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Dawbeney, William, tried for Per-
kin Warbeck's rebellion, and be-
headed, i. 223.

De Thou, memorial of Q. Elizabeth,
communicated to, 413; ii. 11.
De Victoria, the maxim, non funda-
tur imperium nisi in imagine Dei,
iii. 40.

Death, Essay on, ii. 84-86.
fear of, ii. 84.
pains of, ii. 84.

approach of has little effect on
good spirits, ii. 85.

deaths of remarkable men, Ib.
Deathbed sayings, ii. 85.
Dedications, Seneca's, iii. 9.
Deformed people envious, ii. 104.
commonly even with nature, ii.
227.

extreme bold, ii. 227.
observers of the weak points of
others, Ib.

sometimes excellent persons, ii.

228.

Deformity, essay on, ii. 227, 228.
not a sign of character, but a
cause, ii. 227.

in a great wit is an advantage
in rising, ii. 228.
Deipara, iii. 154.

Delapole, William, committed to
custody by Henry VII., i. 330.
Delays of men in authority, ii. 114.
essay on, ii. 152, 153.
Deluges, ii. 274.

Demeanour, the art of, ii. 164, 165.
Democritus, charged with Atheism,
ii. 132.

Demosthenes, his conduct in banish-
ment, iii. 15, 185.

his grounds of hope for Athens,
iii. 113, 114.

his reproof to the Athenians, iii.

118.

Deportment, the art of, ii. 164,

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Devil, envy his proper attribute, ii.

109.

Devonshire, Cornish rebels against
Henry VII. march through,
i. 266.

Earl of, relieves Exeter, besieged
by Perkin Warbeck, i. 287.
Diaries of travels, how to be kept,
ii. 138.

Diet, how to regulate, ii. 188.
Digby, Sir John, Lieutenant of the
Tower, in charge of Perkin
Warbeck, i. 302.

Ambassador to Spain, iii. 5.
Digestion, ii. 7, 161.

Dighton, John, one of the murderers
of the two princes in the Tower,
i. 214-217.
Discontentment, ii. 108.

public, how to remove, ii. 127-

131.

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152.

Dog, his courage in presence of his
master, ii. 134, 339.
Dorset, Marquis of, left as a pledge

at Paris by Henry VII., i. 64.
committed to the tower by the
king, i. 86.

set at liberty, i. 94.
Dove, the spirit of Jesus was the
spirit of the Dove, iii. 166.
innocency of, and wisdom of

the serpent, iii. 167, 168.
Dowry, patrimonial, carries no part
of sovereignty, i. 221.
Drake, Sir Francis, clause inserted
by Bacon in Camden's Annals of
Queen Elizabeth relating to him,
ii. 50.

Dream of Lady Margaret, mother of
Henry VII., i. 365.

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Edmondsbury, Henry VII. at, i.
86.

Edmund, son of Henry VII., dies in
infancy, i. 300.

Education, essay on, ii. 213–215.
the power of, ii. 215.

most perfect when begun in
youth, 1b.

is but an early custom, Ib.
Edward the Confessor, title to the
crown founded on his will, i. 50.
Edward Plantagenet, prisoner in the
Tower, i. 78.

paraded through the streets of
London, i. 80.

Edward IV., his popular reign, i.
48.

invented benevolences, i. 183.
godfather of Perkin Warbeck, i.
201.

godfather not of Perkin, but of
Edward, the converted Jew,
Ib.
Egremond, Sir John, heads the ris-
ing in Yorkshire and Durham
against Henry VII., i. 135.
flies to Lady Margaret of Bur-
gundy, i. 136.
Egypt, excellence of its geographical
position, iii. 83.

Elias, or Hialas, ambassador from
Ferdinando and Isabella to Henry
VII., i. 277.

Elizabeth, Queen, question of her
legitimacy, i. 320.

Bacon's notes to Camden's An-
nals of her reign, ii. 49-65.
her agent at Constantinople,
note by Bacon in Camden re-
specting, ii. 54.
conspiracy of Roderigo Lopez to
poison her, note by Bacon in
Camden respecting, ii. 55.
how dealt with when bills were
to be signed, ii. 154.
applications of two for the office
of secretary, ii. 156.

not independent of subsidies, iii.
53, 54.

playing on the virginals, iii.
158.

Elizabeth, Queen of Henry VII., her
title to the crown, i. 48.
ordered to reside with the Queen
Dowager, i. 52.

again betrothed to the king, i.

53.

marriage, and married life, i.
65, 66.

coronation, i. 94.

dies in childbed in the Tower, i.

324.

