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<p><!-- Page -5 --><SPAN name="Page_i" title='Page i'></SPAN></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 & BROTHERS,
PUBLISHERS<br/>
FRANKLIN SQUARE</p>
<hr />
<p><!-- Page -4 --><SPAN name='Page_iii' title='Page iii'></SPAN></p>
<h2><SPAN name='ENGLISH_MEN_OF_LETTERS'></SPAN>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 & 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 --><SPAN name='Page_v' class="pagenum" title=
'Page v'></SPAN></p>
<h2><SPAN name='PREFACE'></SPAN>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—"<i>Par trop se
débattre, la vérité se perd</i>."<SPAN name=
"footnotetag1" name="footnotetag1" class="fn" href="#footnote1"
title="Promus: edited by Mrs. H. Pott, p. 475."><sup>1</sup></SPAN>
<!-- [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 Rémusat's
work on Bacon, which seems to me the most complete and the most
just estimate both of Bacon's char<!-- Page -2 --><SPAN name='Page_vi' class="pagenum" title='Page vi'></SPAN>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 Rémusat,
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—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>"Penitus toto divisos orbe Britannos."</p>
</blockquote>
<hr />
<p><!-- Page -1 --><SPAN name='Page_vii' class="pagenum" title=
'Page vii'></SPAN></p>
<h2><SPAN name='CONTENTS'></SPAN>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/>
<SPAN name='Page_viii' class="pagenum" title='Page viii'></SPAN>
CHAPTER VII.<br/>
BACON'S LAST YEARS—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><SPAN href='#CHAPTER_I'>EARLY LIFE</SPAN> </td>
<td align="left"><SPAN href='#Page_1'>1</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><b>CHAPTER II.</b> </td>
<td align="left"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><SPAN href='#CHAPTER_II'>BACON AND ELIZABETH</SPAN> </td>
<td align="left"><SPAN href='#Page_26'>26</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><b>CHAPTER III.</b> </td>
<td align="left"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><SPAN href='#CHAPTER_III'>BACON AND JAMES I.</SPAN> </td>
<td align="left"><SPAN href='#Page_55'>55</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><b>CHAPTER IV.</b> </td>
<td align="left"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><SPAN href='#CHAPTER_IV'>BACON SOLICITOR-GENERAL</SPAN> </td>
<td align="left"><SPAN href='#Page_77'>77</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><b>CHAPTER V.</b> </td>
<td align="left"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><SPAN href='#CHAPTER_V'>BACON ATTORNEY-GENERAL AND CHANCELLOR</SPAN>
</td>
<td align="left"><SPAN href='#Page_95'>95</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><b>CHAPTER VI.</b> </td>
<td align="left"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><SPAN href='#CHAPTER_VI'>BACON'S FALL</SPAN> </td>
<td align="left"><SPAN href='#Page_118'>118</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><b>CHAPTER VII.</b> </td>
<td align="left"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><SPAN href='#CHAPTER_VII'>BACON'S LAST YEARS—1621-1626</SPAN>
</td>
<td align="left"><SPAN href='#Page_149'>149</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><b>CHAPTER VIII.</b> </td>
<td align="left"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><SPAN href='#CHAPTER_VIII'>BACON'S PHILOSOPHY</SPAN> </td>
<td align="left"><SPAN href='#Page_168'>168</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><b>CHAPTER IX.</b> </td>
<td align="left"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><SPAN href='#CHAPTER_IX'>BACON AS A WRITER</SPAN> </td>
<td align="left"><SPAN href='#Page_198'>198</SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name='Page_1' class="pagenum" title='Page 1'></SPAN></p>
<h2><SPAN name='CHAPTER_I'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_2' class="pagenum" title='Page 2'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_3' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 3'></SPAN>up," says a keen observer, "of professions, gifts, and
talents; and also of <i>themselves</i>."<SPAN name="footnotetag2" name=
"footnotetag2" class="fn" href="#footnote2" title=
"Dr. Mozley."><sup>2</sup></SPAN><!-- [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—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>
<!-- αρεσκοσ -->
<!-- [Greek: areskos] --> of Aristotle, the <span lang="el" title="anthrôpareskos">ἀνθρωπάρεσκοϛ</span>
<!-- ανθρωπαρεσκο&sigmaf --><!-- [Greek: anthrôpareskos] -->
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—there are many of them—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
<SPAN name='Page_4' class="pagenum" title='Page 4'></SPAN>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;" <SPAN name=
'Page_5' class="pagenum" title='Page 5'></SPAN>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—at one of the greatest
crises of English history—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 <SPAN name='Page_6' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 6'></SPAN>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, <SPAN name='Page_7' class="pagenum" title='Page 7'></SPAN>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—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—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 <SPAN name='Page_8' class="pagenum" title='Page 8'></SPAN>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—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 <SPAN name='Page_9' class="pagenum" title='Page 9'></SPAN>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—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, <SPAN name='Page_10' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 10'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_11' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 11'></SPAN>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—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—certainly from the Puritan—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 <SPAN name='Page_12' class="pagenum"
title='Page 12'></SPAN>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—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—he
was too much alive to the wrongs inflicted by them on his own side,
and to the incredible absurdity of their arguments—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—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 <SPAN name='Page_13' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 13'></SPAN>is very severe. They punish and restrain, but they do
