Parma, Prince of, 483. 485, 486. 488,
Patents likely to be complained of by the Lower House, how to be dealt with, 146, 147, 148. 151, 152. 183.
Question referred to the Council, and carried against judgment, 151. 183.
Policy of the majority respecting, ibid.
For manufacture of Gold and Silver Thread, 184. 191. 195, 196. 188. 202. 204. 227. For forfeiture of the Recogni- sances of Alehouses, 185. 227. For Inns and Hosteries, 184- 186. 191. 196. 198. 202. 204. 227.
For concealments, 191. 195. 202. Complained of to the Lords as grievances, 202.
Proceeding of the Lords with regard to, 203.
Given up by the King, 227.
Of the survey of coals, stopped at the seal, 513, 514.
For incorporation of the Apothe- caries, 514, 515.
Peacock, a school master, committed for pretending to have in- fatuated the King's judgment by sorcery, his examination, 76- 80.
Richard, a monied man and suitor, 258. 260.
Peace, commission of the, revised,
Pembroke, Earl of, Lord Chamberlain, recommended to the Prince by the King when he thought he was dying, 9.
His sentence on the Earl and Countess of Suffolk, 59. A member of the Conference Committee when Bacon and Montagu spoke in their own defence; his motion thereupon, 198.
Appointed to begin and to report
the next conference, 202.
His motion on Bacon's first letter of submission, 248, 249. Against requiring him to answer in person, ibid.
One of the commissioners to receive the great seal from Bacon.
His part in the debate on Bacon's punishment, 268, 269.
Pembroke, Earl of-continued.
Bacon's message of acknowledg ment to, 299.
Pension of 12007. granted to Bacon, 13.
In arrear, 330. 381. 387. 396. Petition for payment of, in ad- vance, 511. 517. 521.
Of 2000l. or 3000l. to be obtained for him by Buckingham after his fall, 295. 297.
Percy, Mr. Henry, bequest to, 542. A suit of, recommended to Sec. Conway, 549.
Perient, Sir Thomas, 253. Perrot, Sir J., moves for public de claration of readiness to sup- port a war for the Palatinate, 281.
Persia in hostility with Spain, 501. See Ormus.
Peterson, Mr., Bacon's late chaplain, to preach his funeral sermon,
Petition to the House of Lords, 321. To the King, 387, 388. 395. 518.
Petty Writs, farm of, sequestered, 381. 387. 396.
Suit concerning, 324. 389.
Proposed alteration in patent, 397. Petition for discharge of rent, 511.
Philips, Sir Robert, on the mismanage- ment of the Conference, 195. One of a committee to set down the judgment against Edward Lloyde, 273.
Supports motion for public de-
claration of readiness to support a war for the recovery of the Palatinate, 281. Opposes motion for more than 2 subsidies; knows of no war, nor of any enemy, 507. Accepts the failure to reconquer the Palatinate, 509.
Not chairman of committee, al- luded to in p. 515.
Philip, King of Spain, his policy with regard to the Palatinate, 400, 401.
His secret communication to the Emperor, 401.
His views as to the marriage, do.
Engagements to be required of him, 457, 458. Postpones the match indefinitely, 458, 459.
His two enemies, 501.
The latter, King of Macedon, 475.
The younger, preserved both his orations and epistles, 546, 547. Plomer, Bacon's servant, legacy to, 543.
Pole, Michael de la, notes on his case, 232.
Pope, Alexander, on Bacon, 553, 554. Pope Sixtus V. and Urban VIII., 496.
Popish bishopricks, design for erecting in England, 378, 379. Poiten, Thomas, a poor Yorkshireman, victim of conjuration, 30. Porter, Mr. Endimion, 437. Porter, Buckingham's servant, letter to Bacon on behalf of, 109. Portugal, Spanish title to, disputed by the right heirs, 464. 479. Powerscourt, Lord, one of the com- manders in Ireland, pays divers
Powerscourt, Lord-continued.
sums of money to the Lord Treasurer Suffolk for favours done, 57.
Powre, a suitor, 256.
Prague, capture of, by the Bavarians, how it affected the question of the recovery of the Palatinate, 153, 154.
Prayer or Psalm, 229-231. Prerogative, royal, its relation to the Common Law, 118.
Prerogative Court of Canterbury. See Wills.
Priests and Recusants, petition for better execution of laws against, 181, 182.
Pretorian Edicts in albo, 360. Courts, 473.
Proclamations and Commissions likely to be complained of by the Lower House, how to be dealt with, 147.
Concerning the manufacture of Gold and Silver Thread, 204. 206.
Imprisonment for disobeying, 205 -208.
