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+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Bacon, by R.W.
+Church.</title>
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+</head>
+<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13888 ***</div>
+
+<p><!-- Page -5 --><a name="Page_i" title='Page i'></a></p>
+
+<h1>BACON</h1>
+
+<p><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+</p>
+
+<h3>BY</h3>
+
+<h2>R.W. CHURCH</h2>
+
+<p style="text-align:center">DEAN OF ST. PAUL'S<br />
+HONORARY FELLOW OF ORIEL COLLEGE</p>
+
+<p><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+</p>
+
+<h2>NEW YORK</h2>
+
+<p style="text-align:center">HARPER &amp; BROTHERS,
+PUBLISHERS<br />
+FRANKLIN SQUARE</p>
+
+<hr />
+<p><!-- Page -4 --><a name='Page_iii' title='Page iii'></a></p>
+
+<h2><a name='ENGLISH_MEN_OF_LETTERS'></a>ENGLISH MEN OF
+LETTERS.</h2>
+
+<p style="text-align:center">EDITED BY JOHN MORLEY.</p>
+
+<hr class="small" />
+<table cellpadding="1" summary="ENGLISH MEN OF LETTERS" style=
+"text-align: center; font-size: smaller; width: 100%">
+<tr>
+<td align="left">JOHNSON</td>
+<td align="left">Leslie Stephen.</td>
+<td align="left">LOCKE</td>
+<td align="left">Thomas Fowler.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td align="left">GIBBON</td>
+<td align="left">J.C. Morison.</td>
+<td align="left">WORDSWORTH</td>
+<td align="left">F. Myers.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td align="left">SCOTT</td>
+<td align="left">R.H. Hutton.</td>
+<td align="left">DRYDEN</td>
+<td align="left">G. Saintsbury.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td align="left">SHELLEY</td>
+<td align="left">J.A. Symonds.</td>
+<td align="left">LANDOR</td>
+<td align="left">Sidney Colvin.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td align="left">HUME</td>
+<td align="left">T.H. Huxley.</td>
+<td align="left">DE QUINCEY</td>
+<td align="left">David Masson.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td align="left">GOLDSMITH</td>
+<td align="left">William Black.</td>
+<td align="left">LAMB</td>
+<td align="left">Alfred Ainger.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td align="left">DEFOE</td>
+<td align="left">William Minto.</td>
+<td align="left">BENTLEY</td>
+<td align="left">R.C. Jebb.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td align="left">BURNS</td>
+<td align="left">J.C. Shairp.</td>
+<td align="left">DICKENS</td>
+<td align="left">A.W. Ward.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td align="left">SPENSER</td>
+<td align="left">R.W. Church.</td>
+<td align="left">GRAY</td>
+<td align="left">E.W. Gosse.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td align="left">THACKERAY</td>
+<td align="left">Anthony Trollope.</td>
+<td align="left">SWIFT</td>
+<td align="left">Leslie Stephen.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td align="left">BURKE</td>
+<td align="left">John Morley.</td>
+<td align="left">STERNE</td>
+<td align="left">H.D. Traill.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td align="left">MILTON</td>
+<td align="left">Mark Pattison.</td>
+<td align="left">MACAULAY</td>
+<td align="left">J. Cotter Morison.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td align="left">HAWTHORNE</td>
+<td align="left">Henry James, Jr.</td>
+<td align="left">FIELDING</td>
+<td align="left">Austin Dobson.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td align="left">SOUTHEY</td>
+<td align="left">E. Dowden.</td>
+<td align="left">SHERIDAN</td>
+<td align="left">Mrs. Oliphant</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td align="left">CHAUCER</td>
+<td align="left">A.W. Ward.</td>
+<td align="left">ADDISON</td>
+<td align="left">W.J. Courthope.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td align="left">BUNYAN</td>
+<td align="left">J.A. Froude.</td>
+<td align="left">BACON</td>
+<td align="left">R.W. Church.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td align="left">COWPER</td>
+<td align="left">Goldwin Smith.</td>
+<td align="left">COLERIDGE</td>
+<td align="left">H.D. Traill.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td align="left">POPE</td>
+<td align="left">Leslie Stephen.</td>
+<td align="left">SIR PHILIP SIDNEY</td>
+<td align="left">J.A. Symonds.</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td align="left">BYRON</td>
+<td align="left">John Nichol.</td>
+<td align="left">KEATS</td>
+<td align="left">Sidney Colvin.</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<p style="text-align:center">12mo, Cloth, 75 cents per
+volume.<br />
+<i>Other volumes in preparation.</i></p>
+
+<hr class="small" />
+<p style="text-align:center">PUBLISHED BY HARPER &amp; BROTHERS,
+NEW YORK.<br />
+ <i>Any of the above works will be sent by mail, postage prepaid,
+to any part of the United States or Canada, on receipt of the
+price.</i></p>
+
+<hr />
+<p><!-- Page -3 --><a name='Page_v' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page v'></a></p>
+
+<h2><a name='PREFACE'></a>PREFACE.</h2>
+
+<p><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>In preparing this sketch it is needless to say how deeply I am
+indebted to Mr. Spedding and Mr. Ellis, the last editors of Bacon's
+writings, the very able and painstaking commentators, the one on
+Bacon's life, the other on his philosophy. It is impossible to
+overstate the affectionate care and high intelligence and honesty
+with which Mr. Spedding has brought together and arranged the
+materials for an estimate of Bacon's character. In the result, in
+spite of the force and ingenuity of much of his pleading, I find
+myself most reluctantly obliged to differ from him; it seems to me
+to be a case where the French saying, cited by Bacon in one of his
+commonplace books, holds good&mdash;"<i>Par trop se
+d&eacute;battre, la v&eacute;rit&eacute; se perd</i>."<a id=
+"footnotetag1" name="footnotetag1" class="fn" href="#footnote1"
+title="Promus: edited by Mrs. H. Pott, p. 475."><sup>1</sup></a>
+<!-- [1] --> But this does not diminish the debt of gratitude which
+all who are interested about Bacon must owe to Mr. Spedding. I wish
+also to acknowledge the assistance which I have received from Mr.
+Gardiner's <i>History of England</i> and Mr. Fowler's edition of
+the <i>Novum Organum</i>; and not least from M. de R&eacute;musat's
+work on Bacon, which seems to me the most complete and the most
+just estimate both of Bacon's char<!-- Page -2 --><a name='Page_vi'
+class='pagenum' title='Page vi'></a>acter and work which has yet
+appeared; though even in this clear and dispassionate survey we are
+reminded by some misconceptions, strange in M. de R&eacute;musat,
+how what one nation takes for granted is incomprehensible to its
+neighbour; and what a gap there is still, even in matters of
+philosophy and literature, between the whole Continent and
+ourselves&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"Penitus toto divisos orbe Britannos."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<hr />
+<p><!-- Page -1 --><a name='Page_vii' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page vii'></a></p>
+
+<h2><a name='CONTENTS'></a>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+<!-- BELOW ARE THE ORIGINAL TOC
+
+CHAPTER I. PAGE<br />
+EARLY LIFE 1<br />
+<br />
+CHAPTER II.<br />
+BACON AND ELIZABETH 26<br />
+<br />
+CHAPTER III.<br />
+BACON AND JAMES I. 55<br />
+<br />
+CHAPTER IV.<br />
+BACON SOLICITOR-GENERAL 77<br />
+<br />
+CHAPTER V.<br />
+BACON ATTORNEY-GENERAL AND CHANCELLOR 95<br />
+<br />
+CHAPTER VI.<br />
+BACON'S FALL 118<br />
+<br />
+<a name='Page_viii' class='pagenum' title='Page viii'></a>
+CHAPTER VII.<br />
+BACON'S LAST YEARS&mdash;1621-1626 149<br />
+<br />
+CHAPTER VIII.<br />
+BACON'S PHILOSOPHY 168<br />
+<br />
+CHAPTER IX.<br />
+BACON AS A WRITER 198<br />
+-->
+<table cellpadding="3" summary="CONTENTS" width="100%">
+<tr>
+<td><b>CHAPTER I.</b> </td>
+<td align="left">PAGE</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><a href='#CHAPTER_I'>EARLY LIFE</a> </td>
+<td align="left"><a href='#Page_1'>1</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><b>CHAPTER II.</b> </td>
+<td align="left"></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><a href='#CHAPTER_II'>BACON AND ELIZABETH</a> </td>
+<td align="left"><a href='#Page_26'>26</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><b>CHAPTER III.</b> </td>
+<td align="left"></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><a href='#CHAPTER_III'>BACON AND JAMES I.</a> </td>
+<td align="left"><a href='#Page_55'>55</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><b>CHAPTER IV.</b> </td>
+<td align="left"></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><a href='#CHAPTER_IV'>BACON SOLICITOR-GENERAL</a> </td>
+<td align="left"><a href='#Page_77'>77</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><b>CHAPTER V.</b> </td>
+<td align="left"></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><a href='#CHAPTER_V'>BACON ATTORNEY-GENERAL AND CHANCELLOR</a>
+</td>
+<td align="left"><a href='#Page_95'>95</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><b>CHAPTER VI.</b> </td>
+<td align="left"></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><a href='#CHAPTER_VI'>BACON'S FALL</a> </td>
+<td align="left"><a href='#Page_118'>118</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><b>CHAPTER VII.</b> </td>
+<td align="left"></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><a href='#CHAPTER_VII'>BACON'S LAST YEARS&mdash;1621-1626</a>
+</td>
+<td align="left"><a href='#Page_149'>149</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><b>CHAPTER VIII.</b> </td>
+<td align="left"></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><a href='#CHAPTER_VIII'>BACON'S PHILOSOPHY</a> </td>
+<td align="left"><a href='#Page_168'>168</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><b>CHAPTER IX.</b> </td>
+<td align="left"></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><a href='#CHAPTER_IX'>BACON AS A WRITER</a> </td>
+<td align="left"><a href='#Page_198'>198</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr />
+<p><a name='Page_1' class='pagenum' title='Page 1'></a></p>
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_I'></a>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+<h3>EARLY LIFE.</h3>
+
+<p><br />
+The life of Francis Bacon is one which it is a pain to write or to
+read. It is the life of a man endowed with as rare a combination of
+noble gifts as ever was bestowed on a human intellect; the life of
+one with whom the whole purpose of living and of every day's work
+was to do great things to enlighten and elevate his race, to enrich
+it with new powers, to lay up in store for all ages to come a
+source of blessings which should never fail or dry up; it was the
+life of a man who had high thoughts of the ends and methods of law
+and government, and with whom the general and public good was
+regarded as the standard by which the use of public power was to be
+measured; the life of a man who had struggled hard and successfully
+for the material prosperity and opulence which makes work easy and
+gives a man room and force for carrying out his purposes. All his
+life long his first and never-sleeping passion was the romantic and
+splendid ambition after knowledge, for the conquest of nature and
+for the service of man; gathering up in himself the spirit and
+longings and efforts of all discoverers and inventors of the arts,
+as <a name='Page_2' class='pagenum' title='Page 2'></a>they are
+symbolised in the mythical Prometheus. He rose to the highest place
+and honour; and yet that place and honour were but the fringe and
+adornment of all that made him great. It is difficult to imagine a
+grander and more magnificent career; and his name ranks among the
+few chosen examples of human achievement. And yet it was not only
+an unhappy life; it was a poor life. We expect that such an
+overwhelming weight of glory should be borne up by a character
+corresponding to it in strength and nobleness. But that is not what
+we find. No one ever had a greater idea of what he was made for, or
+was fired with a greater desire to devote himself to it. He was all
+this. And yet being all this, seeing deep into man's worth, his
+capacities, his greatness, his weakness, his sins, he was not true
+to what he knew. He cringed to such a man as Buckingham. He sold
+himself to the corrupt and ignominious Government of James I. He
+was willing to be employed to hunt to death a friend like Essex,
+guilty, deeply guilty, to the State, but to Bacon the most loving
+and generous of benefactors. With his eyes open he gave himself up
+without resistance to a system unworthy of him; he would not see
+what was evil in it, and chose to call its evil good; and he was
+its first and most signal victim.</p>
+
+<p>Bacon has been judged with merciless severity. But he has also
+been defended by an advocate whose name alone is almost a guarantee
+for the justness of the cause which he takes up, and the innocency
+of the client for whom he argues. Mr. Spedding devoted nearly a
+lifetime, and all the resources of a fine intellect and an earnest
+conviction, to make us revere as well as admire Bacon. But it is
+vain. It is vain to fight against the facts of his life: his words,
+his letters. "Men are made <a name='Page_3' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 3'></a>up," says a keen observer, "of professions, gifts, and
+talents; and also of <i>themselves</i>."<a id="footnotetag2" name=
+"footnotetag2" class="fn" href="#footnote2" title=
+"Dr. Mozley."><sup>2</sup></a><!-- [2] --> With all his greatness,
+his splendid genius, his magnificent ideas, his enthusiasm for
+truth, his passion to be the benefactor of his kind; with all the
+charm that made him loved by good and worthy friends, amiable,
+courteous, patient, delightful as a companion, ready to take any
+trouble&mdash;there was in Bacon's "self" a deep and fatal flaw. He
+was a pleaser of men. There was in him that subtle fault, noted and
+named both by philosophy and religion in the <span lang="el" title=
+"areskos">ἄρεσκοϛ</span>
+<!-- &alpha;&rho;&epsilon;&sigma;&kappa;&omicron;&sigma; -->
+<!-- [Greek: areskos] --> of Aristotle, the <span lang="el" title="anthr&ocirc;pareskos">ἀνθρωπάρεσκοϛ</span>
+<!-- &alpha;&nu;&theta;&rho;&omega;&pi;&alpha;&rho;&epsilon;&sigma;&kappa;&omicron;&sigmaf --><!-- [Greek: anthr&ocirc;pareskos] -->
+of St. Paul, which is more common than it is pleasant to think,
+even in good people, but which if it becomes dominant in a
+character is ruinous to truth and power. He was one of the
+men&mdash;there are many of them&mdash;who are unable to release
+their imagination from the impression of present and immediate
+power, face to face with themselves. It seems as if he carried into
+conduct the leading rule of his philosophy of nature, <i>parendo
+vincitur</i>. In both worlds, moral and physical, he felt himself
+encompassed by vast forces, irresistible by direct opposition. Men
+whom he wanted to bring round to his purposes were as strange, as
+refractory, as obstinate, as impenetrable as the phenomena of the
+natural world. It was no use attacking in front, and by a direct
+trial of strength, people like Elizabeth or Cecil or James; he
+might as well think of forcing some natural power in defiance of
+natural law. The first word of his teaching about nature is that
+she must be won by observation of her tendencies and demands; the
+same radical disposition of temper reveals itself in his dealings
+with men: they, too, must be won by yielding to them, by adapting
+himself to their moods and ends; by spying into the drift of their
+<a name='Page_4' class='pagenum' title='Page 4'></a>humour, by
+subtly and pliantly falling in with it, by circuitous and indirect
+processes, the fruit of vigilance and patient thought. He thought
+to direct, while submitting apparently to be directed. But he
+mistook his strength. Nature and man are different powers, and
+under different laws. He chose to please man, and not to follow
+what his soul must have told him was the better way. He wanted, in
+his dealings with men, that sincerity on which he insisted so
+strongly in his dealings with nature and knowledge. And the ruin of
+a great life was the consequence.</p>
+
+<p>Francis Bacon was born in London on the 22d of January, 1560/61,
+three years before Galileo. He was born at York House, in the
+Strand; the house which, though it belonged to the Archbishops of
+York, had been lately tenanted by Lord Keepers and Lord
+Chancellors, in which Bacon himself afterwards lived as Lord
+Chancellor, and which passed after his fall into the hands of the
+Duke of Buckingham, who has left his mark in the Water Gate which
+is now seen, far from the river, in the garden of the Thames
+Embankment. His father was Sir Nicholas Bacon, Elizabeth's first
+Lord Keeper, the fragment of whose effigy in the Crypt of St.
+Paul's is one of the few relics of the old Cathedral before the
+fire. His uncle by marriage was that William Cecil who was to be
+Lord Burghley. His mother, the sister of Lady Cecil, was one of the
+daughters of Sir Antony Cook, a person deep in the confidence of
+the reforming party, who had been tutor of Edward VI. She was a
+remarkable woman, highly accomplished after the fashion of the
+ladies of her party, and as would become her father's daughter and
+the austere and laborious family to which she belonged. She was
+"exquisitely skilled in the Greek and Latin tongues;" <a name=
+'Page_5' class='pagenum' title='Page 5'></a>she was passionately
+religious, according to the uncompromising religion which the
+exiles had brought back with them from Geneva, Strasburg, and
+Zurich, and which saw in Calvin's theology a solution of all the
+difficulties, and in his discipline a remedy for all the evils, of
+mankind. This means that his boyhood from the first was passed
+among the high places of the world&mdash;at one of the greatest
+crises of English history&mdash;in the very centre and focus of its
+agitations. He was brought up among the chiefs and leaders of the
+rising religion, in the houses of the greatest and most powerful
+persons of the State, and naturally, as their child, at times in
+the Court of the Queen, who joked with him, and called him "her
+young Lord Keeper." It means also that the religious atmosphere in
+which he was brought up was that of the nascent and aggressive
+Puritanism, which was not satisfied with the compromises of the
+Elizabethan Reformation, and which saw in the moral poverty and
+incapacity of many of its chiefs a proof against the great
+traditional system of the Church which Elizabeth was loath to part
+with, and which, in spite of all its present and inevitable
+shortcomings, her political sagacity taught her to reverence and
+trust.</p>
+
+<p>At the age of twelve he was sent to Cambridge, and put under
+Whitgift at Trinity. It is a question which recurs continually to
+readers about those times and their precocious boys, what boys were
+then? For whatever was the learning of the universities, these boys
+took their place with men and consorted with them, sharing such
+knowledge as men had, and performing exercises and hearing lectures
+according to the standard of men. Grotius at eleven was the pupil
+and companion of Scaliger and the learned band of Leyden; at
+fourteen he was part of <a name='Page_6' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 6'></a>the company which went with the ambassadors of the
+States-General to Henry IV.; at sixteen he was called to the bar,
+he published an out-of-the-way Latin writer, Martianus Capella,
+with a learned commentary, and he was the correspondent of De Thou.
+When Bacon was hardly sixteen he was admitted to the Society of
+"Ancients" of Gray's Inn, and he went in the household of Sir Amyas
+Paulet, the Queen's Ambassador, to France. He thus spent two years
+in France, not in Paris alone, but at Blois, Tours, and Poitiers.
+If this was precocious, there is no indication that it was thought
+precocious. It only meant that clever and promising boys were
+earlier associated with men in important business than is customary
+now. The old and the young heads began to work together sooner.
+Perhaps they felt that there was less time to spare. In spite of
+instances of longevity, life was shorter for the average of busy
+men, for the conditions of life were worse.</p>
+
+<p>Two recollections only have been preserved of his early years.
+One is that, as he told his chaplain, Dr. Rawley, late in life, he
+had discovered, as far back as his Cambridge days, the
+"unfruitfulness" of Aristotle's method. It is easy to make too much
+of this. It is not uncommon for undergraduates to criticise their
+text-books; it was the fashion with clever men, as, for instance,
+Montaigne, to talk against Aristotle without knowing anything about
+him; it is not uncommon for men who have worked out a great idea to
+find traces of it, on precarious grounds, in their boyish thinking.
+Still, it is worth noting that Bacon himself believed that his
+fundamental quarrel with Aristotle had begun with the first efforts
+of thought, and that this is the one recollection remaining of his
+early tendency in speculation. The other is more trustworthy, <a
+name='Page_7' class='pagenum' title='Page 7'></a>and exhibits that
+inventiveness which was characteristic of his mind. He tells us in
+the <i>De Augmentis</i> that when he was in France he occupied
+himself with devising an improved system of cypher-writing&mdash;a
+thing of daily and indispensable use for rival statesmen and rival
+intriguers. But the investigation, with its call on the calculating
+and combining faculties, would also interest him, as an example of
+the discovery of new powers by the human mind.</p>
+
+<p>In the beginning of 1579 Bacon, at eighteen, was called home by
+his father's death. This was a great blow to his prospects. His
+father had not accomplished what he had intended for him, and
+Francis Bacon was left with only a younger son's "narrow portion."
+What was worse, he lost one whose credit would have served him in
+high places. He entered on life, not as he might have expected,
+independent and with court favour on his side, but with his very
+livelihood to gain&mdash;a competitor at the bottom of the ladder
+for patronage and countenance. This great change in his fortunes
+told very unfavourably on his happiness, his usefulness, and, it
+must be added, on his character. He accepted it, indeed, manfully,
+and at once threw himself into the study of the law as the
+profession by which he was to live. But the law, though it was the
+only path open to him, was not the one which suited his genius, or
+his object in life. To the last he worked hard and faithfully, but
+with doubtful reputation as to his success, and certainly against
+the grain. And this was not the worst. To make up for the loss of
+that start in life of which his father's untimely death had
+deprived him, he became, for almost the rest of his life, the most
+importunate and most untiring of suitors.</p>
+
+<p>In 1579 or 1580 Bacon took up his abode at Gray's Inn, which for
+a long time was his home. He went through <a name='Page_8' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 8'></a>the various steps of his profession.
+He began, what he never discontinued, his earnest and humble
+appeals to his relative the great Lord Burghley, to employ him in
+the Queen's service, or to put him in some place of independence:
+through Lord Burghley's favour he seems to have been pushed on at
+his Inn, where, in 1586, he was a Bencher; and in 1584 he came into
+Parliament for Melcombe Regis. He took some small part in
+Parliament; but the only record of his speeches is contained in a
+surly note of Recorder Fleetwood, who writes as an old member might
+do of a young one talking nonsense. He sat again for Liverpool in
+the year of the Armada (1588), and his name begins to appear in the
+proceedings. These early years, we know, were busy ones. In them
+Bacon laid the foundation of his observations and judgments on men
+and affairs; and in them the great purpose and work of his life was
+conceived and shaped. But they are more obscure years than might
+have been expected in the case of a man of Bacon's genius and
+family, and of such eager and unconcealed desire to rise and be at
+work. No doubt he was often pinched in his means; his health was
+weak, and he was delicate and fastidious in his care of it. Plunged
+in work, he lived very much as a recluse in his chambers, and was
+thought to be reserved, and what those who disliked him called
+arrogant. But Bacon was ambitious&mdash;ambitious, in the first
+place, of the Queen's notice and favour. He was versatile,
+brilliant, courtly, besides being his father's son; and considering
+how rapidly bold and brilliant men were able to push their way and
+take the Queen's favour by storm, it seems strange that Bacon
+should have remained fixedly in the shade. Something must have kept
+him back. Burghley was not the man to neglect a useful instrument
+with such good will to serve him. But all <a name='Page_9' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 9'></a>that Mr. Spedding's industry and
+profound interest in the subject has brought together throws but an
+uncertain light on Bacon's long disappointment. Was it the rooted
+misgiving of a man of affairs like Burghley at that passionate
+contempt of all existing knowledge, and that undoubting confidence
+in his own power to make men know, as they never had known, which
+Bacon was even now professing? Or was it something soft and
+over-obsequious in character which made the uncle, who knew well
+what men he wanted, disinclined to encourage and employ the nephew?
+Was Francis not hard enough, not narrow enough, too full of ideas,
+too much alive to the shakiness of current doctrines and arguments
+on religion and policy? Was he too open to new impressions, made by
+objections or rival views? Or did he show signs of wanting backbone
+to stand amid difficulties and threatening prospects? Did Burghley
+see something in him of the pliability which he could remember as
+the serviceable quality of his own young days&mdash;which suited
+those days of rapid change, but not days when change was supposed
+to be over, and when the qualities which were wanted were those
+which resist and defy it? The only thing that is clear is that
+Burghley, in spite of Bacon's continual applications, abstained to
+the last from advancing his fortunes.</p>
+
+<p>Whether employed by government or not, Bacon began at this time
+to prepare those carefully-written papers on the public affairs of
+the day, of which he has left a good many. In our day they would
+have been pamphlets or magazine articles. In his they were
+circulated in manuscript, and only occasionally printed. The first
+of any importance is a letter of advice to the Queen, about the
+year 1585, on the policy to be followed with a view to keeping in
+check the Roman Catholic interest at home and abroad. It is calm,
+sagacious, <a name='Page_10' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 10'></a>and, according to the fashion of the age, slightly
+Machiavellian. But the first subject on which Bacon exhibited his
+characteristic qualities, his appreciation of facts, his balance of
+thought, and his power, when not personally committed, of standing
+aloof from the ordinary prejudices and assumptions of men round
+him, was the religious condition and prospects of the English
+Church. Bacon had been brought up in a Puritan household of the
+straitest sect. His mother was an earnest, severe, and intolerant
+Calvinist, deep in the interests and cause of her party, bitterly
+resenting all attempts to keep in order its pretensions. She was a
+masterful woman, claiming to meddle with her brother-in-law's
+policy, and though a most affectionate mother she was a woman of
+violent and ungovernable temper. Her letters to her son Antony,
+whom she loved passionately, but whom she suspected of keeping
+dangerous and papistical company, show us the imperious spirit in
+which she claimed to interfere with her sons; and they show also
+that in Francis she did not find all the deference which she looked
+for. Recommending Antony to frequent "the religious exercises of
+the sincerer sort," she warns him not to follow his brother's
+advice or example. Antony was advised to use prayer twice a day
+with his servants. "Your brother," she adds, "is too negligent
+therein." She is anxious about Antony's health, and warns him not
+to fall into his brother's ill-ordered habits: "I verily think your
+brother's weak stomach to digest hath been much caused and
+confirmed by untimely going to bed, and then musing <i>nescio
+quid</i> when he should sleep, and then in consequent by late
+rising and long lying in bed, whereby his men are made slothful and
+himself continueth sickly. But my sons haste not to hearken to
+their mother's good counsel in time to prevent." It seems clear
+that Francis Bacon <a name='Page_11' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 11'></a>had shown his mother that not only in the care of his
+health, but in his judgment on religious matters, he meant to go
+his own way. Mr. Spedding thinks that she must have had much
+influence on him; it seems more likely that he resented her
+interference, and that the hard and narrow arrogance which she read
+into the Gospel produced in him a strong reaction. Bacon was
+obsequious to the tyranny of power, but he was never inclined to
+bow to the tyranny of opinion; and the tyranny of Puritan
+infallibility was the last thing to which he was likely to submit.
+His mother would have wished him to sit under Cartwright and
+Travers. The friend of his choice was the Anglican preacher, Dr.
+Andrewes, to whom he submitted all his works, and whom he called
+his "inquisitor general;" and he was proud to sign himself the
+pupil of Whitgift, and to write for him&mdash;the archbishop of
+whom Lady Bacon wrote to her son Antony, veiling the dangerous
+sentiment in Greek, "that he was the ruin of the Church, for he
+loved his own glory more than Christ's."</p>
+
+<p>Certainly, in the remarkable paper on <i>Controversies in the
+Church</i> (1589), Bacon had ceased to feel or to speak as a
+Puritan. The paper is an attempt to compose the controversy by
+pointing out the mistakes in judgment, in temper, and in method on
+both sides. It is entirely unlike what a Puritan would have
+written: it is too moderate, too tolerant, too neutral, though like
+most essays of conciliation it is open to the rejoinder from both
+sides&mdash;certainly from the Puritan&mdash;that it begs the
+question by assuming the unimportance of the matters about which
+each contended with so much zeal. It is the confirmation, but also
+the complement, and in some ways the correction of Hooker's
+contemporary view of the quarrel which was threatening the life of
+the English Church, and not even <a name='Page_12' class='pagenum'
+title='Page 12'></a>Hooker could be so comprehensive and so fair.
+For Hooker had to defend much that was indefensible: he had to
+defend a great traditional system, just convulsed by a most
+tremendous shock&mdash;a shock and alteration, as Bacon says, "the
+greatest and most dangerous that can be in a State," in which old
+clews and habits and rules were confused and all but lost; in which
+a frightful amount of personal incapacity and worthlessness had,
+from sheer want of men, risen to the high places of the Church; and
+in which force and violence, sometimes of the most hateful kind,
+had come to be accepted as ordinary instruments in the government
+of souls. Hooker felt too strongly the unfairness, the folly, the
+intolerant aggressiveness, the malignity of his opponents&mdash;he
+was too much alive to the wrongs inflicted by them on his own side,
+and to the incredible absurdity of their arguments&mdash;to do
+justice to what was only too real in the charges and complaints of
+those opponents. But Bacon came from the very heart of the Puritan
+camp. He had seen the inside of Puritanism&mdash;its best as well
+as its worst side. He witnesses to the humility, the
+conscientiousness, the labour, the learning, the hatred of sin and
+wrong, of many of its preachers. He had heard, and heard with
+sympathy, all that could be urged against the bishops'
+administration, and against a system of legal oppression in the
+name of the Church. Where religious elements were so confusedly
+mixed, and where each side had apparently so much to urge on behalf
+of its claims, he saw the deep mistake of loftily ignoring facts,
+and of want of patience and forbearance with those who were
+scandalised at abuses, while the abuses, in some cases monstrous,
+were tolerated and turned to profit. Towards the bishops and their
+policy, though his language is very respectful, for the government
+was implicated, he <a name='Page_13' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 13'></a>is very severe. They punish and restrain, but they do
+not themselves mend their ways or supply what was wanting; and
+theirs are "<i>injuri&aelig; potentiorum</i>"&mdash;"injuries come
+from them that have the upperhand." But Hooker himself did not put
+his finger more truly and more surely on the real mischief of the
+Puritan movement: on the immense outbreak in it of unreasonable
+party spirit and visible personal ambition&mdash;"these are the
+true successors of Diotrephes and not my lord bishops"&mdash;on the
+gradual development of the Puritan theory till it came at last to
+claim a supremacy as unquestionable and intolerant as that of the
+Papacy; on the servile affectation of the fashions of Geneva and
+Strasburg; on the poverty and foolishness of much of the Puritan
+teaching&mdash;its inability to satisfy the great questions which
+it raised in the soul, its unworthy dealing with
+Scripture&mdash;"naked examples, conceited inferences, and forced
+allusions, which mine into all certainty of religion"&mdash;"the
+word, the bread of life, they toss up and down, they break it not;"
+on their undervaluing of moral worth, if it did not speak in their
+phraseology&mdash;"as they censure virtuous men by the names of
+<i>civil</i> and <i>moral</i>, so do they censure men truly and
+godly wise, who see into the vanity of their assertions, by the
+name of <i>politiques</i>, saying that their wisdom is but carnal
+and savouring of man's brain." Bacon saw that the Puritans were
+aiming at a tyranny which, if they established it, would be more
+comprehensive, more searching, and more cruel than that of the
+older systems; but he thought it a remote and improbable danger,
+and that they might safely be tolerated for the work they did in
+education and preaching, "because the work of exhortation doth
+chiefly rest upon these men, and they have a zeal and hate of sin."
+But he ends by warning them lest "that be true which <a name=
+'Page_14' class='pagenum' title='Page 14'></a>one of their
+adversaries said, <i>that they have but two small
+wants&mdash;knowledge and love</i>." One complaint that he makes of
+them is a curious instance of the changes of feeling, or at least
+of language, on moral subjects. He accuses them of "having
+pronounced generally, and without difference, all untruths
+unlawful," forgetful of the Egyptian midwives, and Rahab, and
+Solomon, and even of Him "who, the more to touch the hearts of the
+disciples with a holy dalliance, made as though he would have
+passed Emmaus." He is thinking of their failure to apply a
+principle which was characteristic of his mode of thought, that
+even a statement about a virtue like veracity "hath limit as all
+things else have;" but it is odd to find Bacon bringing against the
+Puritans the converse of the charge which his age, and Pascal
+afterwards, brought against the Jesuits. The essay, besides being a
+picture of the times as regards religion, is an example of what was
+to be Bacon's characteristic strength and weakness: his strength in
+lifting up a subject which had been degraded by mean and wrangling
+disputations, into a higher and larger light, and bringing to bear
+on it great principles and the results of the best human wisdom and
+experience, expressed in weighty and pregnant maxims; his weakness
+in forgetting, as, in spite of his philosophy, he so often did,
+that the grandest major premises need well-proved and ascertained
+minors, and that the enunciation of a principle is not the same
+thing as the application of it. Doubtless there is truth in his
+closing words; but each party would have made the comment that what
+he had to prove, and had not proved, was that by following his
+counsel they would "love the whole world better than a part."</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"Let them not fear ... the fond calumny of <i>neutrality</i>;
+but let them know that is true which is said by a wise man, <i>that
+neuters</i> <a name='Page_15' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 15'></a><i>in contentions are either better or worse than
+either side</i>. These things have I in all sincerity and
+simplicity set down touching the controversies which now trouble
+the Church of England; and that without all art and insinuation,
+and therefore not like to be grateful to either part.
+Notwithstanding, I trust what has been said shall find a
+correspondence in their minds which are not embarked in partiality,
+and which <i>love the whole letter than a part</i>"</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Up to this time, though Bacon had showed himself capable of
+taking a broad and calm view of questions which it was the fashion
+among good men, and men who were in possession of the popular ear,
+to treat with narrowness and heat, there was nothing to disclose
+his deeper thoughts&mdash;nothing foreshadowed the purpose which
+was to fill his life. He had, indeed, at the age of twenty-five,
+written a "youthful" philosophical essay, to which he gave the
+pompous title "<i>Temporis Partus Maximus</i>," "the Greatest Birth
+of Time." But he was thirty-one when we first find an indication of
+the great idea and the great projects which were to make his name
+famous. This indication is contained in an earnest appeal to Lord
+Burghley for some help which should not be illusory. Its words are
+distinct and far-reaching, and they are the first words from him
+which tell us what was in his heart. The letter has the interest to
+us of the first announcement of a promise which, to ordinary minds,
+must have appeared visionary and extravagant, but which was so
+splendidly fulfilled; the first distant sight of that sea of
+knowledge which henceforth was opened to mankind, but on which no
+man, as he thought, had yet entered. It contains the famous
+avowal&mdash;"<i>I have taken all knowledge to be my
+province</i>"&mdash;made in the confidence born of long and silent
+meditations and questionings, but made in a simple good faith which
+is as far as possible from vain boastfulness.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p><a name='Page_16' class='pagenum' title='Page 16'></a> "MY
+LORD,&mdash;With as much confidence as mine own honest and faithful
+devotion unto your service and your honourable correspondence unto
+me and my poor estate can breed in a man, do I commend myself unto
+your Lordship. I wax now somewhat ancient: one and thirty years is
+a great deal of sand in the hour glass. My health, I thank God, I
+find confirmed; and I do not fear that action shall impair it,
+because I account my ordinary course of study and meditation to be
+more painful than most parts of action are. I ever bare a mind (in
+some middle place that I could discharge) to serve her Majesty, not
+as a man born under Sol, that loveth honour, nor under Jupiter,
+that loveth business (for the contemplative planet carrieth me away
+wholly), but as a man born under an excellent sovereign that
+deserveth the dedication of all men's abilities. Besides, I do not
+find in myself so much self-love, but that the greater parts of my
+thoughts are to deserve well (if I be able) of my friends, and
+namely of your Lordship; who, being the Atlas of this commonwealth,
+the honour of my house, and the second founder of my poor estate, I
+am tied by all duties, both of a good patriot, and of an unworthy
+kinsman, and of an obliged servant, to employ whatsoever I am to do
+you service. Again, the meanness of my estate doth somewhat move
+me; for though I cannot accuse myself that I am either prodigal or
+slothful, yet my health is not to spend, nor my course to get.
+Lastly, I confess that I have as vast contemplative ends as I have
+moderate civil ends; for I have taken all knowledge to be my
+province; and if I could purge it of two sorts of rovers, whereof
+the one with frivolous disputations, confutations, and verbosities,
+the other with blind experiments and auricular traditions and
+impostures, hath committed so many spoils, I hope I should bring in
+industrious observations, grounded conclusions, and profitable
+inventions and discoveries: the best state of that province. This,
+whether it be curiosity or vain glory, or nature, or (if one take
+it favourably) <i>philanthropia</i>, is so fixed in my mind as it
+cannot be removed. And I do easily see, that place of any
+reasonable countenance doth bring commandment of more wits than of
+a man's own; which is the thing I greatly affect. And for your
+Lordship, perhaps you shall not find more strength and less
+encounter in any other. And if your Lordship shall find now, or at
+any time, that I do seek or affect any place whereunto any that is
+nearer unto your Lordship shall be concurrent, say then that I am a
+most dishonest man. And <a name='Page_17' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 17'></a>if your Lordship will not carry me on, I will not do
+as Anaxagoras did, who reduced himself with contemplation unto
+voluntary poverty, but this I will do&mdash;I will sell the
+inheritance I have, and purchase some lease of quick revenue, or
+some office of gain that shall be executed by deputy, and so give
+over all care of service, and become some sorry book-maker, or a
+true pioneer in that mine of truth which (he said) lay so deep.
+This which I have writ unto your Lordship is rather thoughts than
+words, being set down without all art, disguising, or reservation.
+Wherein I have done honour both to your Lordship's wisdom, in
+judging that that will be best believed of your Lordship which is
+truest, and to your Lordship's good nature, in retaining nothing
+from you. And even so I wish your Lordship all happiness, and to
+myself means and occasions to be added to my faithful desire to do
+you service. From my lodgings at Gray's Inn."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>This letter to his unsympathetic and suspicious, but probably
+not unfriendly relative, is the key to Bacon's plan of life; which,
+with numberless changes of form, he followed to the end. That is, a
+profession, steadily, seriously, and laboriously kept to, in order
+to provide the means of living; and beyond that, as the ultimate
+and real end of his life, the pursuit, in a way unattempted before,
+of all possible human knowledge, and of the methods to improve it
+and make it sure and fruitful. And so his life was carried out. On
+the one hand it was a continual and pertinacious seeking after
+government employment, which could give credit to his name and put
+money in his pocket&mdash;attempts by general behaviour, by
+professional services when the occasion offered, by putting his
+original and fertile pen at the service of the government, to win
+confidence, and to overcome the manifest indisposition of those in
+power to think that a man who cherished the chimera of universal
+knowledge could be a useful public servant. On the other hand, all
+the while, in the crises of his disappointment or triumph, the one
+great subject lay next his heart, <a name='Page_18' class='pagenum'
+title='Page 18'></a>filling him with fire and passion&mdash;how
+really to know, and to teach men to know indeed, and to use their
+knowledge so as to command nature; the great hope to be the
+reformer and restorer of knowledge in a more wonderful sense than
+the world had yet seen in the reformation of learning and religion,
+and in the spread of civilised order in the great states of the
+Renaissance time. To this he gave his best and deepest thoughts;
+for this he was for ever accumulating, and for ever rearranging and
+reshaping those masses of observation and inquiry and invention and
+mental criticism which were to come in as parts of the great design
+which he had seen in the visions of his imagination, and of which
+at last he was only able to leave noble fragments, incomplete after
+numberless recastings. This was not indeed the only, but it was the
+predominant and governing, interest of his life. Whether as
+solicitor for Court favour or public office; whether drudging at
+the work of the law or managing State prosecutions; whether writing
+an opportune pamphlet against Spain or Father Parsons, or inventing
+a "device" for his Inn or for Lord Essex to give amusement to Queen
+Elizabeth; whether fulfilling his duties as member of Parliament or
+rising step by step to the highest places in the Council Board and
+the State; whether in the pride of success or under the amazement
+of unexpected and irreparable overthrow, while it seemed as if he
+was only measuring his strength against the rival ambitions of the
+day, in the same spirit and with the same object as his
+competitors, the true motive of all his eagerness and all his
+labours was not theirs. He wanted to be powerful, and still more to
+be rich; but he wanted to be so, because without power and without
+money he could not follow what was to him the only thing worth
+following on earth&mdash;a real knowledge of the amazing and <a
+name='Page_19' class='pagenum' title='Page 19'></a>hitherto almost
+unknown world in which he had to live. Bacon, to us, at least, at
+this distance, who can only judge him from partial and imperfect
+knowledge, often seems to fall far short of what a man should be.
+He was not one of the high-minded and proud searchers after
+knowledge and truth, like Descartes, who were content to accept a
+frugal independence so that their time and their thoughts might be
+their own. Bacon was a man of the world, and wished to live in and
+with the world. He threatened sometimes retirement, but never with
+any very serious intention. In the Court was his element, and there
+were his hopes. Often there seems little to distinguish him from
+the ordinary place-hunters, obsequious and selfish, of every age;
+little to distinguish him from the servile and insincere
+flatterers, of whom he himself complains, who crowded the
+antechambers of the great Queen, content to submit with smiling
+face and thankful words to the insolence of her waywardness and
+temper, in the hope, more often disappointed than not, of hitting
+her taste on some lucky occasion, and being rewarded for the
+accident by a place of gain or honour. Bacon's history, as read in
+his letters, is not an agreeable one; after every allowance made
+for the fashions of language and the necessities of a suitor, there
+is too much of insincere profession of disinterestedness, too much
+of exaggerated profession of admiration and devoted service, too
+much of disparagement and insinuation against others, for a man who
+respected himself. He submitted too much to the miserable
+conditions of rising which he found. But, nevertheless, it must be
+said that it was for no mean object, for no mere private
+selfishness or vanity, that he endured all this. He strove hard to
+be a great man and a rich man. But it was that he might have his
+hands free and strong and well furnished <a name='Page_20' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 20'></a>to carry forward the double task of
+overthrowing ignorance and building up the new and solid knowledge
+on which his heart was set&mdash;that immense conquest of nature on
+behalf of man which he believed to be possible, and of which he
+believed himself to have the key.</p>
+
+<p>The letter to Lord Burghley did not help him much. He received
+the reversion of a place, the Clerkship of the Council, which did
+not become vacant for twenty years. But these years of service
+declined and place withheld were busy and useful ones. What he was
+most intent upon, and what occupied his deepest and most serious
+thought, was unknown to the world round him, and probably not very
+intelligible to his few intimate friends, such as his brother
+Antony and Dr. Andrewes. Meanwhile he placed his pen at the
+disposal of the authorities, and though they regarded him more as a
+man of study than of practice and experience, they were glad to
+make use of it. His versatile genius found another employment.
+Besides his affluence in topics, he had the liveliest fancy and
+most active imagination. But that he wanted the sense of poetic
+fitness and melody, he might almost be supposed, with his reach and
+play of thought, to have been capable, as is maintained in some
+eccentric modern theories, of writing Shakespeare's plays. No man
+ever had a more imaginative power of illustration drawn from the
+most remote and most unlikely analogies; analogies often of the
+quaintest and most unexpected kind, but often also not only
+felicitous in application but profound and true. His powers were
+early called upon for some of those sportive compositions in which
+that age delighted on occasions of rejoicing or festival. Three of
+his contributions to these "devices" have been preserved&mdash;two
+of them composed in honour of the Queen, as "triumphs," offered by
+<a name='Page_21' class='pagenum' title='Page 21'></a>Lord Essex,
+one probably in 1592 and another in 1595; a third for a Gray's Inn
+revel in 1594. The "devices" themselves were of the common type of
+the time, extravagant, odd, full of awkward allegory and absurd
+flattery, and running to a prolixity which must make modern lovers
+of amusement wonder at the patience of those days; but the
+"discourses" furnished by Bacon are full of fine observation and
+brilliant thought and wit and happy illustration, which, fantastic
+as the general conception is, raises them far above the level of
+such fugitive trifles.</p>
+
+<p>Among the fragmentary papers belonging to this time which have
+come down, not the least curious are those which throw light on his
+manner of working. While he was following out the great ideas which
+were to be the basis of his philosophy, he was as busy and as
+painstaking in fashioning the instruments by which they were to be
+expressed; and in these papers we have the records and specimens of
+this preparation. He was a great collector of sentences, proverbs,
+quotations, sayings, illustrations, anecdotes, and he seems to have
+read sometimes simply to gather phrases and apt words. He jots down
+at random any good and pointed remark which comes into his thought
+or his memory; at another time he groups a set of stock quotations
+with a special drift, bearing on some subject, such as the faults
+of universities or the habits of lawyers. Nothing is too minute for
+his notice. He brings together in great profusion mere forms,
+varied turns of expression, heads and tails of clauses and
+paragraphs, transitions, connections; he notes down fashions of
+compliment, of excuse or repartee, even morning and evening
+salutations; he records neat and convenient opening and concluding
+sentences, ways of speaking more adapted than others to give a
+special colour or direction <a name='Page_22' class='pagenum'
+title='Page 22'></a>to what the speaker or writer has to
+say&mdash;all that hook-and-eye work which seems so trivial and
+passes so unnoticed as a matter of course, and which yet is often
+hard to reach, and which makes all the difference between tameness
+and liveliness, between clearness and obscurity&mdash;all the
+difference, not merely to the ease and naturalness, but often to
+the logical force of speech. These collections it was his way to
+sift and transcribe again and again, adding as well as omitting.
+From one of these, belonging to 1594 and the following years, the
+<i>Promus of Formularies and Elegancies</i>, Mr. Spedding has given
+curious extracts; and the whole collection has been recently edited
+by Mrs. Henry Pott. Thus it was that he prepared himself for what,
+as we read it, or as his audience heard it, seems the suggestion or
+recollection of the moment. Bacon was always much more careful of
+the value or aptness of a thought than of its appearing new and
+original. Of all great writers he least minds repeating himself,
+perhaps in the very same words; so that a simile, an illustration,
+a quotation pleases him, he returns to it&mdash;he is never tired
+of it; it obviously gives him satisfaction to introduce it again
+and again. These collections of odds and ends illustrate another
+point in his literary habits. His was a mind keenly sensitive to
+all analogies and affinities, impatient of a strict and rigid
+logical groove, but spreading as it were tentacles on all sides in
+quest of chance prey, and quickened into a whole system of
+imagination by the electric quiver imparted by a single word, at
+once the key and symbol of the thinking it had led to. And so he
+puts down word or phrase, so enigmatical to us who see it by
+itself, which to him would wake up a whole train of ideas, as he
+remembered the occasion of it&mdash;how at a certain time and place
+this word set the whole moving, seemed to <a name='Page_23' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 23'></a>breathe new life and shed new light,
+and has remained the token, meaningless in itself, which reminds
+him of so much.</p>
+
+<p>When we come to read his letters, his speeches, his works, we
+come continually on the results and proofs of this early labour.
