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Sailors, their device to get fresh water, from exposing fleeces of wool,
i. 280
St. John, Mr. charge against him, iv. 429, he slanders and abuses
the king, lords, parliament, &c. of England, in some papers

iv. 434

St. John, Sir Oliver, lord deputy of Ireland, vi. 141, 196, and

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note (b)
i. 515

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i. 27

Salamander, the causes why it endureth the fire, if true,
Sale, a property gained thereby when dishonest, iv. 125, how it
may bar the right of the owner, iv. 126, what markets it

made in

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Salgazus, a sea-plant

Salic law, several remarks on it

must be

• ibid.

i. 462

ii. 408

vi. 54, 56

Salisbury, Robert earl of, his character
Salt, a good compost, i. 392, 403, 445. Saltpetre, how to hasten
the breeding of it, i. 446, Salt in plants, i. 461, 462. Salt hath
a sympathy with blood, ii. 71, it is an healer, ibid. it riseth not in
distillations
ii. 35
Salt-water how freshened, or the salt imbibed, ii. 35. Salt-water
passed through earth becomes fresh, i. 245, four differences be-
tween the passing it in vessels and in pits, i. 245, 246. Salt-
water good to water some herbs, i. 471. Salt-water boiled be-
cometh more potable, ii. 35. Salt-water sooner dissolving salt
than fresh water, the cause, ii. 35, 36. Salt-water shineth in the
dashing, i. 370. Salt in its several disguises a composition of mer-
cury and sulphur
i. 373
Sanctuaries qualified by the pope at the interposition of Henry VII.

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Sand for making glass near mount Carmel
Sand for turning minerals into a glassy substance
Sandys, lord, his confession relating to Essex's treason
Sanguis draconis, the tree that bears it

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Sanquar, a speech at his arraignment for having procured
murder Turner out of revenge

Sap assisted by leaving top-boughs in polling, i. 396.
i. 465, the differing nature thereof in several trees
Sapientia veterum quoted

Satiety, or cloying in meats

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Savage, Sir John, slain riding about the walls of Boloign
Savages, how treated

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i. 290

i. 354

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Saville, Sir Henry, some account of him, v. 328, and note 8, his
judgment of poets

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Saxony, duke of, how he surprises Dam in favour of Maximilian,
v. 83, takes Sluice .

v. 84

Scales growing to the teeth as hard as the teeth, i. 286, of fishes
that resemble rotten wood in their shining

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Schism more scandalous than corruption of manners
how to be punished

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ii. 467

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iv. 385

Schoolmen compared to the fictions of astronomy, ii. 293, 433, use-

ful, ii. 375, fitter to guide penknives than swords
Schools of learning to be cherished

Scipio Africanus, his declension

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Scire facias, a writ, in what cases not to be awarded
Scissile and not Scissile.

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Scoffing at holy matters one cause of atheism

iii. 508

iii. 437

ii. 356

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iv. 522

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Scotland, account of the parliament held there, in 1616 vi. 151
Scribonianus, his conspiracy against Claudius.
Shrieking

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ii. 450

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Scriptures are from God and contain his will, ii. 487, are not to
be altered
ibid.
Scots, a commendation of their virtues, &c. iii. 298, &c. ought to be
esteemed denizens of England, iii. 272, 273, are infested by the
Guises, and relieved by queen Elizabeth
iii. 81, &c.
Sea clearer, the north wind blowing than the south, i. 473. Sea,
by the bubbles foreshews wind, ii. 6. Sea-water looketh black

moved, white resting, ii. 32, the cause, ibid. Seas shallow and
narrow break more than deep and large

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Sea-hare, coming near the body, hurteth the lungs
Sea-plants, i. 436, why sea-sand produces no plants

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Sea-sand a good compost, i. 445. Sea-sands produce no plant,

Seal, great seal of England and Scotland to be one after

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Search, in what cases the constable has power to do so iv. 313
Seasons of plants
. i. 438, 439, 440
Seasons of the year, observations on them by Hippocrates i. 384
Seats, or houses, ii. 4, 359, of justice set to sale, oppression,

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Sebastian, king of Portugal, his expedition into Africa
Secret properties

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Secrets not to be revealed in anger, why
Secrecy the virtue of a confessor, ii. 264, what necessary to it, ii.
265, the great importance of it to princes, ii. 302. Secrecy in
council, and celerity in execution, ii. 305, business tainted for
want of it
Sectaries, their tenets inconsistent with monarchy, iii. 435, not to
have countenance or connivance

Secundine, or caul

ii. 370, 371

iii. 437
i. 498

Seditions, ii. 283. Seditions and tumults are brother and sister,
ii. 284, the prognostics, materials, causes, and remedies of them,
ii. 285, et seq.

