FIKST SERIES. 



99 



Pel-mutating hexameters, xii. 222. 



Perraalt's " Cinderella," ii. 214. 297. 



Perrot (John), the Quaker, his sufferings at Eome, iii. 



335; iv. 28. 

 Perrot (Sir John), ii. 217. 254. 

 Perry (Capt.), engineer, xii. 169. 

 Perryn of Knightsbridge, x. 228. 532. 

 Persepolitan inscription, v. 560; vi. 14. 

 Perseverant, its etymon, vii. 400; viii. 44. 121. 

 Persian ambassador in 1819, xii. 146. 

 Persius Flaccus (Aulus), birth-place, viii. 389. 

 Personage, a mysterious one, viii. 34. 113. 

 Perspective, ix. 300. 378. 577; x. 112. 

 Pert, its etymology, ii. 276. See Peart. 

 Peruse, orpervise, i. 215. 252. 319. 

 "Perverse Widow" of Sir Roger de Covevley, x. 161. 



234. 453; xi. 153. 

 Pervise, or peruse, i. 215. 252. 319. 

 Peryent (Sir Thomas), his monumental brass, v. 182, 



183. A 



Pet-names, i. 215. 242. 299; Queen Elizabeth's, v. 323. 

 Peter (St.), statue at Rome, vi. 604; vii. 96. 143. 210. 

 Peter (St.), of what tribe ? x. 207. 

 Peter (St.), or St. Petres soster, i. 229. 281. 

 Peter's (St.) in Eome, x. 386. 434; supposed inscription 



on, iii. 425. 

 Peter the Great, his will, viii. 539. 

 Peter the Hermit, monumental inscription, iii. 329. 

 Peterborough (Charles, Earl of), portrait, v. 441. 521. 

 Peterborough cathedral, inscription, viii. 215. 303. 

 Peterman, its meaning, vi. 223. 

 Peters (Hugh), regicide, iii. 166. 214. 

 Peth, its etymology, xii. 74. 112. 150. 175. 

 Petition, form of one, i. 43. 75. 

 Petition formula, ellipsis in. i. 43. 75; vii. 596. 

 Petley (Elias), noticed, ix. 105. 

 Petrarch's cat, the last Lay of, v. 1 74. 

 Petrarch's Laura, viii. 562. 

 Petre (Father), vi. 362. 418. 589; riding a lobster, i. 



104. 

 Petre (Lady), monument, iv. 22. 74. 182. 

 Petronilla (St.), noticed, i. 281. 

 Petronius and a passage in Pope, i. 246. 362. 414. 



452. 

 Pett (Sir Peter), his <<Happy Future State of England," 



xi. 385. 

 Petticoats, hooped, iii. 88. 153. 156. 

 Pettifogger explained, vii. 354 ; ix. 287. 

 Petty Cuiy, its origin, iv. 24. 120. 194. 

 Petworth parish register, iii. 449. 485. 510; iv. 27. 



125. 

 Pew. See Ftie. 



Pewterspear, its meaning, vi. 362. 

 Peyton family, iii. 186. 

 " Phalanthus," a poem, x. 243. 

 Phallicus, its meaning, iii. 38. 73. 

 Phansagars and Thugs, vi. 245. 

 Phantom bells, viii. 576. 

 Pharaoh, its derivation, xii. 302. 

 Pharaoh's ring, viii. 416. 521. 

 Pharetram de Tutesbit, iv. 316; v. 138; x. 173. 

 Phelps (John), Clerk of the Parliament, xii. 46. 

 Phelps's Gloucestershire collections, v. 346; vi. 107. 

 Philadelphia sign, xi. 241. 



Philadelphia Directories, viii. 168; its sublunary de- 

 lights, 537. 



Philalethes Cestriensis, a pseudonyme, i. 334. 



Philarmonica (Mrs.), her trios, vi. 37. 



Philibeg, or Kilt, iv. 7. 77. 107. 170. 445. 



Philip (St.) and St. James, their festival, i. 216. 



Philip (St.) of Neri, xi. 503. 



Philip's (St.) Bristol, priory, ix. 150. 



Philip d'Auvergne, vii. 236. 296. 



Philip II. of Spain, letters to Queen Elizabeth, ii. 102. 



Philip III. of Spain, his death, viii, 583. 



Philip of Macedon and the Russian autocrat, xii. 445 ; 

 anecdote, xi. 410. 



Philippa, daughter of Henry IV., monument, vi. 388. 



Philips (John), his Ode to St. John, x. 44. 



Philipson (Robin) of Crooke Hall, i. 172. 



Phillipps (Sir Thomas), his manuscripts, ii. 460; iii. 

 358. 507. 



Phillips' family arms, vii. 619. 



Phillips's New Worid of Word.s, xi. 167. 208. 



Philobiblon of Richard de Bury, its translation, ii. 153. 

 202; V. 443. 



Philological ingenuity, x. 323; notes, xi. 338. 



" Philomorus," Poems by Sir Thomas More, xi. 428. 



Philosophical Transactions of Royal Society, vi. 435. 



" Philosophy of Societies," xii. 126. 



Philosophy of the ancients, xii. 405. 



Phipps family, x. 305. 



Phoenix, Lay of the, i. 203. 235. 283. 



" Phoenix," its literary proprietors, iii. 323. 



Phonetic peculiarity, i. 463. 



Phonetic spelling, vi. 357. 424. 566; vii. 26. 



Phonography, Hart's work on, vii. 26. 



Phosphoric light, x. 147. 334. 



Photography: — 



its application to archfeology, vi. 192. 276. 295. 



319. 347. 395. 421, 442. 470. 494. 514. 541. 



561. 587. 612. 

 acetate and nitrate of lead, xi. 371. 

 aceto.nitrate of silver, viii. 649. 

 albumenised paper, viii. 395. 501. 548. 572; ix. 



332. 502; process, vii. 116. ^7; viii. 549; ix. 



206. 254; X. 331; xii. 310. 

 alcoholized paper, xii. 192. 

 amber varnish, vii. 562 ; xi. 390. 

 ambrotype likenesses, xi. 270. 

 ammonio-nitiate, is it dangerous? viii. 134. 158. 



204. 276. 

 Amsterdam photographs, xi. 270. 

 animal charcoal in photography, vii. 245. 

 anthropology and photography, x. 212. 

 Antiquarian Photographic Club, vii. 273. 462. 

 Archer (Mr.) his services to photography, vii. 218. 

 Archer's photographic camera, vi. 396. 426. 

 Barr's dark slide for the paper process, xi. 311. 

 bath for nitrate of silver, xi. 471. 

 baths for collodion process, viii. 42. 

 bichloride of mercury, x. 313, 

 bitumen of Judaea, x. 393. 

 black positive paper, vi. 396. 

 black tints of French photographers, vii. 116. 



315. 

 box sawdust for collodion, ix. 358. 