+Some of the most memorable and familiar passages of his writings
+are to be traced from the storehouses which he filled in these
+years of preparation. An example of this correspondence between the
+note-book and the composition is to be seen in a paper belonging to
+this period, written apparently to form part of a masque, or as he
+himself calls it, a "Conference of Pleasure," and entitled the
+<i>Praise of Knowledge</i>. It is interesting because it is the
+first draught which we have from him of some of the leading ideas
+and most characteristic language about the defects and the
+improvement of knowledge, which were afterwards embodied in the
+<i>Advancement</i> and the <i>Novum Organum</i>. The whole spirit
+and aim of his great reform is summed up in the following fine
+passage:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"Facility to believe, impatience to doubt, temerity to assever,
+glory to know, doubt to contradict, end to gain, sloth to search,
+seeking things in words, resting in a part of nature&mdash;these
+and the like have been the things which have forbidden the happy
+match between the mind of man and the nature of things, and in
+place thereof have married it to vain notions and blind
+experiments.... Therefore, no doubt, the <i>sovereignty of man</i>
+lieth hid in knowledge; wherein many things are reserved which
+kings with their treasures cannot buy nor with their force command;
+their spials and intelligencers can give no news of them; their
+seamen and discoverers cannot sail where they grow. Now we govern
+nature in opinions, but we are thrall unto her in necessity; but if
+we could be led by her in invention, we should command her in
+action."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>To the same occasion as the discourse on the <i>Praise of
+Knowledge</i> belongs, also, one in <i>Praise of the Queen</i>. As
+one is an early specimen of his manner of writing on <a name=
+'Page_24' class='pagenum' title='Page 24'></a>philosophy, so this
+is a specimen of what was equally characteristic of him&mdash;his
+political and historical writing. It is, in form, necessarily a
+panegyric, as high-flown and adulatory as such performances in
+those days were bound to be. But it is not only flattery. It fixes
+with true discrimination on the points in Elizabeth's character and
+reign which were really subjects of admiration and homage. Thus of
+her unquailing spirit at the time of the Spanish
+invasion&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"Lastly, see a Queen, that when her realm was to have been
+invaded by an army, the preparation whereof was like the travail of
+an elephant, the provisions infinite, the setting forth whereof was
+the terror and wonder of Europe; it was not seen that her cheer,
+her fashion, her ordinary manner was anything altered; not a cloud
+of that storm did appear in that countenance wherein peace doth
+ever shine; but with excellent assurance and advised security she
+inspired her council, animated her nobility, redoubled the courage
+of her people; still having this noble apprehension, not only that
+she would communicate her fortune with them, but that it was she
+that would protect them, and not they her; which she testified by
+no less demonstration than her presence in camp. Therefore that
+magnanimity that neither feareth greatness of alteration, nor the
+vows of conspirators, nor the power of the enemy, is more than
+heroical."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>These papers, though he put his best workmanship into them, as
+he invariably did with whatever he touched, were of an ornamental
+kind. But he did more serious work. In the year 1592 a pamphlet had
+been published on the Continent in Latin and English, <i>Responsio
+ad Edictum Regin&aelig; Angli&aelig;</i>, with reference to the
+severe legislation which followed on the Armada, making such
+charges against the Queen and the Government as it was natural for
+the Roman Catholic party to make, and making them with the utmost
+virulence and unscrupulousness. It was supposed to be written by
+the ablest of the Roman pam<a name='Page_25' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 25'></a>phleteers, Father Parsons. The Government felt it to
+be a dangerous indictment, and Bacon was chosen to write the answer
+to it. He had additional interest in the matter, for the pamphlet
+made a special and bitter attack on Burghley, as the person mainly
+responsible for the Queen's policy. Bacon's reply is long and
+elaborate, taking up every charge, and reviewing from his own point
+of view the whole course of the struggle between the Queen and the
+supporters of the Roman Catholic interest abroad and at home. It
+cannot be considered an impartial review; besides that it was
+written to order, no man in England could then write impartially in
+that quarrel; but it is not more one-sided and uncandid than the
+pamphlet which it answers, and Bacon is able to recriminate with
+effect, and to show gross credulity and looseness of assertion on
+the part of the Roman Catholic advocate. But religion had too much
+to do with the politics of both sides for either to be able to come
+into the dispute with clean hands: the Roman Catholics meant much
+more than toleration, and the sanguinary punishments of the English
+law against priests and Jesuits were edged by something even keener
+than the fear of treason. But the paper contains some large surveys
+of public affairs, which probably no one at that time could write
+but Bacon. Bacon never liked to waste anything good which he had
+written; and much of what he had written in the panegyric in
+<i>Praise of the Queen</i> is made use of again, and transferred
+with little change to the pages of the <i>Observations on a
+Libel</i>.</p>
+
+<hr />
+<p><a name='Page_26' class='pagenum' title='Page 26'></a></p>
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_II'></a>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<h3>BACON AND ELIZABETH.</h3>
+
+<p><br />
+The last decade of the century, and almost of Elizabeth's reign
+(1590-1600), was an eventful one to Bacon's fortunes. In it the
+vision of his great design disclosed itself more and more to his
+imagination and hopes, and with more and more irresistible
+fascination. In it he made his first literary venture, the first
+edition of his <i>Essays</i> (1597), ten in number, the
+first-fruits of his early and ever watchful observation of men and
+affairs. These years, too, saw his first steps in public life, the
+first efforts to bring him into importance, the first great trials
+and tests of his character. They saw the beginning and they saw the
+end of his relations with the only friend who, at that time,
+recognised his genius and his purposes, certainly the only friend
+who ever pushed his claims; they saw the growth of a friendship
+which was to have so tragical a close, and they saw the beginnings
+and causes of a bitter personal rivalry which was to last through
+life, and which was to be a potent element hereafter in Bacon's
+ruin. The friend was the Earl of Essex. The competitor was the
+ablest, and also the most truculent and unscrupulous of English
+lawyers, Edward Coke.</p>
+
+<p>While Bacon, in the shade, had been laying the foundations of
+his philosophy of nature, and vainly suing for legal or political
+employment, another man had been steadi<a name='Page_27' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 27'></a>ly rising in the Queen's favour and
+carrying all before him at Court&mdash;Robert Devereux, Lord Essex;
+and with Essex Bacon had formed an acquaintance which had ripened
+into an intimate and affectionate friendship. We commonly think of
+Essex as a vain and insolent favourite, who did ill the greatest
+work given him to do&mdash;the reduction of Ireland; who did it ill
+from some unexplained reason of spite and mischief; and who, when
+called to account for it, broke out into senseless and idle
+rebellion. This was the end. But he was not always thus. He began
+life with great gifts and noble ends; he was a serious, modest, and
+large-minded student both of books and things, and he turned his
+studies to full account. He had imagination and love of enterprise,
+which gave him an insight into Bacon's ideas such as none of
+Bacon's contemporaries had. He was a man of simple and earnest
+religion; he sympathized most with the Puritans, because they were
+serious and because they were hardly used. Those who most condemn
+him acknowledge his nobleness and generosity of nature. Bacon in
+after days, when all was over between them, spoke of him as a man
+always <i>patientissimus veri</i>; "the more plainly and frankly
+you shall deal with my lord," he writes elsewhere, "not only in
+disclosing particulars, but in giving him <i>caveats</i> and
+admonishing him of any error which in this action he may commit
+(such is his lordship's nature), the better he will take it." "He
+must have seemed," says Mr. Spedding, a little too grandly, "in the
+eyes of Bacon like the hope of the world." The two men, certainly,
+became warmly attached. Their friendship came to be one of the
+closest kind, full of mutual services, and of genuine affection on
+both sides. It was not the relation of a great patron and useful
+dependant; it was, what might be expected in the two men, that of
+affectionate <a name='Page_28' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 28'></a>equality. Each man was equally capable of seeing what
+the other was, and saw it. What Essex's feelings were towards Bacon
+the results showed. Bacon, in after years, repeatedly claimed to
+have devoted his whole time and labour to Essex's service. Holding
+him, he says, to be "the fittest instrument to do good to the
+State, I applied myself to him in a manner which I think rarely
+happeneth among men; neglecting the Queen's service, mine own
+fortune, and, in a sort, my vocation, I did nothing but advise and
+ruminate with myself ... anything that might concern his lordship's
+honour, fortune, or service." The claim is far too wide. The
+"Queen's service" had hardly as yet come much in Bacon's way, and
+he never neglected it when it did come, nor his own fortune or
+vocation; his letters remain to attest his care in these respects.
+But no doubt Bacon was then as ready to be of use to Essex, the one
+man who seemed to understand and value him, as Essex was desirous
+to be of use to Bacon.</p>
+
+<p>And it seemed as if Essex would have the ability as well as the
+wish. Essex was, without exception, the most brilliant man who ever
+appeared at Elizabeth's Court, and it seemed as if he were going to
+be the most powerful. Leicester was dead. Burghley was growing old,
+and indisposed for the adventures and levity which, with all her
+grand power of ruling, Elizabeth loved. She needed a favourite, and
+Essex was unfortunately marked out for what she wanted. He had
+Leicester's fascination, without his mean and cruel selfishness. He
+was as generous, as gallant, as quick to descry all great things in
+art and life, as Philip Sidney, with more vigour and fitness for
+active life than Sidney. He had not Raleigh's sad, dark depths of
+thought, but he had a daring courage equal to Raleigh's, without
+Raleigh's cynical contempt for mercy and honour. He <a name=
+'Page_29' class='pagenum' title='Page 29'></a>had every personal
+advantage requisite for a time when intellect, and ready wit, and
+high-tempered valour, and personal beauty, and skill in affairs,
+with equal skill in amusements, were expected to go together in the
+accomplished courtier. And Essex was a man not merely to be courted
+and admired, to shine and dazzle, but to be loved. Elizabeth, with
+her strange and perverse emotional constitution, loved him, if she
+ever loved any one. Every one who served him loved him; and he was,
+as much as any one could be in those days, a popular favourite.
+Under better fortune he might have risen to a great height of
+character; in Elizabeth's Court he was fated to be ruined.</p>
+
+<p>For in that Court all the qualities in him which needed control
+received daily stimulus, and his ardour and high-aiming temper
+turned into impatience and restless irritability. He had a mistress
+who was at one time in the humour to be treated as a tender woman,
+at another as an outrageous flirt, at another as the haughtiest and
+most imperious of queens; her mood varied, no one could tell how,
+and it was most dangerous to mistake it. It was part of her
+pleasure to find in her favourite a spirit as high, a humour as
+contradictory and determined, as her own; it was the charming
+contrast to the obsequiousness or the prudence of the rest; but no
+one could be sure at what unlooked-for moment, and how fiercely,
+she might resent in earnest a display of what she had herself
+encouraged. Essex was ruined for all real greatness by having to
+suit himself to this bewildering and most unwholesome and degrading
+waywardness. She taught him to think himself irresistible in
+opinion and in claims; she amused herself in teaching him how
+completely he was mistaken. Alternately spoiled and crossed, he
+learned to be exacting, unreasonable, absurd in his pettish
+resentments or brooding <a name='Page_30' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 30'></a>sullenness. He learned to think that she must be
+dealt with by the same methods which she herself employed. The
+effect was not produced in a moment; it was the result of a
+courtiership of sixteen years. But it ended in corrupting a noble
+nature. Essex came to believe that she who cowed others must be
+frightened herself; that the stinging injustice which led a proud
+man to expect, only to see how he would behave when refused,
+deserved to be brought to reason by a counter-buffet as rough as
+her own insolent caprice. He drifted into discontent, into
+disaffection, into neglect of duty, into questionable schemings for
+the future of a reign that must shortly end, into criminal methods
+of guarding himself, of humbling his rivals and regaining
+influence. A "fatal impatience," as Bacon calls it, gave his rivals
+an advantage which, perhaps in self-defence, they could not fail to
+take; and that career, so brilliant, so full of promise of good,
+ended in misery, in dishonour, in remorse, on the scaffold of the
+Tower.</p>
+
+<p>With this attractive and powerful person Bacon's fortunes, in
+the last years of the century, became more and more knit up. Bacon
+was now past thirty, Essex a few years younger. In spite of Bacon's
+apparent advantage and interest at Court, in spite of abilities,
+which, though his genius was not yet known, his contemporaries
+clearly recognised, he was still a struggling and unsuccessful man:
+ambitious to rise, for no unworthy reasons, but needy, in weak
+health, with careless and expensive habits, and embarrassed with
+debt. He had hoped to rise by the favour of the Queen and for the
+sake of his father. For some ill-explained reason he was to the
+last disappointed. Though she used him "for matters of state and
+revenue," she either did not like him, or did not see in him the
+servant she wanted to advance. He went on to the last <a name=
+'Page_31' class='pagenum' title='Page 31'></a>pressing his uncle,
+Lord Burghley. He applied in the humblest terms, he made himself
+useful with his pen, he got his mother to write for him; but Lord
+Burghley, probably because he thought his nephew more of a man of
+letters than a sound lawyer and practical public servant, did not
+care to bring him forward. From his cousin, Robert Cecil, Bacon
+received polite words and friendly assurances. Cecil may have
+undervalued him, or have been jealous of him, or suspected him as a
+friend of Essex; he certainly gave Bacon good reason to think that
+his words meant nothing. Except Essex, and perhaps his brother
+Antony&mdash;the most affectionate and devoted of brothers&mdash;no
+one had yet recognised all that Bacon was. Meanwhile time was
+passing. The vastness, the difficulties, the attractions of that
+conquest of all knowledge which he dreamed of, were becoming
+greater every day to his thoughts. The law, without which he could
+not live, took up time and brought in little. Attendance on the
+Court was expensive, yet indispensable, if he wished for place. His
+mother was never very friendly, and thought him absurd and
+extravagant. Debts increased and creditors grumbled. The outlook
+was discouraging, when his friendship with Essex opened to him a
+more hopeful prospect.</p>
+
+<p>In the year 1593 the Attorney-General's place was vacant, and
+Essex, who in that year became a Privy Councillor, determined that
+Bacon should be Attorney-General. Bacon's reputation as a lawyer
+was overshadowed by his philosophical and literary pursuits. He was
+thought young for the office, and he had not yet served in any
+subordinate place. And there was another man, who was supposed to
+carry all English law in his head, full of rude force and endless
+precedents, hard of heart and voluble of <a name='Page_32' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 32'></a>tongue, who also wanted it. An
+Attorney-General was one who would bring all the resources and
+hidden subtleties of English law to the service of the Crown, and
+use them with thorough-going and unflinching resolution against
+those whom the Crown accused of treason, sedition, or invasion of
+the prerogative. It is no wonder that the Cecils, and the Queen
+herself, thought Coke likely to be a more useful public servant
+than Bacon: it is certain what Coke himself thought about it, and
+what his estimate was of the man whom Essex was pushing against
+him. But Essex did not take up his friend's cause in the lukewarm
+fashion in which Burghley had patronised his nephew. There was
+nothing that Essex pursued with greater pertinacity. He importuned
+the Queen. He risked without scruple offending her. She apparently
+long shrank from directly refusing his request. The Cecils were for
+Coke&mdash;the "<i>Huddler</i>" as Bacon calls him, in a letter to
+Essex; but the appointment was delayed. All through 1593, and until
+April, 1594, the struggle went on.</p>
+
+<p>When Robert Cecil suggested that Essex should be content with
+the Solicitor's place for Bacon, "praying him to be well advised,
+for if his Lordship had spoken of that it might have been of easier
+digestion to the Queen," he turned round on Cecil&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"Digest me no digesting," said the Earl; "for the Attorneyship
+is that I must have for Francis Bacon; and in that I will spend my
+uttermost credit, friendship, and authority against whomsoever, and
+that whosoever went about to procure it to others, that it should
+cost both the mediators and the suitors the setting on before they
+came by it. And this be you assured of, Sir Robert," quoth the
+Earl, "for now do I fully declare myself; and for your own part,
+Sir Robert, I do think much and strange both of my Lord your father
+and you, that can have the mind to seek the preferment of a
+stranger before so near a kinsman; namely, considering if you weigh
+in a balance <a name='Page_33' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 33'></a>his parts and sufficiency in any respect with those
+of his competitor, excepting only four poor years of admittance,
+which Francis Bacon hath more than recompensed with the priority of
+his reading; in all other respects you shall find no comparison
+between them."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>But the Queen's disgust at some very slight show of independence
+on Bacon's part in Parliament, unforgiven in spite of repeated
+apologies, together with the influence of the Cecils and the
+pressure of so formidable and so useful a man as Coke, turned the
+scale against Essex. In April, 1594, Coke was made Attorney. Coke
+did not forget the pretender to law, as he would think him, who had
+dared so long to dispute his claims; and Bacon was deeply wounded.
+"No man," he thought, "had ever received a more exquisite
+disgrace," and he spoke of retiring to Cambridge "to spend the rest
+of his life in his studies and contemplations." But Essex was not
+discouraged. He next pressed eagerly for the Solicitorship. Again,
+after much waiting, he was foiled. An inferior man was put over
+Bacon's head. Bacon found that Essex, who could do most things, for
+some reason could not do this. He himself, too, had pressed his
+suit with the greatest importunity on the Queen, on Burghley, on
+Cecil, on every one who could help him; he reminded the Queen how
+many years ago it was since he first kissed her hand in her
+service, and ever since had used his wits to please; but it was all
+in vain. For once he lost patience. He was angry with Essex; the
+Queen's anger with Essex had, he thought, recoiled on his friend.
+He was angry with the Queen; she held his long waiting cheap; she
+played with him and amused herself with delay; he would go abroad,
+and he "knew her Majesty's nature, that she neither careth though
+the whole surname of the Bacons travelled, nor of the Cecils
+neither." He <a name='Page_34' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 34'></a>was very angry with Robert Cecil; affecting not to
+believe them, he tells him stories he has heard of his corrupt and
+underhand dealing. He writes almost a farewell letter of
+ceremonious but ambiguous thanks to Lord Burghley, hoping that he
+would impute any offence that Bacon might have given to the
+"complexion of a suitor, and a tired sea-sick suitor," and speaking
+despairingly of his future success in the law. The humiliations of
+what a suitor has to go through torment him: "It is my luck," he
+writes to Cecil, "still to be akin to such things as I neither like
+in nature nor would willingly meet with in my course, but yet
+cannot avoid without show of base timorousness or else of unkind or
+suspicious strangeness." And to his friend Fulke Greville he thus
+unburdens himself:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"SIR,&mdash;I understand of your pains to have visited me, for
+which I thank you. My matter is an endless question. I assure you I
+had said <i>Requiesce anima mea</i>; but I now am otherwise put to
+my psalter; <i>Nolite confidere</i>. I dare go no further. Her
+Majesty had by set speech more than once assured me of her
+intention to call me to her service, which I could not understand
+but of the place I had been named to. And now whether <i>invidus
+homo hoc fecit</i>; or whether my matter must be an appendix to my
+Lord of Essex suit; or whether her Majesty, pretending to prove my
+ability, meaneth but to take advantage of some errors which, like
+enough, at one time or other I may commit; or what is it? but her
+Majesty is not ready to despatch it. And what though the Master of
+the Rolls, and my Lord of Essex, and yourself, and others, think my
+case without doubt, yet in the meantime I have a hard condition, to
+stand so that whatsoever service I do to her Majesty it shall be
+thought to be but <i>servitium viscatum</i>, lime-twigs and fetches
+to place myself; and so I shall have envy, not thanks. This is a
+course to quench all good spirits, and to corrupt every man's
+nature, which will, I fear, much hurt her Majesty's service in the
+end. I have been like a piece of stuff bespoken in the shop; and if
+her Majesty will not take me, it may be the selling by parcels will
+be more gainful. For to be, as I told you, like a <a name='Page_35'
+class='pagenum' title='Page 35'></a>child following a bird, which
+when he is nearest flieth away and lighteth a little before, and
+then the child after it again, and so <i>in infinitum</i>, I am
+weary of it; as also of wearying my good friends, of whom,
+nevertheless, I hope in one course or other gratefully to deserve.
+And so, not forgetting your business, I leave to trouble you with
+this idle letter; being but <i>justa et moderata querimonia</i>;
+for indeed I do confess, <i>primus amor</i> will not easily be cast
+off. And thus again I commend me to you."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>After one more effort the chase was given up, at least for the
+moment; for it was soon resumed. But just now Bacon felt that all
+the world was against him. He would retire "out of the sunshine
+into the shade." One friend only encouraged him. He did more. He
+helped him when Bacon most wanted help, in his straitened and
+embarrassed "estate." Essex, when he could do nothing more, gave
+Bacon an estate worth at least &pound;1800. Bacon's resolution is
+recorded in the following letter:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"IT MAY PLEASE YOUR GOOD LORDSHIP,&mdash;I pray God her
+Majesty's weighing be not like the weight of a balance, <i>gravia
+deorsum levia sursum</i>. But I am as far from being altered in
+devotion towards her, as I am from distrust that she will be
+altered in opinion towards me, when she knoweth me better. For
+myself, I have lost some opinion, some time, and some means; this
+is my account; but then for opinion, it is a blast that goeth and
+cometh; for time, it is true it goeth and cometh not; but yet I
+have learned that it may be redeemed. For means, I value that most;
+and the rather, <i>because I am purposed not to follow the practice
+of the law</i> (<i>if her Majesty command me in any particular, I
+shall be ready to do her willing service</i>); and my reason is
+only, <i>because it drinketh too much time, which I have dedicated
+to better purposes</i>. But even for that point of estate and
+means, I partly lean to Thales' opinion, That a philosopher may be
+rich if he will. Thus your Lordship seeth how I comfort myself; to
+the increase whereof I would fain please myself to believe that to
+be true which my Lord Treasurer writeth; which is, that it is more
+than a philosopher morally can disgest. But without any such high
+conceit, I esteem it like the pulling out of an aching tooth, <a
+name='Page_36' class='pagenum' title='Page 36'></a>which, I
+remember, when I was a child, and had little philosophy, I was glad
+of when it was done. For your Lordship, I do think myself more
+beholding to you than to any man. And I say, I reckon myself as a
+<i>common</i> (not popular but <i>common</i>); and as much as is
+lawful to be enclosed of a common, so much your Lordship shall be
+sure to have.&mdash;Your Lordship's to obey your honourable
+commands, more settled than ever."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>It may be that, as Bacon afterwards maintained, the closing
+sentences of this letter implied a significant reserve of his
+devotion. But during the brilliant and stormy years of Essex's
+career which followed, Bacon's relations to him continued
+unaltered. Essex pressed Bacon's claims whenever a chance offered.
+He did his best to get Bacon a rich wife&mdash;the young widow of
+Sir Christopher Hatton&mdash;but in vain. Instead of Bacon she
+accepted Coke, and became famous afterwards in the great family
+quarrel, in which Coke and Bacon again found themselves face to
+face, and which nearly ruined Bacon before the time. Bacon worked
+for Essex when he was wanted, and gave the advice which a shrewd
+and cautious friend would give to a man who, by his success and
+increasing pride and self-confidence, was running into serious
+dangers, arming against himself deadly foes, and exposing himself
+to the chances of fortune. Bacon was nervous about Essex's capacity
+for war, a capacity which perhaps was not proved, even by the most
+brilliant exploit of the time, the capture of Cadiz, in which Essex
+foreshadowed the heroic but well-calculated audacities of Nelson
+and Cochrane, and showed himself as little able as they to bear the
+intoxication of success, and to work in concert with envious and
+unfriendly associates. At the end of the year 1596, the year in
+which Essex had won such reputation at Cadiz, Bacon wrote him a
+letter of advice and remonstrance. It is a <a name='Page_37' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 37'></a>lively picture of the defects and
+dangers of Essex's behaviour as the Queen's favourite; and it is a
+most characteristic and worldly-wise summary of the ways which
+Bacon would have him take, to cure the one and escape the other.
+Bacon had, as he says, "good reason to think that the Earl's
+fortune comprehended his own." And the letter may perhaps be taken
+as an indirect warning to Essex that Bacon must, at any rate, take
+care of his own fortune, if the Earl persisted in dangerous
+courses. Bacon shows how he is to remove the impressions, strong in
+the Queen's mind, of Essex's defects; how he is, by due submissions
+and stratagems, to catch her humour&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"But whether I counsel you the best, or for the best, duty
+bindeth me to offer to you my wishes. I said to your Lordship last
+time, <i>Martha, Martha, attendis ad plurima, unum sufficit</i>;
+win the Queen: if this be not the beginning, of any other course I
+see no end."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Bacon gives a series of minute directions how Essex is to disarm
+the Queen's suspicions, and to neutralize the advantage which his
+rivals take of them; how he is to remove "the opinion of his nature
+being <i>opiniastre</i> and not rulable;" how, avoiding the faults
+of Leicester and Hatton, he is, as far as he can, to "allege them
+for authors and patterns." Especially, he must give up that show of
+soldier-like distinction, which the Queen so disliked, and take
+some quiet post at Court. He must not alarm the Queen by seeking
+popularity; he must take care of his estate; he must get rid of
+some of his officers; and he must not be disquieted by other
+favourites.</p>
+
+<p>Bacon wished, as he said afterwards, to see him "with a white
+staff in his hand, as my Lord of Leicester had," an honour and
+ornament to the Court in the eyes of the people and foreign
+ambassadors. But Essex was not fit for <a name='Page_38' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 38'></a>the part which Bacon urged upon him,
+that of an obsequious and vigilant observer of the Queen's moods
+and humours. As time went on, things became more and more difficult
+between him and his strange mistress; and there were never wanting
+men who, like Cecil and Raleigh, for good and bad reasons, feared
+and hated Essex, and who had the craft and the skill to make the
+most of his inexcusable errors. At last he allowed himself, from
+ambition, from the spirit of contradiction, from the blind passion
+for doing what he thought would show defiance to his enemies, to be
+tempted into the Irish campaign of 1599. Bacon at a later time
+claimed credit for having foreseen and foretold its issue. "I did
+as plainly see his overthrow, chained as it were by destiny to that
+journey, as it is possible for any man to ground a judgment on
+future contingents." He warned Essex, so he thought in after years,
+of the difficulty of the work; he warned him that he would leave
+the Queen in the hands of his enemies: "It would be ill for her,
+ill for him, ill for the State." "I am sure," he adds, "I never in
+anything in my life dealt with him in like earnestness by speech,
+by writing, and by all the means I could devise." But Bacon's
+memory was mistaken. We have his letters. When Essex went to
+Ireland, Bacon wrote only in the language of sanguine hope&mdash;so
+little did he see "overthrow chained by destiny to that journey,"
+that "some good spirit led his pen to presage to his Lordship
+success;" he saw in the enterprise a great occasion of honour to
+his friend; he gave prudent counsels, but he looked forward
+confidently to Essex being as "fatal a captain to that war, as
+Africanus was to the war of Carthage." Indeed, however anxious he
+may have been, he could not have foreseen Essex's unaccountable and
+to this day unintelligible failure. But failure was the <a name=
+'Page_39' class='pagenum' title='Page 39'></a>end, from whatever
+cause; failure, disgraceful and complete. Then followed wild and
+guilty but abortive projects for retrieving his failure, by using
+his power in Ireland to make himself formidable to his enemies at
+Court, and even to the Queen herself. He intrigued with Tyrone; he
+intrigued with James of Scotland; he plunged into a whirl of angry
+and baseless projects, which came to nothing the moment they were
+discussed. How empty and idle they were was shown by his return
+against orders to tell his own story at Nonsuch, and by thus
+placing himself alone and undeniably in the wrong, in the power of
+the hostile Council. Of course it was not to be thought of that
+Cecil should not use his advantage in the game. It was too early,
+irritated though the Queen was, to strike the final blow. But it is
+impossible not to see, looking back over the miserable history,
+that Essex was treated in a way which was certain, sooner or later,
+to make him, being what he was, plunge into a fatal and
+irretrievable mistake. He was treated as a cat treats a mouse; he
+was worried, confined, disgraced, publicly reprimanded, brought
+just within verge of the charge of treason, but not quite, just
+enough to discredit and alarm him, but to leave him still a certain
+amount of play. He was made to see that the Queen's favour was not
+quite hopeless; but that nothing but the most absolute and
+unreserved humiliation could recover it. It was plain to any one
+who knew Essex that this treatment would drive Essex to madness.
+"These same gradations of yours"&mdash;so Bacon represents himself
+expostulating with the Queen on her caprices&mdash;"are fitter to
+corrupt than to correct any mind of greatness." They made Essex
+desperate; he became frightened for his life, and he had reason to
+be so, though not in the way which he feared. At length came the
+stupid and ridiculous out<a name='Page_40' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 40'></a>break of the 8th of February, 1600/1601, a plot to
+seize the palace and raise the city against the ministers, by the
+help of a few gentlemen armed only with their rapiers. As Bacon
+himself told the Queen, "if some base and cruel-minded persons had
+entered into such an action, it might have caused much blow and
+combustion; but it appeared well that they were such as knew not
+how to play the malefactors!" But it was sufficient to bring Essex
+within the doom of treason.</p>
+
+<p>Essex knew well what the stake was. He lost it, and deserved to
+lose it, little as his enemies deserved to win it; for they, too,
+were doing what would have cost them their heads if Elizabeth had
+known it&mdash;corresponding, as Essex was accused of doing, with
+Scotland about the succession, and possibly with Spain. But they
+were playing cautiously and craftily; he with bungling passion. He
+had been so long accustomed to power and place, that he could not
+endure that rivals should keep him out of it. They were content to
+have their own way, while affecting to be the humblest of servants;
+he would be nothing less than a Mayor of the Palace. He was guilty
+of a great public crime, as every man is who appeals to arms for
+anything short of the most sacred cause. He was bringing into
+England, which had settled down into peaceable ways, an imitation
+of the violent methods of France and the Guises. But the crime as
+well as the penalty belonged to the age, and crimes legally said to
+be against the State mean morally very different things, according
+to the state of society and opinion. It is an unfairness verging on
+the ridiculous, when the ground is elaborately laid for keeping up
+the impression that Essex was preparing a real treason against the
+Queen like that of Norfolk. It was a treason of the same sort and
+order as that for which Northumberland sent Som<a name='Page_41'
+class='pagenum' title='Page 41'></a>erset to the block: the treason
+of being an unsuccessful rival.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Bacon had been getting gradually into the unofficial
+employ of the Government. He had become one of the "Learned
+Counsel"&mdash;lawyers with subordinate and intermittent work, used
+when wanted, but without patent or salary, and not ranking with the
+regular law officers. The Government had found him useful in
+affairs of the revenue, in framing interrogatories for prisoners in
+the Tower, in drawing up reports of plots against the Queen. He did
+not in this way earn enough to support himself; but he had thus
+come to have some degree of access to the Queen, which he
+represents as being familiar and confidential, though he still
+perceived, as he says himself, that she did not like him. At the
+first news of Essex's return to England, Bacon greeted
+him&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"MY LORD,&mdash;Conceiving that your Lordship came now up in the
+person of a good servant to see your sovereign mistress, which kind
+of compliments are many times <i>instar magnorum meritorum</i>, and
+therefore it would be hard for me to find you, I have committed to
+this poor paper the humble salutations of him <i>that is more yours
+than any man's, and more yours than any man</i>. To these
+salutations I add a due and joyful gratulation, confessing that
+your Lordship, in your last conference with me before your journey,
+spake not in vain, God making it good, That you trusted we should
+say <i>Quis putasset</i>! Which as it is found true in a happy
+sense, so I wish you do not find another <i>Quis putasset</i> in
+the manner of taking this so great a service. But I hope it is, as
+he said, <i>Nubecula est, cito transibit</i>, and that your
+Lordship's wisdom and obsequious circumspection and patience will
+turn all to the best. So referring all to some time that I may
+attend you, I commit you to God's best preservation."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>But when Essex's conduct in Ireland had to be dealt with,
+Bacon's services were called for; and from this time his relations
+towards Essex were altered. Every one, no <a name='Page_42' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 42'></a>one better than the Queen herself,
+knew all that he owed to Essex. It is strangely illustrative of the
+time, that especially as Bacon held so subordinate a position, he
+should have been required, and should have been trusted, to act
+against his only and most generous benefactor. It is strange, too,
+that however great his loyalty to the Queen, however much and
+sincerely he might condemn his friend's conduct, he should think it
+possible to accept the task. He says that he made some
+remonstrance; and he says, no doubt truly, that during the first
+stage of the business he used the ambiguous position in which he
+was placed to soften Essex's inevitable punishment, and to bring
+about a reconciliation between him and the Queen. But he was
+required, as the Queen's lawyer, to set forth in public Essex's
+offences; and he admits that he did so "not over tenderly." Yet all
+this, even if we have misgivings about it, is intelligible. If he
+had declined, he could not, perhaps, have done the service which he
+assures us that he tried to do for Essex; and it is certain that he
+would have had to reckon with the terrible lady who in her old age
+still ruled England from the throne of Henry VIII., and who had
+certainly no great love for Bacon himself. She had already shown
+him in a much smaller matter what was the forfeit to be paid for
+any resistance to her will. All the hopes of his life must perish;
+all the grudging and suspicious favours which he had won with such
+unremitting toil and patient waiting would be sacrificed, and he
+would henceforth live under the wrath of those who never forgave.
+And whatever he did for himself, he believed that he was serving
+Essex. His scheming imagination and his indefatigable pen were at
+work. He tried strange indirect methods; he invented a
+correspondence between his brother and Essex, which was to fall
+into the Queen's hands in order to soften her <a name='Page_43'
+class='pagenum' title='Page 43'></a>wrath and show her Essex's most
+secret feelings. When the Queen proposed to dine with him at his
+lodge in Twickenham Park, "though I profess not to be a poet," he
+"prepared a sonnet tending and alluding to draw on her Majesty's
+reconcilement to my Lord." It was an awkward thing for one who had
+been so intimate with Essex to be so deep in the counsels of those
+who hated him. He complains that many people thought him ungrateful
+and disloyal to his friend, and that stories circulated to his
+disadvantage, as if he were poisoning the Queen's ear against
+Essex. But he might argue fairly enough that, wilful and
+wrong-headed as Essex had been, it was the best that he could now
+do for him; and as long as it was only a question of Essex's
+disgrace and enforced absence from Court, Bacon could not be bound
+to give up the prospects of his life&mdash;indeed, his public duty
+as a subordinate servant of government&mdash;on account of his
+friend's inexcusable and dangerous follies. Essex did not see it
+so, and in the subjoined correspondence had the advantage; but
+Bacon's position, though a higher one might be imagined, where men
+had been such friends as these two men had been, is quite a
+defensible one:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"MY LORD,&mdash;No man can better expound my doings than your
+Lordship, which maketh me need to say the less. Only I humbly pray
+you to believe that I aspire to the conscience and commendation
+first of <i>bonus civis</i>, which with us is a good and true
+servant to the Queen, and next of <i>bonus vir</i>, that is an
+honest man. I desire your Lordship also to think that though I
+confess I love some things much better than I love your
+Lordship&mdash;as the Queen's service, her quiet and contentment,
+her honour, her favour, the good of my country, and the
+like&mdash;yet I love few persons better than yourself, both for
+gratitude's sake and for your own virtues, which cannot hurt but by
+accident or abuse. Of which my good affection I was ever ready and
+am ready to yield testimony by any good offices, but with such
+reservations as <a name='Page_44' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 44'></a>yourself cannot but allow; for as I was ever sorry
+that your Lordship should fly with waxen wings, doubting Icarus's
+fortune, so for the growing up of your own feathers, specially
+ostrich's, or any other save of a bird of prey, no man shall be
+more glad. And this is the axletree whereupon I have turned and
+shall turn, which to signify to you, though I think you are of
+yourself persuaded as much, is the cause of my writing; and so I
+commend your Lordship to God's goodness. From Gray's Inn, this 20th
+day of July, 1600.</p>
+
+<p>"Your Lordship's most humbly,<br />
+ "FR. BACON."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>To this letter Essex returned an answer of dignified reserve,
+such as Bacon might himself have dictated&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"MR. BACON,&mdash;I can neither expound nor censure your late
+actions, being ignorant of all of them, save one, and having
+directed my sight inward only, to examine myself. You do pray me to
+believe that you only aspire to the conscience and commendation of
+<i>bonus civis</i> and <i>bonus vir</i>; and I do faithfully assure
+you, that while that is your ambition (though your course be active
+and mine contemplative), yet we shall both <i>convenire in codem
+tertio</i> and <i>convenire inter nosipsos</i>. Your profession of
+affection and offer of good offices are welcome to me. For answer
+to them I will say but this, that you have believed I have been
+kind to you, and you may believe that I cannot be other, either
+upon humour or my own election. I am a stranger to all poetical
+conceits, or else I should say somewhat of your poetical example.
+But this I must say, that I never flew with other wings than desire
+to merit and confidence in my Sovereign's favour; and when one of
+these wings failed me I would light nowhere but at my Sovereign's
+feet, though she suffered me to be bruised with my fall. And till
+her Majesty, that knows I was never bird of prey, finds it to agree
+with her will and her service that my wings should be imped again,
+I have committed myself to the mire. No power but my God's and my
+Sovereign's can alter this resolution of</p>
+
+<p>"Your retired friend,<br />
+ "ESSEX."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>But after Essex's mad attempt in the city a new state of things
+arose. The inevitable result was a trial for high treason, a trial
+of which no one could doubt the purpose <a name='Page_45' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 45'></a>and end. The examination of
+accomplices revealed speeches, proposals, projects, not very
+intelligible to us in the still imperfectly understood game of
+intrigue that was going on among all parties at the end of
+Elizabeth's reign, but quite enough to place Essex at the mercy of
+the Government and the offended Queen. "The new information," says
+Mr. Spedding, "had been immediately communicated to Coke and
+Bacon." Coke, as Attorney-General, of course conducted the
+prosecution; and the next prominent person on the side of the Crown
+was not the Solicitor, or any other regular law officer, but Bacon,
+though holding the very subordinate place of one of the "Learned
+Counsel."</p>
+
+<p>It does not appear that he thought it strange, that he showed
+any pain or reluctance, that he sought to be excused. He took it as
+a matter of course. The part assigned to Bacon in the prosecution
+was as important as that of Coke; and he played it more skilfully
+and effectively. Trials in those days were confused affairs, often
+passing into a mere wrangle between the judges, lawyers, and
+lookers-on, and the prisoner at the bar. It was so in this case.
+Coke is said to have blundered in his way of presenting the
+evidence, and to have been led away from the point into an
+altercation with Essex. Probably it really did not much matter; but
+the trial was getting out of its course and inclining in favour of
+the prisoner, till Bacon&mdash;Mr. Spedding thinks, out of his
+regular turn&mdash;stepped forward and retrieved matters. This is
+Mr. Spedding's account of what Bacon said and did:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"By this time the argument had drifted so far away from the
+point that it must have been difficult for a listener to remember
+what it was that the prisoners were charged with, or how much of
+the charge had been proved. And Coke, who was all this time the
+sole speaker on behalf of the Crown, was still following each fresh
+topic <a name='Page_46' class='pagenum' title='Page 46'></a>that
+rose before him, without the sign of an intention or the intimation
+of a wish to return to the main question and reform the broken
+ranks of his evidence. Luckily he seems to have been now at a loss
+what point to take next, and the pause gave Bacon an opportunity of
+rising. It can hardly have been in pursuance of previous
+arrangements; for though it was customary in those days to
+distribute the evidence into parts and to assign several parts to
+several counsel, there had been no appearance as yet of any part
+being concluded. It is probable that the course of the trial had
+upset previous arrangements and confused the parts. At any rate so
+it was, however it came to pass, that when Cecil and Essex had at
+last finished their expostulation and parted with charitable
+prayers, each that the other might be forgiven, then (says our
+reporter) Mr. Bacon entered into a speech much after this
+fashion:</p>
+
+<p>"'In speaking of this late and horrible rebellion which hath
+been in the eyes and ears of all men, I shall save myself much
+labour in opening and enforcing the points thereof, insomuch as I
+speak not before a country jury of ignorant men, but before a most
+honourable assembly of the greatest Peers of the land, whose
+wisdoms conceive far more than my tongue can utter; yet with your
+gracious and honourable favours I will presume, if not for
+information of your Honours, yet for the discharge of my duty, to
+say thus much. No man can be ignorant, that knows matters of former
+ages&mdash;and all history makes it plain&mdash;that there was
+never any traitor heard of that durst directly attempt the seat of
+his liege prince but he always coloured his practices with some
+plausible pretence. For God hath imprinted such a majesty in the
+face of a prince that no private man dare approach the person of
+his sovereign with a traitorous intent. And therefore they run
+another side course, <i>oblique et &agrave; latere</i>: some to
+reform corruptions of the State and religion; some to reduce the
+ancient liberties and customs pretended to be lost and worn out;
+some to remove those persons that being in high places make
+themselves subject to envy; but all of them aim at the overthrow of
+the State and destruction of the present rulers. And this likewise
+is the use of those that work mischief of another quality; as Cain,
+that first murderer, took up an excuse for his fact, shaming to
+outface it with impudency, thus the Earl made his colour the
+severing some great men and councillors from her Majesty's favour,
+and the fear he stood in of his pretended enemies lest they should
+murder <a name='Page_47' class='pagenum' title='Page 47'></a>him in
+his house. Therefore he saith he was compelled to fly into the City
+for succour and assistance; not much unlike Pisistratus, of whom it
+was so anciently written how he gashed and wounded himself, and in
+that sort ran crying into Athens that his life was sought and like
+to have been taken away; thinking to have moved the people to have
+pitied him and taken his part by such counterfeited harm and
+danger; whereas his aim and drift was to take the government of the
+city into his hands and alter the form thereof. With like pretences
+of dangers and assaults the Earl of Essex entered the City of
+London and passed through the bowels thereof, blanching rumours
+that he should have been murdered and that the State was sold;
+whereas he had no such enemies, no such dangers: persuading
+themselves that if they could prevail all would have done well. But
+now <i>magna scelera terminantur in h&aelig;resin</i>; for you, my
+Lord, should know that though princes give their subjects cause of
+discontent, though they take away the honours they have heaped upon
+them, though they bring them to a lower estate than they raised
+them from, yet ought they not to be so forgetful of their
+allegiance that they should enter into any undutiful act; much less
+upon rebellion, as you, my Lord, have done. All whatsoever you have
+or can say in answer hereof are but shadows. And therefore methinks
+it were best for you to confess, not to justify.'"</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Essex was provoked by Bacon's incredulous sneer about enemies
+and dangers&mdash;"I call forth Mr. Bacon against Mr. Bacon," and
+referred to the letters which Bacon had written in his name, and in
+which these dangerous enmities were taken for granted. Bacon, in
+answer, repeated what he said so often&mdash;"That he had spent
+more time in vain in studying how to make the Earl a good servant
+to the Queen and State than he had done in anything else." Once
+more Coke got the proceedings into a tangle, and once more Bacon
+came forward to repair the miscarriage of his leader.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"'I have never yet seen in any case such favour shown to any
+prisoner; so many digressions, such delivering of evidence by
+fractions, and so silly a defence of such great and notorious
+treasons. May it <a name='Page_48' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 48'></a>please your Grace, you have seen how weakly he hath
+shadowed his purpose and how slenderly he hath answered the
+objections against him. But, my Lord, I doubt the variety of
+matters and the many digressions may minister occasion of
+forgetfulness, and may have severed the judgments of the Lords; and
+therefore I hold it necessary briefly to recite the Judges'
+opinions.'</p>
+
+<p>"That being done, he proceeded to this effect:</p>
+
+<p>"'Now put the case that the Earl of Essex's intents were, as he
+would have it believed, to go only as a suppliant to her Majesty.
+Shall their petitions be presented by armed petitioners? This must
+needs bring loss of property to the prince. Neither is it any point
+of law, as my Lord of Southampton would have it believed, that
+condemns them of treason. To take secret counsel, to execute it, to
+run together in numbers armed with weapons&mdash;what can be the
+excuse? Warned by the Lord Keeper, by a herald, and yet persist!