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See of Rome, attempts to alienate the hearts of the people from the
king
iv. 388
Seeds steeped in several liquors hasten their growth, i. 391, 392,
Seeds in plants more strong than either leaf or root, i. 457, 458,
the cause, ibid. in some not, ibid. Seeds how to be
425, 470, plants growing without seed, i. 435, 436.
very old, make the plant degenerate

chosen, i.
Seeds, if

. i. 425

Sejanus, his intimacy with Tiberius, ii. 316, the device to pull him
down

ii. 344

Seipsum defendendo, an act done, why not always justifiable, iv. 36,
the punishment for killing a man in that act

iv. 83

Seizure, lessee is shewn to have no property in timber-trees from

iv. 221

vi. 308

thence.

Selden, John, his letter to lord St. Alban
Seminaries, when they blossomed in their missions into England,

iii. 512

Sena loseth its windiness by decoction, i. 252, purges melancholy,
i. 263

Seneca's style, mortar without lime, ii. 449, his sentiment of despis-
ing death, ii. 256, says the good things of adversity are to be ad-
mired, ii. 262, greedy of executorships, ii. 340, a saying of his, iii.
530, condemned
iii. 468

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ii. 341

Seneca, the tragedian
Senses, their pleasures and displeasures, i. 484, their instruments
have a similitude with that which giveth the reflection of the ob-
ject
. i. 347
Separation of several natures by straining, i. 245, 246, 247, of seve-
ral liquors by weight, i. 249, and of the same kind of liquors
thickened, i. 250, of metals

Separation of the cruder parts prohibiteth putrefaction
Separation of bodies by weight, i. 249, in liquors, i.

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i. 525

i. 369

355, 356,
et. seq.

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ibid.

Separation of metals and minerals, ii. 200, consists of refining, ex-
tracting, and principiation .
Separation, the external points thereof, between England and Scot-
land, iii. 274, the internal points

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Septimius Severus died in dispatch of business, ii. 256, bis excessive
fondness to his chief favourite, ii. 316, his character
Sequestrations, in what cases to be granted

Serjeants feast

Serjeants at law, none to be made except such as are qualified to be
judges afterward

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Serjeantry, tenures by, what they are, and how instituted
Serpent, an observation on him

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Shaking of the head compared to the shaking of a bottle

ii. 429

Sessions to be held quarterly by the justices, with the method of

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Shallows break more than deeps

Shame, i. 493, the impressions thereof infectious

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ii. 34

ii. 57

ibid.

Shaw, Dr. his tale at Paul's cross, v. 9, concerning the bastardy of
the children of Edward IV.
Shell-fish have no bones within, i. 504, have male and female gene-
rally

ii. 33

. v. 148

Shene palace almost burnt down
Sheriff's tourne, its origin and jurisdiction, iv. 85, is called also Curia
franci plegii, ibid. made judges of the court for the county and
hundreds, iv. 86, called vicecomites, ibid. their office, ibid. iv. 317,
are bound to attend the judges in their county, by person or by
deputy, iv. 97, from whence they are so called .
iv. 317
Sheriff's accounts how to be managed, iv. 145, their attendance in
the circuits of the judges iii. 440, ancienter than the conquest,
and of great consequence

Shifting for the better helpeth plants and living creatures
Shining wood, many experiments about it.

