Page:The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 19.djvu/353

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INDEX.
341

Partition Treaty. An infamous one, iii. 306. 404. Naples, Sicily, and Lorrain, added to the French dominions by it, 338. Occasions the king of Spain to appoint the duke of Anjou his successor, ibid. 345. 385.
Partnership. The nature of ours with the Dutch, iii. 422.
Partridge (the almanackmaker). Account of his Death, v. 31. His death bed acknowledgment of the deceit of judicial astrology, 34. Elegy on his supposed Death, vii. 53. His Epitaph, 56.
Parvisol (the dean's agent). Dr. Swift disappointed in his returns, xi. 282. 288.
Passions. Like convulsion fits, xvii. 375.
Passive Obedience. Mistake in its object, ii. 368. What it is, as charged by the whigs, iii. 164. What, as professed by the tories, 166. In king Charles the Second's reign, carried to a height inconsistent with our liberties, 211. Liberties of Sweden destroyed by it, xi. 129. Whigs and tories easily reconcilable, when they come to explain the object of it, 130.
Pasquin. The success of it, xiii. 256.
Pate (William). A learned woollendraper, xiv. 202. His epitaph, xviii. 463. Anecdote of him, 464.
Patents. One granted to lord Dartmouth, afterward renewed to Knox, for coining halfpence for the use of Ireland, ix. 53. 65. 82. None can oblige the subjects against law, 61, 62. What to be considered in the passing of them, 168.
Peace. An unreasonable and impracticable condition imposed upon the French by the whig ministry, iii. 90. Why the emperor against it, 311. Vain fears that France was aggrandized by it, 312. When overtures of it are in prudence to be received, 333. Why the Dutch against it, 418. Several observations on it, xi. 232. 245. Private overtures of a peace, made by France and Holland, iv. 187. 233. Many of the tories discontented at it, xv. 388. To be ratified in all courts before it could be proclaimed here, 401.
Pedantry. Its definition, v. 231. x. 217. Not confined to science, or to sex, ibid. Fiddlers, dancing masters, and heralds, greater pedants than Lipsius or Scaliger, x. 217.
Peers. Twelve created at once by queen Anne, iv. 45. 328. The queen's conduct in this censured by those whose opposition had compelled her to it, xviii. 119. The choice made with great judgment, 120. Their house cannot easily be perverted from minding the true interest of their prince and country, ibid.
Peg (John Bull's sister). Her character, xvii. 189.
Pembroke (Thomas Herbert, earl of). Two punning letters to him, xvi. 244, 245. His droll anxiety, on being elected a member of the royal academy of Paris, xv. 180.
Z 3
Pennsylvania.