not themselves mend their ways or supply what was wanting; and
theirs are "<i>injuriæ potentiorum</i>"—"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—"these are the
true successors of Diotrephes and not my lord bishops"—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—its inability to satisfy the great questions which
it raised in the soul, its unworthy dealing with
Scripture—"naked examples, conceited inferences, and forced
allusions, which mine into all certainty of religion"—"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—"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 <SPAN name=
'Page_14' class="pagenum" title='Page 14'></SPAN>one of their
adversaries said, <i>that they have but two small
wants—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> <SPAN name='Page_15' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 15'></SPAN><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—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—"<i>I have taken all knowledge to be my
province</i>"—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><SPAN name='Page_16' class="pagenum" title='Page 16'></SPAN> "MY
LORD,—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 <SPAN name='Page_17' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 17'></SPAN>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—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—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, <SPAN name='Page_18' class="pagenum"
title='Page 18'></SPAN>filling him with fire and passion—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—a real knowledge of the amazing and <SPAN name='Page_19' class="pagenum" title='Page 19'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_20' class="pagenum" title='Page 20'></SPAN>to carry forward the double task of
overthrowing ignorance and building up the new and solid knowledge
on which his heart was set—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—two
of them composed in honour of the Queen, as "triumphs," offered by
<SPAN name='Page_21' class="pagenum" title='Page 21'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_22' class="pagenum"
title='Page 22'></SPAN>to what the speaker or writer has to
say—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—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—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—how at a certain time and place
this word set the whole moving, seemed to <SPAN name='Page_23' class="pagenum" title='Page 23'></SPAN>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—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 <SPAN name=
'Page_24' class="pagenum" title='Page 24'></SPAN>philosophy, so this
is a specimen of what was equally characteristic of him—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—</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 Reginæ Angliæ</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<SPAN name='Page_25' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 25'></SPAN>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><SPAN name='Page_26' class="pagenum" title='Page 26'></SPAN></p>
<h2><SPAN name='CHAPTER_II'></SPAN>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<SPAN name='Page_27' class="pagenum" title='Page 27'></SPAN>ly rising in the Queen's favour and
carrying all before him at Court—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—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 <SPAN name='Page_28' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 28'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name=
'Page_29' class="pagenum" title='Page 29'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_30' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 30'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name=
'Page_31' class="pagenum" title='Page 31'></SPAN>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—the most affectionate and devoted of brothers—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 <SPAN name='Page_32' class="pagenum" title='Page 32'></SPAN>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—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—</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 <SPAN name='Page_33' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 33'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_34' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 34'></SPAN>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,—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 <SPAN name='Page_35' class="pagenum" title='Page 35'></SPAN>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 £1800. Bacon's resolution is
recorded in the following letter:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>"IT MAY PLEASE YOUR GOOD LORDSHIP,—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, <SPAN name='Page_36' class="pagenum" title='Page 36'></SPAN>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.—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—the young widow of
Sir Christopher Hatton—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 <SPAN name='Page_37' class="pagenum" title='Page 37'></SPAN>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—</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 <SPAN name='Page_38' class="pagenum" title='Page 38'></SPAN>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—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 <SPAN name=
'Page_39' class="pagenum" title='Page 39'></SPAN>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"—so Bacon represents himself
expostulating with the Queen on her caprices—"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<SPAN name='Page_40' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 40'></SPAN>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—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<SPAN name='Page_41' class="pagenum" title='Page 41'></SPAN>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"—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—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>"MY LORD,—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 <SPAN name='Page_42' class="pagenum" title='Page 42'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_43' class="pagenum" title='Page 43'></SPAN>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—indeed, his public duty
as a subordinate servant of government—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,—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—as the Queen's service, her quiet and contentment,
