Audley, Lord Chancellor, enriched by church-lands, [318].
Augmentation, Court of, [318].
Babble, etymology of, [3], n.
Bacon, Francis, Lord; a believer in occult science, [646]—[649]; his philosophy, [650], [660].
Bale, Bishop, and his satires, [358].
Barclay’s Eclogues, [287].
Baron, the, of the Middle Ages, [71].
Beowulf and his exploits, [51]—[58].
Bibles publicly burned in Oxford, [335]; first translated into English, [369]; afterwards prohibited, ib.
Bible and Key, mode of discovering thieves, [420], n.