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able to do this because he was one of the most wonderful of thinkers and one of the greatest of writers. The disclosure, the interpretation, the development of that great intellectual revolution which was in the air, and which was practically carried forward in obscurity, day by day, by the fathers of modern astronomy and chemistry and physiology, had fallen to the task of a genius, second only to Shakespeare. He had the power to tell the story of what they were doing and were to do with a force of imaginative reason of which they were utterly incapable. He was able to justify their attempts and their hopes as they themselves could not. He was able to interest the world in the great prospects opening on it, but of which none but a few students had the key. The calculations of the astronomer, the investigations of the physician, were more or less a subject of talk, as curious or possibly useful employments. But that which bound them together in the unity of science, which gave them their meaning beyond themselves, which raised them to a higher level and gave them their real dignity among the pursuits of men, which forced all thinking men to see what new and unsuspected possibilities in the knowledge and in the condition of mankind were opened before them, was not Bacon's own attempts at science, not even his collections of facts and his rules of method, but that great idea of the reality and boundless worth of knowledge which Bacon's penetrating and sure intuition had discerned, and which had taken possession of his whole nature. The impulse which he gave to the progress of science came from his magnificent and varied exposition of this idea; from his series of grand and memorable generalisations

It

on the habits and faults of the human mind-on the difficult and yet so obvious and so natural precautions necessary to guide it in the true and hopeful track. came from the attractiveness, the enthusiasm, and the persuasiveness of the pleading; from the clear and forcible statements, the sustained eloquence, the generous hopes, the deep and earnest purpose of the Advancement and the De Augmentis; from the nobleness, the originality, the picturesqueness, the impressive and irresistible truth of the great aphorisms of the Novum Organum.

INDEX.

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tradictions of Bacon's life, 1-4;
birth, 4; his father and mother,
4-5; environment of his boy-
hood, 5; goes to Cambridge,
and life there, 5-7; admitted at
Gray's Inn, 6; visit to France,
6; his father's death, 7; goes
to live at Gray's Inn, 8; enters
Parliament for Melcombe Regis,
8; papers on public affairs, 10;
Controversies in the Church, 12;
Temporis Partus Maximus, 16;
letter to Lord Burghley, 16-18;
aims of Bacon's life, 18-21, 69-
73; receives reversion of clerk-
ship of the Council, 21; "Dis-
courses in "Devices," 22; his
manner of working, his note-
books, 22-24, 82, 221; Discourse
in Praise of Knowledge, 24;|

Discourse in Praise of the Queen
25; Observations on a Libel, 27;
Bacon and Essex, 27-57; first
edition of the Essays, 28; given
an estate by Essex, 38; becomes
one of the Learned Counsel, 44;
takes part in prosecution of
Essex, 48; intellectual life, 58-
59; public life, 59-61; arrested
for debt, 65, 66; knighted, 67;
activity in Parliament, 73-77;
Advancement of Learning, 76;
marriage, 77-79; appointed
Solicitor-General, 80-99; view
of the greatness of Britain, 83-
84; philosophical plans, 84;
becomes Attorney-General, 99;
Attorney-General and Chan-
cellor, 100-123; Lord Chan-
cellor, 108; Baron Verulam and
Viscount of St. Albans, 108,
125; his fall, 124-155; charged
with receiving bribes, 133; offers
to resign his seal, 140; confesses
his guilt, 142; sentenced, 143;
imprisoned for a few days in the
Tower, 152, 157, 163; pardoned,
157; death, 169, 171; will, 169-
170; character, 171-172, 177-
178; religious views, 174-176;
philosophy, 177-208; Bacon as
a writer, 209-227
Bacon, Sir Nicholas (father), 4
33, 152

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Bacon, Antony (brother), 11, 12,
21, 33, 46

Bacon, Roger, 59

Baranzan, Father, 173

De Augmentis, 7, 168, 173, 183,
200, 217, 218, 227

De Legibus et Justitia, 166
Declaration of the Treason of the

Earl of Essex, 54-55
Descartes, 20, 188, 213, 223

Barnham, Alice (Lord Bacon's Doddridge, 61, 78, 80

wife), 77

Bennett, Sir John, 140, 169
Bodley, Sir Thomas, 76-77, 185,
223

Bohemia, Queen of, 166
Buckingham, George Villiers, Duke
of, 2, 4, 82, 104, 106, 107, 109-
121, 124, 126, 128-130, 132-134,
136, 137, 144, 147-148, 150-152,
154, 155, 157-162, 167, 168
Burghley, Lord, 3, 4, 8, 9-10, 16-
18, 21, 26, 30, 33, 34, 36, 58,
63, 93, 181

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Chamberlain, 99, 112-113, 129,
136, 164
Chancery, Court of, 104, 108-110,

132-133, 139-140, 149-151
Churchill, John, 133, 134, 136, 150
Cogitationes de Scientia Humana,
184, 185

Coke, Sir Edward, 28, 34-35, 39,
48, 49, 51-53, 57, 61, 63-65, 77-
79, 99, 102-105, 107, 111-114,
118, 125, 128-131, 135, 143,
148-149, 169, 201

Elizabeth, Queen, 3-5, 8-10, 17, 19,
20, 22, 25, 26, 28-57, 58, 61-
63, 66, 69, 87, 92, 150, 184,
214

Ellesmere, Lord Chancellor, 75-76,
78, 79, 106, 107
Ellis, Mr., v, 182-183, 185, 188-

190, 194, 196, 224-225
Essex, the Earl of, 2, 19, 22, 27-
Essays, 28, 174, 210-211, 215-218
57, 58, 62, 65, 69, 77, 114,
117, 126, 148, 156, 209

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Gray's Inn, 6, 8, 19, 22, 90, 92,
101, 169, 214
"Great Contract," the, 88-89, 93
Great Place, essay on, 217
Greville, Fulke, 37
Gunpowder Plot, 52, 77

Harvey, 187, 198, 222, 225

Commentarius Solutus, 82-86, 164, Hastings, Sir George, 136, 140

185, 216

Compton, Lady, 111, 112. 118
Cook, Sir Antony (Bacon's grand-
father), 4-5
Copernicus, 195

Cranfield, Sir Lionel, 121, 129-132,
139, 160-161, 167
Cunning, essay on, 86

Hatton, Lady, 39, 77, 111-112
Herbert, George, 210
Historia Naturalis, extract from
preface to, 206-208

History of Henry VII, 166, 174,
210, 214

History of Life and Death, 183
History of the Winds, 183, 212

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