The works of Francis Bacon, lord chancellor of England.

576 INDEX. Sarah's laughter an image of natural reason, i. 239. Scylla and Icarus, or the middle way, i. 309. Satiety, meats that induce, ii. 46. Sea, lord admiral's right of determining as to acts comSaturn, i. 296; ii. 579. mitted on the high, ii. 502; the commandment of Savil's, Mr., opinion respecting poets, i. 111. it one of the points of true greatness in a state, ii. Savil, Sir Henry, letter to, i. 104; answer to Coranus, 223; different clearness of the, ii. 90; importance i. 117. of the mastery of it, i. 38; great effects of battles Savoy, state of during the time of Queen Elizabeth, by, i. 38; ebb and flow of, iii. 523; motions of;, are ii. 248. only five, iii. 523; the great six-hours diurnal moSavages, the proper conduct towards them in planta- tion principally treated, iii. 523; motions of curtions, i. 41. rents do not contradict the notion of a natural and Saviour's (our) first show of his power, i. 176. catholic motion of the sea, iii. 523; grand diurnal Scale, nature of notes of, ii. 25. motion not one of elevation or depression, iii. 524; Scaling ladder of the intellect, iii. 519. elevated all over the world at equinoxes, and at the Scaliger's sixth sense, ii. 91. new and full moon, iii. 524; objections to the opiScammony, strong medicine, ii. 9. nion that the diurnal motion is a progressive one, Scandal, charge against Sir J. Wentworth for, ii. from the fact that in some places wells have simul307. taneous motions with the sea, and fiom the fact that Scarlet, touching the dye of, ii. 122. waters are raised and depressed simultaneously on Scent of dogs almost a sense by itself, ii. 92. the shore of Europe and Florida, considered, iii. Schoolmen. Cymini sectores, i. 55; the origin of 524, 525; ebb and flow of. from what cause it their cobwebs, i. 70; incorporated Aristotle's philo- arises, iii. 525; whence arises the reciprocal action sophy into the Christian religion, i. 97; saying of tides once in six hours, iii. 528; explanation of of them by the bishops at the council at Trent, i. the difference of tides connected with the moon's 122. motion, iii. 529. Schools, too many grammar, ii. 241. Sea-fish put in fresh waters, ii. 94. Science, authors in, ought to be consuls, and not Sea-shore, wells on, ii. 7. dictators, i. 172; error of over-early reducing into Sea-weed, ii. 76. methods and arts, i. 173; badges of false, i. 170; Sea or other water, colour of, ii. 120. the strength of, is in the union of its parts, i. Seas, rolling and breaking of the, ii. 121. 171. Seals, one of the external points of separation with Sciences, want of invention in professors of, i. 174; Scotland, ii. 144. errors in the formation of, i. 173; confederacy of, Seasons, pestilential, ii. 57; prognostics of pestilential, with the imagination, i. 172; imaginary, i. 199; ii. 91. growth of, checked by dedication of colleges to pro- Secrecy, a great means of obtaining suits, i. 54. fessions, i. 185. Secret properties, ii. 136. Sciences and arts, invention in, deficient, i. 207. Sects, the greatest vicissitude, i. 39; the two properties Scientific efforts, on the combination and succession of new sects to supplant authority, to give license of, ii. 557. to pleasures, i. 61; the three plantations, i. 61; diScipio Africanus, Livy's saying of him, i. 48, versities of, i. 200; religious, effect of extirpating Scire facias, when awarded, ii. 484. by violence, i. 300. &cotchmen, the statute for voiding them out,of Eng- Sedition and troubles, essay of, i. 22. land, i. 343; speech on the naturalization of, ii. Seed, what age is best, ii. 88; producing perfect 150. plants without, ii. 76. Scotch skinck, how made, ii. 14. Seeds, most, leave their husks, ii. 86. Sootland, its state during Queen Elizabeth, ii. 248; Self, essay of wisdom for a man's self, i. 31. as to union with, ii. 383; truce with, i. 326; Perkin Self-love maketh mlien unprofitable like the narcissus, Warbeck's reception in, i. 356; king of, ravages i. 288. Northumberland, i. 358; preparations for a war Self-revelation, i. 234. with, i. 361; peace with, i. 364; suggestion of Selden, John, to Lord Viscount St. Alban, ii. 530. courts for the borders of, ii. 143; the points wherein Senators, advantages of learned, i. 177. the nations were united, ii. 143; external points Seneca, i. 210, 219; ii. 435; Nero's opinion of his of separation with, ii. 144; internal points of sepa- style, i. 111; his saying of Caesar, i. 115; his saying ration with, ii. 146; commissioner's certificate of of death, i. 12; on prosperity and adversity, i. 14; union with, ii. 149; argument respecting the post- his prophecy of America, i. 43; why his fame lasts, nati of, ii. 166; discourse of the happy union with, i. 57; his saying on anger, i. 59; his description of ii. 138; considerations touching the union of Eng- Caesar, ii. 234; government of Rome by, i. 165. land and, ii. 143. Senna, how windiness taken from, ii. 10. Scotland and England, union of, ii. 452, 454. Sense, Scaliger's sixth, ii. 91; imagination imitating Scotus, his answer to Charles the Bald, i. 114. the force of the, ii. 107. Scribonianus, answer of his freedman to the freedman Senses, reporters to the mind, i. 162; greatest of th, of Claudius, i. 112. pleasures of the, ii. 91; spiritual species which af. Scripture, no deficiency in, i. 244; interpretation' of, feet the, ii. 128. methodical and solute, i. 241; interpretation of, i. Sentences, collection of, out of the Mimi of Publius, i. 241. 127, 128; out of some of Lord Bacon's writings, i. ScriDtures exhort us to study the omnipotency of 129-131. God, i. 176; meditations on, i. 71; do not restrain Sentient bodies, harmony of, with insentient, i. 412. science, i. 82, 98; honour the name of the invent- Sequela chartarum, i. 100. ors of music and works in metal, i. 98. Sequestration, where granted, ii. 481; of specifics Scylla, fable of, an image of contentious learning, i. lands, ii. 481. 171; the fiction of an emblem of the present phi- Separation of bodies by weight, ii. 8; of metals and losophy, i. 87. minerals, ii. 460.

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Title
The works of Francis Bacon, lord chancellor of England.
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Bacon, Francis, 1561-1626.
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Page 576 - Comprehensive Index
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Philadelphia,: A. Hart,
1852.
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Bacon, Francis, -- 1561-1626.

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