THIRD CENSUS OF FINNEGANS WAKE 239 
(Galway), sea. Almost all the words occur in FIN 143—48. 143.31; 144.12;
146.31; 460.19; 500.25,28; 571.21. 
Priam—last king of Troy, character of 
Homer's, Shakespeare's (q.q.v.). 
+6.23—with Brian O'Linn (q.v.); 131.8; 
240.36; 513.20. 
Priapus—son of Dionysus and Aphrodite (q.q.v.), god of fruitfulness,
represented as a phallus. 115.32. 
Pride, Colonel—Puritan responsible for Pride's Purge of the House of
Commons in Cromwell's (q.v.) time. 355.13. 
Priestley, J. B.(b. 1894)—British author of The Good Companions, etc.
237.8. 
Prima, Secunda, Tertia—three girls in the poem that opens the Alice
(q.v.) books, Mr Wilder says. Alice is Prima. +360.4—with Tereus (q.v.).

Primas—see Caddy. 
*Nimrose, Galopping—from context, a tavern. 39.35—36. 
Primrose, Olivia—girl in Goldsmith's (q.v.) Vicar of Wakefield. See
Rose. 
361.18,22. 
Prince, Morton—Boston neurologist who studied, treated, wrote up the
multiple personality of Christine Beauchamp (q.v.). See also Sally. ?164.1;
?239.29; 242.26; 271 right margin; ?278.26; 
 280.22; 346.30; 363.4; ?365.28; 
460.12,22; ?511.33; 626.27. 
Princes of the Tower—little boys, murdered in Richard III (q.v.). 566.20.

Pringle, Sin John(1707— 82)—according to Mr Knuth, a Scottish
doctor, author of Observations on the Diseases of the Army in Camp and Garrison.
His biographer was Andrew Kippis. 11.10. 
*prior, 196.21; 358.9; 422.36; 438.17. 
Priscian (fi. 500)—Latin grammarian. 
467.32. 
Prisoner of the Vatican—Leo XIII (1870— 1929); see Leo. 100.25.

*Pritchards_partly Vicar Pritchard (1579—1644), author of moral rhymes,
Canwyll y Cymry (464.6) on Welshman's Candle. Maybe also James Pritchard,
author of The Eastern Origin of the Celtic Nation (1831). 44.8; 176.2 (in
Joyce's connection). 
Privates—Three (q.v.) soldiers who are sometimes Tommy Atkinses (Redcoats,
Lobsters) and sometimes Lipoleums or Napoleon's (q.q.v.) boys. 107.6; 289.21;
351.27; 523.35; 587.34. 
Procne—see Philomela. 
*Proctor, 366.23. 
Prometheus ("fomethought")—taught arts 
of life to the Greeks, stole fire from 
heaven for mankind. Joyce equates him 
with Santa Claus (q.v.). 22.7; ?80.16; 
297.1 eft margin; 307.left margin; 560.1; 
585.11. 
*pj.tjmptlyjxer, 49.30. 
Proserpine on Pensephone—daughter of Zeus and Demetem (q.q.v.), raped
by Pluto (q.v.), became Queen of the Underworld. See Kone. 267.11; ?583.13.

Prospero—magician in The Tempest, by 
William Shakespeare (q.v.). See 
Miranda, Ferdinand, Caliban, Ariel. 
308.11; 428.11. 
Proteus ("first man")—third chapter of Ulysses. In Greek myth, Proteus
was the "old man of the sea" who, to escape having to prophesy, turned himself
into all sorts of shapes like Joyce's many-shaped dog, like the changes of
the sea (q.v.), like the artist. Orphics regarded Proteus as the original
matter from which the world was created—see Manamaan, Lim. In the theatre,
a "protean" is an actor who plays many roles in a single play. 
?31.19; 107.8; 169.21; ?186.27; ?476.3; ?604.23. 
Proud, Nicholas—one would almost certainly say firmly that he is the
Devil (q.v.), for Irenaeus (q.v.) says Satan fell because of "pride and arrogance
and envy of God's creation." The young Stephen Dedabus (q.v.) fell also in
Grose's (q.v.) sense of "proud" which is "desirous of copulation." But Mr
Mink found in Thom's (q.v.), 1895, a listing for Nicholas Proud, Esq., who
lived at Fortab in Killimey, was secretary of the Dublin Port and Docks Board
(Ballast Office). 12.24,25; 99.20—21. 
Proudie, Bishop—in Trolbope's Barchester Towers. 484.19—20. 
Proust, Marcel (1871—1922)—authon of A ha recherche du temps
perdu (Remembrance of Things Past). Joyce told Arthur Power that Proust was
the best of the modern French writers, had enlarged the vocabulary of the
subconscious, had created a "living style ... like a river which takes colour
and texture of different regions through which it flows. The so-called classical
style has a fixed rhythm and a fixed mood which make it 
an almost mechanical device. 
Proust's style conveys that almost im