CCCCXCV1 



INDEX TO THE LIFE. 



the illegality of the King s demand, 

 of presents, 164 ; Bacon s speech in, 

 against Mr. O. St. John, see note 

 (a), 165; prosecution in, of Mr. 

 Markham for sending a challenge to 

 Lord Darcy, 189 ; trial of Lord and 

 Lady Suffolk in, for trafficking with 

 the public money, 226 ; trial of 

 Wraynham in, for a libel against 

 Bacon, 234. 



States, greatness of, dependent more 

 upon martial valour and union and 

 not upon territory and riches, 115, 

 116, 117. 



Statesman, Bacon s fitness as a, for 

 the office of Chancellor from his 

 education and reflection upon the 

 subject of politics and eloquence, 

 see notes (c) and (d), 198. 



Statesmen, defective education of, 12, 

 see note (d), 11. 



Statute of uses, Bacon s argument 

 upon the celebrated perpetuity case 

 incorporated into his reading on, 

 see note 3 Q at the end, 43. 



St. John, Mr. Oliver, letter of, re 

 specting the illegality of the King s 

 demand of presents, 163; trial of, 

 in the Star Chamber in consequence, 

 164; Bacon s speech against, see 

 note (a), 165 ; general opinion of 

 the judges respecting the offence of, 

 164. 



Suffolk, Lord and Lady, trial of, for 

 trafficking with the public money, 

 226. 



Sutton Hospital, Bacon s favourite opi 

 nion in his tract upon, as to the ad 

 vancement of learning being the 

 best charity, 223. 



Sylva Sylvarum, extract from, upon 

 the philosophy of Pythagoras, 283. 



Sympathy, Kenelm Digby s powder of, 

 284. 



Systems, see short extract from Bacon s 

 Wisdom of the Ancients, 150. 



System, Bacon s aversion to, 270. 



TABLE, affirmative and negative, Ba 

 con s plan of discovering truth, 269 ; 

 affirmative and negative of compa 

 risons, of exclusions, Bacon s modes 

 in the discovery of truth, 285 288 ; 

 of results, of natures agreeing with 

 nature sought, 289. 



Tanner manuscripts, Oxford, account 

 of in, of Sir H. Mountagu s negotia 

 tion with Buckingham for the lord 

 Treasurership, 227. 



Tempests of state, discontent of the 

 people, 102. 



Temporis partus maximus, see index 

 Novum Organum. 



Tenison, extract from, comparing 

 Bacon s fall to Somers s shipwreck, 

 378 ; and Rawley, their remark 

 able silence as to Bacon s motives 

 for deserting his defence, 374. 



Tenterden, Lord, speech of, showing 

 his opinion of the prejudice of law 

 yers, 276. 



Theatre, idols of, warping the mind in 

 the search after truth, 276. 



Time, want of, an obstacle to the ac 

 quisition of, 278. 



Tindal, Sir J., Bertram s murder of, 

 see Bacon s account and letter to the 

 King respecting, (see note, 240), 239. 



Torture, examination by, of Peacham, 

 an old clergyman, preparatory to 

 his prosecution for high treason, 1 69 ; 

 the erroneous principle of the trial 

 by, see note (a), 163, 164 ; Bacon s 

 private opinion of the trial by, 175 ; 

 Queen Elizabeth s acquaintance with 

 the trial by, 175. 



Tract upon Helps to the intellectual 

 powers, 111. 



Translation, of the divisions of the art 

 of experimenting, 264. 



Travelling instances, or observation of 

 a nature approaching to or receding 

 from existence, 291. 



Treavor and Ascue, Bacon s defence 

 against the charge in, 361. 



Trial of Essex, before the Privy Coun 

 cil, upon the republication of his 

 apology, 66, see for a full account, 

 note 4 C, at the end ; his submis 

 sive and artful demeanour upon, 

 and his eloquence, 68 ; Bacon coun 

 sel against upon, and his secret 

 friendliness to Essex, 67, 68 ; the 

 confused account of the, by Hume 

 and other historians, 69 ; the sen 

 tence upon Essex, 69; the unjust 

 obloquy excited against Bacon by, 

 72 ; of Lord Sanquhar, and Bacon s 

 mildness towards, 153 ; of Mr. O. 

 St. John, in the Star Chamber, see 

 Bacon s speech against, in note, 

 164; of Mr. Peacham, Mr. Owen, 

 and Mr. Talbot, for high treason, 

 167, 168; see Peacham; 178; of 

 Sir J. Hollis, Mr. Lumsden, and 

 Sir J. Wentworth, for certain re 

 ports respecting the Earl and Coun 

 tess of Somerset, 184 ; of the Earl 



