Pee) SHAKESPEARE'S [PARAQUITO, 
Tuey have one mark on their shoulder resembling the 
moon, growing and decreasing as she doth, some times 
showing a full compass, and otherwhiles hollowed and 
pointed with tips like horns. 
Holland’s Pliny, bk. viti. ch. xvii. 
A srotu made of such pullein [cocks and capons] hath 
a singular virtue—for neither lions nor Panthers will set 
upon those persons who are bathed with their decoction, 
especially if there were any garlic sodden therein. 
Ibid., bk xxix. ch. iv. 
Tue Panther so 
Breathes odours precious as the Sannatic gums 
Of Eastern groves, but the delicious scent, 
Not taken in at distance, chokes the sense 
With the too musky flavour. 
Glapthorne, ‘‘ Hollander.” 
Tue Panther though his skin be fair, yet his breath is 
infectious. Reynolds, “God’s Revenge against Murder,” p. 257. 
VY. Leopard and Pard. 
Paraquito. 
i. Kinc Henry IV., ii. 388. 
VY. Parrot. 
Pard. 
TEMPEST, iv. 1, 262. 
Tue Pard is the most swift beast, with many diverse 
colours and round specks as the panther, and reseth to 
blood, and dyeth in leaping, and varieth not from the 
panther, but the panther hath more white specks. The 
Pard when he is sick eateth man’s dirt because of medicine; 
hunters hang that dirt on a tree, and he goeth up to it; 
and the hunters slay him. And is lecherous, and gendereth 
with the lioness :—of that bastard generation cometh the 
leopard [v. Lioness]. The Pard is cruel when his whelps 
be stolen. Bartholomew (Berthelet), bk. xviii. § 83. 