her honour, her favour, the good of my country, and the
like—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 <SPAN name='Page_44' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 44'></SPAN>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—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>"MR. BACON,—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 <SPAN name='Page_45' class="pagenum" title='Page 45'></SPAN>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—Mr. Spedding thinks, out of his
regular turn—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 <SPAN name='Page_46' class="pagenum" title='Page 46'></SPAN>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—and all history makes it plain—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 à 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 <SPAN name='Page_47' class="pagenum" title='Page 47'></SPAN>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 hæresin</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—"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—"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 <SPAN name='Page_48' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 48'></SPAN>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—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—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, <SPAN name='Page_49' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 49'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_50' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 50'></SPAN>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—with whatever purpose—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 <SPAN name=
'Page_51' class="pagenum" title='Page 51'></SPAN>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 £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 <SPAN name='Page_52' class="pagenum" title='Page 52'></SPAN>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; <SPAN name='Page_53' class="pagenum" title='Page 53'></SPAN>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, <SPAN name='Page_54' class="pagenum" title='Page 54'></SPAN>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—he was twice arrested for debt—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><SPAN name='Page_55' class="pagenum" title='Page 55'></SPAN></p>
<h2><SPAN name='CHAPTER_III'></SPAN>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—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 <SPAN name='Page_56' class="pagenum" title='Page 56'></SPAN>mending his
fortunes. And so the two lives went on side by side, the worldly
one—he would have said, the practical one—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—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 <SPAN name='Page_57' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 57'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_58' class="pagenum" title='Page 58'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_59' class="pagenum" title='Page 59'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_60' class="pagenum" title='Page 60'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_61' class="pagenum" title='Page 61'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_62' class="pagenum" title='Page 62'></SPAN>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—"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—"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 <SPAN name='Page_63' class="pagenum" title='Page 63'></SPAN>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,—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 <SPAN name='Page_64' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 64'></SPAN>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—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<SPAN name='Page_65' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 65'></SPAN>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—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 <SPAN name='Page_66' class="pagenum" title='Page 66'></SPAN>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><SPAN name='Page_67' class="pagenum" title='Page 67'></SPAN>
"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—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—that man (I thought) would be the
benefactor indeed of the human race—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—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—be they
great or small—reach no further than the condition and
culture of this mortal life; and I was <SPAN name='Page_68' class="pagenum" title='Page 68'></SPAN>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—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—together with the malignity of sects, and those
compendious artifices and devices which have crept into the place
of solid erudition—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—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—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 <SPAN name='Page_69' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 69'></SPAN>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—though this is a
matter of less moment—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—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 <SPAN name='Page_70' class="pagenum"
title='Page 70'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_71' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 71'></SPAN>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—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 <SPAN name='Page_72' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 72'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_73' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 73'></SPAN>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, "<SPAN name='Page_74' class="pagenum"
title='Page 74'></SPAN>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—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—</p>
<blockquote>
<p><SPAN name='Page_75' class="pagenum" title='Page 75'></SPAN> "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 <SPAN name='Page_76' class="pagenum" title='Page 76'></SPAN>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><SPAN name='Page_77' class="pagenum" title='Page 77'></SPAN></p>