+Will any simple man take this to be less than treason?'</p>
+
+<p>"The Earl of Essex answered that if he had purposed anything
+against others than those his private enemies, he would not have
+stirred with so slender a company. Whereunto Mr. Bacon
+answered:</p>
+
+<p>"'It was not the company you carried with you but the assistance
+you hoped for in the City which you trusted unto. The Duke of Guise
+thrust himself into the streets of Paris on the day of the
+Barricades in his doublet and hose, attended only with eight
+gentlemen, and found that help in the city which (thanks be to God)
+you failed of here. And what followed? The King was forced to put
+himself into a pilgrim's weeds, and in that disguise to steal away
+to scape their fury. Even such was my Lord's confidence too, and
+his pretence the same&mdash;an all-hail and a kiss to the City. But
+the end was treason, as hath been sufficiently proved. But when he
+had once delivered and engaged himself so far into that which the
+shallowness of his conceit could not accomplish as he expected, the
+Queen for her defence taking arms against him, he was glad to yield
+himself; and thinking to colour his practices, turned his pretexts,
+and alleged the occasion thereof to proceed from a private
+quarrel.'</p>
+
+<p>"To this" (adds the reporter) "the Earl answered little. Nor was
+anything said afterwards by either of the prisoners, either in the
+thrust-and-parry dialogue with Coke that followed, or when they
+spoke at large to the question why judgment should not be
+pronounced, <a name='Page_49' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 49'></a>which at all altered the complexion of the case. They
+were both found guilty and sentence passed in the usual form."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Bacon's legal position was so subordinate a place that there
+must have been a special reason for his employment. It is difficult
+to avoid the conclusion that, on the part of the Government, Bacon
+was thus used for the very reason that he had been the friend of
+Essex. He was not commonly called upon in such prosecutions. He was
+not employed by Cecil in the Winchester trials of Raleigh, Grey,
+and Cobham, three years afterwards, nor in those connected with the
+Gunpowder Plot. He was called upon now because no one could so much
+damage Essex; and this last proof of his ready service was required
+by those whose favour, since Essex had gone hopelessly wrong, he
+had been diligently seeking. And Bacon acquiesced in the demand,
+apparently without surprise. No record remains to show that he felt
+any difficulty in playing his part. He had persuaded himself that
+his public duty, his duty as a good citizen to the Queen and the
+commonwealth, demanded of him that he should obey the call to do
+his best to bring a traitor to punishment.</p>
+
+<p>Public duty has claims on a man as well as friendship, and in
+many conceivable cases claims paramount to those of friendship. And
+yet friendship, too, has claims, at least on a man's memory. Essex
+had been a dear friend, if words could mean anything. He had done
+more than any man had done for Bacon, generously and nobly, and
+Bacon had acknowledged it in the amplest terms. Only a year before
+he had written, "I am as much yours as any man's, and as much yours
+as any man." It is not, and it was not, a question of Essex's
+guilt. It may be a question whether the whole matter was not
+exaggerated as to its purpose, as it certainly was as to its real
+danger and <a name='Page_50' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 50'></a>mischief. We at least know that his rivals dabbled in
+intrigue and foolish speeches as well as he; that little more than
+two years afterwards Raleigh and Grey and Cobham were condemned for
+treason in much the same fashion as he was; that Cecil to the end
+of his days&mdash;with whatever purpose&mdash;was a pensioner of
+Spain. The question was not whether Essex was guilty. The question
+for Bacon was, whether it was becoming in him, having been what he
+had been to Essex, to take a leading part in proceedings which were
+to end in his ruin and death. He was not a judge. He was not a
+regular law officer like Coke. His only employment had been casual
+and occasional. He might, most naturally, on the score of his old
+friendship, have asked to be excused. Condemning, as he did, his
+friend's guilt and folly, he might have refused to take part in a
+cause of blood, in which his best friend must perish. He might
+honestly have given up Essex as incorrigible, and have retired to
+stand apart in sorrow and silence while the inevitable tragedy was
+played out. The only answer to this is, that to have declined would
+have incurred the Queen's displeasure: he would have forfeited any
+chance of advancement; nay, closely connected as he had been with
+Essex, he might have been involved in his friend's ruin. But
+inferior men have marred their fortunes by standing by their
+friends in not undeserved trouble, and no one knew better than
+Bacon what was worthy and noble in human action. The choice lay
+before him. He seems hardly to have gone through any struggle. He
+persuaded himself that he could not help himself, under the
+constraint of his duty to the Queen, and he did his best to get
+Essex condemned.</p>
+
+<p>And this was not all. The death of Essex was a shock to the
+popularity of Elizabeth greater than anything that <a name=
+'Page_51' class='pagenum' title='Page 51'></a>had happened in her
+long reign. Bacon's name also had come into men's mouths as that of
+a time-server who played fast and loose with Essex and his enemies,
+and who, when he had got what he could from Essex, turned to see
+what he could get from those who put him to death. A justification
+of the whole affair was felt to be necessary; and Bacon was fixed
+upon for the distinction and the dishonour of doing it. No one
+could tell the story so well, and it was felt that he would not
+shrink from it. Nor did he. In cold blood he sat down to blacken
+Essex, using his intimate personal knowledge of the past to
+strengthen his statements against a friend who was in his grave,
+and for whom none could answer but Bacon himself. It is a
+well-compacted and forcible account of Essex's misdoings, on which
+of course the colour of deliberate and dangerous treason was
+placed. Much of it, no doubt, was true; but even of the facts, and
+much more of the colour, there was no check to be had, and it is
+certain that it was an object to the Government to make out the
+worst. It is characteristic that Bacon records that he did not lose
+sight of the claims of courtesy, and studiously spoke of "my Lord
+of Essex" in the draft submitted for correction to the Queen; but
+she was more unceremonious, and insisted that the "rebel" should be
+spoken of simply as "Essex."</p>
+
+<p>After a business of this kind, fines and forfeitures flowed in
+abundantly, and were "usually bestowed on deserving servants or
+favoured suitors by way of reward;" and Bacon came in for his
+share. Out of one of the fines he received &pound;1200. "The Queen
+hath done something for me," he writes to a friendly creditor,
+"though not in the proportion I had hoped," and he afterwards asked
+for something more. It was rather under the value of Essex's gift
+to him in 1594. But she still refused him <a name='Page_52' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 52'></a>all promotion. He was without an
+official place in the Queen's service, and he never was allowed to
+have it. It is clear that the "Declaration of the Treason of the
+Earl of Essex," if it justified the Government, did not remove the
+odium which had fallen on Bacon. Mr. Spedding says that he can find
+no signs of it. The proof of it is found in the "Apology" which
+Bacon found it expedient to write after Elizabeth's death and early
+in James's reign. He found that the recollection of the way in
+which he had dealt with his friend hung heavy upon him; men
+hesitated to trust him in spite of his now recognised ability.
+Accordingly, he drew up an apology, which he addressed to Lord
+Mountjoy, the friend, in reality half the accomplice, of Essex, in
+his wild, ill-defined plan for putting pressure on Elizabeth. It is
+a clear, able, of course <i>ex parte</i> statement of the doings of
+the three chief actors, two of whom could no longer answer for
+themselves, or correct and contradict the third. It represents the
+Queen as implacable and cruel, Essex as incorrigibly and
+outrageously wilful, proud, and undutiful, Bacon himself as using
+every effort and device to appease the Queen's anger and
+suspiciousness, and to bring Essex to a wiser and humbler mind. The
+picture is indeed a vivid one, and full of dramatic force, of an
+unrelenting and merciless mistress bent on breaking and bowing down
+to the dust the haughty spirit of a once-loved but rebellious
+favourite, whom, though he has deeply offended, she yet wishes to
+bring once more under her yoke; and of the calm, keen-witted
+looker-on, watching the dangerous game, not without personal
+interest, but with undisturbed presence of mind, and doing his best
+to avert an irreparable and fatal breach. How far he honestly did
+his best for his misguided friend we can only know from his own
+report; <a name='Page_53' class='pagenum' title='Page 53'></a>but
+there is no reason to think that he did Essex ill service, though
+he notices in passing an allegation that the Queen in one of her
+angry fits had charged him with this. But his interest clearly was
+to make up the quarrel between the Queen and Essex. Bacon would
+have been a greater man with both of them if he had been able to do
+so. He had been too deeply in Essex's intimacy to make his new
+position of mediator, with a strong bias on the Queen's side, quite
+safe and easy for a man of honourable mind; but a cool-judging and
+prudent man may well have acted as he represents himself acting
+without forgetting what he owed to his friend. Till the last great
+moment of trial there is a good deal to be said for Bacon: a man
+keenly alive to Essex's faults, with a strong sense of what he owed
+to the Queen and the State, and with his own reasonable chances of
+rising greatly prejudiced by Essex's folly. But at length came the
+crisis which showed the man, and threw light on all that had passed
+before, when he was picked out, out of his regular place, to be
+charged with the task of bringing home the capital charge against
+Essex. He does not say he hesitated. He does not say that he asked
+to be excused the terrible office. He did not flinch as the
+minister of vengeance for those who required that Essex should die.
+He did his work, we are told by his admiring biographer, better
+than Coke, and repaired the blunders of the prosecution. He passes
+over very shortly this part of the business: "It was laid upon me
+with the rest of my fellows;" yet it is the knot and key of the
+whole, as far as his own character is concerned. Bacon had his
+public duty: his public duty may have compelled him to stand apart
+from Essex. But it was his interest, it was no part of his public
+duty, which required him to accept the task of accuser of his
+friend, <a name='Page_54' class='pagenum' title='Page 54'></a>and
+in his friend's direst need calmly to drive home a well-directed
+stroke that should extinguish chances and hopes, and make his ruin
+certain. No one who reads his anxious letters about preferment and
+the Queen's favour, about his disappointed hopes, about his
+straitened means and distress for money, about his difficulties
+with his creditors&mdash;he was twice arrested for debt&mdash;can
+doubt that the question was between his own prospects and his
+friend; and that to his own interest he sacrificed his friend and
+his own honour.</p>
+
+<hr />
+<p><a name='Page_55' class='pagenum' title='Page 55'></a></p>
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_III'></a>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<h3>BACON AND JAMES I.</h3>
+
+<p><br />
+Bacon's life was a double one. There was the life of high thinking,
+of disinterested aims, of genuine enthusiasm, of genuine desire to
+delight and benefit mankind, by opening new paths to wonder and
+knowledge and power. And there was the put on and worldly life, the
+life of supposed necessities for the provision of daily bread, the
+life of ambition and self-seeking, which he followed, not without
+interest and satisfaction, but at bottom because he thought he
+must&mdash;must be a great man, must be rich, must live in the
+favour of the great, because without it his great designs could not
+be accomplished. His original plan of life was disclosed in his
+letter to Lord Burghley: to get some office with an assured income
+and not much work, and then to devote the best of his time to his
+own subjects. But this, if it was really his plan, was gradually
+changed: first, because he could not get such a place; and next
+because his connection with Essex, the efforts to gain him the
+Attorney's place, and the use which the Queen made of him after
+Essex could do no more for him, drew him more and more into public
+work, and specially the career of the law. We know that he would
+not by preference have chosen the law, and did not feel that his
+vocation lay that way; but it was the only way open to him for <a
+name='Page_56' class='pagenum' title='Page 56'></a>mending his
+fortunes. And so the two lives went on side by side, the worldly
+one&mdash;he would have said, the practical one&mdash;often
+interfering with the life of thought and discovery, and partly
+obscuring it, but yet always leaving it paramount in his own mind.
+His dearest and most cherished ideas, the thoughts with which he
+was most at home and happiest, his deepest and truest ambitions,
+were those of an enthusiastic and romantic believer in a great
+discovery just within his grasp. They were such as the dreams and
+visions of his great Franciscan namesake, and of the imaginative
+seekers after knowledge in the middle ages, real or mythical,
+Albert the Great, Cornelius Agrippa, Dr. Faustus; they were the
+eager, undoubting hopes of the physical students in Italy and
+England in his own time, Giordano Bruno, Telesio, Campanella,
+Gilbert, Galileo, or the founders of the Italian prototype of
+"Solomon's House" in the <i>New Atlantis</i>, the precursor of our
+Royal Societies, the Academy of the <i>Lincei</i> at Rome. Among
+these meditations was his inner life. But however he may have
+originally planned his course, and though at times under the
+influence of disappointment he threatened to retire to Cambridge or
+to travel abroad, he had bound himself fast to public life, and
+soon ceased to think of quitting it. And he had a real taste for
+it&mdash;for its shows, its prizes, for the laws and turns of the
+game, for its debates and vicissitudes. He was no mere idealist or
+recluse to undervalue or despise the real grandeur of the world. He
+took the keenest interest in the nature and ways of mankind; he
+liked to observe, to generalise in shrewd and sometimes cynical
+epigrams. He liked to apply his powerful and fertile intellect to
+the practical problems of society and government, to their curious
+anomalies, to their paradoxical phenomena; he liked to address
+himself, either <a name='Page_57' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 57'></a>as an expounder or a reformer, to the principles and
+entanglements of English law; he aspired, both as a lecturer and a
+legislator, to improve and simplify it. It was not beyond his hopes
+to shape a policy, to improve administration, to become powerful by
+bringing his sagacity and largeness of thought to the service of
+the State, in reconciling conflicting forces, in mediating between
+jealous parties and dangerous claims. And he liked to enter into
+the humours of a Court; to devote his brilliant imagination and
+affluence of invention either to devising a pageant which should
+throw all others into the shade, or a compromise which should get
+great persons out of some difficulty of temper or pique.</p>
+
+<p>In all these things he was as industrious, as laborious, as
+calmly persevering and tenacious, as he was in his pursuit of his
+philosophical speculations. He was a compound of the most
+adventurous and most diversified ambition, with a placid and
+patient temper, such as we commonly associate with moderate desires
+and the love of retirement and an easy life. To imagine and dare
+anything, and never to let go the object of his pursuit, is one
+side of him; on the other he is obsequiously desirous to please and
+fearful of giving offence, the humblest and most grateful and also
+the most importunate of suitors, ready to bide his time with an
+even cheerfulness of spirit, which yet it was not safe to provoke
+by ill offices and the wish to thwart him. He never misses a chance
+of proffering his services; he never lets pass an opportunity of
+recommending himself to those who could help him. He is so bent on
+natural knowledge that we have a sense of incongruity when we see
+him engaging in politics as if he had no other interest. He throws
+himself with such zest into the language of the moralist, the
+theologian, the historian, that we forget we <a name='Page_58'
+class='pagenum' title='Page 58'></a>have before us the author of a
+new departure in physical inquiry, and the unwearied compiler of
+tables of natural history. When he is a lawyer, he seems only a
+lawyer. If he had not been the author of the <i>Instauratio</i>,
+his life would not have looked very different from that of any
+other of the shrewd and supple lawyers who hung on to the Tudor and
+Stuart Courts, and who unscrupulously pushed their way to
+preferment. He claimed to be, in spite of the misgivings of
+Elizabeth and her ministers, as devoted to public work and as
+capable of it as any of them. He was ready for anything, for any
+amount of business, ready, as in everything, to take infinite
+trouble about it. The law, if he did not like it, was yet no
+by-work with him; he was as truly ambitious as the men with whom he
+maintained so keen and for long so unsuccessful a rivalry. He felt
+bitterly the disappointment of seeing men like Coke and Fleming and
+Doddridge and Hobart pass before him; he could not, if he had been
+only a lawyer, have coveted more eagerly the places, refused to
+him, which they got; only, he had besides a whole train of
+purposes, an inner and supreme ambition, of which they knew
+nothing. And with all this there is no apparent consciousness of
+these manifold and varied interests. He never affected to conceal
+from himself his superiority to other men in his aims and in the
+grasp of his intelligence. But there is no trace that he prided
+himself on the variety and versatility of these powers, or that he
+even distinctly realized to himself that it was anything remarkable
+that he should have so many dissimilar objects and be able so
+readily to pursue them in such different directions.</p>
+
+<p>It is doubtful whether, as long as Elizabeth lived, Bacon could
+ever have risen above his position among the "Learned Counsel," an
+office without patent or salary or <a name='Page_59' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 59'></a>regular employment. She used, him,
+and he was willing to be used; but he plainly did not appear in her
+eyes to be the kind of man who would suit her in the more prominent
+posts of her Government. Unusual and original ability is apt, till
+it is generally recognised, to carry with it suspicion and mistrust
+as to its being really all that it seems to be. Perhaps she thought
+of the possibility of his flying out unexpectedly at some
+inconvenient pinch, and attempting to serve her interests, not in
+her way, but in his own; perhaps she distrusted in business and
+state affairs so brilliant a discourser, whose heart was known,
+first and above all, to be set on great dreams of knowledge;
+perhaps those interviews with her in which he describes the
+counsels which he laid before her, and in which his shrewdness and
+foresight are conspicuous, may not have been so welcome to her as
+he imagined; perhaps, it is not impossible, that he may have been
+too compliant for her capricious taste, and too visibly anxious to
+please. Perhaps, too, she could not forget, in spite of what had
+happened, that he had been the friend, and not the very generous
+friend, of Essex. But, except as to a share of the forfeitures,
+with which he was not satisfied, his fortunes did not rise under
+Elizabeth.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever may have been the Queen's feelings towards him, there
+is no doubt that one powerful influence, which lasted into the
+reign of James, was steadily adverse to his advancement. Burghley
+had been strangely niggardly in what he did to help his brilliant
+nephew; he was going off the scene, and probably did not care to
+trouble himself about a younger and uncongenial aspirant to
+service. But his place was taken by his son, Robert Cecil; and
+Cecil might naturally have been expected to welcome the
+co-operation of one of his own family who <a name='Page_60' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 60'></a>was foremost among the rising men of
+Cecil's own generation, and who certainly was most desirous to do
+him service. But it is plain that he early made up his mind to keep
+Bacon in the background. It is easy to imagine reasons, though the
+apparent short-sightedness of the policy may surprise us; but Cecil
+was too reticent and self-controlled a man to let his reasons
+appear, and his words, in answer to his cousin's applications for
+his assistance, were always kind, encouraging, and vague. But we
+must judge by the event, and that makes it clear that Cecil did not
+care to see Bacon in high position. Nothing can account for Bacon's
+strange failure for so long a time to reach his due place in the
+public service but the secret hostility, whatever may have been the
+cause, of Cecil.</p>
+
+<p>There was also another difficulty. Coke was the great lawyer of
+the day, a man whom the Government could not dispense with, and
+whom it was dangerous to offend. And Coke thoroughly disliked
+Bacon. He thought lightly of his law, and he despised his
+refinement and his passion for knowledge. He cannot but have
+resented the impertinence, as he must have thought it, of Bacon
+having been for a whole year his rival for office. It is possible
+that if people then agreed with Mr. Spedding's opinion as to the
+management of Essex's trial, he may have been irritated by
+jealousy; but a couple of months after the trial (April 29, 1601)
+Bacon sent to Cecil, with a letter of complaint, the following
+account of a scene in Court between Coke and himself:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"<i>A true remembrance of the abuse I received of Mr.
+Attorney-General publicly in the Exchequer the first day of term;
+for the truth whereof I refer myself to all that were
+present.</i></p>
+
+<p>"I moved to have a reseizure of the lands of Geo. Moore, a
+relapsed recusant, a fugitive and a practising traytor; and showed
+better <a name='Page_61' class='pagenum' title='Page 61'></a>matter
+for the Queen against the discharge by plea, which is ever with a
+<i>salvo jure</i>. And this I did in as gentle and reasonable terms
+as might be.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Attorney kindled at it, and said, '<i>Mr. Bacon, if you
+have any tooth against me pluck it out; for it will do you more
+hurt than all the teeth in your head will do you good.</i>' I
+answered coldly in these very words: '<i>Mr. Attorney, I respect
+you; I fear you not; and the less you speak of your own greatness,
+the more I will think of it.</i>'</p>
+
+<p>"He replied, '<i>I think scorn to stand upon terms of greatness
+towards you, who are less than little; less than the least;</i>'
+and other such strange light terms he gave me, with that insulting
+which cannot be expressed.</p>
+
+<p>"Herewith stirred, yet I said no more but this: '<i>Mr.
+Attorney, do not depress me so far; for I have been your better,
+and may be again, when it please the Queen.</i>'</p>
+
+<p>"With this he spake, neither I nor himself could tell what, as
+if he had been born Attorney-General; and in the end bade me not
+meddle with the Queen's business, but with mine own; and that I was
+unsworn, etc. I told him, sworn or unsworn was all one to an honest
+man; and that I ever set my service first, and myself second; and
+wished to God that he would do the like.</p>
+
+<p>"Then he said, it were good to clap a <i>cap. ultegatum</i> upon
+my back! To which I only said he could not; and that he was at
+fault, for he hunted upon an old scent. He gave me a number of
+disgraceful words besides, which I answered with silence, and
+showing that I was not moved with them."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The threat of the <i>capias ultegatum</i> was probably in
+reference to the arrest of Bacon for debt in September, 1593. After
+this we are not surprised at Bacon writing to Coke, "who take to
+yourself a liberty to disgrace and disable my law, my experience,
+my discretion," that, "since I missed the Solicitor's place (the
+rather I think by your means) I cannot expect that you and I shall
+ever serve as Attorney and Solicitor together, but either serve
+with another on your remove, or step into some other course." And
+Coke, no doubt, took care that it should <a name='Page_62' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 62'></a>be so. Cecil, too, may possibly have
+thought that Bacon gave no proof of his fitness for affairs in thus
+bringing before him a squabble in which both parties lost their
+tempers.</p>
+
+<p>Bacon was not behind the rest of the world in "the posting of
+men of good quality towards the King," in the rash which followed
+the Queen's death, of those who were eager to proffer their
+services to James, for whose peaceful accession Cecil had so
+skilfully prepared the way. He wrote to every one who, he thought,
+could help him: to Cecil, and to Cecil's man&mdash;"I pray you, as
+you find time let him know that he is the personage in the State
+which I love most;" to Northumberland, "If I may be of any use to
+your Lordship, by my head, tongue, pen, means, or friends, I humbly
+pray you to hold me your own;" to the King's Scotch friends and
+servants, even to Southampton, the friend of Essex, who had been
+shut up in the Tower since his condemnation with Essex, and who was
+now released. "This great change," Bacon assured him, "hath wrought
+in me no other change towards your Lordship than this, that I may
+safely be now that which I truly was before." Bacon found in after
+years that Southampton was not so easily conciliated. But at
+present Bacon was hopeful: "In mine own particular," he writes, "I
+have many comforts and assurances; but in mine own opinion the
+chief is, that the <i>canvassing world is gone, and the deserving
+world is come</i>." He asks to be recommended to the King&mdash;"I
+commend myself to your love and to the well-using of my name, as
+well in repressing and answering for me, if there be any biting or
+nibbling at it in that place, as in impressing a good conceit and
+opinion of me, chiefly in the King, as otherwise in that Court."
+His pen had been used under the government of the <a name='Page_63'
+class='pagenum' title='Page 63'></a>Queen, and he had offered a
+draft of a proclamation to the King's advisers. But though he
+obtained an interview with the King, James's arrival in England
+brought no immediate prospect of improvement in Bacon's fortunes.
+Indeed, his name was at first inadvertently passed over in the list
+of Queen's servants who were to retain their places. The first
+thing we hear of is his arrest a second time for debt; and his
+letters of thanks to Cecil, who had rendered him assistance, are
+written in deep depression.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"For my purpose or course I desire to meddle as little as I can
+in the King's causes, his Majesty now abounding in counsel, and to
+follow my private thrift and practice, and to marry with some
+convenient advancement. For as for any ambition, I do assure your
+Honour, mine is quenched. In the Queen's, my excellent Mistress's,
+time the <i>quorum</i> was small: her service was a kind of
+freehold, and it was a more solemn time. All those points agreed
+with my nature and judgment. My ambition now I shall only put upon
+my pen, whereby I shall be able to maintain memory and merit of the
+times succeeding.</p>
+
+<p>"Lastly, for this divulged and almost prostituted title of
+knighthood, I could without charge, by your Honour's mean, be
+content to have it, both because of this late disgrace and because
+I have three new knights in my mess in Gray's Inn's commons; and
+because I have found out an alderman's daughter, an handsome
+maiden, to my liking."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Cecil, however, seems to have required that the money should be
+repaid by the day; and Bacon only makes a humble request, which, it
+might be supposed, could have been easily granted.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"IT MAY PLEASE YOUR GOOD LORDSHIP,&mdash;In answer of your last
+letter, your money shall be ready before your day: principal,
+interest, and costs of suit. So the sheriff promised, when I
+released errors; and a Jew takes no more. The rest cannot be
+forgotten, for I cannot forget your Lordship's <i>dum memor ipse
+mei</i>; and if there have <a name='Page_64' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 64'></a>been <i>aliquid nimis</i>, it shall be amended. And,
+to be plain with your Lordship, that will quicken me now which
+slackened me before. Then I thought you might have had more use of
+me than now I suppose you are like to have. Not but I think the
+impediment will be rather in my mind than in the matter or times.
+But to do you service I will come out of my religion at any
+time.</p>
+
+<p>"For my knighthood, I wish the manner might be such as might
+grace me, since the matter will not; I mean, that I might not be
+merely gregarious in a troop. The coronation is at hand. It may
+please your Lordship to let me hear from you speedily. So I
+continue your Lordship's ever much bounden,</p>
+
+<p>"FR. BACON.<br />
+ "From Gorhambury, this 16th of July, 1603."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>But it was not done. He "obtained his title, but not in a manner
+to distinguish him. He was knighted at Whitehall two days before
+the coronation, but had to share the honour with 300 others."</p>
+
+<p>It was not quite true that his "ambition was quenched." For the
+rest of Cecil's life Cecil was the first man at James's Court; and
+to the last there was one thing that Bacon would not appear to
+believe&mdash;he did not choose to believe that it was Cecil who
+kept him back from employment and honour. To the last he persisted
+in assuming that Cecil was the person who would help, if he could,
+a kinsman devoted to his interests and profoundly conscious of his
+worth. To the last he commended his cause to Cecil in terms of
+unstinted affection and confiding hope. It is difficult to judge of
+the sincerity of such language. The mere customary language of
+compliment employed by every one at this time was of a kind which
+to us sounds intolerable. It seems as if nothing that ingenuity
+could devise was too extravagant for an honest man to use, and for
+a man who respected himself to accept. It must not, indeed, be
+forgotten that conventionalities, as well as insincerity, differ in
+their forms in differ<a name='Page_65' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 65'></a>ent times; and that insincerity may lurk behind frank
+and clear words, when they are the fashion, as much as in what is
+like mere fulsome adulation. But words mean something, in spite of
+forms and fashions. When a man of great genius writes his private
+letters, we wish generally to believe on the whole what he says;
+and there are no limits to the esteem, the honour, the confidence,
+which Bacon continued to the end to express towards Cecil. Bacon
+appeared to trust him&mdash;appeared, in spite of continued
+disappointments, to rely on his good-will and good offices. But for
+one reason or another Bacon still remained in the shade. He was
+left to employ his time as he would, and to work his way by
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>He was not idle. He prepared papers which he meant should come
+before the King, on the pressing subjects of the day. The Hampton
+Court conference between the Bishops and the Puritan leaders was at
+hand, and he drew up a moderating paper on the <i>Pacification of
+the Church</i>. The feeling against him for his conduct towards
+Essex had not died away, and he addressed to Lord Mountjoy that
+<i>Apology concerning the Earl of Essex</i>, so full of interest,
+so skilfully and forcibly written, so vivid a picture of the
+Queen's ways with her servants, which has every merit except that
+of clearing Bacon from the charge of disloyalty to his best friend.
+The various questions arising out of the relations of the two
+kingdoms, now united under James, were presenting themselves. They
+were not of easy solution, and great mischief would follow if they
+were solved wrongly. Bacon turned his attention to them. He
+addressed a discourse to the King on the union of the two kingdoms,
+the first of a series of discussions on the subject which Bacon
+made peculiarly his own, and which, no doubt, first drew the King's
+attention and favour to him.</p>
+
+<p>But for the first year of James's reign he was unnoticed <a
+name='Page_66' class='pagenum' title='Page 66'></a>by the King, and
+he was able to give his attention more freely to the great thought
+and hope of his life. This time of neglect gave him the opportunity
+of leisurely calling together and examining the ideas which had
+long had hold of his mind about the state of human knowledge, about
+the possibilities of extending it, about the hopes and powers which
+that new knowledge opened, and about the methods of realising this
+great prospect. This, the passion of his life, never asleep even in
+the hottest days of business or the most hopeless days of defeat,
+must have had full play during these days of suspended public
+employment. He was a man who was not easily satisfied with his
+attempts to arrange the order and proportions of his plans for
+mastering that new world of unknown truth, which he held to be
+within the grasp of man if he would only dare to seize it; and he
+was much given to vary the shape of his work, and to try
+experiments in composition and even style. He wrote and rewrote.
+Besides what was finally published, there remains a larger quantity
+of work which never reached the stage of publication. He repeated
+over and over again the same thoughts, the same images and
+characteristic sayings. Among these papers is one which sums up his
+convictions about the work before him, and the vocation to which he
+had been called in respect of it. It is in the form of a "Proem" to
+a treatise on the <i>Interpretation of Nature</i>. It was never
+used in his published works; but, as Mr. Spedding says, it has a
+peculiar value as an authentic statement of what he looked upon as
+his special business in life. It is this mission which he states to
+himself in the following paper. It is drawn up in "stately Latin."
+Mr. Spedding's translation is no unworthy representation of the
+words of the great Prophet of Knowledge:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p><a name='Page_67' class='pagenum' title='Page 67'></a>
+"Believing that I was born for the service of mankind, and
+regarding the care of the Commonwealth as a kind of common property
+which, like the air and water, belongs to everybody, I set myself
+to consider in what way mankind might be best served, and what
+service I was myself best fitted by nature to perform.</p>
+
+<p>"Now among all the benefits that could be conferred upon
+mankind, I found none so great as the discovery of new arts,
+endowments, and commodities for the bettering of man's life.... But
+if a man could succeed, not in striking out some particular
+invention, however useful, but in kindling a light in
+nature&mdash;a light that should in its very rising touch and
+illuminate all the border regions that confine upon the circle of
+our present knowledge; and so spreading further and further should
+presently disclose and bring into sight all that is most hidden and
+secret in the world&mdash;that man (I thought) would be the
+benefactor indeed of the human race&mdash;the propagator of man's
+empire over the universe, the champion of liberty, the conqueror
+and subduer of necessities.</p>
+
+<p>"For myself, I found that I was fitted for nothing so well as
+for the study of Truth; as having a mind nimble and versatile
+enough to catch the resemblances of things (which is the chief
+point), and at the same time steady enough to fix and distinguish
+their subtler differences; as being gifted by nature with desire to
+seek, patience to doubt, fondness to meditate, slowness to assert,
+readiness to reconsider, carefulness to dispose and set in order;
+and as being a man that neither affects what is new nor admires
+what is old, and that hates every kind of imposture. So I thought
+my nature had a kind of familiarity and relationship with
+Truth.</p>
+
+<p>"Nevertheless, because my birth and education had seasoned me in
+business of State; and because opinions (so young as I was) would
+sometimes stagger me; and because I thought that a man's own
+country has some special claims upon him more than the rest of the
+world; and because I hoped that, if I rose to any place of honour
+in the State, I should have a larger command of industry and
+ability to help me in my work&mdash;for these reasons I both
+applied myself to acquire the arts of civil life, and commended my
+service, so far as in modesty and honesty I might, to the favour of
+such friends as had any influence. In which also I had another
+motive: for I felt that those things I have spoken of&mdash;be they
+great or small&mdash;reach no further than the condition and
+culture of this mortal life; and I was <a name='Page_68' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 68'></a>not without hope (the condition of
+religion being at that time not very prosperous) that if I came to
+hold office in the State, I might get something done too for the
+good of men's souls. When I found, however, that my zeal was
+mistaken for ambition, and my life had already readied the
+turning-point, and my breaking health reminded me how ill I could
+afford to be so slow, and I reflected, moreover, that in leaving
+undone the good that I could do by myself alone, and applying
+myself to that which could not be done without the help and consent
+of others, I was by no means discharging the duty that lay upon
+me&mdash;I put all those thoughts aside, and (in pursuance of my
+old determination) betook myself wholly to this work. Nor am I
+discouraged from it because I see signs in the times of the decline
+and overthrow of that knowledge and erudition which is now in use.
+Not that I apprehend any more barbarian invasions (unless possibly
+the Spanish empire should recover its strength, and having crushed
+other nations by arms should itself sink under its own weight); but
+the civil wars which may be expected, I think (judging from certain
+fashions which have come in of late), to spread through many
+countries&mdash;together with the malignity of sects, and those
+compendious artifices and devices which have crept into the place
+of solid erudition&mdash;seem to portend for literature and the
+sciences a tempest not less fatal, and one against which the
+Printing-office will be no effectual security. And no doubt but
+that fair-weather learning which is nursed by leisure, blossoms
+under reward and praise, which cannot withstand the shock of
+opinion, and is liable to be abused by tricks and quackery, will
+sink under such impediments as these. Far otherwise is it with that
+knowledge whose dignity is maintained by works of utility and
+power. For the injuries, therefore, which should proceed from the
+times, I am not afraid of them; and for the injuries which proceed
+from men, I am not concerned. For if any one charge me with seeking
+to be wise over-much, I answer simply that modesty and civil
+respect are fit for civil matters; in contemplations nothing is to
+be respected but Truth. If any one call on me for <i>works</i>, and
+that presently, I tell him frankly, without any imposture at all,
+that for me&mdash;a man not old, of weak health, my hands full of
+civil business, entering without guide or light upon an argument of
+all others the most obscure&mdash;I hold it enough to have
+constructed the machine, though I may not succeed in setting it on
+work.... If, again, any one ask me, not indeed for actual works,
+yet for definite premises <a name='Page_69' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 69'></a>and forecasts of the works that are to be, I would
+have him know that the knowledge which we now possess will not
+teach a man even what to <i>wish</i>. Lastly&mdash;though this is a
+matter of less moment&mdash;if any of our politicians, who used to
+make their calculations and conjectures according to persons and
+precedents, must needs interpose his judgment in a thing of this
+nature, I would but remind him how (according to the ancient fable)
+the lame man keeping the course won the race of the swift man who
+left it; and that there is no thought to be taken about precedents,
+for the thing is without precedent.</p>
+
+<p>"For myself, my heart is not set upon any of those things which
+depend upon external accidents. I am not hunting for fame: I have
+no desire to found a sect, after the fashion of heresiarchs; and to
+look for any private gain from such an undertaking as this I count
+both ridiculous and base. Enough for me the consciousness of
+well-deserving, and those real and effectual results with which
+Fortune itself cannot interfere."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>In 1604 James's first Parliament met, and with it Bacon returned
+to an industrious public life, which was not to be interrupted till
+it finally came to an end with his strange and irretrievable fall.
+The opportunity had come; and Bacon, patient, vigilant, and
+conscious of great powers and indefatigable energy, fully aware of
+all the conditions of the time, pushed at once to the front in the
+House of Commons. He lost no time in showing that he meant to make
+himself felt. The House of Commons had no sooner met than it was
+involved in a contest with the Chancery, with the Lords, and
+finally with the King himself, about its privileges&mdash;in this
+case its exclusive right to judge of the returns of its members.
+Bacon's time was come for showing the King both that he was willing
+to do him service, and that he was worth being employed. He took a
+leading part in the discussions, and was trusted by the House as
+their spokesman and reporter in the various conferences. The King,
+in his overweening confidence in <a name='Page_70' class='pagenum'
+title='Page 70'></a>his absolute prerogative, had, indeed, got
+himself into serious difficulty; for the privilege was one which it
+was impossible for the Commons to give up. But Bacon led the House
+to agree to an arrangement which saved their rights; and under a
+cloud of words of extravagant flattery he put the King in
+good-humour, and elicited from him the spontaneous proposal of a
+compromise which ended a very dangerous dispute. "The King's
+voice," said Bacon, in his report to the House, "was the voice of
+God in man, the good spirit of God in the mouth of man; I do not
+say the voice of God and not of man; I am not one of Herod's
+flatterers; a curse fell upon him that said it, a curse on him that
+suffered it. We might say, as was said to Solomon, We are glad, O
+King, that we give account to you, because you discern what is
+spoken."</p>
+
+<p>The course of this Parliament, in which Bacon was active and
+prominent, showed the King, probably for the first time, what Bacon
+was. The session was not so stormy as some of the later ones; but
+occasions arose which revealed to the King and to the House of
+Commons the deeply discordant assumptions and purposes by which
+each party was influenced, and which brought out Bacon's powers of
+adjusting difficulties and harmonising claims. He never wavered in
+his loyalty to his own House, where it is clear that his authority
+was great. But there was no limit to the submission and reverence
+which he expressed to the King, and, indeed, to his desire to bring
+about what the King desired, as far as it could be safely done.
+Dealing with the Commons, his policy was "to be content with the
+substance and not to stand on the form." Dealing with the King, he
+was forward to recognise all that James wanted recognised of his
+kingcraft and his absolute sovereignty. Bacon assailed with a force
+and keenness which <a name='Page_71' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 71'></a>showed what he could do as an opponent, the amazing
+and intolerable grievances arising out of the survival of such
+feudal customs as Wardship and Purveyance; customs which made over
+a man's eldest son and property, during a minority, to the keeping
+of the King, that is, to a King's favourite, and allowed the King's
+servants to cut down a man's timber before the windows of his
+house. But he urged that these grievances should be taken away with
+the utmost tenderness for the King's honour and the King's purse.
+In the great and troublesome questions relating to the Union he
+took care to be fully prepared. He was equally strong on points of
+certain and substantial importance, equally quick to suggest
+accommodations where nothing substantial was touched. His attitude
+was one of friendly and respectful independence. It was not
+misunderstood by the King. Bacon, who had hitherto been an unsworn
+and unpaid member of the Learned Counsel, now received his office
+by patent, with a small salary, and he was charged with the grave
+business of preparing the work for the Commissioners for the Union
+of the Kingdoms, in which, when the Commission met, he took a
+foremost and successful part.</p>
+
+<p>But the Parliament before which their report was to be laid did
+not meet till ten months after the work of the Commission was done
+(Dec., 1604&mdash;Nov., 1605). For nearly another year Bacon had no
+public work. The leisure was used for his own objects. He was
+interested in history in a degree only second to his interest in
+nature; indeed, but for the engrossing claims of his philosophy of
+nature, he might have been the first and one of the greatest of our
+historians. He addressed a letter to the Chancellor Ellesmere on
+the deficiencies of British history, and on the opportunities which
+offered for supplying <a name='Page_72' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 72'></a>them. He himself could at present do nothing; "but
+because there be so many good painters, both for hand and colours,
+it needeth but encouragement and instructions to give life and
+light unto it." But he mistook, in this as in other instances, the
+way in which such things are done. Men do not accomplish such
+things to order, but because their souls compel them, as he himself
+was building up his great philosophical structure, in the midst of
+his ambition and disappointment. And this interval of quiet enabled
+him to bring out his first public appeal on the subject which most
+filled his mind. He completed in English the <i>Two Books of the
+Advancement of Knowledge</i>, which were published at a book-shop
+at the gateway of Gray's Inn in Holborn (Oct., 1605). He intended
+that it should be published in Latin also; but he was dissatisfied
+with the ornate translation sent him from Cambridge, and probably
+he was in a hurry to get the book out. It was dedicated to the
+King, not merely by way of compliment, but with the serious hope
+that his interest might be awakened in the subjects which were
+nearest Bacon's heart. Like other of Bacon's hopes, it was
+disappointed. The King's studies and the King's humours were not of
+the kind to make him care for Bacon's visions of the future, or his
+eager desire to begin at once a novel method of investigating the
+facts and laws of nature; and the appeal to him fell dead. Bacon
+sent the book about to his friends with explanatory letters. To Sir
+T. Bodley he writes:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"I think no man may more truly say with the Psalm, <i>Multum
+incola fuit anima mea</i> [Ps. 120] than myself. For I do confess
+since I was of any understanding, my mind hath in effect been
+absent from that I have done; and in absence are many errors which
+I willingly acknowledge; and among them, this great one which led
+the rest: that knowing myself by inward calling to be fitter to
+hold a book <a name='Page_73' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 73'></a>than to play a part, I have led my life in civil
+causes, for which I was not very fit by nature, and more unfit by
+the preoccupation of my mind. Therefore, calling myself home, I
+have now enjoyed myself; whereof likewise I desire to make the
+world partaker."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>To Lord Salisbury, in a note of elaborate compliment, he
+describes his purpose by an image which he repeats more than once.
+"I shall content myself to awake better spirits, <i>like a
+bell-ringer, which is first up to call others to church</i>." But
+the two friends whose judgment he chiefly valued, and who, as on
+other occasions, were taken into his most intimate literary
+confidence, were Bishop Andrewes, his "inquisitor," and Toby
+Matthews, a son of the Archbishop of York, who had become a Roman
+Catholic, and lived in Italy, seeing a good deal of learned men
+there, apparently the most trusted of all Bacon's friends.</p>
+
+<p>When Parliament met again in November, 1605, the Gunpowder Plot
+and its consequences filled all minds. Bacon was not employed about
+it by Government, and his work in the House was confined to
+carrying on matters left unfinished from the previous session. On
+the rumour of legal promotions and vacancies Bacon once more
+applied to Salisbury for the Solicitorship (March, 1606). But no
+changes were made, and Bacon was "still next the door." In May,
+1606, he did what had for some time been in his thoughts: he
+married; not the lady whom Essex had tried to win for him, that
+Lady Hatton who became the wife of his rival Coke, but one whom
+Salisbury helped him to gain, an alderman's daughter, Alice
+Barnham, "an handsome maiden," with some money and a disagreeable
+mother, by her second marriage, Lady Packington. Bacon's curious
+love of pomp amused the gossips of the day. "Sir Francis Bacon,"
+writes Carleton to Chamberlain, "<a name='Page_74' class='pagenum'
+title='Page 74'></a>was married yesterday to his young wench, in
+Maribone Chapel. He was clad from top to toe in purple, and hath
+made himself and his wife such store of raiments of cloth of silver
+and gold that it draws deep into her portion." Of his married life
+we hear next to nothing: in his <i>Essay on Marriage</i> he is not
+enthusiastic in its praise; almost the only thing we know is that
+in his will, twenty years afterwards, he showed his dissatisfaction
+with his wife, who after his death married again. But it gave him
+an additional reason, and an additional plea, for pressing for
+preferment, and in the summer of 1606 the opening came. Coke was
+made Chief-Justice of the Common Pleas, leaving the Attorney's
+place vacant. A favourite of Salisbury's, Hobart, became Attorney,
+and Bacon hoped for some arrangement by which the Solicitor
+Doddridge might be otherwise provided for, and he himself become
+Solicitor. Hopeful as he was, and patient of disappointments, and
+of what other men would have thought injustice and faithlessness,
+he felt keenly both the disgrace and the inconvenience of so often
+expecting place, and being so often passed over. While the question
+was pending, he wrote to the King, the Chancellor, and Salisbury.
+His letter to the King is a record in his own words of his public
+services. To the Chancellor, whom he believed to be his supporter,
+he represented the discredit which he suffered&mdash;he was a
+common gaze and a speech;" "the little reputation which by his
+industry he gathered, being scattered and taken away by continual
+disgraces, <i>every new man coming above me</i>;" and his wife and
+his wife's friends were making him feel it. The letters show what
+Bacon thought to be his claims, and how hard he found it to get
+them recognised. To the Chancellor he urged, among other things,
+that time was slipping by&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p><a name='Page_75' class='pagenum' title='Page 75'></a> "I humbly
+pray your Lordship to consider that time groweth precious with me,
+and that a married man is seven years elder in his thoughts the
+first day.... And were it not to satisfy my wife's friends, and to
+get myself out of being a common gaze and a speech, I protest
+before God I would never speak word for it. But to conclude, as my
+honourable Lady your wife was some mean to make me to change the
+name of another, so if it please you to help me to change my own
+name, I can be but more and more bounden to you; and I am much
+deceived if your Lordship find not the King well inclined, and my
+Lord of Salisbury forward and affectionate."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>To Salisbury he writes:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"I may say to your Lordship, in the confidence of your poor
+kinsman, and of a man by you advanced, <i>Tu idem fer opem, qui
+spem dedisti</i>; for I am sure it was not possible for any living
+man to have received from another more significant and comfortable
+words of hope; your Lordship being pleased to tell me, during the
+course of my last service, that you would raise me; and that when
+you had resolved to raise a man, you were more careful of him than
+himself; and that what you had done for me in my marriage was a
+benefit to me, but of no use to your Lordship.... And I know, and
+all the world knoweth, that your Lordship is no dealer of holy
+water, but noble and real; and on my part I am of a sure ground
+that I have committed nothing that may deserve alteration. And
+therefore my hope is your Lordship will finish a good work, and
+consider that time groweth precious with me, and that I am now
+<i>vergentibus annis</i>. And although I know your fortune is not
+to need an hundred such as I am, yet I shall be ever ready to give
+you my best and first fruits, and to supply (as much as in me
+lieth) worthiness by thankfulness."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Still the powers were deaf to his appeals; at any rate he had to
+be content with another promise. Considering the ability which he
+had shown in Parliament, the wisdom and zeal with which he had
+supported the Government, and the important position which he held
+in the House of Commons, the neglect of him is unintelligible,
+except on two suppositions: that the Government, that is Cecil,
+were <a name='Page_76' class='pagenum' title='Page 76'></a>afraid
+of anything but the mere routine of law, as represented by such men
+as Hobart and Doddridge; or that Coke's hostility to him was
+unabated, and Coke still too important to be offended.</p>
+
+<p>Bacon returned to work when the Parliament met, November, 1606.
+The questions arising out of the Union, the question of
+naturalisation, its grounds and limits, the position of Scotchmen
+born <i>before</i> or <i>since</i> the King's accession, the
+<i>Antenati</i> and <i>Postnati</i>, the question of a union of
+laws, with its consequences, were discussed with great keenness and
+much jealous feeling. On the question of naturalisation Bacon took
+the liberal and larger view. The immediate union of laws he opposed
+as premature. He was a willing servant of the House, and the House
+readily made use of him. He reported the result of conferences,
+even when his own opinion was adverse to that of the House. And he
+reported the speeches of such persons as Lord Salisbury, probably
+throwing into them both form and matter of his own. At length,
+"silently, on the 25th of June," 1607, he was appointed
+Solicitor-General. He was then forty-seven.</p>
+
+<p>"It was also probably about this time," writes Mr. Spedding,
+"that Bacon finally settled the plan of his '<i>Great
+Instauration</i>,' and began to call it by that name."</p>
+
+<hr />
+<p><a name='Page_77' class='pagenum' title='Page 77'></a></p>
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_IV'></a>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+<h3>BACON SOLICITOR-GENERAL.</h3>
+
+<p><br />
+The great thinker and idealist, the great seer of a world of
+knowledge to which the men of his own generation were blind, and
+which they could not, even with his help, imagine a possible one,
+had now won the first step in that long and toilsome ascent to
+success in life, in which for fourteen years he had been baffled.
