P.
Palace in Italy long closed, [167]
Pale Boshe, [45]
Panusch, or Pan, [130]
Paphnutius, St., Incantations to, [33]
Paracelsus, Fairy mythology, [67]
Paraschiva, Venus, [125]
Patterns in Persian carpets made intricate to avert witchcraft and the evil eye, [98]
Paul, St., prayer against snakes, [38]
Pchuvasi, spirits of water, [46], [48], [49];
ancestors of a gypsy tribe, [70]
Pchuvus’ wife, [59];
Pchuvus, Incantation to, [61]
Peacocks, [154]
Peel or Primrose witches, [155]
Peklo, Pikuljk, a Lithuanian god, [29]
Periani, Parjandra, Perun, [40]
Persian dancers, [158]
Peru urphu, [117]
Peter Pindar (Wolcott), [217]
Peter, St. (toothache), [38]
Phooka, [204]
Phynoderee, Manx fairy, [203]
Pig as an amulet, [102]
Pigwiggan, a fairy, [204]
Pipernus, P., “De Effectibus Magicis,” [46], [64], [149]
Pixey, [202]
Plato, Memory according to, [x], [220]
Pliny incantations, [54]
Plundering of peasants by gypsies, [214], [215], [216]
Poetical and artistic composition always the result of awakening the Dream faculty, [166];
its action asleep or waking, [166]
Porcellana, porcella, porcelain, [102]
Portalis, “Couleurs Symboliques,” [28]
Potions, Revolting, [127]
Povodne Vile, Slavonian water-spirits, [69]
Pozemne Vile, Slavonian earth-spirits, [69]
Prætorius, J., Witch-ride and Elder, [30];
meal, [58], [59], [63], [78];
on gypsies, [176], [177]
“Practical Education,” by C. G. Leland, [171], [184]
Prag, Prague, cemetery, [30]
Prediction and Prophecy, their origin, [189]
Prediction, Unconscious, by the author, Two instances of, [174]
Priccolitsh, Priculics, [62]
Priest, Unlucky to meet a, [129]
Princess, The, and boots, [116]
Prschemischl, Legend of shoes, [115], [116]
Property, To recover stolen, [109], [110]
Prophecy developed by unconscious action of Memory and Dream-power, [169], [170]
Pscipolnitza, Flox goddess, [125]
Pudding, The Witch’s, [56]
Puschkeit, a form of Pluto, [29]
Pythagoras, [220]