<h2><SPAN name='CHAPTER_IV'></SPAN>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<SPAN name='Page_78' class="pagenum" title='Page 78'></SPAN>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>—"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 <SPAN name='Page_79' class="pagenum" title='Page 79'></SPAN>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 £24,155 and his
income at £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—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 <SPAN name='Page_80' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 80'></SPAN>space. He notes the stages and points to which his
plans have reached; he indicates, with a favourite quotation or
apophthegm—"<i>Plus ultra</i>"—"<i>ausus vana
contemnere</i>"—"<i>aditus non nisi sub persona infantis</i>"
soon to be familiar to the world in his published
writings—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—"of learned men beyond the seas"—"to begin
first in France to print it"—"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"—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—</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 <SPAN name='Page_81' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 81'></SPAN>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—</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—"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"—</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—"Solemn goose. Stately, leastwise
nodd (?) crafty. They have made him believe that he is wondrous
wise." And, finally, he draws up a <SPAN name='Page_82' class="pagenum" title='Page 82'></SPAN>paper of counsels and rules for his
own conduct—"<i>Custumæ aptæ ad
Individuum</i>"—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 <SPAN name='Page_83' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 83'></SPAN>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—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—"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 <SPAN name='Page_84' class="pagenum" title='Page 84'></SPAN>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"—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—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—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 <SPAN name='Page_85' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 85'></SPAN>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—not soundly
in point of law, but curiously in accordance with modern
notions—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—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><SPAN name='Page_86' class="pagenum" title='Page 86'></SPAN>To Bishop
Andrewes he sent, also in manuscript, another piece, belonging to
the same plan—the deeply impressive treatise called <i>Visa
et Cogitata</i>—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,—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><SPAN name='Page_87' class="pagenum" title='Page 87'></SPAN>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,—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,—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
<SPAN name='Page_88' class="pagenum" title='Page 88'></SPAN>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—"</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 <SPAN name=
'Page_89' class="pagenum" title='Page 89'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_90' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 90'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_91' class="pagenum" title='Page 91'></SPAN>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—"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"—he returns to the charge in
detail against Salisbury and the Great Contract.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>"My second prayer is, that your Majesty—in respect to the
hasty freeing of your state—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 <SPAN name='Page_92' class="pagenum" title='Page 92'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_93' class="pagenum"
title='Page 93'></SPAN>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—for his estate was not "free from
difficulties"—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—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<SPAN name='Page_94' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 94'></SPAN>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—where he was a
check on the prerogative—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><SPAN name='Page_95' class="pagenum" title='Page 95'></SPAN></p>
<h2><SPAN name='CHAPTER_V'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_96' class="pagenum"
title='Page 96'></SPAN>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—if he had escaped the long necessity of being a
persistent and still baffled suitor—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 £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 <SPAN name=
'Page_97' class="pagenum" title='Page 97'></SPAN>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—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—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<SPAN name='Page_98' class="pagenum" title='Page 98'></SPAN>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—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<SPAN name='Page_99' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 99'></SPAN>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 Præmunire. 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 <SPAN name='Page_100' class="pagenum" title='Page 100'></SPAN>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—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—of a policy worthy of a great king, and a king of
England—James <SPAN name='Page_101' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 101'></SPAN>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—so he thought
and so all assured him—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 <SPAN name='Page_102' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 102'></SPAN>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,—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><SPAN name='Page_103' class="pagenum" title='Page 103'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_104' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 104'></SPAN>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—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—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 <SPAN name='Page_105' class="pagenum" title='Page 105'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_106' class="pagenum" title='Page 106'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_107' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 107'></SPAN>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>præmunire</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—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<SPAN name=