+He had made himself, for good and for evil, a servant of the
+Government of James I. He was prepared to discharge with zeal and
+care all his duties. He was prepared to perform all the services
+which that Government might claim from its servants. He had sought,
+he had passionately pressed to be admitted within that circle in
+which the will of the King was the supreme law; after that, it
+would have been ruin to have withdrawn or resisted. But it does not
+appear that the thought or wish to resist or withdraw ever
+presented itself; he had thoroughly convinced himself that in doing
+what the King required he was doing the part of a good citizen, and
+a faithful servant of the State and Commonwealth. The two lives,
+the two currents of purpose and effort, were still there. Behind
+all the wrangle of the courts and the devising of questionable
+legal subtleties to support some unconstitutional encroachment, or
+to outflank the defence of some obnoxious prisoner, the high
+philo<a name='Page_78' class='pagenum' title='Page 78'></a>sophical
+meditations still went on; the remembrance of their sweetness and
+grandeur wrung more than once from the jaded lawyer or the baffled
+counsellor the complaint, in words which had a great charm for him,
+<i>Multum incola fuit anima mea</i>&mdash;"My soul hath long dwelt"
+where it would not be. But opinion and ambition and the immense
+convenience of being great and rich and powerful, and the supposed
+necessities of his condition, were too strong even for his longings
+to be the interpreter and the servant of nature. There is no trace
+of the faintest reluctance on his part to be the willing minister
+of a court of which not only the principal figure, but the arbiter
+and governing spirit, was to be George Villiers, Duke of
+Buckingham.</p>
+
+<p>The first leisure that Bacon had after he was appointed
+Solicitor he used in a characteristic way. He sat down to make a
+minute stock-taking of his position and its circumstances. In the
+summer of 1608 he devoted a week of July to this survey of his
+life, its objects and its appliances; and he jotted down, day by
+day, through the week, from his present reflections, or he
+transcribed from former note-books, a series of notes in loose
+order, mostly very rough and not always intelligible, about
+everything that could now concern him. This curious and intimate
+record, which he called <i>Commentarius Solutus</i>, was discovered
+by Mr. Spedding, who not unnaturally had some misgivings about
+publishing so secret and so ambiguous a record of a man's most
+private confidences with himself. But there it was, and, as it was
+known, he no doubt decided wisely in publishing it as it stands; he
+has done his best to make it intelligible, and he has also done his
+best to remove any unfavourable impressions that might arise from
+it. It is singularly interesting as an <a name='Page_79' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 79'></a>evidence of Bacon's way of working,
+of his watchfulness, his industry, his care in preparing himself
+long beforehand for possible occasions, his readiness to take any
+amount of trouble about his present duties, his self-reliant desire
+for more important and difficult ones. It exhibits his habit of
+self-observation and self-correction, his care to mend his natural
+defects of voice, manner, and delivery; it is even more curious in
+showing him watching his own physical constitution and health, in
+the most minute details of symptoms and remedies, equally with a
+scientific and a practical object. It contains his estimate of his
+income, his expenditure, his debts, schedules of lands and jewels,
+his rules for the economy of his estate, his plans for his new
+gardens and terraces and ponds and buildings at Gorhambury. He was
+now a rich man, valuing his property at &pound;24,155 and his
+income at &pound;4975, burdened with a considerable debt, but not
+more than he might easily look to wipe out. But, besides all these
+points, there appear the two large interests of his life&mdash;the
+reform of philosophy, and his ideal of a great national policy. The
+"greatness of Britain" was one of his favourite subjects of
+meditation. He puts down in his notes the outline of what should be
+aimed at to secure and increase it; it is to make the various
+forces of the great and growing empire work together in harmonious
+order, without waste, without jealousy, without encroachment and
+collision; to unite not only the interests but the sympathies and
+aims of the Crown with those of the people and Parliament; and so
+to make Britain, now in peril from nothing but from the strength of
+its own discordant elements, that "Monarchy of the West" in
+reality, which Spain was in show, and, as Bacon always maintained,
+only in show. The survey of the condition of his philosophical
+enterprise takes more <a name='Page_80' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 80'></a>space. He notes the stages and points to which his
+plans have reached; he indicates, with a favourite quotation or
+apophthegm&mdash;"<i>Plus ultra</i>"&mdash;"<i>ausus vana
+contemnere</i>"&mdash;"<i>aditus non nisi sub persona infantis</i>"
+soon to be familiar to the world in his published
+writings&mdash;the lines of argument, sometimes alternative ones,
+which were before him; he draws out schemes of inquiry, specimen
+tables, distinctions and classifications about the subject of
+Motion, in English interlarded with Latin, or in Latin interlarded
+with English, of his characteristic and practical sort; he notes
+the various sources from which he might look for help and
+co-operation&mdash;"of learned men beyond the seas"&mdash;"to begin
+first in France to print it"&mdash;"laying for a place to command
+wits and pens;" he has his eye on rich and childless bishops, on
+the enforced idleness of State prisoners in the Tower, like
+Northumberland and Raleigh, on the great schools and universities,
+where he might perhaps get hold of some college for
+"Inventors"&mdash;as we should say, for the endowment of research.
+These matters fill up a large space of his notes. But his thoughts
+were also busy about his own advancement. And to these sheets of
+miscellaneous memoranda Bacon confided not only his occupations and
+his philosophical and political ideas, but, with a curious innocent
+unreserve, the arts and methods which he proposed to use in order
+to win the favour of the great and to pull down the reputation of
+his rivals. He puts down in detail how he is to recommend himself
+to the King and the King's favourites&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"To set on foot and maintain access with his Majesty, Dean of
+the Chapel, May, Murray. Keeping a course of access at the
+beginning of every term and vacation, with a memorial. To attend
+some time his repasts, or to fall into a course of familiar
+discourse. To find means to win a conceit, not open, but private,
+of being affectionate <a name='Page_81' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 81'></a>and assured to the Scotch, and fit to succeed
+Salisbury in his manage in that kind; Lord Dunbar, Duke of Lennox,
+and Daubiny: secret."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Then, again, of Salisbury&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"Insinuate myself to become privy to my Lord of Salisbury's
+estate." "To correspond with Salisbury in a habit of natural but no
+ways perilous boldness, and in vivacity, invention, care to cast
+and enterprise (but with due caution), for this manner I judge both
+in his nature freeth the stands, and in his ends pleaseth him best,
+and promiseth more use of me. I judge my standing out, and not
+favoured by Northampton, must needs do me good with Salisbury,
+especially comparative to the Attorney."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The Attorney Hobart filled the place to which Bacon had so long
+aspired, and which he thought, perhaps reasonably, that he could
+fill much better. At any rate, one of the points to which he recurs
+frequently in his notes is to exhort himself to make his own
+service a continual contrast to the Attorney's&mdash;"to have in
+mind and use the Attorney's weakness," enumerating a list of
+instances: "Too full of cases and distinctions. Nibbling solemnly,
+he distinguisheth but apprehends not;" "No gift with his pen in
+proclamations and the like;" and at last he draws out in a series
+of epigrams his view of "Hubbard's disadvantages"&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"Better at shift than at drift.... <i>Subtilitas sine
+acrimonia</i>.... No power with the judge.... He will alter a thing
+but not mend.... He puts into patents and deeds words not of law
+but of common sense and discourse.... Sociable save in profit....
+He doth depopulate mine office; otherwise called inclose.... I
+never knew any one of so good a speech with a worse pen." ...</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Then in a marginal note&mdash;"Solemn goose. Stately, leastwise
+nodd (?) crafty. They have made him believe that he is wondrous
+wise." And, finally, he draws up a <a name='Page_82' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 82'></a>paper of counsels and rules for his
+own conduct&mdash;"<i>Custum&aelig; apt&aelig; ad
+Individuum</i>"&mdash;which might supply an outline for an essay on
+the arts of behaviour proper for a rising official, a sequel to the
+biting irony of the essays on <i>Cunning</i> and <i>Wisdom for a
+Man's Self</i>.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"To furnish my L. of S. with ornaments for public speeches. To
+make him think how he should be reverenced by a Lord Chancellor, if
+I were; Princelike.</p>
+
+<p>"To prepare him for matters to be handled in Council or before
+the King aforehand, and to show him and yield him the fruits of my
+care.</p>
+
+<p>"To take notes in tables, when I attend the Council, and
+sometimes to move out of a memorial shewed and seen. To have
+particular occasions, fit and graceful and continual, to maintain
+private speech with every the great persons, and sometimes drawing
+more than one together. <i>Ex imitatione Att.</i> This specially in
+public places, and without care or affectation. At Council table to
+make good my L. of Salisb. motions and speeches, and for the rest
+sometimes one sometimes another; chiefly his, that is most earnest
+and in affection.</p>
+
+<p>"To suppress at once my speaking, with panting and labour of
+breath and voice. Not to fall upon the main too sudden, but to
+induce and intermingle speech of good fashion. To use at once upon
+entrance given of speech, though abrupt, to compose and draw in
+myself. To free myself at once from payt. (?) of formality and
+compliment, though with some show of carelessness, pride, and
+rudeness."</p>
+
+<p>(And then follows a long list of matters of business to be
+attended to.)</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>These arts of a court were not new; it was not new for men to
+observe them in their neighbours and rivals. What was new was the
+writing them down, with deliberate candour, among a man's private
+memoranda, as things to be done and with the intention of
+practising them. This of itself, it has been suggested, shows that
+they were unfamiliar and uncongenial to Bacon; for a man reminds
+himself of <a name='Page_83' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 83'></a>what he is apt to forget. But a man reminds himself
+also of what seems to him, at the moment, most important, and what
+he lays most stress upon. And it is clear that these are the rules,
+rhetorical and ethical, which Bacon laid down for himself in
+pursuing the second great object of his life&mdash;his official
+advancement; and that, whatever we think of them, they were the
+means which he deliberately approved.</p>
+
+<p>As long as Salisbury lived, the distrust which had kept Bacon so
+long in the shade kept him at a distance from the King's ear, and
+from influence on his counsels. Salisbury was the one Englishman in
+whom the King had become accustomed to confide, in his own
+conscious strangeness to English ways and real dislike and
+suspicion of them; Salisbury had an authority which no one else
+had, both from his relations with James at the end of Elizabeth's
+reign, and as the representative of her policy and the depositary
+of its traditions; and if he had lived, things might not, perhaps,
+have been better in James's government, but many things, probably,
+would have been different. But while Salisbury was supreme, Bacon,
+though very alert and zealous, was mainly busied with his official
+work; and the Solicitor's place had become, as he says, a "mean
+thing" compared with the Attorney's, and also an extremely
+laborious place&mdash;"one of the painfullest places in the
+kingdom." Much of it was routine, but responsible and fatiguing
+routine. But if he was not in Salisbury's confidence, he was
+prominent in the House of Commons. The great and pressing subject
+of the time was the increasing difficulties of the revenue, created
+partly by the inevitable changes of a growing state, but much more
+by the King's incorrigible wastefulness. It was impossible to
+realise completely the great dream and longing of the Stuart kings
+and their ministers to make the Crown independent <a name='Page_84'
+class='pagenum' title='Page 84'></a>of parliamentary supplies; but
+to dispense with these supplies as much as possible, and to make as
+much as possible of the revenue permanent, was the continued and
+fatal policy of the Court. The "Great Contract"&mdash;a scheme by
+which, in return for the surrender by the Crown of certain
+burdensome and dangerous claims of the Prerogative, the Commons
+were to assure a large compensating yearly income to the
+Crown&mdash;was Salisbury's favourite device during the last two
+years of his life. It was not a prosperous one. The bargain was an
+ill-imagined and not very decorous transaction between the King and
+his people. Both parties were naturally jealous of one another,
+suspicious of underhand dealing and tacit changes of terms, prompt
+to resent and take offence, and not easy to pacify when they
+thought advantage had been taken; and Salisbury, either by his own
+fault, or by yielding to the King's canny shiftiness, gave the
+business a more haggling and huckstering look than it need have
+had. Bacon, a subordinate of the Government, but a very important
+person in the Commons, did his part, loyally, as it seems, and
+skilfully in smoothing differences and keeping awkward questions
+from making their appearance. Thus he tried to stave off the risk
+of bringing definitely to a point the King's cherished claim to
+levy "impositions," or custom duties, on merchandise, by virtue of
+his prerogative&mdash;a claim which he warned the Commons not to
+dispute, and which Bacon, maintaining it as legal in theory, did
+his best to prevent them from discussing, and to persuade them to
+be content with restraining. Whatever he thought of the "Great
+Contract," he did what was expected of him in trying to gain for it
+fair play. But he made time for other things also. He advised, and
+advised soundly, on the plantation and finance of Ireland. It was a
+subject in which he took <a name='Page_85' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 85'></a>deep interest. A few years later, with only too sure
+a foresight, he gave the warning, "lest Ireland civil become more
+dangerous to us than Ireland savage." He advised&mdash;not soundly
+in point of law, but curiously in accordance with modern
+notions&mdash;about endowments; though, in this instance, in the
+famous will case of Thomas Sutton, the founder of the Charter
+House, his argument probably covered the scheme of a monstrous job
+in favour of the needy Court. And his own work went on in spite of
+the pressure of the Solicitor's place. To the first years of his
+official life belong three very interesting fragments, intended to
+find a provisional place in the plan of the "Great Instauration."
+To his friend Toby Matthews, at Florence, he sent in manuscript the
+great attack on the old teachers of knowledge, which is perhaps the
+most brilliant, and also the most insolently unjust and unthinking
+piece of rhetoric ever composed by him&mdash;the <i>Redargutio
+Philosophiarum</i>.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"I send you at this time the only part which hath any harshness;
+and yet I framed to myself an opinion, that whosoever allowed well
+of that preface which you so much commend, will not dislike, or at
+least ought not to dislike, this other speech of preparation; for
+it is written out of the same spirit, and out of the same
+necessity. Nay it doth more fully lay open that the question
+between me and the ancients is not of the virtue of the race, but
+of the rightness of the way. And to speak truth, it is to the other
+but as <i>palma</i> to <i>pugnus</i>, part of the same thing more
+large.... Myself am like the miller of Huntingdon, that was wont to
+pray for peace amongst the willows; for while the winds blew, the
+wind-mills wrought, and the water-mill was less customed. So I see
+that controversies of religion must hinder the advancement of
+sciences. Let me conclude with my perpetual wish towards yourself,
+that the approbation of yourself by your own discreet and temperate
+carriage, may restore you to your country, and your friends to your
+society. And so I commend you to God's goodness.</p>
+
+<p>"Gray's Inn, this 10th of October, 1609."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p><a name='Page_86' class='pagenum' title='Page 86'></a>To Bishop
+Andrewes he sent, also in manuscript, another piece, belonging to
+the same plan&mdash;the deeply impressive treatise called <i>Visa
+et Cogitata</i>&mdash;what Francis Bacon had seen of nature and
+knowledge, and what he had come by meditation to think of what he
+had seen. The letter is not less interesting than the last, in
+respect to the writer's purposes, his manner of writing, and his
+relations to his correspondent.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"MY VERY GOOD LORD,&mdash;Now your Lordship hath been so long in
+the church and the palace disputing between kings and popes,
+methinks you should take pleasure to look into the field, and
+refresh your mind with some matter of philosophy, though that
+science be now through age waxed a child again, and left to boys
+and young men; and because you were wont to make me believe you
+took liking to my writings, I send you some of this vacation's
+fruits, and thus much more of my mind and purpose. I hasten not to
+publish; perishing I would prevent. And I am forced to respect as
+well my times as the matter. For with me it is thus, and I think
+with all men in my case, if I bind myself to an argument, it
+loadeth my mind; but if I rid my mind of the present cogitation, it
+is rather a recreation. This hath put me into these miscellanies,
+which I purpose to suppress, if God give me leave to write a just
+and perfect volume of philosophy, which I go on with, though
+slowly. I send not your Lordship too much, lest it may glut you.
+Now let me tell you what my desire is. If your Lordship be so good
+now as when you were the good Dean of Westminster, my request to
+you is, that not by pricks, but by notes, you would mark unto me
+whatsoever shall seem unto you either not current in the style, or
+harsh to credit and opinion, or inconvenient for the person of the
+writer; for no man can be judge and party, and when our minds judge
+by reflection of ourselves, they are more subject to error. And
+though for the matter itself my judgement be in some things fixed,
+and not accessible by any man's judgement that goeth not my way,
+yet even in those things the admonition of a friend may make me
+express myself diversly. I would have come to your Lordship, but
+that I am hastening to my house in the country. And so I commend
+your Lordship to God's goodness."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p><a name='Page_87' class='pagenum' title='Page 87'></a>There was
+yet another production of this time, of which we have a notice from
+himself in a letter to Toby Matthews, the curious and ingenious
+little treatise on the <i>Wisdom of the Ancients</i>, "one of the
+most popular of his works," says Mr. Spedding, "in his own and in
+the next generation," but of value to us mainly for its quaint
+poetical colour, and the unexpected turns, like answers to a
+riddle, given to the ancient fables. When this work was published,
+it was the third time that he had appeared as an author in print.
+He thus writes about it and himself:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"MR. MATTHEWS,&mdash;I do heartily thank you for your letter of
+the 24th of August from Salamanca; and in recompense thereof I send
+you a little work of mine that hath begun to pass the world. They
+tell me my Latin is turned into silver, and become current. Had you
+been here, you should have been my inquisitor before it came forth;
+but I think the greatest inquisitor in Spain will allow it.... My
+great work goeth forward, and, after my manner, I alter ever when I
+add. So that nothing is finished till all be finished.</p>
+
+<p>"From Gray's Inn, the 17th of February, 1610."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>In the autumn of 1611 the Attorney-General was ill, and Bacon
+reminded both the King and Salisbury of his claim. He was afraid,
+he writes to the King, with an odd forgetfulness of the persistency
+and earnestness of his applications, "that <i>by reason of my
+slowness to sue</i>, and apprehend occasions upon the sudden,
+keeping one plain course of painful service, I may <i>in fine
+dierum</i> be in danger to be neglected and forgotten." The
+Attorney recovered, but Bacon, on New Year's Tide of 1611/12, wrote
+to Salisbury to thank him for his good-will. It is the last letter
+of Bacon's to Salisbury which has come down to us.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"IT MAY PLEASE YOUR GOOD LORDSHIP,&mdash;I would entreat the new
+year to answer for the old, in my humble thanks to your Lordship,
+both for many your favours, and chiefly that upon the occasion of
+<a name='Page_88' class='pagenum' title='Page 88'></a>Mr.
+Attorney's infirmity I found your Lordship even as I would wish.
+This doth increase a desire in me to express my thankful mind to
+your Lordship; hoping that though I find age and decays grow upon
+me, yet I may have a flash or two of spirit left to do you service.
+And I do protest before God, without compliment or any light vein
+of mind, that if I knew in what course of life to do you best
+service, I would take it, and make my thoughts, which now fly to
+many pieces, be reduced to that center. But all this is no more
+than I am, which is not much, but yet the entire of him that
+is&mdash;"</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>In the following May (May 24, 1612) Salisbury died. From this
+date James passed from government by a minister, who, whatever may
+have been his faults, was laborious, public-spirited, and a
+statesman, into his own keeping and into the hands of favourites,
+who cared only for themselves. With Cecil ceased the traditions of
+the days of Elizabeth and Burghley, in many ways evil and cruel
+traditions, but not ignoble and sordid ones; and James was left
+without the stay, and also without the check, which Cecil's power
+had been to him. The field was open for new men and new ways; the
+fashions and ideas of the time had altered during the last ten
+years, and those of the Queen's days had gone out of date. Would
+the new turn out for the better or the worse? Bacon, at any rate,
+saw the significance of the change and the critical eventfulness of
+the moment. It was his habit of old to send memorials of advice to
+the heads of the Government, apparently without such suggestions
+seeming more intrusive or officious than a leading article seems
+now, and perhaps with much the same effect. It was now a time to do
+so, if ever; and he was in an official relation to the King which
+entitled him to proffer advice. He at once prepared to lay his
+thoughts before the King, and to suggest that he could do far
+better service than Cecil, and was ready to take his place. The
+policy of the "Great Contract" had certainly broken <a name=
+'Page_89' class='pagenum' title='Page 89'></a>down, and the King,
+under Cecil's guidance, had certainly not known how to manage an
+English parliament. In writing to the King he found it hard to
+satisfy himself. Several draft letters remain, and it is not
+certain which of them, if any, was sent. But immediately on
+Salisbury's death he began, May 29th, a letter in which he said
+that he had never yet been able to show his affection to the King,
+"having been as a hawk tied to another's fist;" and if, "as was
+said to one that spake great words, <i>Amice, verba tua desiderant
+civitatem</i>, your Majesty say to me, <i>Bacon, your words require
+a place to speak them</i>," yet that "place or not place" was with
+the King. But the draft breaks off abruptly, and with the date of
+the 31st we have the following:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"Your Majesty hath lost a great subject and a great servant. But
+if I should praise him in propriety, I should say that he was a fit
+man to keep things from growing worse, but no very fit man to
+reduce things to be much better. For he loved to have the eyes of
+all Israel a little too much upon himself, and to have all business
+still under the hammer, and like clay in the hands of the potter,
+to mould it as he thought good; so that he was more <i>in
+operatione</i> than <i>in opere</i>. And though he had fine
+passages of action, yet the real conclusions came slowly on. So
+that although your Majesty hath grave counsellors and worthy
+persons left, yet you do as it were turn a leaf, wherein if your
+Majesty shall give a frame and constitution to matters, before you
+place the persons, in my simple opinion it were not amiss. But the
+great matter and most instant for the present, is the consideration
+of a Parliament, for two effects: the one for the supply of your
+estate, the other for the better knitting of the hearts of your
+subjects unto your Majesty, according to your infinite merit; for
+both which, Parliaments have been and are the antient and
+honourable remedy.</p>
+
+<p>"Now because I take myself to have a little skill in that
+region, as one that ever affected that your Majesty mought in all
+your causes not only prevail, but prevail with satisfaction of the
+inner man; and though no man can say but I was a perfect and
+peremptory royalist, yet every man makes me believe that I was
+never one hour out of <a name='Page_90' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 90'></a>credit with the Lower House; my desire is to know
+whether your Majesty will give me leave to meditate and propound
+unto you some preparative remembrances touching the future
+Parliament."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Whether he sent this or not, he prepared another draft. What had
+happened in the mean while we know not, but Bacon was in a bitter
+mood, and the letter reveals, for the first time, what was really
+in Bacon's heart about the "great subject and great servant," of
+whom he had just written so respectfully, and with whom he had been
+so closely connected for most of his life. The fierceness which had
+been gathering for years of neglect and hindrance under that placid
+and patient exterior broke out. He offered himself as Cecil's
+successor in business of State. He gave his reason for being
+hopeful of success. Cecil's bitterest enemy could not have given it
+more bitterly.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"My principal end being to do your Majesty service, I crave
+leave to make at this time to your Majesty this most humble
+oblation of myself. I may truly say with the psalm, <i>Multum
+incola fuit anima mea</i>, for my life hath been conversant in
+things wherein I take little pleasure. Your Majesty may have heard
+somewhat that my father was an honest man, and somewhat you may
+have seen of myself, though not to make any true judgement by,
+because I have hitherto had only <i>potestatem verborum</i>, nor
+that neither. I was three of my young years bred with an ambassador
+in France, and since I have been an old truant in the school-house
+of your council-chamber, though on the second form, yet longer than
+any that now sitteth hath been upon the head form. If your Majesty
+find any aptness in me, or if you find any scarcity in others,
+whereby you may think it fit for your service to remove me to
+business of State, although I have a fair way before me for profit
+(and by your Majesty's grace and favour for honour and
+advancement), and in a course less exposed to the blasts of
+fortune, <i>yet now that he is gone, quo vivente virtutibus
+certissimum exitium</i>, I will be ready as a chessman to be
+wherever your Majesty's royal hand shall set me. Your Majesty will
+bear me witness, I have not suddenly opened myself thus far. I have
+looked <a name='Page_91' class='pagenum' title='Page 91'></a>upon
+others, I see the exceptions, I see the distractions, and I fear
+Tacitus will be a prophet, <i>magis alii homines quam alii
+mores</i>. I know mine own heart, and I know not whether God that
+hath touched my heart with the affection may not touch your royal
+heart to discern it. Howsoever, I shall at least go on honestly in
+mine ordinary course, and supply the rest in prayers for you,
+remaining, etc."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>This is no hasty outburst. In a later paper on the true way of
+retrieving the disorders of the King's finances, full of large and
+wise counsel, after advising the King not to be impatient, and
+assuring him that a state of debt is not so intolerable&mdash;"for
+it is no new thing for the greatest Kings to be in debt," and all
+the great men of the Court had been in debt without any "manner of
+diminution of their greatness"&mdash;he returns to the charge in
+detail against Salisbury and the Great Contract.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"My second prayer is, that your Majesty&mdash;in respect to the
+hasty freeing of your state&mdash;would not descend to any means,
+or degree of means, which carrieth not a symmetry with your Majesty
+and greatness. <i>He is gone from whom those courses did wholly
+flow.</i> To have your wants and necessities in particular as it
+were hanged up in two tablets before the eyes of your lords and
+commons, to be talked of for four months together; To have all your
+courses to help yourself in revenue or profit put into printed
+books, which were wont to be held <i>arcana imperii</i>; To have
+such worms of aldermen to lend for ten in the hundred upon good
+assurance, and with such entreaty (?) as if it should save the bark
+of your fortune; To contract still where mought be had the readiest
+payment, and not the best bargain; To stir a number of projects for
+your profit, and then to blast them, and leave your Majesty nothing
+but the scandal of them; To pretend even carriage between your
+Majesty's rights and ease of the people, and to satisfy neither.
+These courses and others the like I hope are gone with the deviser
+of them; which have turned your Majesty to inestimable
+prejudice."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>And what he thought of saying, but on further consideration
+struck out, was the following. It is no wonder <a name='Page_92'
+class='pagenum' title='Page 92'></a>that he struck it out, but it
+shows what he felt towards Cecil.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"I protest to God, though I be not superstitious, when I saw
+your M.'s book against Vorstius and Arminius, and noted your zeal
+to deliver the majesty of God from the vain and indign
+comprehensions of heresy and degenerate philosophy, as you had by
+your pen formerly endeavoured to deliver kings from the usurpation
+of Rome, <i>perculsit illico animum</i> that God would set shortly
+upon you some visible favour, <i>and let me not live if I thought
+not of the taking away of that man</i>."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>And from this time onwards he scarcely ever mentions Cecil's
+name in his correspondence with James but with words of
+condemnation, which imply that Cecil's mischievous policy was the
+result of private ends. Yet this was the man to whom he had written
+the "New Year's Tide" letter six months before; a letter which is
+but an echo to the last of all that he had been accustomed to write
+to Cecil when asking assistance or offering congratulation. Cecil
+had, indeed, little claim on Bacon's gratitude; he had spoken him
+fair in public, and no doubt in secret distrusted and thwarted him.
+But to the last Bacon did not choose to acknowledge this. Had James
+disclosed something of his dead servant, who left some strange
+secrets behind him, which showed his unsuspected hostility to
+Bacon? Except on this supposition (but there is nothing to support
+it), no exaggeration of the liberty allowed to the language of
+compliment is enough to clear Bacon of an insincerity which is
+almost inconceivable in any but the meanest tools of power.</p>
+
+<p>"I assure myself," wrote Bacon to the King, "your Majesty taketh
+not me for one of a busy nature; for my estate being free from all
+difficulties, and I having such a large field for contemplation, as
+I have partly and shall much <a name='Page_93' class='pagenum'
+title='Page 93'></a>more make manifest unto your Majesty and the
+world, to occupy my thoughts, nothing could make me active but love
+and affection." So Bacon described his position with questionable
+accuracy&mdash;for his estate was not "free from
+difficulties"&mdash;in the new time coming. He was still kept out
+of the inner circle of the Council; but from the moment of
+Salisbury's death he became a much more important person. He still
+sued for advancement, and still met with disappointment; the "mean
+men" still rose above him. The lucrative place of Master of the
+Wards was vacated by Salisbury's death. Bacon was talked of for it,
+and probably expected it, for he drew up new rules for it, and a
+speech for the new master; but the office and the speech went to
+Sir George Carey. Soon after Sir George Carey died. Bacon then
+applied for it through the new favourite, Rochester. "He was so
+confident of the place that he put most of his men into new
+cloaks;" and the world of the day amused itself at his
+disappointment, when the place was given to another "mean man," Sir
+Walter Cope, of whom the gossips wrote that if the "last two
+Treasurers could look out of their graves to see those successors
+in that place, they would be out of countenance with themselves,
+and say to the world <i>quantum mutatus</i>." But Bacon's hand and
+counsel appear more and more in important matters&mdash;the
+improvement of the revenue; the defence of extreme rights of the
+prerogative in the case against Whitelocke; the great question of
+calling a parliament, and of the true and "princely" way of dealing
+with it. His confidential advice to the King about calling a
+parliament was marked by his keen perception of the facts of the
+situation; it was marked too by his confident reliance on skilful
+indirect methods and trust in the look of things; it bears traces
+also of his bitter feeling against Salisbury, whom he charges with
+treacherously fo<a name='Page_94' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 94'></a>menting the opposition of the last Parliament. There
+was no want of worldly wisdom in it; certainly it was more adapted
+to James's ideas of state-craft than the simpler plan of Sir Henry
+Nevill, that the King should throw himself frankly on the loyalty
+and good-will of Parliament. And thus he came to be on easy terms
+with James, who was quite capable of understanding Bacon's resource
+and nimbleness of wit. In the autumn of 1613 the Chief-Justiceship
+of the King's Bench became vacant. Bacon at once gave the King
+reasons for sending Coke from the Common Pleas&mdash;where he was a
+check on the prerogative&mdash;to the King's Bench, where he could
+do less harm; while Hobart went to the Common Pleas. The promotion
+was obvious, but the Common Pleas suited Coke better, and the place
+was more lucrative. Bacon's advice was followed. Coke, very
+reluctantly, knowing well who had given it, and why, "not only
+weeping himself but followed by the tears" of all the Court of
+Common Pleas, moved up to the higher post. The Attorney Hobart
+succeeded, and Bacon at last became Attorney (October 27, 1613). In
+Chamberlain's gossip we have an indication, such as occurs only
+accidentally, of the view of outsiders: "There is a strong
+apprehension that little good is to be expected by this change, and
+that Bacon may prove a dangerous instrument."</p>
+
+<hr />
+<p><a name='Page_95' class='pagenum' title='Page 95'></a></p>
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_V'></a>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+<h3>BACON ATTORNEY-GENERAL AND CHANCELLOR.</h3>
+
+<p><br />
+Thus, at last, at the age of fifty-two, Bacon had gained the place
+which Essex had tried to get for him at thirty-two. The time of
+waiting had been a weary one, and it is impossible not to see that
+it had been hurtful to Bacon. A strong and able man, very eager to
+have a field for his strength and ability, who is kept out of it,
+as he thinks unfairly, and is driven to an attitude of suppliant
+dependency in pressing his claim on great persons who amuse him
+with words, can hardly help suffering in the humiliating process.
+It does a man no good to learn to beg, and to have a long training
+in the art. And further, this long delay kept up the distraction of
+his mind between the noble work on which his soul was bent, and the
+necessities of that "civil" or professional and political life by
+which he had to maintain his estate. All the time that he was
+"canvassing" (it is his own word) for office, and giving up his
+time and thoughts to the work which it involved, the great
+<i>Instauration</i> had to wait his hours of leisure; and his
+exclamation, so often repeated, <i>Multum incola fuit anima
+mea</i>, bears witness to the longings that haunted him in his
+hours of legal drudgery, or in the service of his not very thankful
+employers. Not but that he found compensation in the interest of
+public questions, in the company <a name='Page_96' class='pagenum'
+title='Page 96'></a>of the great, in the excitement of state-craft
+and state employment, in the pomp and enjoyment of court life. He
+found too much compensation; it was one of his misfortunes. But his
+heart was always sound in its allegiance to knowledge; and if he
+had been fortunate enough to have risen earlier to the greatness
+which he aimed at as a vantage-ground for his true work, or if he
+had had self-control to have dispensed with wealth and
+position&mdash;if he had escaped the long necessity of being a
+persistent and still baffled suitor&mdash;we might have had as a
+completed whole what we have now only in great fragments, and we
+should have been spared the blots which mar a career which ought to
+have been a noble one.</p>
+
+<p>The first important matter that happened after Bacon's new
+appointment was the Essex divorce case, and the marriage of Lady
+Essex with the favourite whom Cecil's death had left at the height
+of power, and who from Lord Rochester was now made Earl of
+Somerset. With the divorce, the beginning of the scandals and
+tragedies of James's reign, Bacon had nothing to do. At the
+marriage which followed Bacon presented as his offering a masque,
+performed by the members of Gray's Inn, of which he bore the
+charges, and which cost him the enormous sum of &pound;2000.
+Whether it were to repay his obligations to the Howards, or in lieu
+of a "fee" to Rochester, who levied toll on all favours from the
+King, it can hardly be said, as has been suggested, to be a protest
+against the great abuse of the times, the sale of offices for
+money. The "very splendid trifle, the Masque of Flowers," was one
+form of the many extravagant tributes paid but too willingly to
+high-handed worthlessness, of which the deeper and darker guilt was
+to fill all faces with shame two years afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>As Attorney, Bacon had to take a much more prominent <a name=
+'Page_97' class='pagenum' title='Page 97'></a>part in affairs,
+legal, criminal, constitutional, administrative, than he had yet
+been allowed to have. We know that it was his great object to show
+how much more active and useful an Attorney he could be than either
+Coke or Hobart; and as far as unflagging energy and high ability
+could make a good public servant, he fully carried out his purpose.
+In Parliament, the "addled Parliament" of 1614, in which he sat for
+the University of Cambridge, he did his best to reconcile what were
+fast becoming irreconcilable, the claims and prerogatives of an
+absolute king, irritable, suspicious, exacting, prodigal, with the
+ancient rights and liberties, growing stronger in their demands by
+being denied, resisted, or outwitted, of the popular element in the
+State. In the trials, which are so large and disagreeable a part of
+the history of these years&mdash;trials arising out of violent
+words provoked by the violent acts of power, one of which,
+Peacham's, became famous, because in the course of it torture was
+resorted to, or trials which witnessed to the corruption of the
+high society of the day, like the astounding series of arraignments
+and condemnations following on the discoveries relating to
+Overbury's murder, which had happened just before the Somerset
+marriage&mdash;Bacon had to make the best that he could for the
+cruel and often unequal policy of the Court; and Bacon must take
+his share in the responsibility for it. An effort on James's part
+to stop duelling brought from Bacon a worthier piece of service, in
+the shape of an earnest and elaborate argument against it, full of
+good sense and good feeling, but hopelessly in advance of the time.
+On the many questions which touched the prerogative, James found in
+his Attorney a ready and skilful advocate of his claims, who knew
+no limit to them but in the consideration of what was safe and
+prudent to assert. He was a better and more states<a name='Page_98'
+class='pagenum' title='Page 98'></a>manlike counsellor, in his
+unceasing endeavours to reconcile James to the expediency of
+establishing solid and good relations with his Parliament, and in
+his advice as to the wise and hopeful ways of dealing with it.
+Bacon had no sympathy with popular wants and claims; of popularity,
+of all that was called popular, he had the deepest suspicion and
+dislike; the opinions and the judgment of average men he despised,
+as a thinker, a politician, and a courtier; the "malignity of the
+people" he thought great. "I do not love," he says, "the word
+<i>people</i>." But he had a high idea of what was worthy of a
+king, and was due to the public interests, and he saw the folly of
+the petty acts and haughty words, the use of which James could not
+resist. In his new office he once more urged on, and urged in vain,
+his favourite project for revising, simplifying, and codifying the
+law. This was a project which would find little favour with Coke,
+and the crowd of lawyers who venerated him&mdash;men whom Bacon
+viewed with mingled contempt and apprehension both in the courts
+and in Parliament where they were numerous, and whom he more than
+once advised the King to bridle and keep "in awe." Bacon presented
+his scheme to the King in a Proposition, or, as we should call it,
+a Report. It is very able and interesting; marked with his
+characteristic comprehensiveness and sense of practical needs, and
+with a confidence in his own knowledge of law which contrasts
+curiously with the current opinion about it. He speaks with the
+utmost honour of Coke's work, but he is not afraid of a comparison
+with him. "I do assure your Majesty," he says, "I am in good hope
+that when Sir Edward Coke's Reports and my Rules and Decisions
+shall come to posterity, there will be (whatever is now thought)
+question who was the greater lawyer." But the project, though it
+was enter<a name='Page_99' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 99'></a>tained and discussed in Parliament, came to nothing.
+No one really cared about it except Bacon.</p>
+
+<p>But in these years (1615 and 1616) two things happened of the
+utmost consequence to him. One was the rise, more extravagant than
+anything that England had seen for centuries, and in the end more
+fatal, of the new favourite, who from plain George Villiers became
+the all-powerful Duke of Buckingham. Bacon, like the rest of the
+world, saw the necessity of bowing before him; and Bacon persuaded
+himself that Villiers was pre-eminently endowed with all the gifts
+and virtues which a man in his place would need. We have a series
+of his letters to Villiers; they are of course in the complimentary
+vein which was expected; but if their language is only compliment,
+there is no language left for expressing what a man wishes to be
+taken for truth. The other matter was the humiliation, by Bacon's
+means and in his presence, of his old rival Coke. In the dispute
+about jurisdiction, always slumbering and lately awakened and
+aggravated by Coke, between the Common Law Courts and the Chancery,
+Coke had threatened the Chancery with Pr&aelig;munire. The King's
+jealousy took alarm, and the Chief-Justice was called before the
+Council. There a decree, based on Bacon's advice and probably drawn
+up by him, peremptorily overruled the legal doctrine maintained by
+the greatest and most self-confident judge whom the English courts
+had seen. The Chief-Justice had to acquiesce in this reading of the
+law; and then, as if such an affront were not enough, Coke was
+suspended from his office, and, further, enjoined to review and
+amend his published reports, where they were inconsistent with the
+view of law which on Bacon's authority the Star Chamber had adopted
+(June, 1616). This he affected to <a name='Page_100' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 100'></a>do, but the corrections were
+manifestly only colourable; his explanations of his legal heresies
+against the prerogative, as these heresies were formulated by the
+Chancellor and Bacon, and presented to him for recantation, were
+judged insufficient; and in a decree, prefaced by reasons drawn up
+by Bacon, in which, besides Coke's errors of law, his "deceit,
+contempt, and slander of the Government," his "perpetual turbulent
+carriage," and his affectation of popularity, were noted&mdash;he
+was removed from his office (Nov., 1616). So, for the present, the
+old rivalry had ended in a triumph for Bacon. Bacon, whom Coke had
+so long headed in the race, whom he had sneered at as a superficial
+pretender to law, and whose accomplishments and enthusiasm for
+knowledge he utterly despised, had not only defeated him, but
+driven him from his seat with dishonour. When we remember what Coke
+was, what he had thought of Bacon, and how he prized his own unique
+reputation as a representative of English law, the effects of such
+a disgrace on a man of his temper cannot easily be exaggerated.</p>
+
+<p>But for the present Bacon had broken through the spell which had
+so long kept him back. He won a great deal of the King's
+confidence, and the King was more and more ready to make use of
+him, though by no means equally willing to think that Bacon knew
+better than himself. Bacon's view of the law, and his resources of
+argument and expression to make it good, could be depended upon in
+the keen struggle to secure and enlarge the prerogative which was
+now beginning. In the prerogative both James and Bacon saw the
+safety of the State and the only reasonable hope of good
+government; but in Bacon's larger and more elevated views of
+policy&mdash;of a policy worthy of a great king, and a king of
+England&mdash;James <a name='Page_101' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 101'></a>was not likely to take much interest. The memorials
+which it was Bacon's habit to present on public affairs were wasted
+on one who had so little to learn from others&mdash;so he thought
+and so all assured him&mdash;about the secrets of empire. Still
+they were proofs of Bacon's ready mind; and James, even when he
+disagreed with Bacon's opinion and arguments, was too clever not to
+see their difference from the work of other men. Bacon rose in
+favour; and from the first he was on the best of terms with
+Villiers. He professed to Villiers the most sincere devotion.
+According to his custom he presented him with a letter of wise
+advice on the duties and behaviour of a favourite. He at once
+began, and kept up with him to the end, a confidential
+correspondence on matters of public importance. He made it clear
+that he depended upon Villiers for his own personal prospects, and
+it had now become the most natural thing that Bacon should look
+forward to succeeding the Lord Chancellor, Ellesmere, who was fast
+failing. Bacon had already (Feb. 12, 1615/16). in terms which seem
+strange to us, but were less strange then, set forth in a letter to
+the King the reasons why he should be Chancellor; criticising
+justly enough, only that he was a party interested, the
+qualifications of other possible candidates, Coke, Hobart, and the
+Archbishop Abbott. Coke would be "an overruling nature in an
+overruling place," and "popular men were no sure mounters for your
+Majesty's saddle." Hobart was incompetent. As to Abbott, the
+Chancellor's place required "a whole man," and to have both
+jurisdiction, spiritual and temporal, "was fit only for a king."
+The promise that Bacon should have the place came to him three days
+afterwards through Villiers. He acknowledged it in a burst of
+gratitude (Feb. 15, 1615/16). "I will now wholly rely on your
+excellent and happy <a name='Page_102' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 102'></a>self.... I am yours surer to you than my own life.
+For, as they speak of the Turquoise stone in a ring, I will break
+into twenty pieces before you bear the least fall." They were
+unconsciously prophetic words. But Ellesmere lasted longer than was
+expected. It was not till a year after this promise that he
+resigned. On the 7th of March, 1616/17, Bacon received the seals.
+He expresses his obligations to Villiers, now Lord Buckingham, in
+the following letter:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"MY DEAREST LORD,&mdash;It is both in cares and kindness that
+small ones float up to the tongue, and great ones sink down into
+the heart with silence. Therefore I could speak little to your
+Lordship to-day, neither had I fit time; but I must profess thus
+much, that in this day's work you are the truest and perfectest
+mirror and example of firm and generous friendship that ever was in
+court. And I shall count every day lost, wherein I shall not either
+study your well-doing in thought, or do your name honour in speech,
+or perform you service in deed. Good my Lord, account and accept me
+your most bounden and devoted friend and servant of all men
+living,</p>
+
+<p>"March 7, 1616 (<i>i.e.</i> 1616/1617).<br />
+ FR. BACON, C.S."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>He himself believed the appointment to be a popular one. "I know
+I am come in," he writes to the King soon after, "with as strong an
+envy of some particulars as with the love of the general." On the
+7th of May, 1617, he took his seat in Chancery with unusual pomp
+and magnificence, and set forth, in an opening speech, with all his
+dignity and force, the duties of his great office and his sense of
+their obligation. But there was a curious hesitation in treating
+him as other men were treated in like cases. He was only "Lord
+Keeper." It was not till the following January (1617/18) that he
+received the office of Lord Chancellor. It was not till half a year
+afterwards that he was made a Peer. Then he became Baron Verulam
+(July, 1618), and in January, 1620/21, Viscount St. Alban's.</p>
+
+<p><a name='Page_103' class='pagenum' title='Page 103'></a>From
+this time Bacon must be thought of, first and foremost, as a Judge
+in the great seat which he had so earnestly sought. It was the
+place not merely of law, which often tied the judge's hands
+painfully, but of true justice, when law failed to give it. Bacon's
+ideas of the duties of a judge were clear and strong, as he showed
+in various admirable speeches and charges: his duties as regards
+his own conduct and reputation; his duties in keeping his
+subordinates free from the taint of corruption. He was not ignorant
+of the subtle and unacknowledged ways in which unlawful gains may
+be covered by custom, and an abuse goes on because men will not
+choose to look at it. He entered on his office with the full
+purpose of doing its work better than it had ever been done. He saw
+where it wanted reforming, and set himself at once to reform. The
+accumulation and delay of suits had become grievous; at once he
+threw his whole energy into the task of wiping out the arrears
+which the bad health of his predecessor and the traditional
+sluggishness of the court had heaped up. In exactly three months
+from his appointment he was able to report that these arrears had
+been cleared off. "This day" (June 8, 1617), he writes to
+Buckingham, "I have made even with the business of the kingdom for
+common justice. Not one cause unheard. The lawyers drawn dry of all
+the motions they were to make. Not one petition unheard. And this I
+think could not be said in our time before."</p>
+
+<p>The performance was splendid, and there is no reason to think
+that the work so rapidly done was not well done. We are assured
+that Bacon's decisions were unquestioned, and were not complained
+of. At the same time, before this allegation is accepted as
+conclusive proof of the public satisfaction, it must be remembered
+that the question <a name='Page_104' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 104'></a>of his administration of justice, which was at last
+to assume such strange proportions, has never been so thoroughly
+sifted as, to enable us to pronounce upon it, it should be. The
+natural tendency of Bacon's mind would undoubtedly be to judge
+rightly and justly; but the negative argument of the silence at the
+time of complainants, in days when it was so dangerous to question
+authority, and when we have so little evidence of what men said at
+their firesides, is not enough to show that he never failed.</p>
+
+<p>But the serious thing is that Bacon subjected himself to two of
+the most dangerous influences which can act on the mind of a
+judge&mdash;the influence of the most powerful and most formidable
+man in England, and the influence of presents, in money and other
+gifts. From first to last he allowed Buckingham, whom no man, as
+Bacon soon found, could displease except at his own peril, to write
+letters to him on behalf of suitors whose causes were before him;
+and he allowed suitors, not often while the cause was pending, but
+sometimes even then, to send him directly, or through his servants,
+large sums of money. Both these things are explained. It would have
+been characteristic of Bacon to be confident that he could defy
+temptation: these habits were the fashion of the time, and
+everybody took them for granted; Buckingham never asked his good
+offices beyond what Bacon thought just and right, and asked them
+rather for the sake of expedition than to influence his judgment.
