ABBOT and the Black Penitent, story the, 261. Action of the Pyrenees, see Anecdotes of Military Service.
Adams, John, President of the United States, remarks on his death, 407.
-John Quincy, character of, 407. Adventures in Paris-the Soubrette, 156. Aglaè, Mademoiselle, character of, 156. Allspy, Toby, adventures in Paris, by, 156.
America, remarks on the character of the Presidents of, 406; on the literary men, 410.
American boarding-houses, see Uncle Sam.
American Lions, 405.
-Traveller, a Parisian Sabbath by, 194.
Anacrcon made Easy, 300, 439; ode from, 580.
Anecdotes of Military Service—the Of ficer's Lady, 435; the Two Mitchells, 436; a Night Ride, ib, ; a Wolf Ad- venture, 438; the Action of the Pyre- nccs, 439; receipt for making a bowl of punch, 570; the Veteran's Death- bed, 571; death of the Corporal, 572. Aram, Eugene, remarks respecting, 448,
Bacchus, the Supper of, a poem, 542. Baden, baths at,352; the Ursprung, 354; the castle of Alles Schloss, 355; pas- sion for gaming in, 356; custom of mingling music at the banquets, 358. Ball-room, lines written in a, 396. Barney Maguire's History of the Cor- onation, see Maguire. Bayadere, song of the, 413.
"Beat the British," remarks on the uni- versality of the phrase in America,46,n. Blast of winter, a Poem, 520, gentleman Bolton, Mr. Robert, the " connected with the Press," story of, 204.
Boz, Oliver Twist, by, 1. 105. 313. 417. 521; Full Report of the second Meet.
ing of the Mudfog Association for the advancement of Everything, by, 105. Buckingham, Duchess of, culogium on her character, 444 n.
Buller, Mr., poem of Walter Childe,by, 17. 121. 277, 440, 537.
-Mr. jun., Anacreon made Easy by. 300. Buren, Martin Van, President of Ame- rica, remarks on his character, 410. Burying-woman, description of the pro- fession of, in France, 302.
Cadell, Lieut.-Col., Anecdotes of Mili. tary Service by, 435. 570. Cambridge "Row," in the year 1632, 249.
Caroline, Queen of England, account of her appearance at Westminster Hall on the coronation of George IV. 70. C-ford, Lord, and the Pirate, sce Nights at sea.
Charades-the Warlock, 89; the Cut- Purse, 104.
Childe, Walter, legend of, see Walter. Chorus of Bubble Buyers, a poem, see
Paper Money Lyrics.
Claus, Narr, the jester, account of, 341, Claqueur System, remarks on the, 651;
on the state of, in France, 594 600. Clear-Starcher, the handsome, 369. Club, proceedings of the Wide-Awake, 359.
Coronation Miseries, or Reminiscences of the Inauguration of George IV. 65. Coronation, Mr. Barncy Maguire's ac count of the, 207. Cough, lines to a, 470. Courier, the, 90.
Counterfeit Presentments of Two Bro- thers, 496.
Cumming, Mr. Amyere, story respect- ing, 175.
Cumberland, Mr., his account of the first performance of She Stoops to Con- quer, 591.
Cupid and Jupiter, a fable, 266. Cupid couched, a poem, 172. Cutpurse, the, a charade, 104.
Day-dreams, a poem, 260. Dead Clearing, the, 129.
George III. King, remarks on the mis- management at his coronation, 72.
-IV. King, reminiscences of his coronation, 65. 73. Ghost Riders, a legend of the Great American Desert, 471. Gianni, or a Night Scene, 459. Gibson, John Ward, narrative of, 383. Gondolier, song of the, 203. Gonello the Jester, a poem, 553. Good-for-nothing, story of the, 94. Gore, Mrs. Charles, the Counterfeit Pre- sentments of Two Brothers, by, 496.
Gourmanderie, a chapter on, 228. Grandpapa's Story-the Witches' Fro- lic, see Family Stories.
Griffone, a tale of the Peninsula, 74. Grouse-Shooting, a chapter on, 271.
Handsome Clear-Starcher, a legend of the days of Queen Elizabeth, 362. Hauteville, Marquis of, anecdote re- specting him, 122.
Heather for me, the, 48.
Her Majesty's Portraits-the Great State Secret, 240.
Heiress," the, Phantom Ship by the author of, 433.
Henry VIII., King, extract from an order by him for the daily allowance of a maid of honour, 369 n. Hippsley, Mr., The Electrical Gentle- man, story respecting, 374. Hoffman, C. F., the Inn of Wolfswald, by, 49; the Dead Clearing, 129; a Night on the Enchanted Mountains, 306; the Missionary Bride, 330; the Ghost-Riders, 471.
Hogarth, George, Moliere and his Wife by, 451; the Claqueur System, 391. Holme, Mrs. Torre, Lines written in a Ball-room by, 395; song of the Baya- dere,413; Stanzas written in Autumn, 482.