'Page_108' class="pagenum" title='Page 108'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_109' class="pagenum" title='Page 109'></SPAN>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—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
<SPAN name='Page_110' class="pagenum" title='Page 110'></SPAN>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,—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 <SPAN name='Page_111' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 111'></SPAN>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—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—"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 <SPAN name='Page_112' class="pagenum"
title='Page 112'></SPAN>the evidence went well—"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—I have not heard him do
better—and began with a fine of £100,000; but the
judges first, and most of the rest, reduced it to £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—monopolies
for making gold and silk thread, and for licensing inns and
ale-houses—which were in the hands of Buck<SPAN name='Page_113' class="pagenum" title='Page 113'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_114' class="pagenum" title='Page 114'></SPAN>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
£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 <SPAN name='Page_115' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 115'></SPAN>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—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—Look on a Parliament as a certain necessity, but not
only <SPAN name='Page_116' class="pagenum" title='Page 116'></SPAN>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—"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 <SPAN name='Page_117' class="pagenum"
title='Page 117'></SPAN>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><SPAN name='Page_118' class="pagenum" title='Page 118'></SPAN></p>
<h2><SPAN name='CHAPTER_VI'></SPAN>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—the revision of the
Statute Book—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, <SPAN name=
'Page_119' class="pagenum" title='Page 119'></SPAN>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—it might be in an
honourable and ceremonious fashion, in the Tower and on the
scaffold—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 <SPAN name='Page_120' class="pagenum"
title='Page 120'></SPAN>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—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—among the common lawyers,
because it interfered with their business; in the public, partly
from the traditions of its slowness, partly from its expensiveness,
<SPAN name='Page_121' class="pagenum" title='Page 121'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name=
'Page_122' class="pagenum" title='Page 122'></SPAN>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—<SPAN name=
'Page_123' class="pagenum" title='Page 123'></SPAN>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—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—the beginning
of March—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><SPAN name='Page_124' class="pagenum" title='Page 124'></SPAN> 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 <SPAN name='Page_125' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 125'></SPAN>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>Modicæ 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 <SPAN name='Page_126' class="pagenum"
title='Page 126'></SPAN>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,—Your Lordship spake of Purgatory. I am
now in it, but my mind is in a calm, for my fortune is not my <SPAN name='Page_127' class="pagenum" title='Page 127'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_128' class="pagenum" title='Page 128'></SPAN>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—more than two
thousand—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>—the true <i>Instauratio</i> was to restore
laws—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 <SPAN name='Page_129' class="pagenum" title='Page 129'></SPAN>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—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
Augæan 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 £300, £400,
and even £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."<SPAN name=
"footnotetag3" name="footnotetag3" class="fn" href="#footnote3"
title=
"Calendar of State Papers (domestic), March 24, 1621."><sup>3</sup></SPAN><!-- [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
columbæ</i>, <SPAN name='Page_130' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 130'></SPAN>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—</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 <SPAN name='Page_131' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 131'></SPAN>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. <SPAN name='Page_132' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 132'></SPAN>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—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>delivré</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—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<SPAN name=
'Page_133' class="pagenum" title='Page 133'></SPAN>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—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 £1200, and with which he said
that all the judges agreed—an assertion which all the judges
denied. Of these charges there is no contradiction.<SPAN name=
"footnotetag4" name="footnotetag4" class="fn" href="#footnote4"
title=
"Commons' Journals, March 17, April 27; iii. 560, 594-6."><sup>4</sup></SPAN>
<!-- [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><SPAN name='Page_134' class="pagenum" title='Page 134'></SPAN> "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—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<SPAN name='Page_135' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 135'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_136' class="pagenum" title='Page 136'></SPAN>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
£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 <SPAN name='Page_137' class="pagenum"
