Portents, delusive—I. [435].
Portrait, falling in love with a—I. [490] and note, [541]; II. [158], [370].
Power conferred by the possession of a necklace—II. [49];
by a treasure—I. [126]; II. 629.
Powder, magic, for increasing the cutting power of a sword—I. [378].
Prince, strikes a woman by mistake who sends him in search of a wife (an incident common in European folk-lore)—I. [379].
Princess ill-treated by her paramour—I. [169];
skilled in disputation—II. [173];
of the Gandharvas skilled in painting—II. [530].
Pulinda, name of a barbarous tribe—I. [42], [74]; II. [169], [170], [380], [381], [383], [384], [388], [391].
Purse, inexhaustible—I. 571.
Pursuit, magical—II. 632.
Python, a man metamorphosed into a, by eating a gourd—II. [595];
restored to his original shape by means of a sternutatory—ibid.