98 



GENEEAL INDEX. 



Paiilett (Sir Amias), puts Wolsey into the stocks, iv. 



176. 213. 

 Pau'.l (Dr. James), on Auroraa, ii. 441 ; iii. 28. 

 Pauper's badge, its meaning, iv. 294. 372. 

 Pavoise of the Black Prince, i. 183. 283. 

 Pawnbrokers' three balls, i. 5. 42. 74. 

 Pax pennies of William the Conqueror, ix. 562.; s. 36. 



213. 

 Peace illumination in 1802, iv. 23. 77. 

 Peach, its etymology, ii. 420; early cultivation, xi. 41. 

 Peacham (Henry), his Works, xi. 217. 296. 407. 

 Peachell (Hugh), iii. 407. 

 Peacock, swearing by the, iii. 70. 308. 438. 

 Peacock pie, a savoury dish, xii. 389. 

 Peacock's "Headlong Hall," lines from, iii. 286. 

 Pead (Richard) of Garboldisham, xi. 131. 

 Peal of bells, definition of " peal," iv. 243. See Bells. 

 Pearce (Dr. Zaohary) resigns his bishopric, vi. 448. 

 Pearce (Zachary), not Busby's pupil, v. 197. 

 Peari, its etymon, vi. 578; vii. 18. 166. 342. 

 Pearmonger, its meaning, xi. 244. 274, 392. 

 Pear-son (Sir Anthony), xii. 450. 520. 

 Pear-tree at Ilmington, vi. 507. 

 Peart, its meaning, ii. 276; xi. 114. 232. 244. 274. 

 Peasantry, popular stories of the English, v. 363. 459. 



601 ; viii. 94. 

 Peat, deodorising, vi. 509. 615; vii. 220. 

 " Peccavi ! I have Scinde," viii. 490. 574. 

 Peckham : " All holiday at Peckham," origin of the say- 

 ing, ix. 35. 

 Peckham, East, in Kent, parish registers quoted, 



i. 41. 

 Peckwater quadrangle, ix. 400. 

 Pedasjogic ingenuity, x. 401. 

 Pedigree indices, viii. 317. 453. 

 Pedigree to the time of Alfred, viii. 586; ix. 233. 338. 



552; X. 19.5.392. 

 Pedigrees, forged, ix. 221. 275; x. 255. 

 Pedlar's song, attributed to Shakspeare, i. 23 ; ii. 392. 

 Peebles (Dr! Wm.), his Works, v. 428. 

 Peel (Sir Robert), his claims to the remembrance of 



literary men, v. 433. 

 " Peep of day," illustrated, ii. 118; iii. 310. 

 Peerage cases, xi. 486. 

 Peerages in female line, xii. 185. 216. 

 " Peg," or " nail," for an argument, viii. 561. 

 Peg-tankards, vi. 410. 

 Pegge (Catherine), i. 59. 90. 142. 200. 

 Pegge (Dr. Samuel), his family, i. 90. 

 Pegge (Samuel), jun., his " Curialia," &c., xii. 327. 

 Pegnitz-shepherds academy, vii. 16. 

 Pegs and thongs for rowing, iv. 423. 

 Pelaga, its arches, where? iii. 478. 522. 

 Pelasgi, a sorrowful race. viii. 516. 

 Pele (Robert), abbot of Furness, vii. 1 56. 

 Peleg in Germany, vi. 174. 

 Pelham (Henry), noticed, iv. 306. 

 Pelham (Sir John), monument, ix. 51. 

 Pelham (Sir Wm.), his tomb, vi. 148. 

 Pelican, as a symbol, v. 59. 165. 211. 452; vi. 18. 

 Pelle (Honore), sculptor, i. 76. 

 Pemberton and Sir Isaac Nevvton, x. 181. 

 Pembroke (Anne, Countess of), extract from her Day- 



Book, ii. 4. 



Pembroke (Maiy Sidney, Countess of), epitaph, iii. 262. 



307. 413. 456. 

 Pembroke, Dorset, and Montgomery (Countess of), her 



celebrated letter, i. 29. 119. 154; vii. 154. 245. 

 Pendrell (Richard), his tomb, xi. 410. 

 Pengwern Hall in Wales, x. 105. 

 Pendulum demonstration of the earth's rotation, iy. 129. 



177.235.277; V. 84. 158. 

 Penitentiaries for females, xi. 48. 

 Penkenal, its meaning, v. 490. 545. 

 Penn (Wm.), bis family, iii. 264. 409. 454; iv. 93; and 

 Lawton, v. 593 ; inedited letter, xi. 359 ; London resi- 

 dence, iv. 273; " No Crass no Crown," iv. 423; slave- 

 holder, vi. 150. 376. 425. 512. 

 Pennecuik (Alex.), his lost MS., vii. 134. 

 Penniel, its etymology, i. 449. 

 Penniless bench at Oxford, i. 307. 

 Pennsylvania Female Medical College, vi. 44. 

 Penny, its derivation, i. 384. 411 ; ii. 78. 174. 

 Penny Post, its origin, iii. 6. 27. 62. 186. 266. 308. 

 Penny Post, a. d. 1769—1772, viii. 8; x. 523. 

 Pennycomequick, its derivation, viii. 8. 113. 184. 255'. 

 Pension, its meaning, ii. 134. 268. 

 Pensions to literary men, x. 322. 453. 

 Pensioners, gentlemen, vii. 63. 

 Pentateuch, Samaritan, xi. 227. 

 Pentnieth (Dolly), tomb and epitaph, xii. 407. 500. 

 Pepys (Samuel), Battle of St. Gothard, vii. 129. 



book-plates, vi. 534. 



booksellers' losses at the Fire of London, xi. 161. 



Carkasse's " Lucida Intervalla," alludes to Pepys, 

 ii. 87. 



charged with treason, vi. 411. 516. 



Coleridge's notes on his Diary, vi. 212. 



East London topography, viii. 263. 



grammar of his Diary, viii. 466. 502. 



letters on Christ's Hospital, ix. 199. 



lifting-experiment noticed in Diary, vi. 9. 



Moi-ma, or Morena, vi. 342. 373; vii. 118. 508. 



mother's name, xii. 102. 



Notes on the Diary, x. 2. 



Queries in the Bodleian manuscripts, viii. 341. 



Song, — "Beauty Retire," iii. 105. 155. 

 Perambulations, xi. 485; xii 133. 

 Perceval (Hon. Spencer), dream respecting his assassina- 

 tion, iv. 4. 

 Perceval (Thomas), F.S.A., death, xii. 266. 373. 440. 

 Perche and Mortain (Earls of), xi. 265. 

 Percy (Bp. Thomas) and Earl of Surrey's Poems, i. 440. 



471; "Reliques of Ancient Poetry," xii. 21. 

 Percy (Elizabeth, Baroness), v. 269. 

 Percy (Lady Elizabeth), Groom of the Stole, v. 476. 

 Percy (Lady), wife of Hotspur, viii. 104. 184. 251. 

 Percy (Mrs.), portrait, v. 227. 306. 

 Percy (Thomas), 7th Earl of Northumberland, portrait^ 



v. 490. 549. 

 "Percy Anecdotes," authorship, vii. 134. 214. 

 Percy Society dissolved, v. 238. 

 Perekop, its derivation, x. 491. 

 Perfect Tense, its rationale, viii. 410. 

 Periodicals, English, vi. 271. 327. 435. 

 Periplus of Hanno the Carthaginian, i. 361. 412. 

 Periwinkle, a garland, i. 77 ; v. 332. 

 Perjury, papers of, ii. 182. 316; v. 134. 