Prodromus Philosophiæ Secundæ, 532. Protestant Union and Catholic League, treaty between, 108. Prusias, King of Bithynia, 475. Psalms, translation of certain, into English verse, 523.
By whom printed, ibid. Puckering, Sir Thomas, a magistrate, 30.
Queen Anne, death of, 9. 14. 32.
Queen Henrietta, arrival of, 526.
Radford, Peter, wife of, legacy to, 543. Ralegh, Sir Walter, examinations re- lating to his case posssbily lost in the fire at Whitehall, 4. See also, 18.
"Sir Walter Ralegh's Ghost," a seditious book, the author of which the Government were in search of, 153.
Ralegh, Sir Walter-continued.
His saying about the Spanish Armada, 462. 489.
Ramsay, Mr. David, concerned in the business of Wills, 111.
Raveline, the, 495. Rawley, Dr., Bacon's chaplain, avoids mention of Bacon's pecuniary difficulties after his fall, 524.
Rawley, Dr.-continued. Passage on the subject quoted as his, 524.
Anecdote relating to the composi- tion of the Sylva Sylvarum, 525. His list of Bacon's writings, 537. Legacy to, 543.
Witness to the publication of Bacon's last will, 545. Recommendation of, to Bishop Williams, 546.
Edited most of Bacon's MSS., 552. Memorandum in his commonplace-
book of Bacon's remark on the sentence against himself, 559, 560.
On the sources of Bacon's know- ledge, 565.
On his method of study, 566. On his care of his health, ibid. His opinion of him, 576.
Redborn, bequest to the poor of, 540. Referees, in cases of petitions for Patents, 184.
For patents of Inns and Alehouses, 185. 187.
Question of calling them to ac- count in the House of Commons for advice given to the King, 188, 189. 199, 200.
Why not named at the Conference with the Lords, 193-196. Omission supplied at a second Conference, 197.
Offer of Bacon and Montagu to justify their certificates at the proper time, voted a transgres- sion of the rules of the Upper House, 198.
Referees-continued.
Pursuit of, silently dropped, 203. Religion, petition of, 181, 182. 349. 382.
Rémusat, M. Charles de, on the "great- ness of Bacon, 574, 575. Revenge,' the, her fight with the Spanish fleet, 491.
Reynell, Sir George, his great diamond, 228, 258.
Rich, Sir Nathaniel, one of a committee to set down the judgment against Edward Lloyde, 273. Sir Robert, one of Bacon's credi tors to whom letters of adminis tration were granted, 551. Richardson, Serjeant, chosen Speaker of the Lower House, 173. Makes his oration, 174. Ridgway, Lord, pays 300l. to the Lord Treasurer for favour in passing his accounts, 57.
Rimenant, battle near, on Lammas Day, 483.
Rolf, Mr., Bacon's neighbour at St. Albans, 258.
John, afterwards Lord Teynham, arrangements for re- version of his office, 101.
Ross, Lord, married to Sir Thomas Lake's daughter, threatened with scandalous accusations, goes to Italy, 3.
See Lake, Exeter.
Lady, makes a full confes-
Rowe, Sir Thomas, on the mismanage- ment of the Conference, 195. Ruswell, Sir Henry, a suitor, 259.
St. Michael's Church-continued. Bequest to the poor of, 540. Salisbury, Robert, Earl of, state of the Exchequer at his death, 84. Impositions set on by, 86. Divulging of the King's wants begun by, 87.
Sands, Sir Samuel, one of a committee to set down the judgment against Edward Lloyde, 273.
Sandys, Sir Edwin, moves for search of precedents as to the power of judicature of the House of Com- mons, 187.
His part at the conference with the Lords, 191. 193.
Santa Cruz, Marquis de, best Com- mander of Spain by Sea, 486.
Savile, Sir Henry, on the work of the first session in 1621, 282. Lectures founded by, 544. Savoy, apprehension of the designs of Spain, 497. 501.
Saye and Seal, William Fiennes, Baron, on one of the Committees of four for examination of evidence against Bacon, 245.
His motion on Bacon's first letter of submission, 248.
In favour of requiring him to answer the charges in person, 249.
In favour of degradation, 268, 269.
One of the Committee to take ex- aminations in the case of Edward Lloyde, 277.
Sayers, William, legacy to, 543. Scarcity of money, along with plenty of all other commodities, 160. Causes of, recommended for con- sideration by the King to the Commons, and debated, 184. Scott, Richard, a suitor, 255, 256. Scottishmen at the Battle of Newport,
Seymour, Sir Francis-continued. punish them if found guilty,
188. Sheffield, Lord, 39.
On one of the Committees of four for examination of evidence against Bacon, 245.