+And as to the money presents&mdash;every office was underpaid; this
+was the common way of acknowledging pains and trouble: it was
+analogous to a doctor's or a lawyer's fee now. And there is no
+proof that either influence ever led Bacon to do wrong. This has
+been said, and said with some degree of force. But if it shows that
+Bacon was not in this matter below his age, it <a name='Page_105'
+class='pagenum' title='Page 105'></a>shows that he was not above
+it. No one knew better than Bacon that there were no more certain
+dangers to honesty and justice than the interference and
+solicitation of the great, and the old famous pest of bribes, of
+which all histories and laws were full. And yet on the highest seat
+of justice in the realm he, the great reformer of its abuses,
+allowed them to make their customary haunt. He did not mean to do
+wrong: his conscience was clear; he had not given thought to the
+mischief they must do, sooner or later, to all concerned with the
+Court of Chancery. With a magnificent carelessness he could afford
+to run safely a course closely bordering on crime, in which meaner
+men would sin and be ruined.</p>
+
+<p>Before six months were over Bacon found on what terms he must
+stand with Buckingham. By a strange fatality, quite
+unintentionally, he became dragged into the thick of the scandalous
+and grotesque dissensions of the Coke family. The Court was away
+from London in the North; and Coke had been trying, not without
+hope of success, to recover the King's favour. Coke was a rich man,
+and Lady Compton, the mother of the Villiers, thought that Coke's
+daughter would be a good match for one of her younger sons. It was
+really a great chance for Coke; but he haggled about the portion;
+and the opportunity, which might perhaps have led to his taking
+Bacon's place, passed. But he found himself in trouble in other
+ways; his friends, especially Secretary Winwood, contrived to bring
+the matter on again, and he consented to the Villiers's terms. But
+his wife, the young lady's mother, Lady Hatton, would not hear of
+it, and a furious quarrel followed. She carried off her daughter
+into the country. Coke, with a warrant from Secretary Winwood,
+which Bacon had refused to give him, pursued her: "with his son,
+'Fighting Clem,' and ten or eleven <a name='Page_106' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 106'></a>servants, weaponed, in a violent
+manner he repaired to the house where she was remaining, and with a
+piece of timber or form broke open the door and dragged her along
+to his coach." Lady Hatton rushed off the same afternoon for help
+to Bacon.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>After an overturn by the way, "at last to my Lord Keeper's they
+come, but could not have instant access to him, for that his people
+told them he was laid at rest, being not well. Then my La. Hatton
+desired she might be in the next room where my Lord lay, that she
+might be the first that [should] speak with him after he was
+stirring. The door-keeper fulfilled her desire, and in the meantime
+gave her a chair to rest herself in, and there left her alone; but
+not long after, she rose up and bounced against my Lord Keeper's
+door, and waked him and affrighted him, that he called his men to
+him; and they opening the door, she thrust in with them, and
+desired his Lp. to pardon her boldness, but she was like a cow that
+had lost her calf, and so justified [herself] and pacified my
+Lord's anger, and got his warrant and my Lo. Treasurer's warrant
+and others of the Council to fetch her daughter from the father and
+bring them both to the Council."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>It was a chance that the late Chief-Justice and his wife, with
+their armed parties, did not meet on the road, in which case "there
+were like to be strange tragedies." At length the Council compelled
+both sides to keep the peace, and the young lady was taken for the
+present out of the hands of her raging parents. Bacon had assumed
+that the affair was the result of an intrigue between Winwood and
+Coke, and that the Court would take part against Coke, a man so
+deep in disgrace and so outrageously violent. Supposing that he had
+the ear of Buckingham, he wrote earnestly, persuading him to put an
+end to the business; and in the meantime the Council ordered Coke
+to be brought before the Star Chamber "for riot and force," to "be
+heard and sentenced as justice shall appertain." They had not the
+slightest <a name='Page_107' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 107'></a>doubt that they were doing what would please the
+King. A few days after they met, and then they learned the
+truth.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"Coke and his friends," writes Chamberlain, "complain of hard
+measure from some of the greatest at that board, and that he was
+too much trampled upon with ill language. And our friend
+[<i>i.e.</i> Winwood] passed out scot free for the warrant, which
+the greatest [<i>word illegible</i>] there said was subject to a
+<i>pr&aelig;munire</i>; and withal told the Lady Compton that they
+wished well to her and her sons, and would be ready to serve the
+Earl of Buckingham with all true affection, whereas others did it
+out of faction and ambition&mdash;which words glancing directly at
+our good friend (Winwood), he was driven to make his apology, and
+to show how it was put upon him from time to time by the Queen and
+other parties; and, for conclusion, showed a letter of approbation
+of all his courses from the King, making the whole table judge what
+faction and ambition appeared in this carriage. <i>Ad quod non fuit
+responsum.</i>"</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>None indeed, but blank faces, and thoughts of what might come
+next. The Council, and Bacon foremost, had made a desperate
+mistake. "It is evident," as Mr. Spedding says, "that he had not
+divined Buckingham's feelings on the subject." He was now to learn
+them. To his utter amazement and alarm he found that the King was
+strong for the match, and that the proceeding of the Council was
+condemned at Court as gross misconduct. In vain he protested that
+he was quite willing to forward the match; that in fact he had
+helped it. Bacon's explanations, and his warnings against Coke the
+King "rejected with some disdain;" he justified Coke's action; he
+charged Bacon with disrespect and ingratitude to Buckingham; he put
+aside his arguments and apologies as worthless or insincere. Such
+reprimands had not often been addressed, even to inferior servants.
+Bacon's letters to Buckingham remained at first without notice;
+when Buckingham answered he did so with scornful and men<a name=
+'Page_108' class='pagenum' title='Page 108'></a>acing curtness.
+Meanwhile Bacon heard from Yelverton how things were going at
+Court.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"Sir E. Coke," he wrote, "hath not forborne by any engine to
+heave at both your Honour and myself, and he works the weightiest
+instrument, the Earl of Buckingham, who, as I see, sets him as
+close to him as his shirt, the Earl speaking in Sir Edward's
+phrase, and as it were menacing in his spirit."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Buckingham, he went on to say, "did nobly and plainly tell me he
+would not secretly bite, but whosoever had had any interest, or
+tasted of the opposition to his brother's marriage, he would as
+openly oppose them to their faces, and they should discern what
+favour he had by the power he would use." The Court, like a pack of
+dogs, had set upon Bacon. "It is too common in every man's mouth in
+Court that your greatness shall be abated, and as your tongue hath
+been as a razor unto some, so shall theirs be to you." Buckingham
+said to every one that Bacon had been forgetful of his kindness and
+unfaithful to him: "not forbearing in open speech to tax you, as if
+it were an inveterate custom with you, to be unfaithful unto him,
+as you were to the Earls of Essex and Somerset."</p>
+
+<p>All this while Bacon had been clearly in the right. He had
+thrust himself into no business that did not concern him. He had
+not, as Buckingham accuses him of having done, "overtroubled"
+himself with the marriage. He had done his simple duty as a friend,
+as a councillor, as a judge. He had been honestly zealous for the
+Villiers's honour, and warned Buckingham of things that were beyond
+question. He had curbed Coke's scandalous violence, perhaps with no
+great regret, but with manifest reason. But for this he was now on
+the very edge of losing his office; it was clear to him, as it is
+clear to us, that nothing could save him but absolute submission.
+He <a name='Page_109' class='pagenum' title='Page 109'></a>accepted
+the condition. How this submission was made and received, and with
+what gratitude he found that he was forgiven, may be seen in the
+two following letters. Buckingham thus extends his grace to the
+Lord Keeper, and exhorts him to better behaviour:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"But his Majesty's direction in answer of your letter hath given
+me occasion to join hereunto a discovery unto you of mine inward
+thoughts, proceeding upon the discourse you had with me this day.
+For I do freely confess that your offer of submission unto me, and
+in writing (if so I would have it), battered so the unkindness that
+I had conceived in my heart for your behaviour towards me in my
+absence, as out of the sparks of my old affection towards you I
+went to sound his Majesty's intention how he means to behave
+himself towards you, specially in any public meeting; where I found
+on the one part his Majesty so little satisfied with your late
+answer unto him, which he counted (for I protest I use his own
+terms) <i>confused and childish</i>, and his vigorous resolution on
+the other part so fixed, that he would put some public exemplary
+mark upon you, as I protest the sight of his deep-conceived
+indignation quenched my passion, making me upon the instant change
+from the person of a party into a peace-maker; so as I was forced
+upon my knees to beg of his Majesty that he would put no public act
+of disgrace upon you, and, as I dare say, no other person would
+have been patiently heard in this suit by his Majesty but myself,
+so did I (though not without difficulty) obtain thus
+much&mdash;that he would not so far disable you from the merit of
+your future service as to put any particular mark of disgrace upon
+your person. Only thus far his Majesty protesteth, that upon the
+conscience of his office he cannot omit (though laying aside all
+passion) to give a kingly reprimand at his first sitting in council
+to so many of his councillors as were then here behind, and were
+actors in this business, for their ill behaviour in it. Some of the
+particular errors committed in this business he will name, but
+without accusing any particular persons by name.</p>
+
+<p>"Thus your Lordship seeth the fruits of my natural inclination;
+and I protest all this time past it was no small grief unto me to
+hear the mouth of so many upon this occasion open to load you with
+innumerable malicious and detracting speeches, as if no music were
+<a name='Page_110' class='pagenum' title='Page 110'></a>more
+pleasing to my ears than to rail of you, which made me rather
+regret the ill nature of mankind, that like dogs love to set upon
+him that they see once snatched at. And to conclude, my Lord, you
+have hereby a fair occasion so to make good hereafter your
+reputation by your sincere service to his Majesty, as also by your
+firm and constant kindness to your friends, as I may (your
+Lordship's old friend) participate of the comfort and honour that
+will thereby come to you. Thus I rest at last</p>
+
+<p>"Your Lordship's faithful friend and servant,<br />
+ "G.B."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"MY EVER BEST LORD, now better than yourself,&mdash;Your
+Lordship's pen, or rather pencil, hath pourtrayed towards me such
+magnanimity and nobleness and true kindness, as methinketh I see
+the image of some ancient virtue, and not anything of these times.
+It is the line of my life, and not the lines of my letter, that
+must express my thankfulness; wherein if I fail, then God fail me,
+and make me as miserable as I think myself at this time happy by
+this reviver, through his Majesty's singular clemency, and your
+incomparable love and favour. God preserve you, prosper you, and
+reward you for your kindness to</p>
+
+<p>"Your raised and infinitely obliged friend and servant,<br />
+ "Sept. 22, 1617.<br />
+ FR. BACON, C.S."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Thus he had tried his strength with Buckingham. He had found
+that this, "a little parent-like" manner of advising him, and the
+doctrine that a true friend "ought rather to go against his mind
+than his good," was not what Buckingham expected from him. And he
+never ventured on it again. It is not too much to say that a man
+who could write as he now did to Buckingham, could not trust
+himself in any matter in which Buckingham, was interested.</p>
+
+<p>But the reconciliation was complete, and Bacon took his place
+more and more as one of the chief persons in the Government. James
+claimed so much to have his own way, and had so little scruple in
+putting aside, in his <a name='Page_111' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 111'></a>superior wisdom, sometimes very curtly, Bacon's or
+any other person's recommendations, that though his services were
+great, and were not unrecognised, he never had the power and
+influence in affairs to which his boundless devotion to the Crown,
+his grasp of business, and his willing industry, ought to have
+entitled him. He was still a servant, and made to feel it, though a
+servant in the "first form." It was James and Buckingham who
+determined the policy of the country, or settled the course to be
+taken in particular transactions; when this was settled, it was
+Bacon's business to carry it through successfully. In this he was
+like all the other servants of the Crown, and like them he was
+satisfied with giving his advice, whether it were taken or not; but
+unlike many of them he was zealous in executing with the utmost
+vigour and skill the instructions which were given him. Thus he was
+required to find the legal means for punishing Raleigh; and, as a
+matter of duty, he found them. He was required to tell the
+Government side of the story of Raleigh's crimes and
+punishment&mdash;which really was one side of the story, only not
+by any means the whole; and he told it, as he had told the
+Government story against Essex, with force, moderation, and good
+sense. Himself, he never would have made James's miserable blunders
+about Raleigh; but the blunders being made, it was his business to
+do his best to help the King out of them. When Suffolk, the Lord
+Treasurer, was disgraced and brought before the Star Chamber for
+corruption and embezzlement in his office, Bacon thought that he
+was doing no more than his duty in keeping Buckingham informed day
+by day how the trial was going on; how he had taken care that
+Suffolk's submission should not stop it&mdash;"for all would be but
+a play on the stage if justice went not on in the right course;"
+how he had taken care that <a name='Page_112' class='pagenum'
+title='Page 112'></a>the evidence went well&mdash;"I will not say I
+sometime holp it, as far as was fit for a judge;" how, "a little to
+warm the business" ... "I spake a word, that he that did draw or
+milk treasure from Ireland, did not, <i>emulgere</i>, milk money,
+but blood." This, and other "little things" like it, while he was
+sitting as a judge to try, if the word may be used, a personal
+enemy of Buckingham, however bad the case might be against Suffolk,
+sound strange indeed to us; and not less so when, in reporting the
+sentence and the various opinions of the Council about it, he, for
+once, praises Coke for the extravagance of his severity: "Sir
+Edward Coke did his part&mdash;I have not heard him do
+better&mdash;and began with a fine of &pound;100,000; but the
+judges first, and most of the rest, reduced it to &pound;30,000. I
+do not dislike that thing passed moderately; and all things
+considered, it is not amiss, and might easily have been worse."</p>
+
+<p>In all this, which would have been perfectly natural from an
+Attorney-General of the time, Bacon saw but his duty, even as a
+judge between the Crown and the subject. It was what was expected
+of those whom the King chose to employ, and whom Buckingham chose
+to favour. But a worse and more cruel case, illustrating the system
+which a man like Bacon could think reasonable and honourable, was
+the disgrace and punishment of Yelverton, the Attorney-General, the
+man who had stood by Bacon, and in his defence had faced
+Buckingham, knowing well Buckingham's dislike of himself, when all
+the Court turned against Bacon in his quarrel with Coke and Lady
+Compton. Towards the end of the year 1620, on the eve of a probable
+meeting of Parliament, there was great questioning about what was
+to be done about certain patents and monopolies&mdash;monopolies
+for making gold and silk thread, and for licensing inns and
+ale-houses&mdash;which were in the hands of Buck<a name='Page_113'
+class='pagenum' title='Page 113'></a>ingham's brothers and their
+agents. The monopolies were very unpopular; there was always doubt
+as to their legality; they were enforced oppressively and
+vexatiously by men like Michell and Mompesson, who acted for the
+Villiers; and the profits of them went, for the most part, not into
+the Exchequer, but into the pockets of the hangers-on of
+Buckingham. Bacon defended them both in law and policy, and his
+defence is thought by Mr. Gardiner to be not without grounds; but
+he saw the danger of obstinacy in maintaining what had become so
+hateful in the country, and strongly recommended that the more
+indefensible and unpopular patents should be spontaneously given
+up, the more so as they were of "no great fruit." But Buckingham's
+insolent perversity "refused to be convinced." The Council, when
+the question was before them, decided to maintain them. Bacon, who
+had rightly voted in the minority, thus explains his own vote to
+Buckingham: "The King did wisely put it upon and consult, whether
+the patents were at this time to be removed by Act of Council
+before Parliament. <i>I opined (but yet somewhat like Ovid's
+mistress, that strove, but yet as one that would be overcome), that
+yes!</i>" But in the various disputes which had arisen about them,
+Yelverton had shown that he very much disliked the business of
+defending monopolies, and sending London citizens to jail for
+infringing them. He did it, but he did it grudgingly. It was a
+great offence in a man whom Buckingham had always disliked; and it
+is impossible to doubt that what followed was the consequence of
+his displeasure.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"In drawing up a new charter for the city of London," writes Mr.
+Gardiner, "Yelverton inserted clauses for which he was unable to
+produce a warrant. The worst that could be said was that he had,
+through inadvertence, misunderstood the verbal directions of the <a
+name='Page_114' class='pagenum' title='Page 114'></a>King. Although
+no imputation of corruption was brought against him, yet he was
+suspended from his office, and prosecuted in the Star Chamber. He
+was then sentenced to dismissal from his post, to a fine of
+&pound;4000, and to imprisonment during the Royal pleasure."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>In the management of this business Bacon had the chief part.
+Yelverton, on his suspension, at once submitted. The obnoxious
+clauses are not said to have been of serious importance, but they
+were new clauses which the King had not sanctioned, and it would be
+a bad precedent to pass over such unauthorised additions even by an
+Attorney-General. "I mistook many things," said Yelverton
+afterwards, in words which come back into our minds at a later
+period, "I was improvident in some things, and too credulous in all
+things." It might have seemed that dismissal, if not a severe
+reprimand, was punishment enough. But the submission was not
+enough, in Bacon's opinion, "for the King's honour." He dwelt on
+the greatness of the offence, and the necessity of making a severe
+example. According to his advice, Yelverton was prosecuted in the
+Star Chamber. It was not merely a mistake of judgment. "Herein,"
+said Bacon, "I note the wisdom of the law of England, which termeth
+the highest contempt and excesses of authority <i>Misprisions</i>;
+which (if you take the sound and derivation of the word) is but
+<i>mistaken</i>; but if you take the use and acception of the word,
+it is high and heinous contempt and usurpation of authority;
+whereof the reason I take to be and the name excellently imposed,
+for that main mistaking, it is ever joined with contempt; for he
+that reveres will not easily mistake; but he that slights, and
+thinks more of the greatness of his place than of the duty of his
+place, will soon commit misprisions." The day would come when this
+doctrine would be pressed with ruinous effect against Bacon
+himself. But now he <a name='Page_115' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 115'></a>expounded with admirable clearness the wrongness of
+carelessness about warrants and of taking things for granted. He
+acquitted his former colleague of "corruption of reward;" but "in
+truth that makes the offence rather divers than less;" for some
+offences "are black, and others scarlet, some sordid, some
+presumptuous." He pronounced his sentence&mdash;the fine, the
+imprisonment; "for his place, I declare him unfit for it." "And the
+next day," says Mr. Spedding, "he reported to Buckingham the result
+of the proceeding," and takes no small credit for his own part in
+it.</p>
+
+<p>It was thus that the Court used Bacon, and that Bacon submitted
+to be used. He could have done, if he had been listened to, much
+nobler service. He had from the first seen, and urged as far as he
+could, the paramount necessity of retrenchment in the King's
+profligate expenditure. Even Buckingham had come to feel the
+necessity of it at last; and now that Bacon filled a seat at the
+Council, and that the prosecution of Suffolk and an inquiry into
+the abuses of the Navy had forced on those in power the urgency of
+economy, there was a chance of something being done to bring order
+into the confusion of the finances. Retrenchment began at the
+King's kitchen and the tables of his servants; an effort was made,
+not unsuccessfully, to extend it wider, under the direction of
+Lionel Cranfield, a self-made man of business from the city; but
+with such a Court the task was an impossible one. It was not
+Bacon's fault, though he sadly mismanaged his own private affairs,
+that the King's expenditure was not managed soberly and wisely. Nor
+was it Bacon's fault, as far as advice went, that James was always
+trying either to evade or to outwit a Parliament which he could
+not, like the Tudors, overawe. Bacon's uniform counsel had
+been&mdash;Look on a Parliament as a certain necessity, but not
+only <a name='Page_116' class='pagenum' title='Page 116'></a>as a
+necessity, as also a unique and most precious means for uniting the
+Crown with the nation, and proving to the world outside how
+Englishmen love and honour their King, and their King trusts his
+subjects. Deal with it frankly and nobly as becomes a king, not
+suspiciously like a huckster in a bargain. Do not be afraid of
+Parliament. Be skilful in calling it, but don't attempt to "pack"
+it. Use all due adroitness and knowledge of human nature, and
+necessary firmness and majesty, in managing it; keep unruly and
+mischievous people in their place, but do not be too anxious to
+meddle&mdash;"let nature work;" and above all, though of course you
+want money from it, do not let that appear as the chief or real
+cause of calling it. Take the lead in legislation. Be ready with
+some interesting or imposing points of reform, or policy, about
+which you ask your Parliament to take counsel with you. Take care
+to "frame and have ready some commonwealth bills, that may add
+respect to the King's government and acknowledgment of his care;
+not <i>wooing</i> bills to make the King and his graces cheap, but
+good matter to set the Parliament on work, that an empty stomach do
+not feed on humour." So from the first had Bacon always thought; so
+he thought when he watched, as a spectator, James's blunders with
+his first Parliament of 1604; so had he earnestly counselled James,
+when admitted to his confidence, as to the Parliaments of 1614 and
+1615; so again, but in vain, as Chancellor, he advised him to meet
+the Parliament of 1620. It was wise, and from his point of view
+honest advice, though there runs all through it too much reliance
+on appearances which were not all that they seemed; there was too
+much thought of throwing dust in the eyes of troublesome and
+inconvenient people. But whatever motives there might have been
+behind, it would have been <a name='Page_117' class='pagenum'
+title='Page 117'></a>well if James had learned from Bacon how to
+deal with Englishmen. But he could not. "I wonder," said James one
+day to Gondomar, "that my ancestors should ever have permitted such
+an institution as the House of Commons to have come into existence.
+I am a stranger, and found it here when I arrived, so that I am
+obliged to put up with what I cannot get rid of." James was the
+only one of our many foreign kings who, to the last, struggled to
+avoid submitting himself to the conditions of an English
+throne.</p>
+
+<hr />
+<p><a name='Page_118' class='pagenum' title='Page 118'></a></p>
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_VI'></a>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+<h3>BACON'S FALL.</h3>
+
+<p><br />
+When Parliament met on January 30, 1620/21, and Bacon, as Lord
+Chancellor, set forth in his ceremonial speeches to the King and to
+the Speaker the glories and blessings of James's reign, no man in
+England had more reason to think himself fortunate. He had reached
+the age of sixty, and had gained the object of his ambition. More
+than that, he was conscious that in his great office he was finding
+full play for his powers and his high public purposes. He had won
+greatly on the confidence of the King. He had just received a fresh
+mark of honour from him: a few days before he had been raised a
+step in the peerage, and he was now Viscount St. Alban's. With
+Buckingham he seemed to be on terms of the most affectionate
+familiarity, exchanging opinions freely with him on every subject.
+And Parliament met in good-humour. They voted money at once. One of
+the matters which interested Bacon most&mdash;the revision of the
+Statute Book&mdash;they took up as one of their first measures, and
+appointed a Select Committee to report upon it. And what, amid the
+apparent felicity of the time, was of even greater personal
+happiness to Bacon, the first step of the "Great Instauration" had
+been taken. During the previous autumn, Oct. 12, 1620, the <i>Novum
+Organum</i>, the first instalment of his vast design, <a name=
+'Page_119' class='pagenum' title='Page 119'></a>was published, the
+result of the work of thirty years; and copies were distributed to
+great people, among others to Coke. He apprehended no evil; he had
+nothing to fear, and much to hope from the times.</p>
+
+<p>His sudden and unexpected fall, so astonishing and so
+irreparably complete, is one of the strangest events of that still
+imperfectly comprehended time. There had been, and were still to
+be, plenty of instances of the downfall of power, as ruinous and
+even more tragic, though scarcely any one more pathetic in its
+surprise and its shame. But it is hard to find one of which so
+little warning was given, and the causes of which are at once in
+part so clear, and in part so obscure and unintelligible. Such
+disasters had to be reckoned upon as possible chances by any one
+who ventured into public life. Montaigne advises that the
+discipline of pain should be part of every boy's education, for the
+reason that every one in his day might be called upon to undergo
+the torture. And so every public man, in the England of the Tudors
+and Stuarts, entered on his career with the perfectly familiar
+expectation of possibly closing it&mdash;it might be in an
+honourable and ceremonious fashion, in the Tower and on the
+scaffold&mdash;just as he had to look forward to the possibility of
+closing it by small-pox or the plague. So that when disaster came,
+though it might be unexpected, as death is unexpected, it was a
+turn of things which ought not to take a man by surprise. But some
+premonitory signs usually gave warning. There was nothing to warn
+Bacon that the work which he believed he was doing so well would be
+interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>We look in vain for any threatenings of the storm. What the men
+of his time thought and felt about Bacon it is not easy to
+ascertain. Appearances are faint and contradictory; he himself,
+though scornful of judges who <a name='Page_120' class='pagenum'
+title='Page 120'></a>sought to be "popular," believed that he "came
+in with the favour of the general;" that he "had a little popular
+reputation, which followeth me whether I will or no." No one for
+years had discharged the duties of his office with greater
+efficiency. Scarcely a trace remains of any suspicion, previous to
+the attack upon him, of the justice of his decisions; no instance
+was alleged that, in fact, impure motives had controlled the
+strength and lucidity of an intellect which loved to be true and
+right for the mere pleasure of being so. Nor was there anything in
+Bacon's political position to make him specially obnoxious above
+all others of the King's Council. He maintained the highest
+doctrines of prerogative; but they were current doctrines, both at
+the Council board and on the bench; and they were not discredited
+nor extinguished by his fall. To be on good terms with James and
+Buckingham meant a degree of subservience which shocks us now; but
+it did not shock people then, and he did not differ from his
+fellows in regarding it as part of his duty as a public servant of
+the Crown. No doubt he had enemies&mdash;some with old grudges like
+Southampton, who had been condemned with Essex; some like Suffolk,
+smarting under recent reprimands and the biting edge of Bacon's
+tongue; some like Coke, hating him from constitutional antipathies
+and the strong antagonism of professional doctrines, for a long
+course of rivalry and for mortifying defeats. But there is no
+appearance of preconcerted efforts among them to bring about his
+overthrow. He did not at the time seem to be identified with
+anything dangerous or odious. There was no doubt a good deal of
+dissatisfaction with Chancery&mdash;among the common lawyers,
+because it interfered with their business; in the public, partly
+from the traditions of its slowness, partly from its expensiveness,
+<a name='Page_121' class='pagenum' title='Page 121'></a>partly
+because, being intended for special redress of legal hardship, it
+was sure to disappoint one party to a suit. But Bacon thought that
+he had reformed Chancery. He had also done a great deal to bring
+some kind of order, or at least hopefulness of order, into the
+King's desperate finances. And he had never set himself against
+Parliament. On the contrary, he had always been forward to declare
+that the King could not do without Parliament, and that Parliament
+only needed to be dealt with generously, and as "became a King," to
+be not a danger and hindrance to the Crown but its most sincere and
+trustworthy support.</p>
+
+<p>What was then to portend danger to Bacon when the Parliament of
+1620/21 met? The House of Commons at its meeting was thoroughly
+loyal and respectful; it meant to be <i>benedictum et pacificum
+parliamentum</i>. Every one knew that there would be "grievances"
+which would not be welcome to the Court, but they did not seem
+likely to touch him. Every one knew that there would be questions
+raised about unpopular patents and oppressive monopolies, and about
+their legality; and it was pretty well agreed upon at Court that
+they should be given up as soon as complained of. But Bacon was not
+implicated more than the Crown lawyers before him, in what all the
+Crown lawyers had always defended. There was dissatisfaction about
+the King's extravagance and wastefulness, about his indecision in
+the cause of the Elector Palatine, about his supposed intrigues
+with Papistical and tyrannical Spain; but Bacon had nothing to do
+with all this except, as far as he could, to give wise counsel and
+warning. The person who made the King despised and hated was the
+splendid and insolent favourite, Buckingham. It might have been
+thought that the one thing to be set against much that <a name=
+'Page_122' class='pagenum' title='Page 122'></a>was wrong in the
+State was the just and enlightened and speedy administration of
+equity in the Chancery.</p>
+
+<p>When Parliament met, though nothing seemed to threaten mischief,
+it met with a sturdy purpose of bringing to account certain
+delinquents whose arrogance and vexations of the subjects had
+provoked the country, and who were supposed to shelter themselves
+under the countenance of Buckingham. Michell and Mompesson were
+rascals whose misdemeanors might well try the patience of a less
+spirited body than an English House of Commons. Buckingham could
+not protect them, and hardly tried to do so. But just as one
+electric current "induces" another by neighbourhood, so all this
+deep indignation against Buckingham's creatures created a fierce
+temper of suspicion about corruption all through the public
+service. Two Committees were early appointed by the House of
+Commons: one a Committee on Grievances, such as the monopolies; the
+other, a Committee to inquire into abuses in the Courts of Justice
+and receive petitions about them. In the course of the proceedings,
+the question arose in the House as to the authorities or "referees"
+who had certified to the legality of the Crown patents or grants
+which had been so grossly abused; and among these "referees" were
+the Lord Chancellor and other high officers, both legal and
+political.</p>
+
+<p>It was the little cloud. But lookers-on like Chamberlain did not
+think much of it. "The referees," he wrote on Feb. 29th, "who
+certified the legality of the patents are glanced at, but they are
+chiefly above the reach of the House; they attempt so much that
+they will accomplish little." Coke, who was now the chief leader in
+Parliament, began to talk ominously of precedents, and to lay down
+rules about the power of the House to punish&mdash;<a name=
+'Page_123' class='pagenum' title='Page 123'></a>rules which were
+afterwards found to have no authority for them. Cranfield, the
+representative of severe economy, insisted that the honour of the
+King required that the referees, whoever they were, should be
+called to account. The gathering clouds shifted a little, when the
+sense of the House seemed to incline to giving up all retrospective
+action, and to a limitation for the future by statute of the
+questionable prerogative&mdash;a limitation which was in fact
+attempted by a bill thrown out by the Lords. But they gathered
+again when the Commons determined to bring the whole matter before
+the House of Lords. The King wrote to warn Bacon of what was
+coming. The proposed conference was staved off by management for a
+day or two, but it could not be averted, and the Lords showed their
+eagerness for it. And two things by this time&mdash;the beginning
+of March&mdash;seemed now to have become clear, first, that under
+the general attack on the referees was intended a blow against
+Bacon; next, that the person whom he had most reason to fear was
+Sir Edward Coke.</p>
+
+<p>The storm was growing; but Bacon was still unalarmed, though
+Buckingham had been frightened into throwing the blame on the
+referees.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"I do hear," he writes to Buckingham (dating his letter on March
+7th, "the day I received the seal"), "from divers of judgement,
+that to-morrow's conference is like to pass in a calm, as to the
+referees. Sir Lionel Cranfield, who hath been formerly the trumpet,
+said yesterday that he did now incline unto Sir John Walter's
+opinion and motion not to have the referees meddled with, otherwise
+than to discount it from the King; and so not to look back, but to
+the future. And I do hear almost all men of judgement in the House
+wish now that way. I woo nobody; I do but listen, and I have doubt
+only of Sir Edward Coke, who I wish had some round <i>caveat</i>
+given him from the King; for your Lordship hath no great power with
+him. But a word from the King mates him."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p><a name='Page_124' class='pagenum' title='Page 124'></a> But
+Coke's opportunity had come. The House of Commons was disposed for
+gentler measures. But he was able to make it listen to his harsher
+counsels, and from this time his hand appears in all that was done.
+The first conference was a tame and dull one. The spokesmen had
+been slack in their disagreeable and perhaps dangerous duty. But
+Coke and his friends took them sharply to task. "The heart and
+tongue of Sir Edward Coke are true relations," said one of his
+fervent supporters; "but his pains hath not reaped that harvest of
+praise that he hath deserved. For the referees, they are as
+transcendent delinquents as any other, and sure their souls made a
+wilful elopement from their bodies when they made these
+certificates." A second conference was held with the Lords, and
+this time the charge was driven home. The referees were named, the
+Chancellor at the head of them. When Bacon rose to explain and
+justify his acts he was sharply stopped, and reminded that he was
+transgressing the orders of the House in speaking till the
+Committees were named to examine the matter. What was even more
+important, the King had come to the House of Lords (March 10th),
+and frightened, perhaps, about his subsidies, told them "that he
+was not guilty of those grievances which are now discovered, but
+that he grounded his judgement upon others who have misled him."
+The referees would be attacked, people thought, if the Lower House
+had courage.</p>
+
+<p>All this was serious. As things were drifting, it seemed as if
+Bacon might have to fight the legal question of the prerogative in
+the form of a criminal charge, and be called upon to answer the
+accusation of being the minister of a crown which legal language
+pronounced absolute, and of a King who interpreted legal language
+to the letter; and further, to meet his accusers after the King
+himself had <a name='Page_125' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 125'></a>disavowed what his servant had done. What passed
+between Bacon and the King is confused and uncertain; but after his
+speech the King could scarcely have thought of interfering with the
+inquiry. The proceedings went on; Committees were named for the
+several points of inquiry; and Bacon took part in these
+arrangements. It was a dangerous position to have to defend himself
+against an angry House of Commons, led and animated by Coke and
+Cranfield. But though the storm had rapidly thickened, the charges
+against the referees were not against him alone. His mistake in
+law, if it was a mistake, was shared by some of the first lawyers
+and first councillors in England. There was a battle before him,
+but not a hopeless one. "<i>Modic&aelig; fidei, quare
+dubitasti</i>" he writes about this time to an anxious friend.</p>
+
+<p>But in truth the thickening storm had been gathering over his
+head alone. It was against him that the whole attack was directed;
+as soon as it took a different shape, the complaints against the
+other referees, such as the Chief-Justice, who was now Lord
+Treasurer, though some attempt was made to press them, were quietly
+dropped. What was the secret history of these weeks we do not know.
+But the result of Bacon's ruin was that Buckingham was saved. "As
+they speak of the Turquoise stone in a ring," Bacon had said to
+Buckingham when he was made Chancellor, "I will break into twenty
+pieces before you have the least fall." Without knowing what he
+pledged himself to, he was taken at his word.</p>
+
+<p>At length the lightning fell. During the early part of March,
+while these dangerous questions were mooted about the referees, a
+Committee, appointed early in the session, had also been sitting on
+abuses in courts of justice, and as part of their business, an
+inquiry had been going on into <a name='Page_126' class='pagenum'
+title='Page 126'></a>the ways of the subordinate officers of the
+Court of Chancery. Bacon had early (Feb. 17th) sent a message to
+the Committee courting full inquiry, "willingly consenting that any
+man might speak anything of his Court." On the 12th of March the
+chairman, Sir R. Philips, reported that he had in his hands "divers
+petitions, many frivolous and clamorous, many of weight and
+consequence." Cranfield, who presided over the Court of Wards, had
+quarrelled fiercely with the Chancery, where he said there was
+"neither Law, Equity, nor Conscience," and pressed the inquiry,
+partly, it may be, to screen his own Court, which was found fault
+with by the lawyers. Some scandalous abuses were brought to light
+in the Chancery. They showed that "Bacon was at fault in the art of
+government," and did not know how to keep his servants in order.
+One of them, John Churchill, an infamous forger of Chancery orders,
+finding things going hard with him, and "resolved," it is said,
+"not to sink alone," offered his confessions of all that was going
+on wrong in the Court. But on the 15th of March things took another
+turn. It was no longer a matter of doubtful constitutional law; no
+longer a question of slack discipline over his officers. To the
+astonishment, if not of the men of his own day, at least to the
+unexhausted astonishment of times following, a charge was suddenly
+reported from the Committee to the Commons against the Lord
+Chancellor, not of straining the prerogative, or of conniving at
+his servants' misdoings, but of being himself a corrupt and venal
+judge. Two suitors charged him with receiving bribes. Bacon was
+beginning to feel worried and anxious, and he wrote thus to
+Buckingham. At length he had begun to see the meaning of all these
+inquiries, and to what they were driving.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"MY VERY GOOD LORD,&mdash;Your Lordship spake of Purgatory. I am
+now in it, but my mind is in a calm, for my fortune is not my <a
+name='Page_127' class='pagenum' title='Page 127'></a>felicity. I
+know I have clean hands and a clean heart, and I hope a clean house
+for friends or servants. But Job himself, or whosoever was the
+justest judge, by such hunting for matters against him as hath been
+used against me, may for a time seem foul, specially in a time when
+greatness is the mark and accusation is the game. And if this be to
+be a Chancellor. I think if the great seal lay upon Hounslow Heath
+nobody would take it up. But the King and your Lordship will, I
+hope, put an end to these miseries one way or other. And in troth
+that which I fear most is lest continual attendance and business,
+together with these cares, and want of time to do my weak body
+right this spring by diet and physic, will cast me down; and then
+it will be thought feigning or fainting. But I hope in God I shall
+hold out. God prosper you."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The first charges attracted others, which were made formal
+matters of complaint by the House of Commons. John Churchill, to
+save himself, was busy setting down cases of misdoing; and probably
+suitors of themselves became ready to volunteer evidence. But of
+this Bacon as yet knew nothing. He was at this time only aware that
+there were persons who were "hunting out complaints against him,"
+that the attack was changed from his law to his private character;
+he had found an unfavourable feeling in the House of Lords; and he
+knew well enough what it was to have powerful enemies in those days
+when a sentence was often settled before a trial. To any one, such
+a state of things was as formidable as the first serious symptoms
+of a fever. He was uneasy, as a man might well be on whom the House
+of Commons had fixed its eye, and to whom the House of Lords had
+shown itself unfriendly. But he was as yet conscious of nothing
+fatal to his defence, and he knew that if false accusations could
+be lightly made they could also be exposed.</p>
+
+<p>A few days after the first mention of corruption the Commons
+laid their complaints of him before the House <a name='Page_128'
+class='pagenum' title='Page 128'></a>of Lords, and on the same day
+(March 19) Bacon, finding himself too ill to go to the House, wrote
+to the Peers by Buckingham, requesting them that as some
+"complaints of base bribery" had come before them, they would give
+him a fair opportunity of defending himself, and of cross-examining
+witnesses; especially begging, that considering the number of
+decrees which he had to make in a year&mdash;more than two
+thousand&mdash;and "the courses which had been taken in hunting out
+complaints against him," they would not let their opinion of him be
+affected by the mere number of charges that might be made. Their
+short verbal answer, moved by Southampton (March 20), that they
+meant to proceed by right rule of justice, and would be glad if he
+cleared his honour, was not encouraging. And now that the Commons
+had brought the matter before them, the Lords took it entirely into
+their own hands, appointing three Committees, and examining the
+witnesses themselves. New witnesses came forward every day with
+fresh cases of gifts and presents, "bribes" received by the Lord
+Chancellor. When Parliament rose for the Easter vacation (March
+27-April 17), the Committees continued sitting. A good deal
+probably passed of which no record remains. When the Commons met
+again (April 17) Coke was full of gibes about <i>Instauratio
+Magna</i>&mdash;the true <i>Instauratio</i> was to restore
+laws&mdash;and two days after an Act was brought in for review and
+reversal of decrees in Courts of Equity. It was now clear that the
+case against Bacon had assumed formidable dimensions, and also a
+very strange, and almost monstrous shape. For the Lords, who were
+to be the judges, had by their Committees taken the matter out of
+the hands of the Commons, the original accusers, and had become
+themselves the prosecutors, collecting and arranging evidence,
+accepting or rejecting depositions, and <a name='Page_129' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 129'></a>doing all that counsel or the
+committing magistrate would do preliminary to a trial. There
+appears to have been no cross-examining of witnesses on Bacon's
+behalf, or hearing witnesses for him&mdash;not unnaturally at this
+stage of business, when the prosecutors were engaged in making out
+their own case; but considering that the future judges had of their
+own accord turned themselves into the prosecutors, the unfairness
+was great. At the same time it does not appear that Bacon did
+anything to watch how things went in the Committees, which had his
+friends in them as well as his enemies, and are said to have been
+open courts. Towards the end of March, Chamberlain wrote to
+Carleton that "the Houses were working hard at cleansing out the
+Aug&aelig;an stable of monopolies, and also extortions in Courts of
+Justice. The petitions against the Lord Chancellor were too
+numerous to be got through: his chief friends and brokers of
+bargains, Sir George Hastings and Sir Richard Young, and others
+attacked, are obliged to accuse him in their own defence, though
+very reluctantly. His ordinary bribes were &pound;300, &pound;400,
+and even &pound;1000.... The Lords admit no evidence except on
+oath. One Churchill, who was dismissed from the Chancery Court for
+extortion, is the chief cause of the Chancellor's ruin."<a id=
+"footnotetag3" name="footnotetag3" class="fn" href="#footnote3"
+title=
+"Calendar of State Papers (domestic), March 24, 1621."><sup>3</sup></a><!-- [3] -->
+Bacon was greatly alarmed. He wrote to Buckingham, who was "his
+anchor in these floods." He wrote to the King; he was at a loss to
+account for the "tempest that had come on him;" he could not
+understand what he had done to offend the country or Parliament; he
+had never "taken rewards to pervert justice, however he might be
+frail, and partake of the abuse of the time."</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"Time hath been when I have brought unto you <i>genitum
+columb&aelig;</i>, <a name='Page_130' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 130'></a>from others. Now I bring it from myself. I fly unto
+your Majesty with the wings of a dove, which once within these
+seven days I thought would have carried me a higher flight.</p>
+
+<p>"When I enter into myself, I find not the materials of such a
+tempest as is comen upon me. I have been (as your Majesty knoweth
+best) never author of any immoderate counsel, but always desired to
+have things carried <i>suavibus modis</i>. I have been no
+avaricious oppressor of the people. I have been no haughty or
+intolerable or hateful man, in my conversation or carriage. I have
+inherited no hatred from my father, but am a good patriot born.
+Whence should this be? For these are the things that use to raise
+dislikes abroad."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>And he ended by entreating the King to help him:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"That which I thirst after, as the hart after the streams, is
+that I may know by my matchless friend [Buckingham] that presenteth
+to you this letter, your Majesty's heart (which is an
+<i>abyssus</i> of goodness, as I am an <i>abyssus</i> of misery)
+towards me. I have been ever your man, and counted myself but an
+usufructuary of myself, the property being yours; and now making
+myself an oblation to do with me as may best conduce to the honour
+of your justice, the honour of your mercy, and the use of your
+service, resting as</p>
+
+<p>"Clay in your Majesty's gracious hands<br />
+ "Fr. St. Aldan, Canc.<br />
+ "March 25, 1621."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>To the world he kept up an undismayed countenance: he went down
+to Gorhambury, attended by troops of friends. "This man," said
+Prince Charles, when he met his company, "scorns to go out like a
+snuff." But at Gorhambury he made his will, leaving "his name to
+the next ages and to foreign nations;" and he wrote a prayer, which
+is a touching evidence of his state of mind&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"Most gracious Lord God, my merciful Father, from my youth up,
+my Creator, my Redeemer, my Comforter. Thou (O Lord) soundest and
+searchest the depths and secrets of all hearts; thou knowledgest
+the upright of heart, thou judgest the hypocrite, thou ponderest
+men's <a name='Page_131' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 131'></a>thoughts and doings as in a balance, thou measurest
+their intentions as with a line, vanity and crooked ways cannot be
+hid from thee.</p>
+
+<p>"Remember (O Lord) how thy servant hath walked before thee;
+remember what I have first sought, and what hath been principal in
+mine intentions. I have loved thy assemblies, I have mourned for
+the divisions of thy Church, I have delighted in the brightness of
+thy sanctuary. This vine which thy right hand hath planted in this
+nation, I have ever prayed unto thee that it might have the first
+and the latter rain; and that it might stretch her branches to the
+seas and to the floods. The state and bread of the poor and
+oppressed have been precious in my eyes: I have hated all cruelty
+and hardness of heart; I have (though in a despised weed) procured
+the good of all men. If any have been mine enemies, I thought not
+of them; neither hath the sun almost set upon my displeasure; but I
+have been as a dove, free from superfluity of maliciousness. Thy
+creatures have been my books, but thy Scriptures much more. I have
+sought thee in the courts, fields, and gardens, but I have found
+thee in thy temples.</p>
+
+<p>"Thousand have been my sins, and ten thousand my transgressions;
+but thy sanctifications have remained with me, and my heart,
+through thy grace, hath been an unquenched coal upon thy altar. O
+Lord, my strength, I have since my youth met with thee in all my
+ways, by thy fatherly compassions, by thy comfortable
+chastisements, and by thy most visible providence. As thy favours
+have increased upon me, so have thy corrections; so as thou hast
+been alway near me, O Lord; and ever as my worldly blessings were
+exalted, so secret darts from thee have pierced me; and when I have
+ascended before men, I have descended in humiliation before
+thee.</p>
+
+<p>"And now when I thought most of peace and honour, thy hand is
+heavy upon me, and hath humbled me, according to thy former
+loving-kindness, keeping me still in thy fatherly school, not as a
+bastard, but as a child. Just are thy judgements upon me for my
+sins, which are more in number than the sands of the sea, but have
+no proportion to thy mercies; for what are the sands of the sea to
+the sea, earth, heavens? and all these are nothing to thy
+mercies.</p>
+
+<p>"Besides my innumerable sins, I confess before thee that I am
+debtor to thee for the gracious talent of thy gifts and graces,
+which I have misspent in things for which I was least fit; so as I
+may truly say, my soul hath been a stranger in the course of my
+pilgrimage. <a name='Page_132' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 132'></a>Be merciful unto me (O Lord) for my Saviour's sake,
+and receive me into thy bosom, or guide me in thy ways."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Bacon up to this time strangely, if the Committees were "open
+Courts," was entirely ignorant of the particulars of the charge
+which was accumulating against him. He had an interview with the
+King, which was duly reported to the House, and he placed his case
+before James, distinguishing between the "three cases of bribery
+supposed in a judge&mdash;a corrupt bargain; carelessness in
+receiving a gift while the cause is going on; and, what is
+innocent, receiving a gift after it is ended." And he meant in such
+words as these to place himself at the King's disposal, and ask his
+direction:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"For my fortune, <i>summa summarum</i> with me is, that I may
+not be made altogether unprofitable to do your Majesty service or
+honour. If your Majesty continue me as I am, I hope I shall be a
+new man, and shall reform things out of feeling, more than another
+can do out of example. If I cast part of my burden, I shall be more
+strong and <i>delivr&eacute;</i> to bear the rest. And, to tell
+your Majesty what my thoughts run upon, I think of writing a story
+of England, and of recompiling of your laws into a better
+digest."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The King referred him to the House; and the House now (April
+19th) prepared to gather up into "one brief" the charges against
+the Lord Chancellor, still, however, continuing open to receive
+fresh complaints.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the chase after abuses of all kinds was growing hotter
+in the Commons&mdash;abuses in patents and monopolies, which
+revived the complaints against referees, among whom Bacon was
+frequently named, and abuses in the Courts of Justice. The attack
+passed by and spared the Common Law Courts, as was noticed in the
+course of the debates; it spared Cranfield's Court, the Court of
+Wards. But it fell heavily on the Chancery and the Ec<a name=
+'Page_133' class='pagenum' title='Page 133'></a>clesiastical
+Courts. "I have neither power nor will to defend Chancery," said
+Sir John Bennett, the judge of the Prerogative Court; but a few
+weeks after his turn came, and a series of as ugly charges as could
+well be preferred against a judge, charges of extortion as well as
+bribery, were reported to the House by its Committee. There can be
+no doubt of the grossness of many of these abuses, and the zeal
+against them was honest, though it would have shown more courage if
+it had flown at higher game; but the daily discussion of them
+helped to keep alive and inflame the general feeling against so
+great a "delinquent" as the Lord Chancellor was supposed to be.