Elizabeth, widow of Edward IV., i.

96.

Emmanuel, king of Portugal, iii. 26.
Empire, essay on, ii. 140-146.

true temper of, ii. 140.

great empires enervate their
subject nations, ii. 278.
Empson and Dudley, their relation
to Henry VII., i. 39, 357.
horse-leeches and shearers for
the king, i. 324.

their oppressions, i. 234, 326,
351, 352.

Enclosures, statute of Henry VII.
respecting, i. 142.

England and Flanders, man and
wife, i. 219.

why an overmatch for France,
ii. 180.
Entreprenant, ii. 217.
Envy, essay on, ii. 103-109.

its relation to love, ii. 103.
called in Scripture an evil eye,
Ib

a gadding passion, ii. 104.
what persons apt to envy others,
ii. 104, 105.

what persons most subject to be
envied, ii. 105-107.

Envy-continued.

redoubleth from speech and
fame, ii. 105.

ever joined with the comparing
a man's self, ii. 106.
mollified by chanting a "Quan-

ta patimur," Ib.
cure of it, ii. 108.

difference between public and
private, lb.

public is a disease in a state,
Ib.

the most importune and the vil-
est of affections, ii. 109.
the proper attribute of the Dev-
il, ii. 109.

the canker of honour, ii. 264.
Epicurus, tentamenta, iii. 119.

got rid of Fate, and made room
for Fortune, iii. 179.
Epidemic sweating sickness, i. 54,

55.

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the recreation of his other stud-
ies, iii. 18.

Essex, Earl of, corrections by Bacon
in Camden's Annals,
respecting his expedition to
Spain in 1589, ii. 50.
respecting the false alarm
of a Spanish invasion in
1559, ii. 57.

his trial for treason, ii. 61-
64.

Estaples, treaty of, i. 175.

peace of, between Henry VII. and

Charles VIII., i. 195, 198.
Eunuchs, envious, ii. 104.

why trusted by kings, ii. 228.
Evil comes in contact with good,
how, iii. 112.

whether God the author of, iii.
180.
Evil eye, ii. 103.
Exchequer, Court of, its jurisdiction,
i. 130.

Excommunication, Pope's Bull of,
published at Paul's Cross, i. 331.
Exercises, appropriate to each dis-
ease, ii. 253.

the efficacy of exercise or prac-
tice, iii. 131, 301.
Exeter, besieged by Perkin War-
beck, i. 285.

visited by Henry VII., i. 289.
Expense, essay on, ii. 174, 175.

ought to be but to half the re-
ceipts, ii. 175.
Extortions of Henry VII., i. 325, 326.
Eye, evil, ii. 103.

Fabours, of Gyngham, drawn down
by the garrison, i. 149.
Fabyan, character of his chronicle,
i. 15, 25.

Facility, a vice of men in authority,
ii. 114.

Factions in a state, the breaking of,
a remedy for discontentments,
ii. 130.

essay on Faction, ii. 254-256.
Faculties of the mind of man three-
fold, hence three classes of written
books, i. 33.

Faith, confession of, iii. 147-157.
Fall of man, iii. 151.

Falsehood, the shame and wicked-
ness of, ii. 84.

Montaigne on, ii. 83.

Fama omnis e domesticis emanat,
ii. 264.

Fame, her pedigree, ii. 123,

like a river, bears up things light
and swollen, and drowns things
weighty and solid, ii. 259.
of learning her flight slow with-
out some feathers of ostenta-
tion, ii. 262.

the spur to virtue, iii. 104.
Family, old, ii. 122.

Faro, Katheren de, mother of Perkin
Warbeck, i. 902.

Favourites of Princes, ii. 167.
Fawcon, one of our pursuivants, i.

149.

Ferdinando of Spain, i. 181.

his wars in Granada, i. 163.
his share in the execution of the
Earl of Warwick by Henry
VII, i. 305, 306.

according to Sir James Mack-
intosh, i. 306, 317.

his policy respecting Castile, i.
340.

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make peace with Charles VIII.,
i. 195.
proposed marriage, between
their daughter Katherine
and Prince Arthur of Eng-
land, i. 277. -See Isabella.
Ferdinando the younger, King of
Naples, i. 239.

Fines, after five years, to be final,
to conclude all strangers' rights, i.
141, 142.

Fishing on the coast of England,
rights of the Dutch to, i. 346.
Fistula Panis, quid, i. 445.
Fitz-gerard, Thomas, Earl of Kil-
dare, rebels against Henry VII., i.
75, 76.
Fitzwater, Lord, favours Perkin
Warbeck, i. 212.

apprehended, tried, and behead-
ed, i. 223.

