FIRST SEIilES. 



97 



Parish registers. See Parochial registers. 



Parishes, names first given to, iv. 153; vii. 53C; viii. 



58. 

 Park (Thomas), and a letter of Junius's, viii. 8 ; on tlie 



name Junius, vi. 414; letter to Edmund Malone, xi. 



217. 

 Parker (Abp.), his correspondence, viii. 149.^ 

 Parker Society, General Index to their Works, xi. 336 ; 



its monoijram, vii. 502. 

 Parker Street, Druiy Lane, i. 229. 

 Parkers hi p. See Poker ship. 

 Parkes (William), noticed, iv. 134. 

 Parkinson (James), his Royal Oration, vi. 414. 

 Parliament, its etymology, ii. 85. 139. 

 Parliament, a member electing himself, viii. 586; ix. 



285. 

 Parliament, Admonition to the, v. 4. 184. 

 Parliament the Long, list of its members, ix. 423; its 



proposed System of Law, viii. 389. 

 Parliament house, poem on the burning of, v. 488. 547. 

 Parliamenlaiy bills explained to the sovereign, vi. 556 ; 



vii. 50. 

 Parliamentary chaplains, their sermons, vii. 34. 343. 

 Parliamentary debates of 1768 to 1774, iv. 368; Index 



to Papers, xi. 417; printing, xii. 63; papers, their 



publication, xi. 417; writs, i. 305. 

 Parma (Ferdinand, Charles III., Duke of), ix. 417. 



598. 

 Pamell (Thomas), his quotation from Secimdus, iii. 135; 



unpublished lines by, i. 427. 

 Parochial libraries, vi. 432. 559; vii. 193. 369. 392. 



438. 463. 507. 558. 605; viii. 62.93. 274.327. 



369. 527. 595; ix. 186; x. 213; xii. 55. 

 Parochial registers, their origin, xii. 514; during the 



Commonweahh, i. 103; extracts from, i. 10. 41; ix. 



590; X. 337; xi. 17. 241 ; xii. 443. 520; inscrip- 

 tions in, vii. 257; viii. 30; London, ii. 18 ; right of 



search, iv. 232. 473. 490, v. 36. 141. 207; vii. 598; 



taxed, ii. 10. 60; iii. 94; their ti-anscription, i. 329. 



442 ; ii. 1 ; their unsafe state, i. 407. 

 Parr, family of Queen Catherine, iii. 302. 

 Parr (Dr. Samuel) and Dr. John Taylor, i. 466; viii. 



299; notes in his Preface to Bellendenus, xi. 483. 

 Parr (Queen Katherine), her devotional tracts, ii. 212; 



her MS Book of Prayer.s, i'. 167. 

 Parr (Thomas), epitaph, &c., xi. 266. 

 Parr (Dr. William) assists Dr. White in the Bampton 



Lectures, xii. 358; Dedications, vii. 156. 296; letter 



on Milton, viii. 433. 

 Parr (Sir William), tomb. vi. 148. 

 Parrot, female, hostility to its own sex, xi. 408. 

 Parry (Bishop Henry), descendants, xii. 365. 440. 

 Parry family of St. Katterns, near J3ath, ix. 409. 

 Parse, its meaning, ii. 318. 430. 522. 

 Parsley-bed procreating infants, vi. 386. 517. 

 Parson's barn: " As big as a parson's barn," xi. 7. 113. 

 Parson's blue, xii. 406. 

 Parson's charity, Ely, i. 467. 

 Parsons, or Persons '(Robert), x. 8. 68. 130. 270. 

 Parsons (Walter), Staffordshire giant, ii. 135. 314; 



porter to James I., vi. 175. 

 Parthenon described by Ciriaco, vii. 306. 

 Partington (Mrs.) pseudonyme, ii. 377. 411. 450. 

 Partrige family, ii, 230. 286. 



Party, its modern use, vii. 177. 247. 367 ; viii. 137 ; 



xi. 154. 

 Party names in the 17th century, viii. 117. 

 Party-similes of the 17th century, viii. 485. 631; ix. 



96; X. 260. 278. 

 Parva Hibernia, v. 201. 259. 282. 

 Parvise, explained, vii. 528. 624; viii. 161. 

 Parvus (Albertus), i. 385. 474. 

 Piiscal (Blaise) and his editor Bossut, ii. 277. 335; 



saying of, vii. 596; viii. 44; x. 134; xi. 173, 

 Paschal eggs, ix. 483. 

 Pasigraphy, by Alexander Dow, x. 445. 

 Pasquil's .Jests, edit. 1608, 1609, i. 413. 

 Pasquinade, alliterative, on Convocation, vii. 129. 

 Pasquinades, collection of, iii. 8 ; anonymous, v. 200. 



283; on Cardinal Bona, iv. 381; on Leo XII., ii. 



131; on Pius IX., ix. 292. 437. 

 Passamezzo galliard, vi. 311. 466; vii. 216. 366. 

 Pa.ssellew (Robert), his family, i. 319; iv. 73. 

 Passemer's Antiquities of Devonshire, v. 511. 

 Passenger (Tlios.), Shepherd's Kalendar, viii. 50. 

 Passilodion, explained, ii. 515. 

 Passion flower, vi. 502. 



Passion of Our Lord dramatised, ix. 373. 528; medie- 

 val emblems on, vii. 199. 

 Passionale: a portion of the Gospels, xi. 427. 

 Passports to Austria, x. 165. 

 Paster, or plaister, ii. 102. 

 Paston family, xii. 366. 519. 

 Pastoral staff. See Crazier. 

 Patay battle, its date, xii. 11. 

 Pate (Ricliaid), bishop of Worcester, vi. 203. 

 Patents, of appointment, vi. 510. 

 Paternal coat of arms, ix. 398; x. 53. 

 Paterno.ster, White, i. 229. 281 ; viii. 614; xi. 206. 313. 



474. 511; xii. 35. 

 Paternoster tackling, explained, iii. 89. 152. 

 Paterson (Win.), founder of the Bank, x. 102. 273. 

 " Pathway to Perfect Knowledge," i. 140. 

 Patriarchs of the Western Church, viii. 317; ix. 384. 

 Patrick (St.), birthplace, v. 344. 403. 520. 561 ; had 



he a wife? iv. 190; legend of the Saint and Crosier, 



ii. 267. 429. 468; purgatory, vii. 552; viii. 178. 



327; xi. 233. 

 Patrick (Bp. Symon), family, viii. 103. 205; " Mensa 



Mybtica," xi. 385; letters on the Latitudinarian,s, xii. 



262; "Parable of u Pilgrim," vii. 156; Prayers and 



Sermon, xi. 125. 

 Patrick (Rev. John), on the " Eucharist," iii. 169. 214. 

 Patrons of church livings, i. 61. 91. 106. 

 Patten (Margaret), picture, viii. 442. 

 Pattenson (Dr. Mattiiew), iii. 407. 469. 

 Paul (Bishop), his Saga quoted, v. 562. 

 Paul {jean), Comte de Cerdan, xi. 445. 

 Paul (St.), Epistles to Seneca, vii. 500. 583. 633; viii. 



88. 205; quotations of heatiien writers, v. 175. 278. 



352; vi. 243. 411; xi. 286; works on his Life, iii. 



451; iv. 198. 

 Paul's (Si.), Alley, i. 410. 

 Paul's (St.), Cathedral clock, xi. 186; clock striking 



thirteen, iii. 40. 109. 153. 198. 449; raihngs round 



it, i. 446. 

 Paul's (St.), Churchyard, i. 410. 

 Paul's (St.) school library, viii. 641 ; ix, 65. 

 K 