+And, indeed, two of the worst charges against him were made before
+the Commons. One was a statement made in the House by Sir George
+Hastings, a member of the House, who had been the channel of
+Awbry's gift, that when he had told Bacon that if questioned he
+must admit it, Bacon's answer was: "George, if you do so, I must
+deny it upon my honour&mdash;upon my oath." The other was that he
+had given an opinion in favour of some claim of the Masters in
+Chancery for which he received &pound;1200, and with which he said
+that all the judges agreed&mdash;an assertion which all the judges
+denied. Of these charges there is no contradiction.<a id=
+"footnotetag4" name="footnotetag4" class="fn" href="#footnote4"
+title=
+"Commons' Journals, March 17, April 27; iii. 560, 594-6."><sup>4</sup></a>
+<!-- [4] --></p>
+
+<p>Bacon made one more appeal to the King (April 21). He hoped
+that, by resigning the seal, he might be spared the sentence:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"But now if not <i>per omnipotentiam</i> (as the divines speak),
+but <i>per potestatem suaviter disponentem</i>, your Majesty will
+graciously save me from a sentence with the good liking of the
+House, and that cup may pass from me; it is the utmost of my
+desires.</p>
+
+<p><a name='Page_134' class='pagenum' title='Page 134'></a> "This I
+move with the more belief, because I assure myself that if it be
+reformation that is sought, the very taking away the seal, upon my
+general submission, will be as much in example for these four
+hundred years as any furder severity."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>At length, informally, but for the first time distinctly, the
+full nature of the accusation, with its overwhelming list of cases,
+came to Bacon's knowledge (April 20 or 21). From the single charge,
+made in the middle of March, it had swelled in force and volume
+like a rising mountain torrent. That all these charges should have
+sprung out of the ground from their long concealment is strange
+enough. How is it that nothing was heard of them when the things
+happened? And what is equally strange is that these charges were
+substantially true and undeniable; that this great Lord Chancellor,
+so admirable in his despatch of business, hitherto so little
+complained of for wrong or unfair decisions, had been in the habit
+of receiving large sums of money from suitors, in some cases
+certainly while the suit was pending. And further, while receiving
+them, while perfectly aware of the evil of receiving gifts on the
+seat of judgment, while emphatically warning inferior judges
+against yielding to the temptation, he seems really to have
+continued unconscious of any wrong-doing while gift after gift was
+offered and accepted. But nothing is so strange as the way in which
+Bacon met the charges. Tremendous as the accusation was, he made
+not the slightest fight about it. Up to this time he had held
+himself innocent. Now, overwhelmed and stunned, he made no attempt
+at defence; he threw up the game without a struggle, and
+volunteered an absolute and unreserved confession of his
+guilt&mdash;that is to say, he declined to stand his trial. Only,
+he made an earnest application to the House of Lords, in proceeding
+to sen<a name='Page_135' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 135'></a>tence, to be content with a general admission of
+guilt, and to spare him the humiliation of confessing the separate
+facts of alleged "bribery" which were contained in the twenty-eight
+Articles of his accusation. This submission, "grounded only on
+rumour," for the Articles of charge had not yet been communicated
+to him by the accusers, took the House by surprise. "No Lord spoke
+to it, after it had been read, for a long time." But they did not
+mean that he should escape with this. The House treated the
+suggestion with impatient scorn (April 24). "It is too late," said
+Lord Saye. "No word of confession of any corruption in the Lord
+Chancellor's submission," said Southampton; "it stands with the
+justice and honour of this House not to proceed without the
+parties' particular confession, or to have the parties to hear the
+charge, and we to hear the parties answer." The demand of the Lords
+was strictly just, but cruel; the Articles were now sent to him; he
+had been charged with definite offences; he must answer yes or no,
+confess them or defend himself. A further question arose whether he
+should not be sent for to appear at the bar. He still held the
+seals. "Shall the Great Seal come to the bar?" asked Lord Pembroke.
+It was agreed that he was to be asked whether he would acknowledge
+the particulars. His answer was "that he will make no manner of
+defence to the charge, but meaneth to acknowledge corruption, and
+to make a particular confession to every point, and after that a
+humble submission. But he humbly craves liberty that, when the
+charge is more full than he finds the truth of the fact, he may
+make a declaration of the truth in such particulars, the charge
+being brief and containing not all the circumstances." And such a
+confession he made. "My Lords," he said, to those who were sent to
+ask <a name='Page_136' class='pagenum' title='Page 136'></a>whether
+he would stand to it, "it is my act, my hand, my heart. I beseech
+your Lordships be merciful to a broken reed." This was, of course,
+followed by a request to the King from the House to "sequester" the
+Great Seal. A commission was sent to receive it (May 1). "The
+worse, the better," he answered to the wish, "that it had been
+better with him." "By the King's great favour I received the Great
+Seal; by my own great fault I have lost it." They intended him now
+to come to the bar to receive his sentence. But he was too ill to
+leave his bed. They did not push this point farther, but proceeded
+to settle the sentence (May 3). He had asked for mercy, but he did
+not get it. There were men who talked of every extremity short of
+death. Coke, indeed, in the Commons, from his store of precedents,
+had cited cases where judges had been hanged for bribery. But the
+Lords would not hear of this. "His offences foul," said Lord
+Arundel; "his confession pitiful. Life not to be touched." But
+Southampton, whom twenty years before he had helped to involve in
+Essex's ruin, urged that he should be degraded from the peerage;
+and asked whether, at any rate, "he whom this House thinks unfit to
+be a constable shall come to the Parliament." He was fined
+&pound;40,000. He was to be imprisoned in the Tower during the
+King's pleasure. He was to be incapable of any office, place, or
+employment in the State or Commonwealth. He was never to sit in
+Parliament or come within the verge of the Court. This was agreed
+to, Buckingham only dissenting. "The Lord Chancellor is so sick,"
+he said, "that he cannot live long."</p>
+
+<p>What is the history of this tremendous catastrophe by which, in
+less than two months, Bacon was cast down from the height of
+fortune to become a byword of shame? He had enemies, who certainly
+were glad, but there is no <a name='Page_137' class='pagenum'
+title='Page 137'></a>appearance that it was the result of any plot
+or combination against him. He was involved, accidentally, it may
+almost be said, in the burst of anger excited by the intolerable
+dealings of others. The indignation provoked by Michell and
+Mompesson and their associates at that particular moment found
+Bacon in its path, doing, as it seemed, in his great seat of
+justice, even worse than they; and when he threw up all attempt at
+defence, and his judges had his hand to an unreserved confession of
+corruption, both generally, and in the long list of cases alleged
+against him, it is not wonderful that they came to the conclusion,
+as the rest of the world did, that he was as bad as the accusation
+painted him&mdash;a dishonest and corrupt judge. Yet it is strange
+that they should not have observed that not a single charge of a
+definitely unjust decision was brought, at any rate was proved,
+against him. He had taken money, they argued, and therefore he must
+be corrupt; but if he had taken money to pervert judgment, some
+instance of the iniquity would certainly have been brought forward
+and proved. There is no such instance to be found; though, of
+course, there were plenty of dissatisfied suitors; of course the
+men who had paid their money and lost their cause were furious. But
+in vain do we look for any case of proved injustice. The utmost
+that can be said is that in some cases he showed favour in pushing
+forward and expediting suits. So that the real charge against Bacon
+assumes, to us who have not to deal practically with dangerous
+abuses, but to judge conduct and character, a different complexion.
+Instead of being the wickedness of perverting justice and selling
+his judgments for bribes, it takes the shape of allowing and
+sharing in a dishonourable and mischievous system of payment for <a
+name='Page_138' class='pagenum' title='Page 138'></a>service, which
+could not fail to bring with it temptation and discredit, and in
+which fair reward could not be distinguished from unlawful gain.
+Such a system it was high time to stop; and in this rough and harsh
+way, which also satisfied some personal enmities, it was stopped.
+We may put aside for good the charge on which he was condemned, and
+which in words he admitted&mdash;of being corrupt as a judge. His
+real fault&mdash;and it was a great one&mdash;was that he did not
+in time open his eyes to the wrongness and evil, patent to every
+one, and to himself as soon as pointed out, of the traditional
+fashion in his court of eking out by irregular gifts the salary of
+such an office as his.</p>
+
+<p>Thus Bacon was condemned both to suffering and to dishonour;
+and, as has been observed, condemned without a trial. But it must
+also be observed that it was entirely owing to his own act that he
+had not a trial, and with a trial the opportunity of
+cross-examining witnesses and of explaining openly the matters
+urged against him. The proceedings in the Lords were preliminary to
+the trial; when the time came, Bacon, of his own choice, stopped
+them from going farther, by his confession and submission.
+Considering the view which he claimed to take of his own case, his
+behaviour was wanting in courage and spirit. From the moment that
+the attack on him shifted from a charge of authorising illegal
+monopolies to a charge of personal corruption, he never fairly met
+his accusers. The distress and anxiety, no doubt, broke down his
+health; and twice, when he was called upon to be in his place in
+the House of Lords, he was obliged to excuse himself on the ground
+that he was too ill to leave his bed. But between the time of the
+first charge and his condemnation seven weeks elapsed; and though
+he was able to go down to <a name='Page_139' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 139'></a>Gorhambury, he never in that time showed himself in
+the House of Lords. Whether or not, while the Committees were busy
+in collecting the charges, he would have been allowed to take part,
+to put questions to the witnesses, or to produce his own, he never
+attempted to do so; and by the course he took there was no other
+opportunity. To have stood his trial could hardly have increased
+his danger, or aggravated his punishment; and it would only have
+been worthy of his name and place, if not to have made a fight for
+his character and integrity, at least to have bravely said what he
+had made up his mind to admit, and what no one could have said more
+nobly and pathetically, in open Parliament. But he was cowed at the
+fierceness of the disapprobation manifest in both Houses. He shrunk
+from looking his peers and his judges in the face. His friends
+obtained for him that he should not be brought to the bar, and that
+all should pass in writing. But they saved his dignity at the
+expense of his substantial reputation. The observation that the
+charges against him were not sifted by cross-examination applies
+equally to his answers to them. The allegations of both sides would
+have come down to us in a more trustworthy shape if the case had
+gone on. But to give up the struggle, and to escape by any
+humiliation from a regular public trial, seems to have been his
+only thought when he found that the King and Buckingham could not
+or would not save him.</p>
+
+<p>But the truth is that he knew that a trial of this kind was a
+trial only in name. He knew that, when a charge of this sort was
+brought, it was not meant to be really investigated in open court,
+but to be driven home by proofs carefully prepared beforehand,
+against which the accused had little chance. He knew, too, that in
+those days to resist in <a name='Page_140' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 140'></a>earnest an accusation was apt to be taken as an
+insult to the court which entertained it. And further, for the
+prosecutor to accept a submission and confession without pushing to
+the formality of a public trial, and therefore a public exposure,
+was a favour. It was a favour which by his advice, as against the
+King's honour, had been refused to Suffolk; it was a favour which,
+in a much lighter charge, had by his advice been refused to his
+colleague Yelverton only a few months before, when Bacon, in
+sentencing him, took occasion to expatiate on the heinous guilt of
+misprisions or mistakes in men in high places. The humiliation was
+not complete without the trial, but it was for humiliation and not
+fair investigation that the trial was wanted. Bacon knew that the
+trial would only prolong his agony, and give a further triumph to
+his enemies.</p>
+
+<p>That there was any plot against Bacon, and much more that
+Buckingham to save himself was a party to it, is of course absurd.
+Buckingham, indeed, was almost the only man in the Lords who said
+anything for Bacon, and, alone, he voted against his punishment.
+But considering what Buckingham was, and what he dared to do when
+he pleased, he was singularly cool in helping Bacon. Williams, the
+astute Dean of Westminster, who was to be Bacon's successor as Lord
+Keeper, had got his ear, and advised him not to endanger himself by
+trying to save delinquents. He did not. Indeed, as the inquiry went
+on, he began to take the high moral ground; he was shocked at the
+Chancellor's conduct; he would not have believed that it could have
+been so bad; his disgrace was richly deserved. Buckingham kept up
+appearances by saying a word for him from time to time in
+Parliament, which he knew would be useless, and which he certainly
+took no measures to make ef<a name='Page_141' class='pagenum'
+title='Page 141'></a>fective. It is sometimes said that Buckingham
+never knew what dissimulation was. He was capable, at least, of the
+perfidy and cowardice of utter selfishness. Bacon's conspicuous
+fall diverted men's thoughts from the far more scandalous
+wickedness of the great favourite. But though there was no plot,
+though the blow fell upon Bacon almost accidentally, there were
+many who rejoiced to be able to drive it home. We can hardly wonder
+that foremost among them was Coke. This was the end of the long
+rivalry between Bacon and Coke, from the time that Essex pressed
+Bacon against Coke in vain to the day when Bacon as Chancellor
+drove Coke from his seat for his bad law, and as Privy Councillor
+ordered him to be prosecuted in the Star Chamber for riotously
+breaking open men's doors to get his daughter. The two men
+thoroughly disliked and undervalued one another. Coke made light of
+Bacon's law. Bacon saw clearly Coke's narrowness and ignorance out
+of that limited legal sphere in which he was supposed to know
+everything, his prejudiced and interested use of his knowledge, his
+coarseness and insolence. But now in Parliament Coke was supreme,
+"our Hercules," as his friends said. He posed as the enemy of all
+abuses and corruption. He brought his unrivalled, though not always
+accurate, knowledge of law and history to the service of the
+Committees, and took care that the Chancellor's name should not be
+forgotten when it could be connected with some bad business of
+patent or Chancery abuse. It was the great revenge of the Common
+Law on the encroaching and insulting Chancery which had now proved
+so foul. And he could not resist the opportunity of marking the
+revenge of professional knowledge over Bacon's airs of
+philosophical superiority. "To restore things to their original"
+was his sneer in Par<a name='Page_142' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 142'></a>liament, "this, <i>Instauratio Magna. Instaurare
+paras&mdash;Instaura leges justitiamque prius</i>."<a id=
+"footnotetag5" name="footnotetag5" class="fn" href="#footnote5"
+title=
+"Commons' Journals, iii. 578. In his copy of the Novum Organum, received ex dono auctoris, Coke wrote the same words. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&quot;Auctori consilium. &nbsp;Instaurare paras veterum documenta sophorum: &nbsp;Instaura leges justitiamque prius.&quot; He added, with allusion to the ship in the frontispiece of the Novum Organum, &nbsp;&nbsp;&quot;It deserveth not to be read in schools, &nbsp;&nbsp;But to be freighted in the ship of Fools.&quot;">
+<sup>5</sup></a> <!-- [5] --></p>
+
+<p>The charge of corruption was as completely a surprise to Bacon
+as it was to the rest of the world. And yet, as soon as the blot
+was hit, he saw in a moment that his position was hopeless&mdash;he
+knew that he had been doing wrong; though all the time he had never
+apparently given it a thought, and he insisted, what there is every
+reason to believe, that no present had induced him to give an
+unjust decision. It was the power of custom over a character
+naturally and by habit too pliant to circumstances. Custom made him
+insensible to the evil of receiving recommendations from Buckingham
+in favour of suitors. Custom made him insensible to the evil of
+what it seems every one took for granted&mdash;receiving gifts from
+suitors. In the Court of James I. the atmosphere which a man in
+office breathed was loaded with the taint of gifts and bribes.
+Presents were as much the rule, as indispensable for those who
+hoped to get on, as they are now in Turkey. Even in Elizabeth's
+days, when Bacon was struggling to win her favour, and was in the
+greatest straits for money, he borrowed &pound;500 to buy a jewel
+for the Queen. When he was James's servant the giving of gifts
+became a necessity. New Year's Day brought round its tribute of
+gold vases and gold pieces to the King and Buckingham. <a name=
+'Page_143' class='pagenum' title='Page 143'></a>And this was the
+least. Money was raised by the sale of officers and titles. For
+&pound;20,000, having previously offered &pound;10,000 in vain, the
+Chief-Justice of England, Montague, became Lord Mandeville and
+Treasurer. The bribe was sometimes disguised: a man became a Privy
+Councillor, like Cranfield, or a Chief-Justice, like Ley
+(afterwards "the good Earl," "unstained with gold or fee," of
+Milton's Sonnet), by marrying a cousin or a niece of Buckingham.
+When Bacon was made a Peer, he had also given him "the making of a
+Baron;" that is to say, he might raise money by bargaining with
+some one who wanted a peerage; when, however, later on, he asked
+Buckingham for a repetition of the favour, Buckingham gave him a
+lecture on the impropriety of prodigality, which should make it
+seem that "while the King was asking money of Parliament with one
+hand he was giving with the other." How things were in Chancery in
+the days of the Queen, and of Bacon's predecessors, we know little;
+but Bacon himself implies that there was nothing new in what he
+did. "All my lawyers," said James, "are so bred and nursed in
+corruption that they cannot leave it." Bacon's Chancellorship
+coincided with the full bloom of Buckingham's favour; and
+Buckingham set the fashion, beyond all before him, of extravagance
+in receiving and spending. Encompassed by such assumptions and such
+customs, Bacon administered the Chancery. Suitors did there what
+people did everywhere else; they acknowledged by a present the
+trouble they gave, or the benefit they gained. It may be that
+Bacon's known difficulties about money, his expensive ways and love
+of pomp, his easiness of nature, his lax discipline over his
+servants, encouraged this profuseness of giving. And Bacon let it
+be. He asked no questions; he knew that he worked <a name=
+'Page_144' class='pagenum' title='Page 144'></a>hard and well; he
+knew that it could go on without affecting his purpose to do
+justice "from the greatest to the groom." A stronger character, a
+keener conscience, would have faced the question, not only whether
+he was not setting the most ruinous of precedents, but whether any
+man could be so sure of himself as to go on dealing justly with
+gifts in his hands. But Bacon, who never dared to face the
+question, what James was, what Buckingham was, let himself be
+spellbound by custom. He knew in the abstract that judges ought to
+have nothing to do with gifts, and had said so impressively in his
+charges to them. Yet he went on self-complacent, secure, almost
+innocent, building up a great tradition of corruption in the very
+heart of English justice, till the challenge of Parliament, which
+began in him its terrible and relentless, but most unequal,
+prosecution of justice against ministers who had betrayed the
+commonwealth in serving the Crown, woke him from his dream, and
+made him see, as others saw it, the guilt of a great judge who,
+under whatever extenuating pretext, allowed the suspicion to arise
+that he might sell justice. "In the midst of a state of as great
+affliction as mortal man can endure," he wrote to the Lords of the
+Parliament, in making his submission, "I shall begin with the
+professing gladness in some things. The first is that hereafter the
+greatness of a judge or magistrate shall be no sanctuary or
+protection of guiltiness, which is the beginning of a golden world.
+The next, that after this example it is like that judges will fly
+from anything that is in the likeness of corruption as from a
+serpent." Bacon's own judgment on himself, deliberately repeated,
+is characteristic, and probably comes near the truth. "Howsoever, I
+acknowledge the sentence just and for reformation's sake fit," he
+writes to Buckingham from <a name='Page_145' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 145'></a>the Tower, where, for form's sake, he was imprisoned
+for a few miserable days, he yet had been "the justest Chancellor
+that hath been in the five changes that have been since Sir Nicolas
+Bacon's time." He repeated the same thing yet more deliberately in
+later times. "<i>I was the justest judge that was in England these
+fifty years. But it was the justest censure in Parliament that was
+these two hundred years.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>He might have gone on to add, "the Wisest Counsellor; and yet
+none on whom rested heavier blame; none of whom England might more
+justly complain." Good counsels given, submissive acquiescence in
+the worst&mdash;this is the history of his statesmanship. Bacon,
+whose eye was everywhere, was not sparing of his counsels. On all
+the great questions of the time he has left behind abundant
+evidence, not only of what he thought, but of what he advised. And
+in every case these memorials are marked with the insight, the
+independence, the breadth of view, and the moderation of a mind
+which is bent on truth. He started, of course, from a basis which
+we are now hardly able to understand or allow for, the idea of
+absolute royal power and prerogative which James had enlarged and
+hardened out of the Kingship of the Tudors, itself imperious and
+arbitrary enough, but always seeking, with a tact of which James
+was incapable, to be in touch and sympathy with popular feeling.
+But it was a basis which in principle every one of any account as
+yet held or professed to hold, and which Bacon himself held on
+grounds of philosophy and reason. He could see no hope for orderly
+and intelligent government except in a ruler whose wisdom had equal
+strength to assert itself; and he looked down with incredulity and
+scorn on the notion of anything good <a name='Page_146' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 146'></a>coming out of what the world then
+knew or saw of popular opinion or parliamentary government. But
+when it came to what was wise and fitting for absolute power to do
+in the way of general measures and policy, he was for the most part
+right. He saw the inexorable and pressing necessity of putting the
+finance of the kingdom on a safe footing. He saw the necessity of a
+sound and honest policy in Ireland. He saw the mischief of the
+Spanish alliance in spite of his curious friendship with Gondomar,
+and detected the real and increasing weakness of the Spanish
+monarchy, which still awed mankind. He saw the growing danger of
+abuses in Church and State which were left untouched, and were
+protected by the punishment of those who dared to complain of them.
+He saw the confusion and injustice of much of that common law of
+which the lawyers were so proud; and would have attempted, if he
+had been able, to emulate Justinian, and anticipate the Code
+Napoleon, by a rational and consistent digest. Above all, he never
+ceased to impress on James the importance, and, if wisely used, the
+immense advantages, of his Parliaments. Himself, for great part of
+his life, an active and popular member of the House of Commons, he
+saw that not only it was impossible to do without it, but that, if
+fairly, honourably, honestly dealt with, it would become a source
+of power and confidence which would double the strength of the
+Government both at home and abroad. Yet of all this wisdom nothing
+came. The finance of the kingdom was still ruined by extravagance
+and corruption in a time of rapidly-developing prosperity and
+wealth. The wounds of Ireland were unhealed. It was neither peace
+nor war with Spain, and hot infatuation for its friendship
+alternated with cold fits of distrust and estrange<a name=
+'Page_147' class='pagenum' title='Page 147'></a>ment. Abuses
+flourished and multiplied under great patronage. The King's one
+thought about Parliament was how to get as much money out of it as
+he could, with as little other business as possible. Bacon's
+counsels were the prophecies of Cassandra in that so prosperous but
+so disastrous reign. All that he did was to lend the authority of
+his presence, in James's most intimate counsels, to policy and
+courses of which he saw the unwisdom and the perils. James and
+Buckingham made use of him when they wanted. But they would have
+been very different in their measures and their statesmanship if
+they had listened to him.</p>
+
+<p>Mirabeau said, what of course had been said before him, "On ne
+vaut, dans la partie ex&eacute;cutive de la vie humaine, que par le
+caract&egrave;re." This is the key to Bacon's failures as a judge
+and as a statesman, and why, knowing so much more and judging so
+much more wisely than James and Buckingham, he must be identified
+with the misdoings of that ignoble reign. He had the courage of his
+opinions; but a man wants more than that: he needs the manliness
+and the public spirit to enforce them, if they are true and
+salutary. But this is what Bacon had not. He did not mind being
+rebuffed; he knew that he was right, and did not care. But to stand
+up against the King, to contradict him after he had spoken, to
+press an opinion or a measure on a man whose belief in his own
+wisdom was infinite, to risk not only being set down as a dreamer,
+but the King's displeasure, and the ruin of being given over to the
+will of his enemies, this Bacon had not the fibre or the stiffness
+or the self-assertion to do. He did not do what a man of firm will
+and strength of purpose, a man of high integrity, of habitual
+resolution, would have done. Such men insist <a name='Page_148'
+class='pagenum' title='Page 148'></a>when they are responsible, and
+when they know that they are right; and they prevail, or accept the
+consequences. Bacon, knowing all that he did, thinking all that he
+thought, was content to be the echo and the instrument of the
+cleverest, the foolishest, the vainest, the most pitiably unmanly
+of English kings.</p>
+
+<hr />
+<p><a name='Page_149' class='pagenum' title='Page 149'></a></p>
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_VII'></a>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+
+<h3>BACON'S LAST YEARS.<br />
+[1621-1626.]</h3>
+
+<p><br />
+The tremendous sentences of those days, with their crushing fines,
+were often worse in sound than in reality. They meant that for the
+moment a man was defeated and disgraced. But it was quite
+understood that it did not necessarily follow that they would be
+enforced in all their severity. The fine might be remitted, the
+imprisonment shortened, the ban of exclusion taken off. At another
+turn of events or caprice the man himself might return to favour,
+and take his place in Parliament or the Council as if nothing had
+happened. But, of course, a man might have powerful enemies, and
+the sentence might be pressed. His fine might be assigned to some
+favourite; and he might be mined, even if in the long run he was
+pardoned; or he might remain indefinitely a prisoner. Raleigh had
+remained to perish at last in dishonour. Northumberland, Raleigh's
+fellow-prisoner, after fifteen years' captivity, was released this
+year. The year after Bacon's condemnation such criminals as Lord
+and Lady Somerset were released from the Tower, after a six years'
+imprisonment. Southampton, the accomplice of Essex, Suffolk,
+sentenced as late as 1619 by Bacon for embezzlement, sat in the
+House of Peers which judged Bacon, and both of them took a
+prominent part in judging him.</p>
+
+<p><a name='Page_150' class='pagenum' title='Page 150'></a> To
+Bacon the sentence was ruinous. It proved an irretrievable
+overthrow as regards public life, and, though some parts of it were
+remitted and others lightened, it plunged his private affairs into
+trouble which weighed heavily on him for his few remaining years.
+To his deep distress and horror he had to go to the Tower to
+satisfy the terms of his sentence. "Good my Lord," he writes to
+Buckingham, May 31, "procure my warrant for my discharge this day.
+Death is so far from being unwelcome to me, as I have called for it
+as far as Christian resolution would permit any time these two
+months. But to die before the time of his Majesty's grace, in this
+disgraceful place, is even the worst that could be." He was
+released after two or three days, and he thanks Buckingham (June 4)
+for getting him out to do him and the King faithful
+service&mdash;"wherein, by the grace of God, your Lordship shall
+find that my adversity hath neither <i>spent</i> nor <i>pent</i> my
+spirits." In the autumn his fine was remitted&mdash;that is, it was
+assigned to persons nominated by Bacon, who, as the Crown had the
+first claim on all his goods, served as a protection against his
+other creditors, who were many and some of them clamorous&mdash;and
+it was followed by his pardon. His successor, Williams, now Bishop
+of Lincoln, who stood in great fear of Parliament, tried to stop
+the pardon. The assignment of the fine, he said to Buckingham, was
+a gross job&mdash;"it is much spoken against, not for the matter
+(for no man objects to that), but for the manner, which is full of
+knavery, and a wicked precedent. For by this assignment he is
+protected from all his creditors, which (I dare say) was neither
+his Majesty's nor your Lordship's meaning." It was an ill-natured
+and cowardly piece of official pedantry to plunge deeper a drowning
+man; but in the end the pardon was passed. <a name='Page_151'
+class='pagenum' title='Page 151'></a>It does not appear whether
+Buckingham interfered to overrule the Lord Keeper's scruples.
+Buckingham was certainly about this time very much out of humour
+with Bacon, for a reason which, more than anything else, discloses
+the deep meanness which lurked under his show of magnanimity and
+pride. He had chosen this moment to ask Bacon for York House. This
+meant that Bacon would never more want it. Even Bacon was stung by
+such a request to a friend in his condition, and declined to part
+with it; and Buckingham accordingly was offended, and made Bacon
+feel it. Indeed, there is reason to think with Mr. Spedding that
+for the sealing of his pardon Bacon was indebted to the good
+offices with the King, not of Buckingham, but of the Spaniard,
+Gondomar, with whom Bacon had always been on terms of cordiality
+and respect, and who at this time certainly "brought about
+something on his behalf, which his other friends either had not
+dared to attempt or had not been able to obtain."</p>
+
+<p>But, though Bacon had his pardon, he had not received permission
+to come within the verge of the Court, which meant that he could
+not live in London. His affairs were in great disorder, his health
+was bad, and he was cut off from books. He wrote an appeal to the
+Peers who had condemned him, asking them to intercede with the King
+for the enlargement of his liberty. "I am old," he wrote, "weak,
+ruined, in want, a very subject of pity." The Tower at least gave
+him the neighbourhood of those who could help him. "There I could
+have company, physicians, conference with my creditors and friends
+about my debts and the necessities of my estate, helps for my
+studies and the writings I have in hand. Here I live upon the
+sword-point of a sharp air, endangered if I go abroad, dulled if I
+stay within, solitary and comfortless, without company, <a name=
+'Page_152' class='pagenum' title='Page 152'></a>banished from all
+opportunities to treat with any to do myself good, and to help out
+my wrecks." If the Lords would recommend his suit to the King, "You
+shall do a work of charity and nobility, you shall do me good, you
+shall do my creditors good, and it may be you shall do posterity
+good, if out of the carcase of dead and rotten greatness (as out of
+Samson's lion) there may be honey gathered for the use of future
+times." But Parliament was dissolved before the touching appeal
+reached them; and Bacon had to have recourse to other expedients.
+He consulted Selden about the technical legality of the sentence.
+He appealed to Buckingham, who vouchsafed to appear more placable.
+Once more he had recourse to Gondomar, "in that solitude of
+friends, which is the base-court of adversity," as a man whom he
+had "observed to have the magnanimity of his own nation and the
+cordiality of ours, and I am sure the wit of both"&mdash;and who
+had been equally kind to him in "both his fortunes;" and he
+proposed through Gondomar to present Gorhambury to Buckingham "for
+nothing," as a peace-offering. But the purchase of his liberty was
+to come in another way. Bacon had reconciled himself to giving up
+York House; but now Buckingham would not have it: he had found
+another house, he said, which suited him as well. That is to say,
+he did not now choose to have York House from Bacon himself; but he
+meant to have it. Accordingly, Buckingham let Bacon know through a
+friend of Bacon's, Sir Edward Sackville, that the price of his
+liberty to live in London was the cession of York House&mdash;not
+to Buckingham, but of all men in the world, to Lionel Cranfield,
+the man who had been so bitter against Bacon in the House of
+Commons. This is Sir Edward Sackville's account to Bacon of his
+talk with Buckingham; it is characteristic of every one
+concerned:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p><a name='Page_153' class='pagenum' title='Page 153'></a> "In the
+forenoon he laid the law, but in the afternoon he preached the
+gospel; when, after some revivations of the old distaste concerning
+York House, he most nobly opened his heart unto me; wherein I read
+that which augured much good towards you. After which revelation
+the book was again sealed up, and must in his own time only by
+himself be again manifested unto you. I have leave to remember some
+of the vision, and am not forbidden to write it. He vowed (not
+court like), but constantly to appear your friend so much, as if
+his Majesty should abandon the care of you, you should share his
+fortune with him. He pleased to tell me how much he had been
+beholden to you, how well he loved you, how unkindly he took the
+denial of your house (for so he will needs understand it); but the
+close for all this was harmonious, since he protested he would
+seriously begin to study your ends, now that the world should see
+he had no ends on you. He is in hand with the work, and therefore
+will by no means accept of your offer, though I can assure you the
+tender hath much won upon him, and mellowed his heart towards you,
+and your genius directed you aright when you writ that letter of
+denial to the Duke. The King saw it, and all the rest, which made
+him say unto the Marquis, you played an after-game well; and that
+now he had no reason to be much offended.</p>
+
+<p>"I have already talked of the Revelation, and now am to speak in
+apocalyptical language, which I hope you will rightly comment:
+whereof if you make difficulty, the bearer can help you with the
+key of the cypher.</p>
+
+<p>"My Lord Falkland by this time hath showed you London from
+Highgate. <i>If York House were gone, the town were yours</i>, and
+all your straitest shackles clean off, besides more comfort than
+the city air only. The Marquis would be exceeding glad the
+Treasurer had it. This I know; yet this you must not know from me.
+Bargain with him presently, upon as good conditions as you can
+procure, so you have direct motion from the Marquis to let him have
+it. Seem not to dive into the secret of it, though you are purblind
+if you see not through it. I have told Mr. Meautys how I would wish
+your Lordship now to make an end of it. From him I beseech you take
+it, and from me only the advice to perform it. If you part not
+speedily with it, you may defer the good which is approaching near
+you, and disappointing other aims (which must either shortly
+receive content or never), perhaps anew yield matter of discontent,
+though <a name='Page_154' class='pagenum' title='Page 154'></a>you
+may be indeed as innocent as before. Make the Treasurer believe
+that since the Marquis will by no means accept of it, and that you
+must part with it, you are more willing to pleasure him than
+anybody else, because you are given to understand my Lord Marquis
+so inclines; which inclination, if the Treasurer shortly send unto
+you about it, desire may be more clearly manifested than as yet it
+hath been; since as I remember none hitherto hath told you <i>in
+terminis terminantibus</i> that the Marquis desires you should
+gratify the Treasurer. I know that way the hare runs, and that my
+Lord Marquis longs until Cranfield hath it; and so I wish too, for
+your good; yet would not it were absolutely passed until my Lord
+Marquis did send or write unto you to let him have it; for then his
+so disposing of it were but the next degree removed from the
+immediate acceptance of it, and your Lordship freed from doing it
+otherwise than to please him, and to comply with his own will and
+way."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>It need hardly be said that when Cranfield got it, it soon
+passed into Buckingham's hands. "Bacon consented to part with his
+house, and Buckingham in return consented to give him his liberty."
+Yet Bacon could write to him, "low as I am, I had rather sojourn in
+a college in Cambridge than recover a good fortune by any other but
+yourself." "As for York House," he bids Toby Matthews to let
+Buckingham know, "that <i>whether in a straight line or a compass
+line</i>, I meant it for his Lordship, in the way which I thought
+might please him best." But liberty did not mean either money or
+recovered honour. All his life long he had made light of being in
+debt; but since his fall this was no longer a condition easy to
+bear. He had to beg some kind of pension of the King. He had to beg
+of Buckingham; "a small matter for my debts would do me more good
+now than double a twelvemonth hence. I have lost six thousand by
+the year, besides caps and courtesies. Two things I may assure your
+Lordship. The one, that I shall lead such a course of life as
+whatsoever <a name='Page_155' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 155'></a>the King doth for me shall rather sort to his
+Majesty's and your Lordship's honour than to envy; the other, that
+whatsoever men talk, I can play the good husband, and the King's
+bounty shall not be lost."</p>
+
+<p>It might be supposed from the tone of these applications that
+Bacon's mind was bowed down and crushed by the extremity of his
+misfortune. Nothing could be farther from the truth. In his
+behaviour during his accusation there was little trace of that high
+spirit and fortitude shown by far inferior men under like
+disasters. But the moment the tremendous strain of his misfortunes
+was taken off, the vigour of his mind recovered itself. The
+buoyancy of his hopefulness, the elasticity of his energy, are as
+remarkable as his profound depression. When the end was
+approaching, his thoughts turned at once to other work to be done,
+ready in plan, ready to be taken up and finished. At the close of
+his last desperate letter to the King he cannot resist finishing at
+once with a jest, and with the prospect of two great literary
+undertakings&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"This is my last suit which I shall make to your Majesty in this
+business, prostrating myself at your mercy seat, after fifteen
+years service, wherein I have served your Majesty in my poor
+endeavours with an entire heart, and, as I presumed to say unto
+your Majesty, am still a virgin for matters that concern your
+person and crown; and now only craving that after eight steps of
+honour I be not precipitated altogether. But because he that hath
+taken bribes is apt to give bribes, I will go furder, and present
+your Majesty with a bribe. For if your Majesty will give me peace
+and leisure, and God give me life, I will present your Majesty with
+a good history of England, and a better digest of your laws."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The Tower did, indeed, to use a word of the time, "mate" him.
+But the moment he was out of it, his quick and fertile mind was
+immediately at work in all di<a name='Page_156' class='pagenum'
+title='Page 156'></a>rections, reaching after all kinds of plans,
+making proof of all kinds of expedients to retrieve the past,
+arranging all kinds of work according as events might point out the
+way. His projects for history, for law, for philosophy, for
+letters, occupy quite as much of his thoughts as his pardon and his
+debts; and they, we have seen, occupied a good deal. If he was
+pusillanimous in the moment of the storm, his spirit, his force,
+his varied interests, returned the moment the storm was past. His
+self-reliance, which was boundless, revived. He never allowed
+himself to think, however men of his own time might judge him, that
+the future world would mistake him. "<i>Aliquis fui inter
+vivos</i>," he writes to Gondomar, "<i>neque omnino intermoriar
+apud posteros</i>." Even in his time he did not give up the hope of
+being restored to honour and power. He compared himself to
+Demosthenes, to Cicero, to Seneca, to Marcus Livius, who had been
+condemned for corrupt dealings as he had been, and had all
+recovered favour and position. Lookers-on were puzzled and shocked.
+"He has," writes Chamberlain, "no manner of feeling of his fall,
+but continuing vain and idle in all his humours as when he was at
+the highest." "I am said," Bacon himself writes, "to have a feather
+in my head."</p>
+
+<p>Men were mistaken. His thoughts were, for the moment, more than
+ever turned to the future; but he had not given up hope of having a
+good deal to say yet to the affairs of the present. Strangely
+enough, as it seems to us, in the very summer after that fatal
+spring of 1621 the King called for his opinion concerning the
+reformation of Courts of Justice; and Bacon, just sentenced for
+corruption and still unpardoned, proceeds to give his advice as if
+he were a Privy Councillor in confidential employment. Early in the
+following year he, according to his fashion, surveyed <a name=
+'Page_157' class='pagenum' title='Page 157'></a>his position, and
+drew up a paper of memoranda, like the notes of the <i>Commentarius
+Solutus</i> of 1608, about points to be urged to the King at an
+interview. Why should not the King employ him again? "Your Majesty
+never chid me;" and as to his condemnation, "as the fault was not
+against your Majesty, so my fall was not your act." "Therefore," he
+goes on, "if your Majesty do at any time find it fit for your
+affairs to employ me publicly upon the stage, I shall so live and
+spend my time as neither discontinuance shall disable me nor
+adversity shall discourage me, nor anything that I do give any new
+scandal or envy upon me." He insists very strongly that the King's
+service never miscarried in his hands, for he simply carried out
+the King's wise counsels. "That his Majesty's business never
+miscarried in my hands I do not impute to any extraordinary ability
+in myself, but to my freedom from any particular, either friends or
+ends, and my careful receipt of his directions, being, as I have
+formerly said to him, but as a bucket and cistern to that
+fountain&mdash;a bucket to draw forth, a cistern to preserve." He
+is not afraid of the apparent slight to the censure passed on him
+by Parliament. "For envy, it is an almanack of the old year, and as
+a friend of mine said, <i>Parliament died penitent towards me</i>."
+"What the King bestows on me will be further seen than on Paul's
+steeple." "There be mountebanks, as well in the civil body as in
+the natural; I ever served his Majesty with modesty; no shouting,
+no undertaking." In the odd fashion of the time&mdash;a fashion in
+which no one more delighted than himself&mdash;he lays hold of
+sacred words to give point to his argument.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"I may allude to the three petitions of the
+Litany&mdash;<i>Libera nos Domine</i>; <i>parce nobis, Domine</i>;
+<i>exaudi nos, Domine</i>. In the first, I am persuaded that his
+Majesty had a mind to do it, and could not conveniently in respect
+of his affairs. In the second, he hath done it <a name='Page_158'
+class='pagenum' title='Page 158'></a>in my fine and pardon. In the
+third, he hath likewise performed, in restoring to the light of his
+countenance."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>But if the King did not see fit to restore him to public
+employment, he would be ready to give private counsel; and he would
+apply himself to any "literary province" that the King appointed.
+"I am like ground fresh. If I be left to myself I will graze and
+bear natural philosophy; but if the King will plough me up again,
+and sow me with anything, I hope to give him some yield." "Your
+Majesty hath power; I have faith. Therefore a miracle may be
+wrought." And he proposes, for matters in which his pen might be
+useful, first, as "active" works, the recompiling of laws; the
+disposing of wards, and generally the education of youth; the
+regulation of the jurisdiction of Courts; and the regulation of
+Trade; and for "contemplative," the continuation of the history of
+Henry VIII.; a general treatise <i>de Legibus et Justitia</i>; and
+the "Holy War" against the Ottomans.</p>
+
+<p>When he wrote this he had already shown what his unquelled
+energy could accomplish. In the summer and autumn after his
+condemnation, amid all the worries and inconveniences of that time,
+moving about from place to place, without his books, and without
+free access to papers and records, he had written his <i>History of
+Henry VII</i>. The theme had, no doubt, been long in his head. But
+the book was the first attempt at philosophical history in the
+language, and it at once takes rank with all that the world had yet
+seen, in classical times and more recently in Italy, of such
+history. He sent the book, among other persons, to the Queen of
+Bohemia, with a phrase, the translation of a trite Latin
+commonplace, which may have been the parent of one which became
+famous in our time; and with an expression of absolute confidence
+in the goodness of his own work.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p><a name='Page_159' class='pagenum' title='Page 159'></a> "I have
+read in books that it is accounted a great bliss for a man to have
+<i>Leisure with Honour</i>. That was never my fortune. For time
+was, I had Honour without Leisure; and now I have <i>Leisure
+without Honour</i>.... But my desire is now to have <i>Leisure
+without Loitering</i>, and not to become an abbey-lubber, as the
+old proverb was, but to yield some fruit of my private life.... If
+King Henry were alive again, I hope verily he would not be so angry
+with me for not flattering him, as well pleased in seeing himself
+so truly described in colours that will last and be believed."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>But the tide had turned against him for good. A few fair words,
+a few grudging doles of money to relieve his pressing wants, and
+those sometimes intercepted and perhaps never rightly granted from
+an Exchequer which even Cranfield's finance could not keep filled,
+were all the graces that descended upon him from those fountains of
+goodness in which he professed to trust with such boundless faith.
+The King did not want him, perhaps did not trust him, perhaps did
+not really like him. When the <i>Novum Organum</i> came out, all
+that he had to say about it was in the shape of a profane jest that
+"it was like the peace of God&mdash;it passed all understanding."
+Other men had the ear of Buckingham; shrewd, practical men of
+business like Cranfield, who hated Bacon's loose and careless ways,
+or the clever ecclesiastic Williams, whose counsel had steered
+Buckingham safely through the tempest that wrecked Bacon, and who,
+with no legal training, had been placed in Bacon's seat. "I
+thought," said Bacon, "that I should have known my successor."
+Williams, for his part, charged Bacon with trying to cheat his
+creditors, when his fine was remitted. With no open quarrel,
+Bacon's relations to Buckingham became more ceremonious and
+guarded; the "My singular good Lord" of the former letters becomes,
+now that Buckingham had risen so high and Bacon had sunk so low,
+"Excellent Lord." The one friend to whom Ba<a name='Page_160'
+class='pagenum' title='Page 160'></a>con had once wished to owe
+everything had become the great man, now only to be approached with
+"sweet meats" and elaborate courtesy. But it was no use. His full
+pardon Bacon did not get, though earnestly suing for it, that he
+might not "die in ignominy." He never sat again in Parliament. The
+Provostship of Eton fell vacant, and Bacon's hopes were kindled.
+"It were a pretty cell for my fortune. The College and School I do
+not doubt but I shall make to flourish." But Buckingham had
+promised it to some nameless follower, and by some process of
+exchange it went to Sir Henry Wotton. His English history was
+offered in vain. His digest of the Laws was offered in vain. In
+vain he wrote a memorandum on the regulation of usury; notes of
+advice to Buckingham; elaborate reports and notes of speeches about
+a war with Spain, when that for a while loomed before the country.
+In vain he affected an interest which he could hardly have felt in
+the Spanish marriage, and the escapade of Buckingham and Prince
+Charles, which "began," he wrote, "like a fable of the poets, but
+deserved all in a piece a worthy narration." In vain, when the
+Spanish marriage was off and the French was on, he proposed to
+offer to Buckingham "his service to live a summer as upon mine own
+delight at Paris, to settle a fast intelligence between France and
+us;" "I have somewhat of the French," he said, "I love birds, as
+the King doth." Public patronage and public employment were at an
+end for him. His petitions to the King and Buckingham ceased to be
+for office, but for the clearing of his name and for the means of
+living. It is piteous to read the earnestness of his requests.