Flammock, Thomas, leader of the
Cornish rebels against Henry
VII., i. 264.

taken prisoner at Blackheath, i.
273.

executed at Tyburn, i. 274.
Flanders, rebels against Henry VII.
assemble in, i. 81.

rebels against Maximilian, i.

150.

speech of the French ambassa-
dors concerning, i. 159.
and England, man and wife, i.
219.

English merchants ordered to
leave by Henry VII., i. 222,
244.

trade resumed, i. 258, 260.

Flattery among lovers, ii. 110.

Foderingham, burial-place of Cecile,
Duchess of York, i. 239.
Fois, Madame de, report of her mar-
riage with Ferdinando of Castile,
i. 342.

Followers and Friends, essay on, ii.
247-249.

Fool hath said in his heart, There is
no God, iii. 176, 177.

more of, than of the wise, in
human nature, ii. 116.
Forfeiture, women advanced by their
husband, or his ancestors, not al-
lowed to alienate the lands, by
Statute of 11 Henry VII, i. 242.
Formalities, use of, ii. 164-166.
Forrest, Myles, one of the murderers
of the princes in the Tower, i. 214
Fortune, the advancement of, i. 22.

high, how to bear oneself in, ii.
111-115.

is like a market, ii. 152.
essay on, ii. 215-218.
the mould of, is in a man's
hands, ii. 215.

blind, but not invisible. Ib.
her way is like the milky way
in heaven, Ib..

her two daughters, Confidence
and Reputation, ii. 217.

wise men attribute their virtues
to, lb.

Fouldrey, in Lancashire, rebels from
Ireland land at, i. 87.

Fountains in gardens, of two kinds,
ii. 241.

Foxe, Bishop of Duresme, privy
counsellor, i. 64.

subsequent promotions, i. 65.
ambassador to Scotland, i. 96.
Lord Privy Seal to Henry VII.,
i. 259.

strengthens Norham Castle
against the Scots, i. 275.
with Hialas to treat with James
IV., i. 278.

his meeting with James IV. at
Melrosse, i. 299.
busied about the marriage of
Prince Arthur with Katharine
of Arragon, i. 317.

negotiates the marriage of the
Princess Mary with Charles,
Prince of Castile, i. 353.

Flowers commended for gardens, ii. France, all noblesse or peasantry, i.

of a man's self, ii. 171.

236-239.

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145.
Henry VII. of England claims
the kingdom, 170.

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Freethinking, ii. 81.
French, feeling of the English tow-
ards, i. 125, 126.

well acquainted with the cour-
age of the English, i. 127.
are wiser than they seem, the
Spaniards seem wiser than
they are, ii. 164.

army, often ill provided, by rea-
son of negligence, iii. 73.
Friends and followers, essay on, ii.
247-249.

Friendship, essay on, ii. 165-174.

three main fruits of,

peace in the affections, ii.
165-170.

support in the judgment, ii.
170-173.

aid on all occasions, ii. 173-
175.

there is little in the world, and

least of all between equals,
ii. 249.

Frion, Stephen, an emissary of Mar-
garet of Burgundy, i. 208.
sent by Charles VIII. ambassa-
dor to Perkin Warbeck, i. 208.
Perkin guided by him, i. 236.
Fulforde's march to the relief of Ex-
eter besieged by Perkin Warbeck,
i. 287.

Fuller, his remark concerning May-
games in harvest time, ii. 61, 62.
Gabato, Sebastian, sails with three
ships beyond Labrador, i. 294.

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Galba, his dying speech, ii. 85.

omnium consensu capax impe-

rii, nisi imperasset, ii. 115.
his saying, legi a se militem
non emi," ii. 130.

prophecy of Tiberius respecting,
ii. 204.

Galeot, James, the French general
killed at the battle of St. Albans,
i. 127.

Gambling by servants, statute of
Henry VII. respecting, i. 334.
Garcilazzo de Viega, ii. 215.
Gardens, essay on, ii. 235-245.

passages resembling in the
Winter's Tale, ii. 235-237.
God Almighty first planted a
garden, ii. 235.

for all the months in the year,
Ib.

flowers and fruits commended,
ii. 235-239.

dimensions required, ii. 239.
subdivisions of, Ib.

alleys and hedges, ii. 239, 240.
fountains, ii. 241, 242.
heaths, ii. 242, 243.
side grounds, ii. 243, 244.
aviaries, ii. 245.

Garter, order of the, sent by Henry
VII. to Alphonso, eldest son
of Ferdinando of Spain, i.

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