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iii. 441

i. 401

i. 370

ibid.

ii. 374

Night-

Shipping, or navy, the walls of England, iii. 450, all the necessary
materials of it our own produce, save sails and cordage
Shooting, good for the lungs and stomach

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Showers good for the fruit, i. 467, for some not, ibid.
showers better than day-showers

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Showers after a long drought cause sicknesses if they be
if great not

Shrewsbury, Gilbert earl of

Shrewsbury, lady, some account of her and her trial

ibid.

gentle;

ii. 2, 3

vi. 107

v. 347

Shute, Mr. carries a message from Sir George Villiers to Sir Fran-

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Sighing and yawning, the breath drawn in by both

vi. 88

ii. 246

i. 384

i. 475

Sight, the object thereof, quicker than of hearing, i. 328. Sight,
ii. 30, 31, 32, objects thereof cause great delights in the spirits,
but no great offence, why

.. ibid.

Sigismund, prince of Transilvania, iii. 474, heads three provinces
which revolt in Turkey

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Silver more easily made than gold, i. 362, ii. 191, the Chinese intent
upon making it, 362, Silver halfpence
Silver, certificate touching the scarcity of it at the mint ⚫ iii. 383
Simcock, his deposition
vi. 98
Simnel, Lambert, v. 20, his history in personating the 2d son of Ed-
ward IV. ibid. changes his scene, and personates Edward Planta-
genet, v. 22, afterward proclaimed at Dublin, v. 24, taken in the
battle near Newark, v. 33, consigned to an office in the king's
kitchen, ibid. preferred to be his falconer
⚫ v. 33, 103
Simonds, William, v. 20, never brought to trial or execution, v. 22,
taken at the battle of Stokefield, v. 33, no more heard of ibid.
Simonides
ii. 447
Simples, special for medicine, i. 478, such as have subtle parts with-
out acrimony, ibid. many creatures bred of putrefaction, are such,
ibid. also putrefactions of plants
ibid.

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Simulation and dissimulation, ii. 263, a weak kind of policy, ibid. and
differ from judgment, ii. 263, 264, three degrees of it, ii. 264, its
advantages, ii. 265, the case of dissembling knowledge

Sinews, why much affected with cold

ii. 334

Single life, the causes of it, ii. 268, recommended to churchmen,

ibid. most charitable and yet most cruel

Singularities in several plants

Sinking of bodies, its cause

Sitting healthful, why

Six clerks, concerning the grant of their office

i. 447

ibid.

i. 471, 472

i. 515

i. 499

v. 497

Sixtus V. how the son of an illustrious house, ii. 423, a tale of his
reception in the other world

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ii. 424

Skipwith, Henry, his cause in chancery recommended by the earl
of Buckingham

Skull, of one entire bone
Slander, how to be punished

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Sleep, a great nourisher, i. 270, 271. Sleep promotes sweat, and
stays other evacuations of the body, i. 489. Sleep, why hindered
by cold in the feet, i. 503, furthered by some kind of noises, ibid.
nourisheth in many beasts and birds, ibid. creatures that sleep all
winter, ii. 41. Sleeping plants
i. 454
Smells and odours, i. 386, best at some distance as well as sound,
why, ibid. best where the body is crushed, ibid. not so in flowers
crushed, ibid. best in flowers whose leaves smell not, ibid. Smells,
sweet, ii. 9, have all a corporeal substance, ii. 10, 11.
fetid, ii. 11. Smells of the jail very pernicious, ii. 49.
that are most dangerous

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Smith, Sir Thomas, his case in Essex's treason
Sir Thomas Smith, sent ambassador to Russia

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Sneezing ceaseth hiccup, i. 476, why induced by looking against
the sun, ibid. caused by tickling the nose
Snow, why colder than water
Snow-water unwholesome, i. 388. Snows cause fruitfulness, whence,
i. 467, 471, puts forth plants and breeds worms, i. 436, 437, 482,
Snow, good to be applied to a mortified part, whence i. 520
Socage, tenures so called, what, and how instituted, iv. 105, &c.
reserved by the lord

iv. 106

i. 460

Socotra, that island famous for the sanguis draconis
Socrates, what he said of the oracle of Delphos, ii. 417, his senti-
ments of the writings of Heraclitus, ibid. compared to the apo-
thecaries' pots containing precious drugs

Soft bodies, ii. 18, their cause, ibid. are of two sorts

ii. 443

ibid.

Soldiers, want of provision for them, when disbanded, complained
of

Soles of the feet have a sympathy with the head

iii. 69

i. 288

Solicitor and attorney general, &c. their consequence

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Solomon's house modelled in the New Atlantis, ii. 80, 90, 209, in-

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