+"Help me (dear Sovereign lord and master), pity me so far as that I
+who have borne a bag be not now in my age forced in effect to bear
+a wallet." The words are from a carefully-prepared and <a name=
+'Page_161' class='pagenum' title='Page 161'></a>rhetorical letter
+which was not sent, but they express what he added to a letter
+presenting the <i>De Augmentis; "det Vestra Majestas obolum
+Belisario</i>." Again, "I prostrate myself at your Majesty's feet;
+I your ancient servant, now sixty-four years old in age, and three
+years and five months old in misery. I desire not from your Majesty
+means, nor place, nor employment, but only after so long a time of
+expiation, a complete and total remission of the sentence of the
+Upper House, to the end that blot of ignominy may be removed from
+me, and from my memory and posterity, that I die not a condemned
+man, but may be to your Majesty, as I am to God, <i>nova
+creatura</i>." But the pardon never came. Sir John Bennett, who had
+been condemned as a corrupt judge by the same Parliament, and
+between whose case and Bacon's there was as much difference, "I
+will not say as between black and white, but as between black and
+gray," had got his full pardon, "and they say shall sit in
+Parliament." Lord Suffolk had been one of Bacon's judges. "I hope I
+deserve not to be the only outcast." But whether the Court did not
+care, or whether, as he once suspected, there was some old enemy
+like Coke, who "had a tooth against him," and was watching any
+favour shown him, he died without his wish being fulfilled, "to
+live out of want and to die out of ignominy."</p>
+
+<p>Bacon was undoubtedly an impoverished man, and straitened in his
+means; but this must be understood as in relation to the rank and
+position which he still held, and the work which he wanted done for
+the <i>Instauratio</i>. His will, dated a few months before his
+death, shows that it would be a mistake to suppose that he was in
+penury. He no doubt often wanted ready money, and might be vexed by
+creditors. But he kept a large household, and was able to live in
+comfort at Gray's Inn or at Gorhambury. A man <a name='Page_162'
+class='pagenum' title='Page 162'></a>who speaks in his will of his
+"four coach geldings and his best caroache," besides many legacies,
+and who proposes to found two lectures at the universities, may
+have troubles about debts and be cramped in his expenditure, but it
+is only relatively to his station that he can be said to be poor.
+And to subordinate officers of the Treasury who kept him out of his
+rights, he could still write a sharp letter, full of his old force
+and edge. A few months before his death he thus wrote to the Lord
+Treasurer Ley, who probably had made some difficulty about a claim
+for money:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"MY LORD,&mdash;I humbly entreat your Lordship, and (if I may
+use the word) advise your Lordship to make me a better answer. Your
+Lordship is interested in honour, in the opinion of all that hear
+how I am dealt with. If your Lordship malice me for Long's cause,
+surely it was one of the justest businesses that ever was in
+Chancery. I will avouch it; and how deeply I was tempted therein,
+your Lordship knoweth best. Your Lordship may do well to think of
+your grave as I do of mine; and to beware of hardness of heart. And
+as for fair words, it is a wind by which neither your Lordship nor
+any man else can sail long. Howsoever, I am the man that shall give
+all due respects and reverence to your great place.</p>
+
+<p>"20th June, 1625.<br />
+ FR. ST. ALBAN."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Bacon always claimed that he was not "vindicative." But
+considering how Bishop Williams, when he was Lord Keeper, had
+charged Bacon with "knavery" and "deceiving his creditors" in the
+arrangements about his fine, it is not a little strange to find
+that at the end of his life Bacon had so completely made friends
+with him that he chose him as the person to whom he meant to leave
+his speeches and letters, which he was "willing should not be
+lost," and also the charge of superintending two foundations of
+&pound;200 a year for Natural Science at the universities. And the
+Bishop accepted the charge.</p>
+
+<p>The end of this, one of the most pathetic of histories, <a name=
+'Page_163' class='pagenum' title='Page 163'></a>was at hand; the
+end was not the less pathetic because it came in so homely a
+fashion. On a cold day in March he stopped his coach in the snow on
+his way to Highgate, to try the effect of cold in arresting
+putrefaction. He bought a hen from a woman by the way, and stuffed
+it with snow. He was taken with a bad chill, which forced him to
+stop at a strange house, Lord Arundel's, to whom he wrote his last
+letter&mdash;a letter of apology for using his house. He did not
+write the letter as a dying man. But disease had fastened on him. A
+few days after, early on Easter morning, April 9, 1626, he passed
+away. He was buried at St. Albans, in the Church of St. Michael,
+"the only Christian church within the walls of old Verulam." "For
+my name and memory," he said in his will, "I leave it to men's
+charitable speeches, and to foreign nations and the next ages." So
+he died: the brightest, richest, largest mind but one, in the age
+which had seen Shakespeare and his fellows; so bright and rich and
+large that there have been found those who identify him with the
+writer of <i>Hamlet</i> and <i>Othello</i>. That is idle. Bacon
+could no more have written the plays than Shakespeare could have
+prophesied the triumphs of natural philosophy. So ended a career,
+than which no other in his time had grander and nobler
+aims&mdash;aims, however mistaken, for the greatness and good of
+England; aims for the enlargement of knowledge and truth, and for
+the benefit of mankind. So ended a career which had mounted slowly
+and painfully, but resolutely, to the highest pinnacle of
+greatness&mdash;greatness full of honour and beneficent
+activity&mdash;suddenly to plunge down to depths where honour and
+hope were irrecoverable. So closed, in disgrace and disappointment
+and neglect, the last sad chapter of a life which had begun so
+brightly, which had achieved such permanent triumphs, <a name=
+'Page_164' class='pagenum' title='Page 164'></a>which had lost
+itself so often in the tangles of insincerity and evil custom,
+which was disfigured and marred by great misfortunes, and still
+more by great mistakes of his own, which was in many ways
+misunderstood not only by his generation but by himself, but which
+he left in the constant and almost unaccountable faith that it
+would be understood and greatly honoured by posterity. With all its
+glories, it was the greatest shipwreck, the greatest tragedy, of an
+age which saw many.</p>
+
+<p>But in these gloomy and dreary days of depression and vain hope
+to which his letters bear witness&mdash;"three years and five
+months old in misery," again later, "a long cleansing week of five
+years' expiation and more"&mdash;his interest in his great
+undertaking and his industry never flagged. The King did not want
+what he offered, did not want his histories, did not want his help
+about law. Well, then, he had work of his own on which his heart
+was set; and if the King did not want his time, he had the more for
+himself. Even in the busy days of his Chancellorship he had
+prepared and carried through the press the <i>Novum Organum</i>,
+which he published on the very eve of his fall. It was one of those
+works which quicken a man's powers, and prove to him what he can
+do; and it had its effect. His mind was never more alert than in
+these years of adversity, his labour never more indefatigable, his
+powers of expression never more keen and versatile and strong.
+Besides the political writings of grave argument for which he found
+time, these five years teem with the results of work. In the year
+before his death he sketched out once more, in a letter to a
+Venetian correspondent, Fra Fulgenzio, the friend of Sarpi, the
+plan of his great work, on which he was still busy, though with
+fast diminishing hopes of seeing it finished. To another foreign
+correspondent, a professor of <a name='Page_165' class='pagenum'
+title='Page 165'></a>philosophy at Annecy, and a distinguished
+mathematician, Father Baranzan, who had raised some questions about
+Bacon's method, and had asked what was to be done with metaphysics,
+he wrote in eager acknowledgment of the interest which his writings
+had excited, and insisting on the paramount necessity, above
+everything, of the observation of facts and of natural history, out
+of which philosophy may be built. But the most comprehensive view
+of his intellectual projects in all directions, "the fullest
+account of his own personal feelings and designs as a writer which
+we have from his own pen," is given in a letter to the venerable
+friend of his early days, Bishop Andrewes, who died a few months
+after him. Part, he says, of his <i>Instauratio</i>, "the work in
+mine own judgement (<i>si nunquam fallit imago</i>) I do most
+esteem," has been published; but because he "doubts that it flies
+too high over men's heads," he proposes "to draw it down to the
+sense" by examples of Natural History. He has enlarged and
+translated the <i>Advancement</i> into the <i>De Augmentis</i>.
+"Because he could not altogether desert the civil person that he
+had borne," he had begun a work on Laws, intermediate between
+philosophical jurisprudence and technical law. He had hoped to
+compile a digest of English law, but found it more than he could do
+alone, and had laid it aside. The <i>Instauratio</i> had
+contemplated the good of men "in the dowries of nature;" the
+<i>Laws</i>, their good "in society and the dowries of government."
+As he owed duty to his country, and could no longer do it service,
+he meant to do it honour by his history of Henry VII. His
+<i>Essays</i> were but "recreations;" and remembering that all his
+writings had hitherto "gone all into the City and none into the
+Temple," he wished to make "some poor oblation," and therefore had
+chosen an argument mixed of religious and civil considera<a name=
+'Page_166' class='pagenum' title='Page 166'></a>tions, the dialogue
+of "an Holy War" against the Ottoman, which he never finished, but
+which he intended to dedicate to Andrewes, "in respect of our
+ancient and private acquaintance, and because amongst the men of
+our times I hold you in special reverence."</p>
+
+<p>The question naturally presents itself, in regard to a friend of
+Bishop Andrewes, What was Bacon as regards religion? And the
+answer, it seems to me, can admit of no doubt. The obvious and
+superficial thing to say is that his religion was but an official
+one, a tribute to custom and opinion. But it was not so. Both in
+his philosophical thinking, and in the feelings of his mind in the
+various accidents and occasions of life, Bacon was a religious man,
+with a serious and genuine religion. His sense of the truth and
+greatness of religion was as real as his sense of the truth and
+greatness of nature; they were interlaced together, and could not
+be separated, though they were to be studied separately and
+independently. The call, repeated through all his works from the
+earliest to the last, <i>Da Fidel qu&aelig; Fidel sunt</i>, was a
+warning against confusing the two, but was an earnest recognition
+of the claims of each. The solemn religious words in which his
+prefaces and general statements often wind up with thanksgiving and
+hope and prayer, are no mere words of course; they breathe the
+spirit of the deepest conviction. It is true that he takes the
+religion of Christendom as he finds it. The grounds of belief, the
+relation of faith to reason, the profounder inquiries into the
+basis of man's knowledge of the Eternal and Invisible, are out of
+the circle within which he works. What we now call the philosophy
+of religion is absent from his writings. In truth, his mind was not
+qualified to grapple with such questions. There is no sign in his
+writings that he ever tried his strength against them; that he ever
+<a name='Page_167' class='pagenum' title='Page 167'></a>cared to go
+below the surface into the hidden things of mind, and what mind
+deals with above and beyond sense&mdash;those metaphysical
+difficulties and depths, as we call them, which there is no
+escaping, and which are as hard to explore and as dangerous to
+mistake as the forces and combinations of external nature. But it
+does not follow, because he had not asked all the questions that
+others have asked, that he had not thought out his reasonable
+faith. His religion was not one of mere vague sentiment: it was the
+result of reflection and deliberate judgment. It was the
+discriminating and intelligent Church of England religion of Hooker
+and Andrewes, which had gone back to something deeper and nobler in
+Christianity than the popular Calvinism of the earlier Reformation;
+and though sternly hostile to the system of the Papacy, both on
+religious and political grounds, attempted to judge it with
+knowledge and justice. This deliberate character of his belief is
+shown in the remarkable Confession of Faith which he left behind
+him: a closely-reasoned and nobly-expressed survey of Christian
+theology&mdash;"a <i>summa theologi&aelig;</i>, digested into seven
+pages of the finest English of the days when its tones were
+finest." "The entire scheme of Christian theology," as Mr. Spedding
+says, "is constantly in his thoughts; underlies everything; defines
+for him the limits of human speculation; and, as often as the
+course of inquiry touches at any point the boundary line, never
+fails to present itself. There is hardly any occasion or any kind
+of argument into which it does not at one time or another
+incidentally introduce itself." Doubtless it was a religion which
+in him was compatible, as it has been in others, with grave faults
+of temperament and character. But it is impossible to doubt that it
+was honest, that it elevated his thoughts, that it was a refuge and
+stay in the times of trouble.</p>
+
+<hr />
+<p><a name='Page_168' class='pagenum' title='Page 168'></a></p>
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_VIII'></a>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+
+<h3>BACON'S PHILOSOPHY.</h3>
+
+<p><br />
+Bacon was one of those men to whom posterity forgives a great deal
+for the greatness of what he has done and attempted for posterity.
+It is idle, unless all honest judgment is foregone, to disguise the
+many deplorable shortcomings of his life; it is unjust to have one
+measure for him, and another for those about him and opposed to
+him. But it is not too much to say that in temper, in honesty, in
+labour, in humility, in reverence, he was the most perfect example
+that the world had yet seen of the student of nature, the
+enthusiast for knowledge. That such a man was tempted and fell, and
+suffered the Nemesis of his fall, is an instance of the awful truth
+embodied in the tragedy of <i>Faust</i>. But his genuine devotion,
+so unwearied and so paramount, to a great idea and a great purpose
+for the good of all generations to come, must shield him from the
+insult of Pope's famous and shallow epigram. Whatever may have been
+his sins, and they were many, he cannot have been the "meanest of
+mankind," who lived and died, holding unaltered, amid temptations
+and falls, so noble a conception of the use and calling of his
+life: the duty and service of helping his brethren to know as they
+had never yet learned to know. That thought never left him; the
+obligations it imposed were never forgotten in the crush <a name=
+'Page_169' class='pagenum' title='Page 169'></a>and heat of
+business; the toils, thankless at the time, which it heaped upon
+him in addition to the burdens of public life were never refused.
+Nothing diverted him, nothing made him despair. He was not
+discouraged because he was not understood. There never was any one
+in whose life the "<i>Souverainet&eacute; du but</i>" was more
+certain and more apparent; and that object was the second greatest
+that man can have. To teach men to know is only next to making them
+good.</p>
+
+<p>The Baconian philosophy, the reforms of the <i>Novum
+Organum</i>, the method of experiment and induction, are
+commonplaces, and sometimes lead to a misconception of what Bacon
+did. Bacon is, and is not, the founder of modern science. What
+Bacon believed could be done, what he hoped and divined, for the
+correction and development of human knowledge, was one thing; what
+his methods were, and how far they were successful, is another. It
+would hardly be untrue to say that though Bacon is the parent of
+modern science, his methods contributed nothing to its actual
+discoveries; neither by possibility could they have done so. The
+great and wonderful work which the world owes to him was in the
+idea, and not in the execution. The idea was that the systematic
+and wide examination of facts was the first thing to be done in
+science, and that till this had been done faithfully and
+impartially, with all the appliances and all the safeguards that
+experience and forethought could suggest, all generalisations, all
+anticipations from mere reasoning, must be adjourned and postponed;
+and further, that sought on these conditions, knowledge, certain
+and fruitful, beyond all that men then imagined, could be attained.
+His was the faith of the discoverer, the imagination of the poet,
+the voice of the prophet. But his was not the warrior's arm, the
+engineer's <a name='Page_170' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 170'></a>skill, the architect's creativeness. "I only sound
+the clarion," he says, "but I enter not into the battle;" and with
+a Greek quotation very rare with him, he compares himself to one of
+Homer's peaceful heralds, <span lang="el" title="chairete k&ecirc;rukes, Dios angeloi &ecirc;de kai andr&ocirc;n">χαίρετε κήρυκες, Δίος ἄγγελοι ἠδὲ καὶ ἀνδρῶν</span>.
+<!-- &chi;&alpha;&iota;&rho;&epsilon;&tau;&epsilon; &kappa;&eta;&rho;&upsilon;&kappa;&epsilon;&sigmaf;,
+&Delta;&iota;&omicron;&sigmaf; &alpha;&gamma;&gamma;&epsilon;&lambda;&omicron;&iota; &eta;&delta;&epsilon;
+&kappa;&alpha;&iota; &alpha;&nu;&delta;&rho;&omega;&nu; -->
+<!-- [Greek: chairete k&ecirc;rukes, Dios angeloi &ecirc;de kai andr&ocirc;n]. -->
+Even he knew not the full greatness of his own enterprise. He
+underrated the vastness and the subtlety of nature. He overrated
+his own appliances to bring it under his command. He had not that
+incommunicable genius and instinct of the investigator which in
+such men as Faraday close hand to hand with phenomena. His weapons
+and instruments wanted precision; they were powerful up to a
+certain point, but they had the clumsiness of an unpractised time.
+Cowley compared him to Moses on Pisgah surveying the promised land;
+it was but a distant survey, and Newton was the Joshua who began to
+take possession of it.</p>
+
+<p>The idea of the great enterprise, in its essential outline, and
+with a full sense of its originality and importance, was early
+formed, and was even sketched on paper with Bacon's characteristic
+self-reliance when he was but twenty-five. Looking back, in a
+letter written in the last year of his life, on the ardour and
+constancy with which he had clung to his faith&mdash;"in that
+purpose my mind never waxed old; in that long interval of time it
+never cooled"&mdash;he remarks that it was then "forty years since
+he put together a youthful essay on these matters, which with vast
+confidence I called by the high-sounding title, The Greatest Birth
+of Time." "The Greatest Birth of Time," whatever it was, has
+perished, though the name, altered to "Partus Temporis
+<i>Masculus</i>" has survived, attached to some fragments of
+uncertain date and arrangement. But in very truth the child was
+born, and, as Bacon says, for forty years grew and developed, with
+many changes yet the same. Bacon <a name='Page_171' class='pagenum'
+title='Page 171'></a>was most tenacious, not only of ideas, but
+even of the phrases, images, and turns of speech in which they had
+once flashed on him and taken shape in his mind. The features of
+his undertaking remained the same from first to last, only expanded
+and enlarged as time went on and experience widened; his conviction
+that the knowledge of nature, and with it the power to command and
+to employ nature, were within the capacity of mankind and might be
+restored to them; the certainty that of this knowledge men had as
+yet acquired but the most insignificant part, and that all existing
+claims to philosophical truth were as idle and precarious as the
+guesses and traditions of the vulgar; his belief that no greater
+object could be aimed at than to sweep away once and for ever all
+this sham knowledge and all that supported it, and to lay an
+entirely new and clear foundation to build on for the future; his
+assurance that, as it was easy to point out with fatal and luminous
+certainty the rottenness and hollowness of all existing knowledge
+and philosophy, so it was equally easy to devise and practically
+apply new and natural methods of investigation and construction,
+which should replace it by knowledge of infallible truth and
+boundless fruitfulness. His object&mdash;to gain the key to the
+interpretation of nature; his method&mdash;to gain it, not by the
+means common to all previous schools of philosophy, by untested
+reasonings and imposing and high-sounding generalisations, but by a
+series and scale of rigorously verified inductions, starting from
+the lowest facts of experience to discoveries which should prove
+and realise themselves by leading deductively to practical
+results&mdash;these, in one form or another, were the theme of his
+philosophical writings from the earliest sight of them that we
+gain.</p>
+
+<p>He had disclosed what was in his mind in the letter to <a name=
+'Page_172' class='pagenum' title='Page 172'></a>Lord Burghley,
+written when he was thirty-one (1590/91), in which he announced
+that he had "taken all knowledge for his province," to "purge it of
+'frivolous disputations' and 'blind experiments,' and that whatever
+happened to him, he meant to be a 'true pioneer in the mine of
+truth.'" But the first public step in the opening of his great
+design was the publication in the autumn of 1605 of the
+<i>Advancement of Learning</i>, a careful and balanced report on
+the existing stock and deficiencies of human knowledge. His
+endeavours, as he says in the <i>Advancement</i> itself, are "but
+as an image in a cross-way, that may point out the way, but cannot
+go it." But from this image of his purpose, his thoughts greatly
+widened as time went on. The <i>Advancement</i>, in part at least,
+was probably a hurried work. It shadowed out, but only shadowed
+out, the lines of his proposed reform of philosophical thought; it
+showed his dissatisfaction with much that was held to be sound and
+complete, and showed the direction of his ideas and hopes. But it
+was many years before he took a further step. Active life
+intervened. In 1620, at the height of his prosperity, on the eve of
+his fall, he published the long meditated <i>Novum Organum</i>, the
+avowed challenge to the old philosophies, the engine and instrument
+of thought and discovery which was to put to shame and supersede
+all others, containing, in part at least, the principles of that
+new method of the use of experience which was to be the key to the
+interpretation and command of nature, and, together with the
+method, an elaborate but incomplete exemplification of its leading
+processes. Here were summed up, and stated with the most solemn
+earnestness, the conclusions to which long study and continual
+familiarity with the matters in question had led him. And with the
+<i>Novum Organum</i> was at length disclosed, though only in
+outline, the whole of the vast <a name='Page_173' class='pagenum'
+title='Page 173'></a>scheme in all its parts, object, method,
+materials, results, for the "Instauration" of human knowledge, the
+restoration of powers lost, disused, neglected, latent, but
+recoverable by honesty, patience, courage, and industry.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>The <i>Instauratio</i>, as he planned the work, "is to be
+divided," says Mr. Ellis, "into six portions, of which the
+<i>first</i> is to contain a general survey of the present state of
+knowledge. In the <i>second</i>, men are to be taught how to use
+their understanding aright in the investigation of nature. In the
+<i>third</i>, all the phenomena of the universe are to be stored up
+as in a treasure-house, as the materials on which the new method is
+to be employed. In the <i>fourth</i>, examples are to be given of
+its operation and of the results to which it leads. The
+<i>fifth</i> is to contain what Bacon had accomplished in natural
+philosophy <i>without</i> the aid of his own method, <i>ex eodem
+intellect&ucirc;s usu quem alii in inquirendo et inveniendo
+adhibere consueverunt</i>. It is therefore less important than the
+rest, and Bacon declares that he will not bind himself to the
+conclusions which it contains. Moreover, its value will altogether
+cease when the <i>sixth</i> part can be completed, wherein will be
+set forth the new philosophy&mdash;the results of the application
+of the new method to all the phenomena of the universe. But to
+complete this, the last part of the <i>Instauratio</i>, Bacon does
+not hope; he speaks of it as a thing, <i>et supra vires et ultra
+spes nostras collocata</i>."&mdash;<i>Works</i>, i. 71.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The <i>Novum Organum</i>, itself imperfect, was the crown of all
+that he lived to do. It was followed (1622) by the publication,
+intended to be periodical, of materials for the new philosophy to
+work upon, particular sections and classes of observations on
+phenomena&mdash;the <i>History of the Winds</i>, the <i>History of
+Life and Death</i>. Others were partly prepared but not published
+by him. And finally, in 1623, he brought out in Latin a greatly
+enlarged recasting of the <i>Advancement</i>; the nine books of the
+"<i>De Augmentis</i>." But the great scheme was not completed;
+portions were left more or less finished. Much that he <a name=
+'Page_174' class='pagenum' title='Page 174'></a>purposed was left
+undone, and could not have been yet done at that time.</p>
+
+<p>But the works which he published represent imperfectly the
+labour spent on the undertaking. Besides these there remains a vast
+amount of unused or rejected work, which shows how it was thought
+out, rearranged, tried first in one fashion and then in another,
+recast, developed. Separate chapters, introductions, "experimental
+essays and discarded beginnings," treatises with picturesque and
+imaginative titles, succeeded one another in that busy work-shop;
+and these first drafts and tentative essays have in them some of
+the freshest and most felicitous forms of his thoughts. At one time
+his enterprise, connecting itself with his own life and mission,
+rose before his imagination and kindled his feelings, and embodied
+itself in the lofty and stately "Proem" already quoted. His quick
+and brilliant imagination saw shadows and figures of his ideas in
+the ancient mythology, which he worked out with curious ingenuity
+and often much poetry in his <i>Wisdom of the Ancients</i>. Towards
+the end of his life he began to embody his thoughts and plans in a
+philosophical tale, which he did not finish&mdash;the <i>New
+Atlantis</i>&mdash;a charming example of his graceful fancy and of
+his power of easy and natural story-telling. Between the
+<i>Advancement</i> and the <i>Novum Organum</i> (1605-20) much
+underground work had been done. "He had finally (about 1607)
+settled the plan of the <i>Great Instauration</i>, and began to
+call it by that name." The plan, first in three or four divisions,
+had been finally digested into six. Vague outlines had become
+definite and clear. Distinct portions had been worked out. Various
+modes of treatment had been tried, abandoned, modified. Prefaces
+were written to give the sketch and purpose of chapters not yet
+composed. The <i>Novum Organum</i> had <a name='Page_175' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 175'></a>been written and rewritten twelve
+times over. Bacon kept his papers, and we can trace in the unused
+portion of those left behind him much of the progress of his work,
+and the shapes which much of it went through. The
+<i>Advancement</i> itself is the filling-out and perfecting of what
+is found in germ, meagre and rudimentary, in a <i>Discourse in
+Praise of Knowledge</i>, written in the days of Elizabeth, and in
+some Latin chapters of an early date, the <i>Cogitationes de
+Scientia Humana</i>, on the limits and use of knowledge, and on the
+relation of natural history to natural philosophy. These early
+essays, with much of the same characteristic illustration, and many
+of the favourite images and maxims and texts and phrases, which
+continue to appear in his writings to the end, contain the thoughts
+of a man long accustomed to meditate and to see his way on the new
+aspects of knowledge opening upon him. And before the
+<i>Advancement</i> he had already tried his hand on a work intended
+to be in two books, which Mr. Ellis describes as a "great work on
+the Interpretation of Nature," the "earliest type of the
+<i>Instauratio</i>," and which Bacon called by the enigmatical name
+of <i>Valerius Terminus</i>. In it, as in a second draft, which in
+its turn was superseded by the <i>Advancement</i>, the line of
+thought of the Latin <i>Cogitationes</i> reappears, expanded and
+more carefully ordered; it contains also the first sketch of his
+certain and infallible method for what he calls the "freeing of the
+direction" in the search after Truth, and the first indications of
+the four classes of "Idols" which were to be so memorable a portion
+of Bacon's teaching. And between the <i>Advancement</i> and the
+<i>Novum Organum</i> at least one unpublished treatise of great
+interest intervened, the <i>Visa et Cogitata</i>, on which he was
+long employed, and which he brought to a finished shape, fit to be
+submitted to his friends and critics, Sir <a name='Page_176' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 176'></a>Thomas Bodley and Bishop Andrewes.
+It is spoken of as a book to be "imparted <i>sicut videbitur</i>,"
+in the review which he made of his life and objects soon after he
+was made Solicitor in 1608. A number of fragments also bear witness
+to the fierce scorn and wrath which possessed him against the older
+and the received philosophies. He tried his hand at declamatory
+onslaughts on the leaders of human wisdom, from the early Greeks
+and Aristotle down to the latest "novellists;" and he certainly
+succeeded in being magnificently abusive. But he thought wisely
+that this was not the best way of doing what in the <i>Commentarius
+Solutus</i> he calls on himself to do&mdash;"taking a greater
+confidence and authority in discourses of this nature, <i>tanquam
+sui certus et de alto despiciens</i>;" and the rhetorical
+<i>Redargutio Philosophiarum</i> and writings of kindred nature
+were laid aside by his more serious judgment. But all these
+fragments witness to the immense and unwearied labour bestowed in
+the midst of a busy life on his undertaking; they suggest, too, the
+suspicion that there was much waste from interruption, and the
+doubt whether his work would not have been better if it could have
+been more steadily continuous. But if ever a man had a great object
+in life, and pursued it through good and evil report, through
+ardent hope and keen disappointment, to the end, with unwearied
+patience and unshaken faith, it was Bacon, when he sought the
+improvement of human knowledge "for the glory of God and the relief
+of man's estate." It is not the least part of the pathetic fortune
+of his life that his own success was so imperfect.</p>
+
+<p>When a reader first comes from the vague, popular notions of
+Bacon's work to his definite proposals the effect is startling.
+Every one has heard that he contemplated a complete reform of the
+existing conceptions of human <a name='Page_177' class='pagenum'
+title='Page 177'></a>knowledge, and of the methods by which
+knowledge was to be sought; that rejecting them as vitiated, by the
+loose and untested way in which they had been formed, he called men
+from verbal generalisations and unproved assumptions to come down
+face to face with the realities of experience; that he substituted
+for formal reasoning, from baseless premises and unmeaning
+principles, a methodical system of cautious and sifting inference
+from wide observation and experiment; and that he thus opened the
+path which modern science thenceforth followed, with its amazing
+and unexhausted discoveries, and its vast and beneficent practical
+results. We credit all this to Bacon, and assuredly not without
+reason. All this is what was embraced in his vision of a changed
+world of thought and achievement. All this is what was meant by
+that <i>Regnum Hominis</i>, which, with a play on sacred words
+which his age did not shrink from, and which he especially pleased
+himself with, marked the coming of that hitherto unimagined empire
+of man over the powers and forces which encompassed him. But the
+detail of all this is multifarious and complicated, and is not
+always what we expect; and when we come to see how his work is
+estimated by those who, by greatest familiarity with scientific
+ideas and the history of scientific inquiries, are best fitted to
+judge of it, many a surprise awaits us.</p>
+
+<p>For we find that the greatest differences of opinion exist on
+the value of what he did. Not only very unfavourable judgments have
+been passed upon it, on general grounds&mdash;as an irreligious, or
+a shallow and one-sided, or a poor and "utilitarian" philosophy,
+and on a definite comparison of it with the actual methods and
+processes which as a matter of history have been the real means of
+scientific discovery&mdash;but also some of those who have most
+admired his genius, <a name='Page_178' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 178'></a>and with the deepest love and reverence have spared
+no pains to do it full justice, have yet come to the conclusion
+that as an instrument and real method of work Bacon's attempt was a
+failure. It is not only De Maistre and Lord Macaulay who dispute
+his philosophical eminence. It is not only the depreciating opinion
+of a contemporary like Harvey, who was actually doing what Bacon
+was writing about. It is not only that men who after the long
+history of modern science have won their place among its leaders,
+and are familiar by daily experience with the ways in which it
+works&mdash;a chemist like Liebig, a physiologist like Claude
+Bernard&mdash;say that they can find nothing to help them in
+Bacon's methods. It is not only that a clear and exact critic like
+M. de R&eacute;musat looks at his attempt, with its success and
+failure, as characteristic of English, massive, practical good
+sense rather than as marked by real philosophical depth and
+refinement, such as Continental thinkers point to and are proud of
+in Descartes and Leibnitz. It is not even that a competent master
+of the whole domain of knowledge, Whewell, filled with the deepest
+sense of all that the world owes to Bacon, takes for granted that
+"though Bacon's general maxims are sagacious and animating, his
+particular precepts failed in his hands, and are now practically
+useless;" and assuming that Bacon's method is not the right one,
+and not complete as far as the progress of science up to his time
+could direct it, proceeds to construct a <i>Novum Organum
+Renovatum</i>. But Bacon's writings have recently undergone the
+closest examination by two editors, whose care for his memory is as
+loyal and affectionate as their capacity is undoubted, and their
+willingness to take trouble boundless. And Mr. Ellis and Mr.
+Spedding, with all their interest in every detail of Bacon's work,
+and admiration of the way in which he performed it, make no secret
+of their conclusion <a name='Page_179' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 179'></a>that he failed in the very thing on which he was
+most bent&mdash;the discovery of practical and fruitful ways of
+scientific inquiry. "Bacon," says Mr. Spedding, "failed to devise a
+practicable method for the discovery of the Forms of Nature,
+because he misconceived the conditions of the case.... For the same
+reason he failed to make any single discovery which holds its place
+as one of the steps by which science has in any direction really
+advanced. The clew with which he entered the labyrinth did not
+reach far enough; before he had nearly attained his end he was
+obliged either to come back or to go on without it."</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"His peculiar system of philosophy," says Mr. Spedding in
+another preface, "that is to say, the peculiar method of
+investigation, the "<i>organum</i>," the "<i>formula</i>," the
+"<i>clavis</i>," the "<i>ars ipsa interpretandi naturam</i>," the
+"<i>filum Labyrinthi</i>," or by whatever of its many names we
+choose to call that artificial process by which alone he believed
+man could attain a knowledge of the laws and a command over the
+powers of nature&mdash;<i>of this philosophy we can make
+nothing</i>. If we have not tried it, it is because we feel
+confident that it would not answer. We regard it as a curious piece
+of machinery, very subtle, elaborate, and ingenious, but not worth
+constructing, because all the work it could do may be done more
+easily another way."&mdash;<i>Works</i>, iii. 171.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>What his method really was is itself a matter of question. Mr.
+Ellis speaks of it as a matter "but imperfectly apprehended." He
+differs from his fellow-labourer Mr. Spedding, in what he supposes
+to be its central and characteristic innovation. Mr. Ellis finds it
+in an improvement and perfection of logical machinery. Mr. Spedding
+finds it in the formation of a great "natural and experimental
+history," a vast collection of facts in every department of nature,
+which was to be a more important part of his philosophy than the
+<i>Novum Organum</i> itself. Both of them think that as he went on,
+the difficulties of the <a name='Page_180' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 180'></a>work grew upon him, and caused alterations in his
+plans, and we are reminded that "there is no didactic exposition of
+his method in the whole of his writings," and that "this has not
+been sufficiently remarked by those who have spoken of his
+philosophy."</p>
+
+<p>In the first place, the kind of intellectual instrument which he
+proposed to construct was a mistake. His great object was to place
+the human mind "on a level with things and nature" (<i>ut faciamus
+intellectum humanum rebus et natur&aelig; parem</i>), and this
+could only be done by a revolution in methods. The ancients had all
+that genius could do for man; but it was a matter, he said, not of
+the strength and fleetness of the running, but of the rightness of
+the way. It was a new method, absolutely different from anything
+known, which he proposed to the world, and which should lead men to
+knowledge, with the certainty and with the impartial facility of a
+high-road. The Induction which he imagined to himself as the
+contrast to all that had yet been tried was to have two qualities.
+It was to end, by no very prolonged or difficult processes, in
+absolute certainty. And next, it was to leave very little to the
+differences of intellectual power: it was to level minds and
+capacities. It was to give all men the same sort of power which a
+pair of compasses gives the hand in drawing a circle. "<i>Absolute
+certainty, and a mechanical mode of procedure</i>" says Mr. Ellis,
+"<i>such that all men should be capable of employing it, are the
+two great features of the Baconian system</i>." This he thought
+possible, and this he set himself to expound&mdash;"a method
+universally applicable, and in all cases infallible." In this he
+saw the novelty and the vast importance of his discovery. "By this
+method all the knowledge which the human mind was capable of
+receiving might be attained, and attained <a name='Page_181' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 181'></a>without unnecessary labour." It was
+a method of "a demonstrative character, with the power of reducing
+all minds to nearly the same level." The conception, indeed, of a
+"great Art of knowledge," of an "Instauration" of the sciences, of
+a "Clavis" which should unlock the difficulties which had hindered
+discovery, was not a new one. This attempt at a method which should
+be certain, which should level capacities, which should do its work
+in a short time, had a special attraction for the imagination of
+the wild spirits of the South, from Raimond Lulli in the thirteenth
+century to the audacious Calabrians of the sixteenth. With Bacon it
+was something much more serious and reasonable and business-like.
+But such a claim has never yet been verified; there is no reason to
+think that it ever can be; and to have made it shows a fundamental
+defect in Bacon's conception of the possibilities of the human mind
+and the field it has to work in.</p>
+
+<p>In the next place, though the prominence which he gave to the
+doctrine of Induction was one of those novelties which are so
+obvious after the event, though so strange before it, and was
+undoubtedly the element in his system which gave it life and power
+and influence on the course of human thought and discovery, his
+account of Induction was far from complete and satisfactory.
+Without troubling himself about the theory of Induction, as De
+R&eacute;musat has pointed out, he contented himself with applying
+to its use the precepts of common-sense and a sagacious perception
+of the circumstances in which it was to be employed. But even these
+precepts, notable as they were, wanted distinctness, and the
+qualities needed for working rules. The change is great when in
+fifty years we pass from the poetical science of Bacon to the
+mathematical and precise science of Newton. His own time may well
+have been <a name='Page_182' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 182'></a>struck by the originality and comprehensiveness of
+such a discriminating arrangement of proofs as the "Prerogative
+Instances" of the <i>Novum Organum</i>, so natural and real, yet
+never before thus compared and systematized. But there is a great
+interval between his method of experimenting, his "<i>Hunt of
+Pan</i>"&mdash;the three tables of Instances, "<i>Presence</i>,"
+"<i>Absence</i>" and "<i>Degrees, or Comparisons</i>," leading to a
+process of sifting and exclusion, and to the <i>First Vintage</i>,
+or beginnings of theory&mdash;and say, for instance, Mill's four
+methods of experimental inquiry: the method of <i>agreement</i>, of
+<i>differences</i>, of <i>residues</i>, and of <i>concomitant
+variations</i>. The course which he marked out so laboriously and
+so ingeniously for Induction to follow was one which was found to
+be impracticable, and as barren of results as those deductive
+philosophies on which he lavished his scorn. He has left precepts
+and examples of what he meant by his cross-examining and sifting
+processes. As admonitions to cross-examine and to sift facts and
+phenomena they are valuable. Many of the observations and
+classifications are subtle and instructive. But in his hands
+nothing comes of them. They lead at the utmost to mere negative
+conclusions; they show what a thing is not. But his attempt to
+elicit anything positive out of them breaks down, or ends at best
+in divinations and guesses, sometimes&mdash;as in connecting Heat
+and Motion&mdash;very near to later and more carefully-grounded
+theories, but always unverified. He had a radically false and
+mechanical conception, though in words he earnestly disclaims it,
+of the way to deal with the facts of nature. He looked on them as
+things which told their own story, and suggested the questions
+which ought to be put to them; and with this idea half his time was
+spent in collecting huge masses of indigested facts of the most
+various au<a name='Page_183' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 183'></a>thenticity and value, and he thought he was
+collecting materials which his method had only to touch in order to
+bring forth from them light and truth and power. He thought that,
+not in certain sciences, but in all, one set of men could do the
+observing and collecting, and another be set on the work of
+Induction and the discovery of "axioms." Doubtless in the
+arrangement and sorting of them his versatile and ingenious mind
+gave itself full play; he divides and distinguishes them into their
+companies and groups, different kinds of Motion, "Prerogative"
+instances, with their long tale of imaginative titles. But we look
+in vain for any use that he was able to make of them, or even to
+suggest. Bacon never adequately realised that no promiscuous
+assemblage of even the most certain facts could ever lead to
+knowledge, could ever suggest their own interpretation, without the
+action on them of the living mind, without the initiative of an
+idea. In truth he was so afraid of assumptions and "anticipations"
+and prejudices&mdash;his great bugbear was so much the
+"<i>intellectus sibi permissus</i>" the mind given liberty to guess
+and imagine and theorise, instead of, as it ought, absolutely and
+servilely submitting itself to the control of facts&mdash;that he
+missed the true place of the rational and formative element in his
+account of Induction. He does tell us, indeed, that "truth emerges
+sooner from error than from confusion." He indulges the mind, in
+the course of its investigation of "Instances," with a first
+"vintage" of provisional generalisations. But of the way in which
+the living mind of the discoverer works, with its ideas and
+insight, and thoughts that come no one knows whence, working hand
+in hand with what comes before the eye or is tested by the
+instrument, he gives us no picture. Compare his elaborate
+investigation of the "Form <a name='Page_184' class='pagenum'
+title='Page 184'></a>of Heat" in the <i>Novum Organum</i>, with
+such a record of real inquiry as Wells's <i>Treatise on Dew</i>, or
+Herschel's analysis of it in his <i>Introduction to Natural
+Philosophy</i>. And of the difference of genius between a Faraday
+or a Newton, and the crowd of average men who have used and
+finished off their work, he takes no account. Indeed, he thinks
+that for the future such difference is to disappear.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"That his method is impracticable," says Mr. Ellis, "cannot, I
+think, be denied, if we reflect not only that it never has produced
+any result, but also that the process by which scientific truths
+have been established cannot be so presented as even to appear to
+be in accordance with it. In all cases this process involves an
+element to which nothing corresponds in the Tables of 'Comparence'
+and 'Exclusion,' namely, the application to the facts of
+observation of a principle of arrangement, an idea, existing in the
+mind of the discoverer antecedently to the act of induction. It may
+be said that this idea is precisely one of the <i>natur&aelig;</i>
+into which the facts of observation ought in Bacon's system to be
+analysed. And this is in one sense true; but it must be added that
+this analysis, if it be thought right so to call it, is of the
+essence of the discovery which results from it. In most cases the
+act of induction follows as a matter of course as soon as the
+appropriate idea has been introduced."&mdash;Ellis, <i>General
+Preface</i>, i. 38.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Lastly, not only was Bacon's conception of philosophy so narrow
+as to exclude one of its greatest domains; for, says Mr. Ellis, "it
+cannot be denied that to Bacon all sound philosophy seemed to be
+included in what we now call the natural sciences," and in all its
+parts was claimed as the subject of his inductive method; but
+Bacon's scientific knowledge and scientific conceptions were often
+very imperfect&mdash;more imperfect than they ought to have been
+for his time. Of one large part of science, which was just then
+beginning to be cultivated with high promise of success&mdash;<a
+name='Page_185' class='pagenum' title='Page 185'></a>the knowledge
+of the heavens&mdash;he speaks with a coldness and suspicion which
+contrasts remarkably with his eagerness about things belonging to
+the sphere of the earth and within reach of the senses. He holds,
+of course, the unity of the world; the laws of the whole visible
+universe are one order; but the heavens, wonderful as they are to
+him, are&mdash;compared with other things&mdash;out of his track of
+inquiry. He had his astronomical theories; he expounded them in his
+"<i>Descriptio Globi Intellectualis</i>" and his <i>Thema Coeli</i>
+He was not altogether ignorant of what was going on in days when
+Copernicus, Kepler, and Galileo were at work. But he did not know
+how to deal with it, and there were men in England, before and
+then, who understood much better than he the problems and the
+methods of astronomy. He had one conspicuous and strange defect for
+a man who undertook what he did. He was not a mathematician: he did
+not see the indispensable necessity of mathematics in the great
+<i>Instauration</i> which he projected; he did not much believe in
+what they could do. He cared so little about them that he takes no
+notice of Napier's invention of Logarithms. He was not able to
+trace how the direct information of the senses might be rightly
+subordinated to the rational, but not self-evident results of
+geometry and arithmetic. He was impatient of the subtleties of
+astronomical calculations; they only attempted to satisfy problems
+about the motion of bodies in the sky, and told us nothing of
+physical fact; they gave us, as Prometheus gave to Jove, the
+outside skin of the offering, which was stuffed inside with straw
+and rubbish. He entirely failed to see that before dealing with
+physical astronomy, it must be dealt with mathematically. "It is
+well to remark," as Mr. Ellis says, "that none of Newton's
+astronomical discoveries could have been <a name='Page_186' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 186'></a>made if astronomers had not
+continued to render themselves liable to Bacon's censure." Bacon
+little thought that in navigation the compass itself would become a
+subordinate instrument compared with the helps given by
+mathematical astronomy. In this, and in other ways, Bacon rose
+above his time in his conceptions of what <i>might be</i>, but not
+of what <i>was</i>; the list is a long one, as given by Mr.
+Spedding (iii. 511), of the instances which show that he was
+ill-informed about the advances of knowledge in his own time. And
+his mind was often not clear when he came to deal with complex
+phenomena. Thus, though he constructed a table of specific
+gravities&mdash;"the only collection," says Mr. Ellis, "of
+quantitative experiments that we find in his works," and
+"wonderfully accurate considering the manner in which they were
+obtained;" yet he failed to understand the real nature of the
+famous experiment of Archimedes. And so with the larger features of
+his teaching it is impossible not to feel how imperfectly he had
+emancipated himself from the power of words and of common
+prepossessions; how for one reason or another he had failed to call
+himself to account in the terms he employed, and the assumptions on
+which he argued. The caution does not seem to have occurred to him
+that the statement of a fact may, in nine cases out of ten, involve
+a theory. His whole doctrine of "Forms" and "Simple natures," which
+is so prominent in his method of investigation, is an example of
+loose and slovenly use of unexamined and untested ideas. He allowed
+himself to think that it would be possible to arrive at an alphabet
+of nature, which, once attained, would suffice to spell out and
+constitute all its infinite combinations. He accepted, without
+thinking it worth a doubt, the doctrine of appetites and passions
+and inclinations and dislikes and horrors in <a name='Page_187'
+class='pagenum' title='Page 187'></a>inorganic nature. His whole
+physiology of life and death depends on a doctrine of animal
+spirits, of which he traces the operations and qualities as if they
+were as certain as the nerves or the blood, and of which he gives
+this account&mdash;"that in every tangible body there is a spirit
+covered and enveloped in the grosser body;" "not a virtue, not an
+energy, not an actuality, nor any such idle matter, but a body thin
+and invisible, and yet having place and dimension, and real." ...