title='Page 137'></SPAN>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—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 <SPAN name='Page_138' class="pagenum" title='Page 138'></SPAN>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—of being corrupt as a judge. His
real fault—and it was a great one—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 <SPAN name='Page_139' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 139'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_140' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 140'></SPAN>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<SPAN name='Page_141' class="pagenum"
title='Page 141'></SPAN>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<SPAN name='Page_142' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 142'></SPAN>liament, "this, <i>Instauratio Magna. Instaurare
paras—Instaura leges justitiamque prius</i>."<SPAN name=
"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. "Auctori consilium. Instaurare paras veterum documenta sophorum: Instaura leges justitiamque prius." He added, with allusion to the ship in the frontispiece of the Novum Organum, "It deserveth not to be read in schools, But to be freighted in the ship of Fools."">
<sup>5</sup></SPAN> <!-- [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—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—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 £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. <SPAN name=
'Page_143' class="pagenum" title='Page 143'></SPAN>And this was the
least. Money was raised by the sale of officers and titles. For
£20,000, having previously offered £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 <SPAN name=
'Page_144' class="pagenum" title='Page 144'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_145' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 145'></SPAN>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—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 <SPAN name='Page_146' class="pagenum" title='Page 146'></SPAN>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<SPAN name=
'Page_147' class="pagenum" title='Page 147'></SPAN>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 exécutive de la vie humaine, que par le
caractère." 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 <SPAN name='Page_148' class="pagenum" title='Page 148'></SPAN>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><SPAN name='Page_149' class="pagenum" title='Page 149'></SPAN></p>
<h2><SPAN name='CHAPTER_VII'></SPAN>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><SPAN name='Page_150' class="pagenum" title='Page 150'></SPAN> 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—"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—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—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—"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. <SPAN name='Page_151' class="pagenum" title='Page 151'></SPAN>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, <SPAN name=
'Page_152' class="pagenum" title='Page 152'></SPAN>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"—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—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><SPAN name='Page_153' class="pagenum" title='Page 153'></SPAN> "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 <SPAN name='Page_154' class="pagenum" title='Page 154'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_155' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 155'></SPAN>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—</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<SPAN name='Page_156' class="pagenum"
title='Page 156'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name=
'Page_157' class="pagenum" title='Page 157'></SPAN>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—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—a fashion in
which no one more delighted than himself—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—<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 <SPAN name='Page_158' class="pagenum" title='Page 158'></SPAN>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><SPAN name='Page_159' class="pagenum" title='Page 159'></SPAN> "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—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<SPAN name='Page_160' class="pagenum" title='Page 160'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name=
'Page_161' class="pagenum" title='Page 161'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_162' class="pagenum" title='Page 162'></SPAN>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,—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
£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, <SPAN name=
'Page_163' class="pagenum" title='Page 163'></SPAN>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—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—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—greatness full of honour and beneficent
activity—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, <SPAN name=
'Page_164' class="pagenum" title='Page 164'></SPAN>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—"three years and five
months old in misery," again later, "a long cleansing week of five
years' expiation and more"—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 <SPAN name='Page_165' class="pagenum"
title='Page 165'></SPAN>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<SPAN name=
'Page_166' class="pagenum" title='Page 166'></SPAN>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 quæ 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
<SPAN name='Page_167' class="pagenum" title='Page 167'></SPAN>cared to go
below the surface into the hidden things of mind, and what mind
deals with above and beyond sense—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—"a <i>summa theologiæ</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><SPAN name='Page_168' class="pagenum" title='Page 168'></SPAN></p>
<h2><SPAN name='CHAPTER_VIII'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name=
'Page_169' class="pagenum" title='Page 169'></SPAN>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>Souveraineté 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 <SPAN name='Page_170' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 170'></SPAN>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 kêrukes, Dios angeloi êde kai andrôn">χαίρετε κήρυκες, Δίος ἄγγελοι ἠδὲ καὶ ἀνδρῶν</span>.
