Post 8vo, cloth limp, 2s. 6d. per volume. THE MAYFAIR LIBRARY. THE NEW REPUBLIC. By W. H. MALLOCK. THE NEW PAUL AND VIRGINIA. By W. H. MALLOCK. THE TRUE HISTORY OF JOSHUA DAVIDSON. By E. LYNN LINTON. OLD STORIES RE-TOLD. By WALTER THORNBURY. PUNIANA. By the Hon. HUGH ROWLEY. MORE PUNIANA. By the Hon. HUGH Rowley. BY STREAM AND SEA. By WILLIAM SENIOR. JEUX D'ESPRIT. Collected and Edited by HENRY S. Leigh. GASTRONOMY AS A FINE ART. By BRILLAT-SAVARIN. THE MUSES OF MAYFAIR. Edited by H. CHOLMONDELEY PENNELL. PUCK ON PEGASUS. By H. CHOLMONDELEY PENNELL. ORIGINAL PLAYS. By W. S. GILBERT. CAROLS OF COCKAYNE. By HENRY S. LEIGH. LITERARY FRIVOLITIES, FANCIES, FOLLIES, AND PENCIL AND PALETTE. BY ROBERT KEMPT. THE SPEECHES OF CHARLES DICKENS. THE CUPBOARD PAPERS. BY FIN-BEC. By JACOB QUIPS AND QUIDDITIES. By W. DAVENPORT ADAMS. MELANCHOLY ANATOMISED: à Popular Abridgment of "Burton's Anatomy of Melancholy." Other Volumes are in preparation. CHATTO AND WINDUS, PICCADILLY, W. OF THE "TIMES" 1800-1870 WITH AN INTRODUCTION EDITED BY ALICE CLAY BLIOTHER MAY 181 BODLEIANA London CHATTO AND WINDUS, PICCADILLY 1881 [All rights reserved] 270.g.873. INTRODUCTION. THE contents of the little volume now presented to the public have been taken from the second column (commonly called the "Agony Column") of the Times newspaper, from the commencement of the present century to the end of the year 1870. Readers of newspapers (more especially of the Times) cannot fail to be struck by the mysterious communications which daily appear, and I venture to hope my selection of some of the most remarkable may interest those who peruse these pages. Most of the advertisements selected show a curious phase of life, interesting to an observer of human existence and human eccentricities. They are veiled in an air of mystery, with a view of blinding the general public, but at the same time give a clue unmistakable to those for whom they were intended. At the early period of 1800 the “ Agony Column" seems to have been the chief medium for matrimonial advertisements; but, unfortunately, we are left considerably in the dark, and our curiosity as to whether the young nobleman (in advertisement |