His part in the debate on Bacon's punishment, 268.
One of Committee to take exami- nations, in the case of Edward Lloyde, 277.
Moves for warrant to commit Bacon to the Tower, 279. Sherburn, Edward, one of Bacon's secretaries, 83. 255.
A witness in Bacon's case, 256, 259.
Sheriff, Gabriel, a witness in Bacon's case, 260.
Sheriffs, carelessness of the Judges in presenting fit men for, 55, 56. Shute, Mr., of Lombard Street, be- quest to for funeral sermon, 540.
Shute, Mr., his employment in the cause of Fisher and Wrenham: 254.
Of Richard Scott, 255, 256. Sidley, of Kent, founded a lecture in natural philosophy at Oxford,
Silver, the raising of, by ordinance, 74.
Sinclair, Lord, Ambassador from the King of Denmark, 32.
Smith, old goodwife, legacy to, 543. Smith, Richard, legacy to, 543. Smith, Bacon's Bailiff, and his wife, legacies to, 543.
Smith, Sir Thomas, 260. Smithwick, a suitor, 259. Solon's laws, 359, 360.
Somerset, Earl of, joint-patentee of the reversion of Sir J. Roper's office, 101.
Released from the Tower, 326. "Hath his pardon and they say shall sit in Parliament," 549. Southampton, Henry Wriothsley, Earl of, 203.
Moves for committees to inquire
into the execution of the patents complained of, 203.
Moves answer to Bacon's first
letter to the Lords, 216. Chairman of one of the Com-
mittees of four for examination of evidence against Bacon, 245. Motion on his first letter of sub- mission, 248.
Southampton, Henry W.-continued. Against requiring him to answer in person, 249.
Seconds the Prince's motion for a message, 250.
His motions in the debate on Bacon's punishment, 267. 269. One of the Committee to take ex- aminations in the case of Edward Lloyde, 277. Complains that Bacon has not been
sent to the Tower, 279. Letter to, from Bacon, desiring him to favour his suit for re- admission to the House of Lords, 453, 454.
Spain, short view of Great Britain and, 22-28.
Suggests to James the office of mediator between the parties in the Bohemian war, 28, 29. Alarmed by his consent to the levy
of Volunteers and the borrow- ing of money for the defence of Palatinate, 106.
Keeps him in belief that the Pala- tinate will be respected, until ready to attack it, 112. "Vox populi, or news from," 153. Peace with, would be broken by a diverting army, 163.
Policy of opposition to, approved by Bacon, but rendered im- practicable by the King's pro- ceedings, 368.
Alliance with, how to be turned to best account, 368–370. Co-operation of, necessary for re- covery of Palatinate, 369. 400. 430.
Visit of the Prince and Bucking- to, 401.
Buckingham's quarrel with, 440, 441.
"The King will put a hook in the
The uniting of the States of Europe against the growing ambition of, 446.
Views of the House of Commons
regarding, 456-460.
Notes for speech concerning war with, 460-465.
Treaties with, declared at an end, 465, 466.
Considerations touching a war with, 469-505. 535. Policy of, in invading England, 480.
Policy of the Kings of, 482.
Strength of in 1588, compared with 1624, 496, 497.
Spain-continued.
Dominions of, scattered, 463. 498. Population scanty, 499.
Peasants of, no soldiers, 502. Treasure of, at the mercy of those who are masters by sea, 464. 500.
Greatness of, built on four pillars, 502.
Weak at the spring head, ibid. Devotion of, to the Catholic
Church, a matter of ambition not religion, 503.
Support given by, to the Protest-
ants of France, ibid.
Issues of the war with, of little interest to the new House of Commons, 509,
Unsuccessful expedition against, 537.
Buckingham's attempt to pull down the monarchy of, 538. Spaniards' valour, 499.
Spanish match, progress of negotiations concerning, 16-19.
Treaty for, reopened by Gondomar with offer to accept the con- ditions which had been rejected before, 107.
Likely to be broken off, 113. Effect of the dissolution of Parlia ment upon, 369. 400.
Expected to be concluded shortly: the Council made acquainted with the Articles, 430. Condition of, on the Prince's re- turn from Spain, 440.
Advice to Buckingham concerning, 449, 450.
Finally broken off, 458, 459. Declared at an end, 466.
Sparta, defence of, against the Thebans, 472.
Speech of matters of state, proclama- tion against excess of, 152. 154, 155, 156, 157.
Spencer, Robert, Lord, on one of the Committees of four for examina- tion of evidence against Bacon,
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