<!-- χαιρετε κηρυκες,
Διος αγγελοι ηδε
και ανδρων -->
<!-- [Greek: chairete kêrukes, Dios angeloi êde kai andrôn]. -->
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—"in that
purpose my mind never waxed old; in that long interval of time it
never cooled"—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 <SPAN name='Page_171' class="pagenum"
title='Page 171'></SPAN>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—to gain the key to the
interpretation of nature; his method—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—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 <SPAN name=
'Page_172' class="pagenum" title='Page 172'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_173' class="pagenum"
title='Page 173'></SPAN>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
intellectûs 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—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>."—<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—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 <SPAN name=
'Page_174' class="pagenum" title='Page 174'></SPAN>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—the <i>New
Atlantis</i>—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 <SPAN name='Page_175' class="pagenum" title='Page 175'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_176' class="pagenum" title='Page 176'></SPAN>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—"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 <SPAN name='Page_177' class="pagenum"
title='Page 177'></SPAN>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—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—but also some of those who have most
admired his genius, <SPAN name='Page_178' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 178'></SPAN>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—a chemist like Liebig, a physiologist like Claude
Bernard—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 Rémusat 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 <SPAN name='Page_179' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 179'></SPAN>that he failed in the very thing on which he was
most bent—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—<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."—<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 <SPAN name='Page_180' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 180'></SPAN>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 naturæ 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—"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 <SPAN name='Page_181' class="pagenum" title='Page 181'></SPAN>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
Rémusat 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 <SPAN name='Page_182' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 182'></SPAN>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>"—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—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—as in connecting Heat
and Motion—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<SPAN name='Page_183' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 183'></SPAN>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—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—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 <SPAN name='Page_184' class="pagenum"
title='Page 184'></SPAN>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>naturæ</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."—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—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—<SPAN name='Page_185' class="pagenum" title='Page 185'></SPAN>the knowledge
of the heavens—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—compared with other things—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 <SPAN name='Page_186' class="pagenum" title='Page 186'></SPAN>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—"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 <SPAN name='Page_187' class="pagenum" title='Page 187'></SPAN>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—"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, <SPAN name='Page_188' class="pagenum" title='Page 188'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name=
'Page_189' class="pagenum" title='Page 189'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name='Page_190' class="pagenum" title='Page 190'></SPAN>to occupy it—this announcement
not only of a new system of thought, but of a change in the
condition of the world—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—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—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"—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 Rémusat
remarks—the keenest and fairest of Bacon's judges—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—the Greek
Aristotle and the Englishman Bacon. They agree in the universality
and comprehensiveness of their conception of human knowledge; and
<SPAN name='Page_191' class="pagenum" title='Page 191'></SPAN>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—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—predecessors,
contemporaries, successors of Aristotle—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
encyclopædic minds; but the Roman <SPAN name='Page_192' class="pagenum" title='Page 192'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name=
'Page_193' class="pagenum" title='Page 193'></SPAN>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
vitæ</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—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—what is the meaning
