Subsidy continued. granted by Parliament to Henry VII. vi. whether a Great Council had the power of indispensable to Queen Elizabeth, vii. 41. flies again to Flanders, vi. 220. joins the Archduke Philip, ib. returns to England, assured of his life, vi. committed to the Tower, vi. 232. Suitors, essay on, vi. 495-497, 528, 529, Suits after judgment, vii. 764. Sulphur, flower of, for the lungs, vi. 437. Sun good by aspect, evil by conjunction, vii. 86. Superstition, essay on, vi. 415, 416, 560, worse than atheism, vi. 417, 561. without a veil, a deformed thing, ib. Supplicavit supersedeas, the writing of, a Surety to keep the peace, vii. 463. takes Aton Castle, ib. among thoughts, like bats among birds, vi. how to guard against, ib. Swans, the companions of Diomede why. Swart, Martin, leader of the Almaine auxili- Sweating sickness, an epidemic at the begin- why some states are compelled to employ Sylla, Cæsar's saying respecting, vi. 412. his treatment from Pompey, vi. 438. Cæsar of, that he could not dictate, vii. Symnell, Lambert, vi. 21. Syringa, or Echo, fable of her marriage with Tacitus, on the reverence due to governments, on discontent in states, vi. 412. on mathematicians and fortune-tellers, vi. de mathematicis et genethliacis, vi. 660. Taunton, Cornish rebels against Henry VII. kill the Provost of Perin, ib. Tauri, duo Jovi a Prometheo immolati, vi. 669. Taxation, vii. 60. in the time of Henry VII. vi. 82. Tellus Jovi consilium dat, vi. 632. Tenant in ancient demesne, vii. 330, 483. Tenure of lands, all holden of the Crown me- in capite, vii. 482, 483. three, Frankalmoigne, knight service, in capite, vi. 218; vii. 482, 546, 556. Tennyson,image used by, coincident with a Greek Terpsichore, mother of the Sirens, vi. 762. Terretenant, vii. 433, 434. Territories, true greatness of a kingdom does the provinces not out of proportion to the Territories - continued. martial virtues proportioned to extent of no province utterly unprofitable, vii. 53, 54. of Great Britain, vii. 54, 55. his friend Sejanus, vi. 439. his prophecy to Galba, vi. 463. his nature, mire mingled with blood, vii. Tick-tack, game of, vii. 211. Tidder, Henry, son to Edmund, Earl of Rich- Tigellinus, his justification towards Burrhus, Tigers, Bacchus, why drawn by, vi. 742. tithes not paid for, why, vii. 531. to a sick man seems longer when without trieth troth, vii. 203. Tirrell, Sir James, employed to murder the Tissick, Henry VII. suffers from, vi. 235. Thales, looking at the stars, fell into the water, on marriage, vii. 156. life and death all one, ib. Theatre, God's, if a man can be partaker of, Thebes, two seen by Pentheus under the in- when asked to play the lute, vi. 444, to a lover who scorned him when fallen, likened himself to a plane tree, vii. 153. If I had not been undone, I had been un- Theobald's, Lord Burleigh's, Queen Elizabeth by Spartan boys, ib. by Russian monks, ib. Tournament at Shine, vi. 127. Tournay, birthplace of Perkin Warbeck,vi.184. Tower, Earl of Suffolk committed to the in a palace, plan for, vi. 482. there be but three things which one na- Trajan on the vain jealousy of princes, vii. why called the wall-flower, ib. likened the king's exchequer to the spleen, Tranquillity of mind, vii. 248. diaries of, ib. things to be observed, vi. 417. Treason, cases of, vii. 733–735. punishment, trial, and proceedings in Treasure trove, vii. 150. Treaties, meaning of the fable of the river Tree, man's life compared to, vi. 602. Trial, new, granted upon a verdict, in cases Tribute paid by France to England in the Tunstal, Sir Richard, sent as commissioner by Henry VII. to Charles VIII. vi. 71. note by Bacon in Camden, respecting contempt of marriage among them makes a holy war proposed against the, vii. 4. Tutors in travelling, vi. 417, 418. Typhon, or the rebel, interpretation of the sive rebellis, vi. 630, 631. his capture by Pan, meaning of the fable, a Pane in retibus implicatus interpretatio Tyranny, origin of rebellions against, vi. 703. Ulysses at the islands of the Sirens, vi. 762, vetulam suam prætulit immortalitati, vi. apud insulas Sirenum, vi. 684-(86. four unions of territory to England, vii.673. fruits of, vi. 381, 382. bounds of, vi. 382, 383. means of procuring, vi. 383, 384. Unmarried men have done the greatest works best friends, masters, and servants, vi. 391, not always best subjects, ib. best churchmen, vi. 392, 547. Henry VII. to Charles VIII. vi. 69. three parts of a use, three properties of a use, ib. differs from legal estate, in the raising of the preserving of it, vii. 404, 405. inception and progression of, vii. 407- in the civil law, vii. 407, 408. first about the reign of Richard in course of statutes, vii. 411-414. the title of it, vii. 417. the precedent taken from 1 R. II. 5, vii. 417. Uses, Statute of continued. the preamble, vii. 417–423. the inconveniences, vii. 418-421. to heirs, that they are weak for con- deration, vii. 418, 419. to jurors and witnesses, that they to purchasers, that they are danger- to such as come in by gift of law, the remedy by the statute, vii. 421-423. by taking away the deceit of uses, the case, or supposition, of the statute, vii. the purview, vii. 426–432. of the general case, vii. 426-429. of execution of rents, vii. 431, 432. enrolment of bargains and sales, in protection of cestui que use, vii. the raising of uses, vii. 435-445. the persons who are actors in the who may be seized to a use, vii. Vagabonds, statute of Henry VII. respecting, 'vi. 224. Vain-glory, essay on, vi. 503-505, 585, 586. among soldiers essential, vi. 504, 586. Vena porta, merchants in a kingdom, vi. 422. of wealth, is merchandizing, vi. 474. unde nata, vi. 649, 650. why mother of Cupid, vi. 729, 731. dextra ejus a Diomede vulnerata, vi. 657. V. who may declare a use, vii. the use itself, vii. 435. meaning of the statute illustrated, from the body of the statute, vii. inconveniences of a contrary interpreta- revocation of uses, Bacon's argument in to be repressed, vi. 80. the bastard use of money, vi. 87. essay on, vi. 473–477. is a concessum propter duritiem cordis, ib. discommodities of, ib. reformation and reiglement of, vi. 475— two rates of, proposed, vi. 476. Usus fructus, and dominium, vii. 407, 530. Verba fortiùs accipiuntur contra proferentem, generalia restringuntur ad habilitatem per- ita intelligenda, ut res magis valeat cum effectu accipienda, vii. 337, 587. falsam, quæ competunt in limitationem Verdict, statute of Henry VII. giving a new Vertue, his engraving of Henry VII. vi. 6. vii. 169. Verunsell, Lord, President of Flanders, vi. Vespasian, his dying speech, vi. 380, 545. to Apollonius and Euphrates, vii. 132. Vespasian-continued. his tribute on urine, vii. 149. Vicinity, that which is next to a good thing is on the face of the globe, vi. 512, 513. in the weather, vi. 513, 514. in wars, vi. 515-517. Villain, vii. 437, 712. his issue belong to the Lord jure naturæ, regardant, vii. 330. Vindictive persons live the life of witches, Vines, the sweet scent of the flower of, vi. Vinum Dæmonum, poesy, vi. 378. Virtue, its relation to beauty, vi. 478, 569. Voluptas, Tithoni fabula, vi. 653. per Pandoram significata, vi. 674. Vulcan, his wooing Minerva, vi. 736. the maker of Pandora, or Pleasure, vi. Vulcanus Pandoræ artifex, vi. 669. opificium voluptatis ei deputatur, vi. 674. Wager about repeating the Paternoster, vii. 172. Waiving, property in goods by, vii. 501. the king devotes his banner there after War, a just fear of an imminent danger is a the just occasions of, vi. 450; vii. 30. foreign, like that of exercise, ib. vicissitudes and changes in, vi. 515–517. in the seats of, vi. 515. anciently moved from east to northern nations the more mar- at the breaking up of great em- in the weapons, vi. 516. invention of ordinance, ib. in the conduct of, ib. arms flourish in the youth of a state, signified by the fable of Perseus, vi. 715 three precepts thereby taught, vi. 715. advertisement touching an Holy War, vii. for the propagation of Christianity, whe- in peace sons bury their fathers, in war, king's prerogative in, vii. 666, 776. W. Weather, cycle of, every 35 years, vi. 513. Wells, Viscount, made commissioner to treat Chapel of Henry VII. at, vi, 245. |