+"a middle nature between flame, which is momentary, and air which
+is permanent." Yet these are the very things for which he holds up
+Aristotle and the Scholastics and the Italian speculators to
+reprobation and scorn. The clearness of his thinking was often
+overlaid by the immense profusion of decorative material which his
+meditation brought along with it. The defect was greater than that
+which even his ablest defenders admit. It was more than that in
+that "greatest and radical difference, which he himself observes"
+between minds, the difference between minds which were apt to note
+<i>distinctions</i>, and those which were apt to note
+<i>likenesses</i>, he was, without knowing it, defective in the
+first. It was that in many instances he exemplified in his own work
+the very faults which he charged on the older philosophies: haste,
+carelessness, precipitancy, using words without thinking them out,
+assuming to know when he ought to have perceived his real
+ignorance.</p>
+
+<p>What, then, with all these mistakes and failures, not always
+creditable or pardonable, has given Bacon his preeminent place in
+the history of science?</p>
+
+<p>1. The answer is that with all his mistakes and failures, the
+principles on which his mode of attaining a knowledge of nature was
+based were the only true ones; and they had never before been
+propounded so systematically, so fully, <a name='Page_188' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 188'></a>and so earnestly. His was not the
+first mind on whom these principles had broken. Men were, and had
+been for some time, pursuing their inquiries into various
+departments of nature precisely on the general plan of careful and
+honest observation of real things which he enjoined. They had seen,
+as he saw, the futility of all attempts at natural philosophy by
+mere thinking and arguing, without coming into contact with the
+contradictions or corrections or verifications of experience. In
+Italy, in Germany, in England there were laborious and successful
+workers, who had long felt that to be in touch with nature was the
+only way to know. But no one had yet come before the world to
+proclaim this on the house-tops, as the key of the only certain
+path to the secrets of nature, the watchword of a revolution in the
+methods of interpreting her; and this Bacon did with an imposing
+authority and power which enforced attention. He spoke the thoughts
+of patient toilers like Harvey with a largeness and richness which
+they could not command, and which they perhaps smiled at. He
+disentangled and spoke the vague thoughts of his age, which other
+men had not the courage and clearness of mind to formulate. What
+Bacon <i>did</i>, indeed, and what he <i>meant</i>, are separate
+matters. He <i>meant</i> an infallible method by which man should
+be fully equipped for a struggle with nature; he meant an
+irresistible and immediate conquest, within a definite and not
+distant time. It was too much. He himself saw no more of what he
+<i>meant</i> than Columbus did of America. But what he <i>did</i>
+was to persuade men for the future that the intelligent, patient,
+persevering cross-examination of things, and the thoughts about
+them, was the only, and was the successful road to know. No one had
+yet done this, and he did it. His writings were a public
+recognition of real science, in its humblest tasks <a name=
+'Page_189' class='pagenum' title='Page 189'></a>about the
+commonplace facts before our feet, as well as in its loftiest
+achievements. "The man who is growing great and happy by
+electrifying a bottle," says Dr. Johnson, "wonders to see the world
+engaged in the prattle about peace and war," and the world was
+ready to smile at the simplicity or the impertinence of his
+enthusiasm. Bacon impressed upon the world for good, with every
+resource of subtle observation and forcible statement, that "the
+man who is growing great by electrifying a bottle" is as important
+a person in the world's affairs as the arbiter of peace and
+war.</p>
+
+<p>2. Yet this is not all. An inferior man might have made himself
+the mouthpiece of the hopes and aspirations of his generation after
+a larger science. But to Bacon these aspirations embodied
+themselves in the form of a great and absorbing idea; an idea which
+took possession of the whole man, kindling in him a faith which
+nothing could quench, and a passion which nothing could dull; an
+idea which, for forty years, was his daily companion, his daily
+delight, his daily business; an idea which he was never tired of
+placing in ever fresh and more attractive lights, from which no
+trouble could wean him, about which no disaster could make him
+despair; an idea round which the instincts and intuitions and
+obstinate convictions of genius gathered, which kindled his rich
+imagination and was invested by it with a splendour and
+magnificence like the dreams of fable. It is this idea which finds
+its fitting expression in the grand and stately aphorisms of the
+<i>Novum Organum</i>, in the varied fields of interest in the <i>De
+Augmentis</i>, in the romance of the <i>New Atlantis</i>. It is
+this idea, this certainty of a new unexplored Kingdom of Knowledge
+within the reach and grasp of man, if he will be humble enough and
+patient enough and truthful enough <a name='Page_190' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 190'></a>to occupy it&mdash;this announcement
+not only of a new system of thought, but of a change in the
+condition of the world&mdash;a prize and possession such as man had
+not yet imagined; this belief in the fortunes of the human race and
+its issue, "such an issue, it may be, as in the present condition
+of things and men's minds cannot easily be conceived or imagined,"
+yet more than verified in the wonders which our eyes have
+seen&mdash;it is this which gives its prerogative to Bacon's work.
+That he bungled about the processes of Induction, that he talked
+about an unintelligible doctrine of <i>Forms</i>, did not affect
+the weight and solemnity of his call to learn, so full of wisdom
+and good-sense, so sober and so solid, yet so audaciously
+confident. There had been nothing like it in its ardour of hope, in
+the glory which it threw around the investigation of nature. It was
+the presence and the power of a great idea&mdash;long become a
+commonplace to us, but strange and perplexing at first to his own
+generation, which probably shared Coke's opinion that it qualified
+its champion for a place in the company of the "Ship of Fools,"
+which expressed its opinion of the man who wrote the <i>Novum
+Organum</i>, in the sentiment that "a fool <i>could</i> not have
+written it, and a wise man <i>would</i> not"&mdash;it is this which
+has placed Bacon among the great discoverers of the human race.</p>
+
+<p>It is this imaginative yet serious assertion of the vast range
+and possibilities of human knowledge which, as M. de R&eacute;musat
+remarks&mdash;the keenest and fairest of Bacon's judges&mdash;gives
+Bacon his claim to the undefinable but very real character of
+greatness. Two men stand out, "the masters of those who know,"
+without equals up to their time, among men&mdash;the Greek
+Aristotle and the Englishman Bacon. They agree in the universality
+and comprehensiveness of their conception of human knowledge; and
+<a name='Page_191' class='pagenum' title='Page 191'></a>they were
+absolutely alone in their serious practical ambition to work out
+this conception. In the separate departments of thought, of
+investigation, of art, each is left far behind by numbers of men,
+who in these separate departments have gone far deeper than they,
+have soared higher, have been more successful in what they
+attempted. But Aristotle first, and for his time more successfully,
+and Bacon after him, ventured on the daring enterprise of "taking
+all knowledge for their province;" and in this they stood alone.
+This present scene of man's existence, this that we call nature,
+the stage on which mortal life begins and goes on and ends, the
+faculties with which man is equipped to act, to enjoy, to create,
+to hold his way amid or against the circumstances and forces round
+him&mdash;this is what each wants to know, as thoroughly and really
+as can be. It is not to reduce things to a theory or a system that
+they look around them on the place where they find themselves with
+life and thought and power; that were easily done, and has been
+done over and over again, only to prove its futility. It is to
+know, as to the whole and its parts, as men understand
+<i>knowing</i> in some one subject of successful handling, whether
+art or science or practical craft. This idea, this effort,
+distinguishes these two men. The Greeks&mdash;predecessors,
+contemporaries, successors of Aristotle&mdash;were speculators,
+full of clever and ingenious guesses, in which the amount of clear
+and certain fact was in lamentable disproportion to the schemes
+blown up from it; or they devoted themselves more profitably to
+some one or two subjects of inquiry, moral or purely intellectual,
+with absolute indifference to what might be asked, or what might be
+known, of the real conditions under which they were passing their
+existence. Some of the Romans, Cicero and Pliny, had
+encyclop&aelig;dic minds; but the Roman <a name='Page_192' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 192'></a>mind was the slave of precedent, and
+was more than satisfied with partially understanding and neatly
+arranging what the Greeks had left. The Arabians looked more widely
+about them; but the Arabians were essentially sceptics, and
+resigned subjects to the inevitable and the inexplicable; there was
+an irony, open or covert, in their philosophy, their terminology,
+their transcendental mysticism, which showed how little they
+believed that they really knew. The vast and mighty intellects of
+the schoolmen never came into a real grapple with the immensity of
+the facts of the natural or even of the moral world; within the
+world of abstract thought, the world of language, with its infinite
+growths and consequences, they have never had their match for
+keenness, for patience, for courage, for inexhaustible toil; but
+they were as much disconnected from the natural world, which was
+their stage of life, as if they had been disembodied spirits. The
+Renaissance brought with it not only the desire to know, but to
+know comprehensively and in all possible directions; it brought
+with it temptations to the awakened Italian genius, renewed,
+enlarged, refined, if not strengthened by its passage through the
+Middle Ages, to make thought deal with the real, and to understand
+the scene in which men were doing such strange and wonderful
+things; but Giordano Bruno, Telesio, Campanella, and their fellows,
+were not men capable of more than short flights, though they might
+be daring and eager ones. It required more thoroughness, more
+humble-minded industry, to match the magnitude of the task. And
+there have been men of universal minds and comprehensive knowledge
+since Bacon, Leibnitz, Goethe, Humboldt, men whose thoughts were at
+home everywhere, where there was something to be known. But even
+for them the world of knowledge has grown too large. We <a name=
+'Page_193' class='pagenum' title='Page 193'></a>shall never again
+see an Aristotle or a Bacon, because the conditions of knowledge
+have altered. Bacon, like Aristotle, belonged to an age of
+adventure, which went to sea little knowing whither it went, and
+ill furnished with knowledge and instruments. He entered with a
+vast and vague scheme of discovery on these unknown seas and new
+worlds which to us are familiar, and daily traversed in every
+direction. This new world of knowledge has turned out in many ways
+very different from what Aristotle or Bacon supposed, and has been
+conquered by implements and weapons very different in precision and
+power from what they purposed to rely on. But the combination of
+patient and careful industry, with the courage and divination of
+genius, in doing what none had done before, makes it equally stupid
+and idle to impeach their greatness.</p>
+
+<p>3. Bacon has been charged with bringing philosophy down from the
+heights, not as of old to make men know themselves, and to be the
+teacher of the highest form of truth, but to be the purveyor of
+material utility. It contemplates only, it is said, the "<i>commoda
+vit&aelig;</i>;" about the deeper and more elevating problems of
+thought it does not trouble itself. It concerns itself only about
+external and sensible nature, about what is "of the earth, earthy."
+But when it comes to the questions which have attracted the keenest
+and hardiest thinkers, the question, what it is that thinks and
+wills&mdash;what is the origin and guarantee of the faculties by
+which men know anything at all and form rational and true
+conceptions about nature and themselves, whence it is that reason
+draws its powers and materials and rules&mdash;what is the meaning
+of words which all use but few can explain&mdash;Time and Space,
+and Being and Cause, and consciousness and choice, and the moral
+law&mdash;Bacon is content with a loose and superficial treatment
+<a name='Page_194' class='pagenum' title='Page 194'></a>of them.
+Bacon certainly was not a metaphysician, nor an exact and lucid
+reasoner. With wonderful flashes of sure intuition or happy
+anticipation, his mind was deficient in the powers which deal with
+the deeper problems of thought, just as it was deficient in the
+mathematical faculty. The subtlety, the intuition, the penetration,
+the severe precision, even the force of imagination, which make a
+man a great thinker on any abstract subject were not his; the
+interest of questions which had interested metaphysicians had no
+interest for him: he distrusted and undervalued them. When he
+touches the "ultimities" of knowledge he is as obscure and hard to
+be understood as any of those restless Southern Italians of his own
+age, who shared with him the ambition of reconstructing science.
+Certainly the science which most interested Bacon, the science
+which he found, as he thought, in so desperate a condition, and to
+which he gave so great an impulse, was physical science. But
+physical science may be looked at and pursued in different ways, in
+different tempers, with different objects. It may be followed in
+the spirit of Newton, of Boyle, of Herschel, of Faraday; or with a
+confined and low horizon it may be dwarfed and shrivelled into a
+mean utilitarianism. But Bacon's horizon was not a narrow one. He
+believed in God and immortality and the Christian creed and hope.
+To him the restoration of the Reign of Man was a noble enterprise,
+because man was so great and belonged to so great an order of
+things, because the things which he was bid to search into with
+honesty and truthfulness were the works and laws of God, because it
+was so shameful and so miserable that from an ignorance which
+industry and good-sense could remedy, the tribes of mankind passed
+their days in self-imposed darkness and helplessness. It was God's
+appointment that men should go through this earth<a name='Page_195'
+class='pagenum' title='Page 195'></a>ly stage of their being. Each
+stage of man's mysterious existence had to be dealt with, not
+according to his own fancies, but according to the conditions
+imposed on it; and it was one of man's first duties to arrange for
+his stay on earth according to the real laws which he could find
+out if he only sought for them. Doubtless it was one of Bacon's
+highest hopes that from the growth of true knowledge would follow
+in surprising ways the relief of man's estate; this, as an end,
+runs through all his yearning after a fuller and surer method of
+interpreting nature. The desire to be a great benefactor, the
+spirit of sympathy and pity for mankind, reign through this portion
+of his work&mdash;pity for confidence so greatly abused by the
+teachers of man, pity for ignorance which might be dispelled, pity
+for pain and misery which might be relieved. In the quaint but
+beautiful picture of courtesy, kindness, and wisdom, which he
+imagines in the <i>New Atlantis</i>, the representative of true
+philosophy, the "Father of Solomon's House," is introduced as one
+who "had an aspect as if he pitied men." But unless it is
+utilitarianism to be keenly alive to the needs and pains of life,
+and to be eager and busy to lighten and assuage them, Bacon's
+philosophy was not utilitarian. It may deserve many reproaches, but
+not this one. Such a passage as the following&mdash;in which are
+combined the highest motives and graces and passions of the soul,
+love of truth, humility of mind, purity of purpose, reverence for
+God, sympathy for man, compassion for the sorrows of the world and
+longing to heal them, depth of conviction and faith&mdash;fairly
+represents the spirit which runs through his works. After urging
+the mistaken use of imagination and authority in science, he goes
+on&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"There is not and never will be an end or limit to this; one
+catches at one thing, another at another; each has his favourite <a
+name='Page_196' class='pagenum' title='Page 196'></a>fancy; pure
+and open light there is none; every one philosophises out of the
+cells of his own imagination, as out of Plato's cave; the higher
+wits with more acuteness and felicity, the duller, less happily,
+but with equal pertinacity. And now of late, by the regulation of
+some learned and (as things now are) excellent men (the former
+license having, I suppose, become wearisome), the sciences are
+confined to certain and prescribed authors, and thus restrained are
+imposed upon the old and instilled into the young; so that now (to
+use the sarcasm of Cicero concerning C&aelig;sar's year) the
+constellation of Lyra rises by edict, and authority is taken for
+truth, not truth for authority. Which kind of institution and
+discipline is excellent for present use, but precludes all prospect
+of improvement. For we copy the sin of our first parents while we
+suffer for it. They wished to be like God, but their posterity wish
+to be even greater. For we create worlds, we direct and domineer
+over nature, we will have it that all things <i>are</i> as in our
+folly we think they should be, not as seems fittest to the Divine
+wisdom, or as they are found to be in fact; and I know not whether
+we more distort the facts of nature or of our own wits; but we
+clearly impress the stamp of our own image on the creatures and
+works of God, instead of carefully examining and recognising in
+them the stamp of the Creator himself. Wherefore our dominion over
+creatures is a second time forfeited, not undeservedly; and whereas
+after the fall of man some power over the resistance of creatures
+was still left to him&mdash;the power of subduing and managing them
+by true and solid arts&mdash;yet this too through our insolence,
+and because we desire to be like God and to follow the dictates of
+our own reason, we in great part lose. If, therefore, there be any
+humility towards the Creator, any reverence for or disposition to
+magnify His works, any charity for man and anxiety to relieve his
+sorrows and necessities, any love of truth in nature, any hatred of
+darkness, any desire for the purification of the understanding, we
+must entreat men again and again to discard, or at least set apart
+for a while, these volatile and preposterous philosophies which
+have preferred theses to hypotheses, led experience captive, and
+triumphed over the works of God; and to approach with humility and
+veneration to unroll the volume of Creation, to linger and meditate
+therein, and with minds washed clean from opinions to study it in
+purity and integrity. For this is that sound and language which
+"went forth into all lands," and did not <a name='Page_197' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 197'></a>incur the confusion of Babel; this
+should men study to be perfect in, and becoming again as little
+children condescend to take the alphabet of it into their hands,
+and spare no pains to search and unravel the interpretation
+thereof, but pursue it strenuously and persevere even unto
+death."&mdash;Preface to <i>Historia Naturalis</i>: translated,
+<i>Works</i>, v. 132-3.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<hr />
+<p><a name='Page_198' class='pagenum' title='Page 198'></a></p>
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_IX'></a>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+
+<h3>BACON AS A WRITER.</h3>
+
+<p><br />
+Bacon's name belongs to letters as well as to philosophy. In his
+own day, whatever his contemporaries thought of his <i>Instauration
+of Knowledge</i>, he was in the first rank as a speaker and a
+writer. Sir Walter Raleigh, contrasting him with Salisbury, who
+could speak but not write, and Northampton, who could write but not
+speak, thought Bacon eminent both as a speaker and a writer. Ben
+Jonson, passing in review the more famous names of his own and the
+preceding age, from Sir Thomas More to Sir Philip Sidney, Hooker,
+Essex, and Raleigh, places Bacon without a rival at the head of the
+company as the man who had "fulfilled all numbers," and "stood as
+the mark and <span lang="el" title="akm&ecirc;">ἀκμὴ</span>
+<!--&alpha;&kappa;&mu;&eta;--><!-- [Greek: akm&ecirc;] -->
+of our language." And he also records Bacon's power as a speaker.
+"No man," he says, "ever spoke more neatly, more pressly, or
+suffered less emptiness, less idleness, in what he uttered."..."His
+hearers could not cough or look aside from him without loss. He
+commanded when he spoke, and had his judges angry and pleased at
+his devotion ... the fear of every man that heard him was that he
+should make an end." He notices one feature for which we are less
+prepared, though we know that the edge of Bacon's sarcastic tongue
+was felt and resented in James's Court. "His speech," says Ben
+Jonson, "was nobly censorious when he could <i>spare and pass by a
+<a name='Page_199' class='pagenum' title='Page 199'></a>jest</i>."
+The unpopularity which certainly seems to have gathered round his
+name may have had something to do with this reputation.</p>
+
+<p>Yet as an English writer Bacon did not expect to be remembered,
+and he hardly cared to be. He wrote much in Latin, and his first
+care was to have his books put into a Latin dress. "For these
+modern languages," he wrote to Toby Matthews towards the close of
+his life, "will at one time or another play the bank-rowte with
+books, and since I have lost much time with this age, I would be
+glad if God would give me leave to recover it with posterity." He
+wanted to be read by the learned out of England, who were supposed
+to appreciate his philosophical ideas better than his own
+countrymen, and the only way to this was to have his books
+translated into the "general language." He sends Prince Charles the
+<i>Advancement</i> in its new Latin dress. "It is a book," he says,
+"that will live, and be a citizen of the world, as English books
+are not." And he fitted it for continental reading by carefully
+weeding it of all passages that might give offence to the censors
+at Rome or Paris. "I have been," he writes to the King, "mine own
+<i>Index Expurgatorius</i>, that it may be read in all places. For
+since my end of putting it in Latin was to have it read everywhere,
+it had been an absurd contradiction to free it in the language and
+to pen it up in the matter." Even the <i>Essays</i> and the
+<i>History of Henry VII.</i> he had put into Latin "by some good
+pens that do not forsake me." Among these translators are said to
+have been George Herbert and Hobbes, and on more doubtful
+authority, Ben Jonson and Selden. The <i>Essays</i> were also
+translated into Latin and Italian with Bacon's sanction.</p>
+
+<p>Bacon's contemptuous and hopeless estimate of "these modern
+languages," forty years after Spenser had pro<a name='Page_200'
+class='pagenum' title='Page 200'></a>claimed and justified his
+faith in his own language, is only one of the proofs of the
+short-sightedness of the wisest and the limitations of the
+largest-minded. Perhaps we ought not to wonder at his silence about
+Shakespeare. It was the fashion, except among a set of clever but
+not always very reputable people, to think the stage, as it was,
+below the notice of scholars and statesmen; and Shakespeare took no
+trouble to save his works from neglect. Yet it is a curious defect
+in Bacon that he should not have been more alive to the powers and
+future of his own language. He early and all along was profoundly
+impressed with the contrast, which the scholarship of the age so
+abundantly presented, of words to things. He dwells in the
+<i>Advancement</i> on that "first distemper of learning, when men
+study words and not matter." He illustrates it at large from the
+reaction of the new learning and of the popular teaching of the
+Reformation against the utilitarian and unclassical terminology of
+the schoolmen; a reaction which soon grew to excess, and made men
+"hunt more after choiceness of the phrase, and the round and clean
+composition of the sentence, and the sweet falling of the clauses,"
+than after worth of subject, soundness of argument, "life of
+invention or depth of judgment." "I have represented this," he
+says, "in an example of late times, but it hath been and will be
+<i>secundum majus et minus</i> in all times;" and he likens this
+"vanity" to "Pygmalion's frenzy"&mdash;"for to fall in love with
+words which are but the images of matter, is all one as to fall in
+love with a picture." He was dissatisfied with the first attempt at
+translation into Latin of the <i>Advancement</i> by Dr. Playfer of
+Cambridge, because he "desired not so much neat and polite, as
+clear, masculine, and apt expression." Yet, with this hatred of
+circumlocution and prettiness, of the cloudy amplifications, <a
+name='Page_201' class='pagenum' title='Page 201'></a>and pompous
+flourishings, and "the flowing and watery vein," which the scholars
+of his time affected, it is strange that he should not have seen
+that the new ideas and widening thoughts of which he was the herald
+would want a much more elastic and more freely-working instrument
+than Latin could ever become. It is wonderful indeed what can be
+done with Latin. It was long after his day to be the language of
+the exact sciences. In his <i>History of the Winds</i>, which is
+full of his irrepressible fancy and picturesqueness, Bacon
+describes in clear and intelligible Latin the details of the
+rigging of a modern man-of-war, and the mode of sailing her. But
+such tasks impose a yoke, sometimes a rough one, on a language
+which has "taken its ply" in very different conditions, and of
+which the genius is that of indirect and circuitous expression,
+"full of majesty and circumstance." But it never, even in those
+days of scholarship, could lend itself to the frankness, the
+straightforwardness, the fulness and shades of suggestion and
+association, with which, in handling ideas of subtlety and
+difficulty, a writer would wish to speak to his reader, and which
+he could find only in his mother tongue. It might have been thought
+that with Bacon's contempt of form and ceremony in these matters,
+his consciousness of the powers of English in his hands might have
+led him to anticipate that a flexible and rich and strong language
+might create a literature, and that a literature, if worth
+studying, would be studied in its own language. But so great a
+change was beyond even his daring thoughts. To him, as to his age,
+the only safe language was the Latin. For familiar use English was
+well enough. But it could not be trusted; "it would play the
+bankrupt with books." And yet Galileo was writing in Italian as
+well as in Latin; only within twenty-five years later, Descartes
+was writing <i>De la M&eacute;<a name='Page_202' class='pagenum'
+title='Page 202'></a>thode</i>, and Pascal was writing in the same
+French in which he wrote the <i>Provincial Letters</i>, his
+<i>Nouvelles Exp&eacute;riences touchant le Vide</i>, and the
+controversial pamphlets which followed it; showing how in that
+interval of five-and-twenty years an instrument had been fashioned
+out of a modern language such as for lucid expression and clear
+reasoning, Bacon had not yet dreamed of. From Bacon to Pascal is
+the change from the old scientific way of writing to the modern;
+from a modern language, as learned and used in the 16th century, to
+one learned in the 17th.</p>
+
+<p>But the language of the age of Elizabeth was a rich and noble
+one, and it reached a high point in the hands of Bacon. In his
+hands it lent itself to many uses, and assumed many forms, and he
+valued it, not because he thought highly of its qualities as a
+language, but because it enabled him with least trouble "to speak
+as he would," in throwing off the abundant thoughts that rose
+within his mind, and in going through the variety of business which
+could not be done in Latin. But in all his writing it is the
+matter, the real thing that he wanted to say, which was uppermost.
+He cared how it was said, not for the sake of form or ornament, but
+because the force and clearness of what was said depended so much
+on how it was said. Of course, what he wanted to say varied
+indefinitely with the various occasions of his life. His business
+may merely be to write "a device" or panegyric for a pageant in the
+Queen's honour, or for the revels of Gray's Inn. But even these
+trifles are the result of real thought, and are full of
+ideas&mdash;ideas about the hopes of knowledge or about the policy
+of the State; and though, of course, they have plenty of the
+flourishes and quaint absurdities indispensable on such occasions,
+yet the "rhetorical affectation" is in the thing itself, and not in
+the way it is handled; he had an opportunity of saying <a name=
+'Page_203' class='pagenum' title='Page 203'></a>some of the things
+which were to him of deep and perpetual interest, and he used it to
+say them, as forcibly, as strikingly, as attractively as he could.
+His manner of writing depends, not on a style, or a studied or
+acquired habit, but on the nature of the task which he has in hand.
+Everywhere his matter is close to his words, and governs, animates,
+informs his words. No one in England before had so much as he had
+the power to say what he wanted to say, and exactly as he wanted to
+say it. No one was so little at the mercy of conventional language
+or customary rhetoric, except when he persuaded himself that he had
+to submit to those necessities of flattery, which cost him at last
+so dear.</p>
+
+<p>The book by which English readers, from his own time to ours,
+have known him best, better than by the originality and the
+eloquence of the <i>Advancement</i>, or than by the political
+weight and historical imagination of the <i>History of Henry
+VII.</i>, is the first book which he published, the volume of
+<i>Essays</i>. It is an instance of his self-willed but most
+skilful use of the freedom and ease which the "modern language,"
+which he despised, gave him. It is obvious that he might have
+expanded these "Counsels, moral and political," to the size which
+such essays used to swell to after his time. Many people would have
+thanked him for doing so; and some have thought it a good book on
+which to hang their own reflections and illustrations. But he saw
+how much could be done by leaving the beaten track of set treatise
+and discourse, and setting down unceremoniously the observations
+which he had made, and the real rules which he had felt to be true,
+on various practical matters which come home to men's "business and
+bosoms." He was very fond of these moral and political
+generalisations, both of his own collecting and as <a name=
+'Page_204' class='pagenum' title='Page 204'></a>found in writers
+who, he thought, had the right to make them, like the Latins of the
+Empire and the Italians and Spaniards of the Renaissance. But a
+mere string of maxims and quotations would have been a poor thing
+and not new; and he cast what he had to say into connected wholes.
+But nothing can be more loose than the structure of the essays.
+There is no art, no style, almost, except in a few&mdash;the
+political ones&mdash;no order: thoughts are put down and left
+unsupported, unproved, undeveloped. In the first form of the ten,
+which composed the first edition of 1597, they are more like notes
+of analysis or tables of contents; they are austere even to
+meagreness. But the general character continues in the enlarged and
+expanded ones of Bacon's later years. They are like chapters in
+Aristotle's Ethics and Rhetoric on virtues and characters; only
+Bacon's takes Aristotle's broad marking lines as drawn, and
+proceeds with the subtler and more refined observations of a much
+longer and wider experience. But these short papers say what they
+have to say without preface, and in literary undress, without a
+superfluous word, without the joints and bands of structure; they
+say it in brief, rapid sentences, which come down, sentence after
+sentence, like the strokes of a great hammer. No wonder that in
+their disdainful brevity they seem rugged and abrupt, "and do not
+seem to end, but fall." But with their truth and piercingness and
+delicacy of observation, their roughness gives a kind of flavour
+which no elaboration could give. It is none the less that their
+wisdom is of a somewhat cynical kind, fully alive to the
+slipperiness and self-deceits and faithlessness which are in the
+world and rather inclined to be amused at them. In some we can see
+distinct records of the writer's own experience: one contains the
+substance of a charge deliv<a name='Page_205' class='pagenum'
+title='Page 205'></a>ered to Judge Hutton on his appointment;
+another of them is a sketch drawn from life of a character which
+had crossed Bacon's path, and in the essay on <i>Seeming Wise</i>
+we can trace from the impatient notes put down in his
+<i>Commentarius Solutus</i>, the picture of the man who stood in
+his way, the Attorney-General Hobart. Some of them are memorable
+oracular utterances not inadequate to the subject, on <i>Truth</i>
+or <i>Death</i> or <i>Unity</i>. Others reveal an utter incapacity
+to come near a subject, except as a strange external phenomena,
+like the essay on <i>Love</i>. There is a distinct tendency in them
+to the Italian school of political and moral wisdom, the wisdom of
+distrust and of reliance on indirect and roundabout ways. There is
+a group of them, "of <i>Delays</i>," "of <i>Cunning</i>," "of
+<i>Wisdom for a Man's Self</i>," "of <i>Despatch</i>," which show
+how vigilantly and to what purpose he had watched the treasurers
+and secretaries and intriguers of Elizabeth's and James's Courts;
+and there are curious self-revelations, as in the essay on
+<i>Friendship</i>. But there are also currents of better and larger
+feeling, such as those which show his own ideal of "<i>Great
+Place</i>," and what he felt of its dangers and duties. And mixed
+with the fantastic taste and conceits of the time, there is
+evidence in them of Bacon's keen delight in nature, in the beauty
+and scents of flowers, in the charm of open-air life, as in the
+essay on <i>Gardens</i>, "The purest of human pleasures, the
+greatest refreshment to the spirits of man."</p>
+
+<p>But he had another manner of writing for what he held to be his
+more serious work. In the philosophical and historical works there
+is no want of attention to the flow and order and ornament of
+composition. When we come to the <i>Advancement of Learning</i>, we
+come to a book which is one of the landmarks of what high thought
+and rich im<a name='Page_206' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 206'></a>agination have made of the English language. It is
+the first great book in English prose of secular interest; the
+first book which can claim a place beside the <i>Laws of
+Ecclesiastical Polity</i>. As regards its subject-matter, it has
+been partly thrown into the shade by the greatly enlarged and
+elaborate form in which it ultimately appeared, in a Latin dress,
+as the first portion of the scheme of the <i>Instauratio</i>, the
+<i>De Augmentis Scientiarum</i>. Bacon looked on it as a first
+effort, a kind of call-bell to awaken and attract the interest of
+others in the thoughts and hopes which so interested himself. But
+it contains some of his finest writing. In the <i>Essays</i> he
+writes as a looker-on at the game of human affairs, who, according
+to his frequent illustration, sees more of it than the gamesters
+themselves, and is able to give wiser and faithful counsel, not
+without a touch of kindly irony at the mistakes which he observes.
+In the <i>Advancement</i> he is the enthusiast for a great cause
+and a great hope, and all that he has of passion and power is
+enlisted in the effort to advance it. The <i>Advancement</i> is far
+from being a perfect book. As a survey of the actual state of
+knowledge in his day, of its deficiencies, and what was wanted to
+supply them, it is not even up to the materials of the time. Even
+the improved <i>De Augmentis</i> is inadequate; and there is reason
+to think the <i>Advancement</i> was a hurried book, at least in the
+later part, and it is defective in arrangement and proportion of
+parts. Two of the great divisions of knowledge&mdash;history and
+poetry&mdash;are despatched in comparatively short chapters; while
+in the division on "Civil Knowledge," human knowledge as it
+respects society, he inserts a long essay, obviously complete in
+itself and clumsily thrust in here, on the ways of getting on in
+the world, the means by which a man may be "<i>Faber fortun&aelig;
+su&aelig;</i>"&mdash;the architect of his own suc<a name='Page_207'
+class='pagenum' title='Page 207'></a>cess; too lively a picture to
+be pleasant of the arts with which he had become acquainted in the
+process of rising. The book, too, has the blemishes of its own
+time; its want of simplicity, its inevitable though very often
+amusing and curious pedantries. But the <i>Advancement</i> was the
+first of a long line of books which have attempted to teach English
+readers how to think of knowledge; to make it really and
+intelligently the interest, not of the school or the study or the
+laboratory only, but of society at large. It was a book with a
+purpose, new then, but of which we have seen the fulfilment. He
+wanted to impress on his generation, as a very practical matter,
+all that knowledge might do in wise hands, all that knowledge had
+lost by the faults and errors of men and the misfortunes of time,
+all that knowledge might be pushed to in all directions by faithful
+and patient industry and well-planned methods for the elevation and
+benefit of man in his highest capacities as well as in his
+humblest. And he further sought to teach them <i>how</i> to know;
+to make them understand that difficult achievement of
+self-knowledge, to know <i>what it is</i> to know; to give the
+first attempted chart to guide them among the shallows and rocks
+and whirlpools which beset the course and action of thought and
+inquiry; to reveal to them the "idols" which unconsciously haunt
+the minds of the strongest as well as the weakest, and interpose
+their delusions when we are least aware&mdash;"the fallacies and
+false appearances inseparable from our nature and our condition of
+life." To induce men to believe not only that there was much to
+know that was not yet dreamed of, but that the way of knowing
+needed real and thorough improvement; that the knowing mind bore
+along with it all kinds of snares and disqualifications of which it
+is unconscious; and that it needed training quite as much as mate<a
+name='Page_208' class='pagenum' title='Page 208'></a>rials to work
+on, was the object of the <i>Advancement</i>. It was but a sketch;
+but it was a sketch so truly and forcibly drawn, that it made an
+impression which has never been weakened. To us its use and almost
+its interest is passed. But it is a book which we can never open
+without coming on some noble interpretation of the realities of
+nature or the mind; some unexpected discovery of that quick and
+keen eye which arrests us by its truth; some felicitous and
+unthought-of illustration, yet so natural as almost to be doomed to
+become a commonplace; some bright touch of his incorrigible
+imaginativeness, ever ready to force itself in amid the driest
+details of his argument.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Advancement</i> was only one shape out of many into which
+he cast his thoughts. Bacon was not easily satisfied with his work;
+even when he published he did so, not because he had brought his
+work to the desired point, but lest anything should happen to him
+and it should "perish." Easy and unstudied as his writing seems, it
+was, as we have seen, the result of unintermitted trouble and
+varied modes of working. He was quite as much a talker as a writer,
+and beat out his thoughts into shape in talking. In the essay on
+<i>Friendship</i> he describes the process with a vividness which
+tells of his own experience&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"But before you come to that [the faithful counsel that a man
+receiveth from his friend], certain it is that whosoever hath his
+mind fraught with many thoughts, his wits and understanding do
+clarify and break up in the communicating and discoursing with
+another. He tosseth his thoughts more easily; he marshalleth them
+more orderly; he seeth how they look when they are turned into
+words; finally, he waxeth wiser than himself, and that more by an
+hour's discourse than by a day's meditation. It was well said by
+Themistocles to the King of Persia, 'That speech was like cloth of
+arras opened and put abroad, whereby the imagery doth appear in
+figure; whereas in thought they lie in packs.' Neither is this
+second <a name='Page_209' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 209'></a>fruit of friendship, in opening the understanding,
+restrained only to such friends as are able to give a man counsel.
+(They are, indeed, best.) But even without that, a man learneth of
+himself, and bringeth his own thoughts to light, and whetteth his
+wits against a stone which itself cuts not. In a word, a man were
+better relate himself to a <i>statua</i> or a picture, than to
+suffer his thoughts to pass in smother."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Bacon, as has been said, was a great maker of notes and
+note-books: he was careful not of the thought only, but of the very
+words in which it presented itself; everything was collected that
+might turn out useful in his writing or speaking, down to
+alternative modes of beginning or connecting or ending a sentence.
+He watched over his intellectual appliances and resources much more
+strictly than over his money concerns. He never threw away and
+never forgot what could be turned to account. He was never afraid
+of repeating himself, if he thought he had something apt to say. He
+was never tired of recasting and rewriting, from a mere fragment or
+preface to a finished paper. He has favourite images, favourite
+maxims, favourite texts, which he cannot do without. "<i>Da Fidei
+qu&aelig; sunt Fidei</i>" comes in from his first book to his last.
+The illustrations which he gets from the myth of Scylla, from
+Atalanta's ball, from Borgia's saying about the French marking
+their lodgings with chalk, the saying that God takes delight, like
+the "innocent play of children," "to hide his works in order to
+have them found out," and to have kings as "his playfellows in that
+game," these, with many others, reappear, however varied the
+context, from the first to the last of his compositions. An edition
+of Bacon, with marginal references and parallel passages, would
+show a more persistent recurrence of characteristic illustrations
+and sentences than perhaps any other writer.</p>
+
+<p><a name='Page_210' class='pagenum' title='Page 210'></a> The
+<i>Advancement</i> was followed by attempts to give serious effect
+to its lesson. This was nearly all done in Latin. He did so,
+because in these works he spoke to a larger and, as he thought,
+more interested audience; the use of Latin marked the gravity of
+his subject as one that touched all mankind; and the majesty of
+Latin suited his taste and his thoughts. Bacon spoke, indeed,
+impressively on the necessity of entering into the realm of
+knowledge in the spirit of a little child. He dwelt on the
+paramount importance of beginning from the very bottom of the scale
+of fact, of understanding the commonplace things at our feet, so
+full of wonder and mystery and instruction, before venturing on
+theories. The sun is not polluted by shining on a dunghill, and no
+facts were too ignoble to be beneath the notice of the true student
+of nature. But his own genius was for the grandeur and pomp of
+general views. The practical details of experimental science were,
+except in partial instances, yet a great way off; and what there
+was, he either did not care about or really understand, and had no
+aptitude for handling. He knew enough to give reality to his
+argument; he knew, and insisted on it, that the labour of
+observation and experiment would have to be very heavy and quite
+indispensable. But his own business was with great principles and
+new truths; these were what had the real attraction for him; it was
+the magnificent thoughts and boundless hopes of the approaching
+"kingdom of man" which kindled his imagination and fired his
+ambition. "He writes philosophy," said Harvey, who had come to his
+own great discovery through patient and obscure experiments on
+frogs and monkeys&mdash;"he writes philosophy like a Lord
+Chancellor." And for this part of the work, the stateliness and
+dignity of the Latin corresponded to the proud claims which he made
+<a name='Page_211' class='pagenum' title='Page 211'></a>for his
+conception of the knowledge which was to be. English seemed to him
+too homely to express the hopes of the world, too unstable to be
+trusted with them. Latin was the language of command and law. His
+Latin, without enslaving itself to Ciceronian types, and with a
+free infusion of barbarous but most convenient words from the vast
+and ingenious terminology of the schoolmen, is singularly forcible
+and expressive. It is almost always easy and clear; it can be vague
+and general, and it can be very precise where precision is wanted.
+It can, on occasion, be magnificent, and its gravity is continually
+enlivened by the play upon it, as upon a background, of his
+picturesque and unexpected fancies. The exposition of his
+philosophical principles was attempted in two forms. He began in
+English. He began, in the shape of a personal account, a statement
+of a series of conclusions to which his thinking had brought him,
+which he called the "Clue of the Labyrinth," <i>Filum
+Labyrinthi</i>. But he laid this aside unfinished, and rewrote and
+completed it in Latin, with the title <i>Cogitata et Visa</i>. It
+gains by being in Latin; as Mr. Spedding says, "it must certainly
+be reckoned among the most perfect of Bacon's productions." The
+personal form with each paragraph begins and ends. "<i>Franciscus
+Bacon sic cogitavit</i> ... <i>itaque visum est ei</i>" gives to it
+a special tone of serious conviction, and brings the interest of
+the subject more keenly to the reader. It has the same kind of
+personal interest, only more solemn and commanding, which there is
+in Descartes's <i>Discours de la M&eacute;thode</i>. In this form
+Bacon meant at first to publish. He sent it to his usual critics,
+Sir Thomas Bodley, Toby Matthews, and Bishop Andrewes. And he meant
+to follow it up with a practical exemplification of his method. But
+he changed his plan. He had more than once ex<a name='Page_212'
+class='pagenum' title='Page 212'></a>pressed his preference for the
+form of <i>aphorisms</i> over the argumentative and didactic
+continuity of a set discourse. He had, indeed, already twice begun
+a series of aphorisms on the true methods of interpreting nature,
+and directing the mind in the true path of knowledge, and had begun
+them with the same famous aphorism with which the <i>Novum
+Organum</i> opens. He now reverted to the form of the aphorism, and
+resolved to throw the materials of the <i>Cogitata et Visa</i> into
+this shape. The result is the <i>Novum Organum</i>. It contains,
+with large additions, the substance of the treatise, but broken up
+and rearranged in the new form of separate impersonal generalised
+observations. The points and assertions and issues which, in a
+continuous discourse, careful readers mark and careless ones miss,
+are one by one picked out and brought separately to the light. It
+begins with brief, oracular, unproved maxims and propositions, and
+goes on gradually into larger developments and explanations. The
+aphorisms are meant to strike, to awaken questions, to disturb
+prejudices, to let in light into a nest of unsuspected intellectual
+confusions and self-misunderstandings, to be the mottoes and
+watchwords of many a laborious and difficult inquiry. They form a
+connected and ordered chain, though the ties between each link are
+not given. In this way Bacon put forth his proclamation of war on
+all that then called itself science; his announcement that the
+whole work of solid knowledge must be begun afresh, and by a new,
+and, as he thought, infallible method. On this work Bacon
+concentrated all his care. It was twelve years in hand, and twelve
+times underwent his revision. "In the first book especially," says
+Mr. Ellis, "every word seems to have been carefully weighed; and it
+would be hard to omit or change anything without injuring the
+meaning which Bacon in<a name='Page_213' class='pagenum' title=
+'Page 213'></a>tended to convey." Severe as it is, it is instinct
+with enthusiasm, sometimes with passion. The Latin in which it is
+written answers to it; it has the conciseness, the breadth, the
+lordliness of a great piece of philosophical legislation.</p>
+
+<p>The world has agreed to date from Bacon the systematic reform of
+natural philosophy, the beginning of an intelligent attempt, which
+has been crowned by such signal success, to place the investigation
+of nature on a solid foundation. On purely scientific grounds his
+title to this great honour may require considerable qualification.
+What one thing, it is asked, would not have been discovered in the
+age of Galileo and Harvey, if Bacon had never written? What one
+scientific discovery can be traced to him, or to the observance of
+his peculiar rules? It was something, indeed, to have conceived, as
+clearly as he conceived it, the large and comprehensive idea of
+what natural knowledge must be, and must rest upon, even if he were
+not able to realise his idea, and were mistaken in his practical
+methods of reform. But great ideas and great principles need their
+adequate interpreter, their <i>vates sacer</i>, if they are to
+influence the history of mankind. This was what Bacon was to
+science, to that great change in the thoughts and activity of men
+in relation to the world of nature around them: and this is his
+title to the great place assigned to him. He not only understood
+and felt what science might be, but he was able to make
+others&mdash;and it was no easy task beforehand, while the wonders
+of discovery were yet in the future&mdash;understand and feel it
+too. And he was 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, sec<a name='Page_214' class=
+'pagenum' title='Page 214'></a>ond 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 on the habits and
+faults of the human mind&mdash;on the difficult and yet so obvious
+and so natural precautions necessary to guide it in the true and
+hopeful track. It 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 <i>Advancement</i> and the <i>De
+Augmentis</i>; from the nobleness, the originality, the
+picturesqueness, the impressive and irresistible truth of the great
+aphorisms of the <i>Novum Organum</i>.</p>
+
+<h3>THE END</h3>
+
+<hr />
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h2>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
+
+<!-- A footnote -->
+<div class="footnote"><a id="footnote1" name="footnote1"></a>
+
+<p><a href="#footnotetag1"><b>[1]</b></a> <i>Promus</i>: edited by
+Mrs. H. Pott, p. 475.</p>
+</div>
+
+<!-- A footnote -->
+<div class="footnote"><a id="footnote2" name="footnote2"></a>
+
+<p><a href="#footnotetag2"><b>[2]</b></a> Dr. Mozley.</p>
+</div>
+
+<!-- A footnote -->
+<div class="footnote"><a id="footnote3" name="footnote3"></a>
+
+<p><a href="#footnotetag3"><b>[3]</b></a> <i>Calendar of State
+Papers</i> (domestic), March 24, 1621.</p>
+</div>
+
+<!-- A footnote -->
+<div class="footnote"><a id="footnote4" name="footnote4"></a>
+
+<p><a href="#footnotetag4"><b>[4]</b></a> <i>Commons' Journals</i>,
+March 17, April 27; iii. 560, 594-6.</p>
+</div>
+
+<!-- A footnote -->
+<div class="footnote"><a id="footnote5" name="footnote5"></a>
+
+<p><a href="#footnotetag5"><b>[5]</b></a> <i>Commons' Journals</i>,
+iii. 578. In his copy of the <i>Novum Organum</i>, received <i>ex
+dono auctoris</i>, Coke wrote the same words.</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="line i6">"<i>Auctori consilium</i>.</div>
+
+<div class="line">Instaurare paras veterum documenta
+sophorum:</div>
+
+<div class="line">Instaura leges justitiamque prius."</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>He added, with allusion to the ship in the frontispiece of the
+<i>Novum Organum</i>,</p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="line">"It deserveth not to be read in schools,</div>
+
+<div class="line">But to be freighted in the ship of Fools."</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<hr />
+<!-- THE OLD FOOTNOTES ARE IN COMMENT BELOW
+
+<p>[1] <i>Promus</i>: edited by Mrs. H. Pott, p. 475.</p>
+
+<p>[2] Dr. Mozley.</p>
+
+<p>[3] <i>Calendar of State Papers</i> (domestic), March 24, 1621.</p>
+
+<p>[4] <i>Commons' Journals</i>, March 17, April 27; iii. 560, 594-6.</p>
+
+<p>[5] <i>Commons' Journals</i>, iii. 578. In his copy of the <i>Novum Organum</i>,
+received <i>ex dono auctoris</i>, Coke wrote the same words.</p>
+
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<div class='line i6'>&quot;<i>Auctori consilium</i>.<br /></div>
+<>Instaurare paras veterum documenta sophorum:<br /></span>
+<span>Instaura leges justitiamque prius.&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>He added, with allusion to the ship in the frontispiece of the <i>Novum
+Organum</i>,</p>
+
+<div class='poem'><div class='stanza'>
+<span>&quot;It deserveth not to be read in schools,<br /></span>
+<span>But to be freighted in the ship of Fools.&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div><a name='Page_149' class='pagenum' title='Page 149'></a>
+
+-->
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13888 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+