of words which all use but few can explain—Time and Space,
and Being and Cause, and consciousness and choice, and the moral
law—Bacon is content with a loose and superficial treatment
<SPAN name='Page_194' class="pagenum" title='Page 194'></SPAN>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<SPAN name='Page_195' class="pagenum" title='Page 195'></SPAN>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—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—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—fairly
represents the spirit which runs through his works. After urging
the mistaken use of imagination and authority in science, he goes
on—</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 <SPAN name='Page_196' class="pagenum" title='Page 196'></SPAN>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 Cæsar'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—the power of subduing and managing them
by true and solid arts—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 <SPAN name='Page_197' class="pagenum" title='Page 197'></SPAN>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."—Preface to <i>Historia Naturalis</i>: translated,
<i>Works</i>, v. 132-3.</p>
</blockquote>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name='Page_198' class="pagenum" title='Page 198'></SPAN></p>
<h2><SPAN name='CHAPTER_IX'></SPAN>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="akmê">ἀκμὴ</span>
<!--ακμη--><!-- [Greek: akmê] -->
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
<SPAN name='Page_199' class="pagenum" title='Page 199'></SPAN>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<SPAN name='Page_200' class="pagenum" title='Page 200'></SPAN>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"—"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, <SPAN name='Page_201' class="pagenum" title='Page 201'></SPAN>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 Mé<SPAN name='Page_202' class="pagenum"
title='Page 202'></SPAN>thode</i>, and Pascal was writing in the same
French in which he wrote the <i>Provincial Letters</i>, his
<i>Nouvelles Expériences 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—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 <SPAN name=
'Page_203' class="pagenum" title='Page 203'></SPAN>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 <SPAN name=
'Page_204' class="pagenum" title='Page 204'></SPAN>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—the
political ones—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<SPAN name='Page_205' class="pagenum"
title='Page 205'></SPAN>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<SPAN name='Page_206' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 206'></SPAN>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—history and
poetry—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 fortunæ
suæ</i>"—the architect of his own suc<SPAN name='Page_207' class="pagenum" title='Page 207'></SPAN>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—"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<SPAN name='Page_208' class="pagenum" title='Page 208'></SPAN>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—</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 <SPAN name='Page_209' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 209'></SPAN>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
quæ 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><SPAN name='Page_210' class="pagenum" title='Page 210'></SPAN> 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—"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
<SPAN name='Page_211' class="pagenum" title='Page 211'></SPAN>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 Méthode</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<SPAN name='Page_212' class="pagenum" title='Page 212'></SPAN>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<SPAN name='Page_213' class="pagenum" title=
'Page 213'></SPAN>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—and it was no easy task beforehand, while the wonders
of discovery were yet in the future—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<SPAN name='Page_214' class="pagenum" title='Page 214'></SPAN>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—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"><SPAN name="footnote1" name="footnote1"></SPAN>
<p><SPAN href="#footnotetag1"><b>[1]</b></SPAN> <i>Promus</i>: edited by
Mrs. H. Pott, p. 475.</p>
</div>
<!-- A footnote -->
<div class="footnote"><SPAN name="footnote2" name="footnote2"></SPAN>
<p><SPAN href="#footnotetag2"><b>[2]</b></SPAN> Dr. Mozley.</p>
</div>
<!-- A footnote -->
<div class="footnote"><SPAN name="footnote3" name="footnote3"></SPAN>
<p><SPAN href="#footnotetag3"><b>[3]</b></SPAN> <i>Calendar of State
Papers</i> (domestic), March 24, 1621.</p>
</div>
<!-- A footnote -->
<div class="footnote"><SPAN name="footnote4" name="footnote4"></SPAN>
<p><SPAN href="#footnotetag4"><b>[4]</b></SPAN> <i>Commons' Journals</i>,
March 17, April 27; iii. 560, 594-6.</p>
</div>
<!-- A footnote -->
<div class="footnote"><SPAN name="footnote5" name="footnote5"></SPAN>
<p><SPAN href="#footnotetag5"><b>[5]</b></SPAN> <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'>"<i>Auctori consilium</i>.<br/></div>
<>Instaurare paras veterum documenta sophorum:<br/></span>
<span>Instaura leges justitiamque prius."<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>"It deserveth not to be read in schools,<br/></span>
<span>But to be freighted in the ship of Fools."<br/></span></div>
</div>
<SPAN name='Page_149' class="pagenum" title='Page 149'></SPAN>
-->
<SPAN name="endofbook"></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />