and 

 singular oath in the Isle of Man, 

 252 ; his duties to the witnesses, 

 the jurors, the advocates, 253, 254, 

 255 ; his duty to himself, to his 

 profession, to society, 255 ; his duty 

 to resign, 256, see Hale s life, note 

 (/) ; upon the bench compared to 

 philosopher in his study, 269. 



Judges, Bacon s advice to Villiers 

 upon the choice of good, note (6), 

 198 ; Bacon s high conduct as a 

 patron in the appointment of, 200 ; 

 the custom of giving presents to, by 

 the suitors, common in the age of 

 Bacon and his predecessors, 203 ; 

 the custom of bestowing presents 

 upon, by the suitors, common in 

 all nations approaching civilization, 

 206 ; origin of the custom of pre 

 sents to, in France, 207 ; the cus 

 tom of influencing, see by univer 

 sities and Buckingham, 233 ; the 

 custom of openly soliciting, by the 

 suitors, common in France, 209 ; 

 Bacon s address to, upon their se 

 veral duties, 243 ; appointment of, 

 Bacon s speeches to, upon the, 243 ; 

 see also Judge. 



Judgment, defects of Novum Orga 

 num, 272. 



Justice, courts of, the wise constitu 

 tion of, 62 ; speedy, extract from 

 Bacon s address to the bar upon the 

 virtue of, 215. 



Jupiter, Bacon s illustration by, and 

 Saturn, of the union of contempla 

 tion and action, 137 ; and Saturn, see 

 Saturn. 



Judicial exertions, Bacon s, 229. 



Judicature, extract from Bacon s essay 

 upon, 216. 



KENELM Digby s powder of sym 

 pathy, note (a), 283. 



Kennedy and Vanlore, Bacon s com 

 plete refutation of the charge of 

 bribery in, 362. 



King James appoints Bacon his coun 

 sel, with a small pension, 108 ; Ba- 