Jackson, Andrew, ex-president of Ame- rica, character of, 407.
Jane, Queen of the Two Sicilies, laws made by, 169.
Jefferson, Thomas, character of, 407. Jerdan, William, Nonsense! a Miscel-
lany about Love, by, 167.
Jesters, remarks on the custom of retain- ing 338; anecdotes of different jesters, 339; Klauss von Raustet, or Claus Narr, 341; Provano Arlotte 342; Joe Miller, 344, 345; Gonello, 553. Jest-books of England, 343. Jocund. Joyce, a question by, 536. Joe Miller, and the jesters of all times and climes, 339.
Le Gros, W. B., the Love-Merchant, by, 61; Cupid and Jupiter, 266; Pluto and Proserpine, a poem, 413. Lines on the Power of Beauty, 54; to
155; Memory, paraphrased from the French, 133; on Venice, 193; on seeing the timber representation of the Duke of Wellington on the arch at Hyde Park Corner, 276; written in a Ball-room, 396; to a Cough, 470; Extra-Ordinary, 500; on Will-ing Mourners, 511; lines, 552. Lions of Baden in Baden, 353. Loss of my Leg, story of, 181. Love and the Flimsies, a poem, see Pa- per Money Lyrics. Love-merchant, a poem, 61.
Mackay, Mungo, see Mungo. Macready, Mr., notice of his check of the Claqueur System, 591. Maguire, Barney, his history of the Co- ronation, 207.
Maid of Honour, extract from an order
of Henry VIII. for the daily allow- ance of, 369 n.
Marcel, M., story of his last minuet,397. Matilda to King John, a poem, 556. Mayhew, Edward, the Good-for-noth- ing, by, 94.
Mayhew, Henry, Peter Punctilio,by,609. Medwin, Capt., Pasquile, by, 286. Memory, paraphrased from the French. 133.
Miller, Joe, the jester, particulars re- specting him, 344, 345.
Minuet, story of Marcel's last, 397. Missionary Bride, story of the, 330. Mitchells, the Two, see Anecdotes of Mi- litary Service.
Molière, M., account of his marriage, 451; his attachment to his wife, 452; circumstances respecting his funeral,
Madame, her marriage, 451; her
coquetry, 453; deception practised up- on M. de Lorny respecting her, 454, 456; her remark on the outrage of. fered to her husband's remains, 457. Motley, song of the Gondolier by, 203. Mudfog Association, full Report of the Second Meeting of, for the advance. ment of Everything, 209. MungoMackay, the Practical Joker,346. N.
Napier, Col., Griffone, a tale of the Peninsula, by, 74.
Napoleon's Midnight Review, 173. National Guards, remarks on the, 194. Nights at Sea; or Sketches of Naval
Life during the War-Lord C--ford and the Pirate, 141, 557.
Night on the Enchanted Mountains,306. Night Ride, see Anecdotes of Military Service.
Scene, see Gianni. Nonsense! a Miscellany about Love, 167. Nutmegs for Nightingales, No.V.—Wa- terloo, 457! No. VI-I met her in the Omnibus, 458.
Ode from Anacreon, 580. Officer's Lady, the, see Anecdotes of Mi- litary Service.
"Old Sailor," Nights at Sea by the, 141. Oliver Twist, or the Parish Boy's Pro gress-particulars of the adventure ex- plained, 1; conversations concerning him, 15, 105, 107; disclosures respect- ing, 316, 321; his interview with Mr. Brownlow,325; particulars relating to an old acquaintance of his, 417; con. versations respecting him, 532. Ouseley, T. J., song of the Earth to the Moon, by, 450.
Paddy Flynn, or the Miseries of Dining out, 31.
Palatable Pilgrimage to the Eating. houses of Paris, 485.
Paper Money Lyrics-Love and the Flimsies, a poem, 140; Chorus of Bubblebuyers, 239.
Pasquale, a tale of Italy, 286. Paris, the Restaurants of, 228: a Pala-
table Pilgrimage to the Eating-houses of, 485; remarks on the Cafés of, 543.
Parisian Sabbath, a, 194.
Parisian Cafes, description of, 543. Parent-Duchatelet, M., character of, 301; his description of the employ. ment of a burying.woman, 303. Peninsula, a tale of the, sce Griffone.
Phantom Ship, the, a poem, 433. Pluto and Proserpine, a pocm, 483. Poems, the Dew-drop and the Rose, 60; the Love-Merchant, 61; Paper Money Lyrics, 140, 239; Cupid couched, 172; Day Dreams, 260; Cupid and Jupiter, 266; the Phantom Ship, 433; Pluto and Proserpine, 483; the Blast of Winter, 520; the Supper of Bacchus, 542; Gonello the Jester, 553; Three Weeks before Marriage, 590. Portrait, the, 329.
Power of Beauty, lines on the, 54. Power, Tyrone, Fight of Hell-Kettle by, 55.
Press, Gentleman connected with the, 204.
Profession, an extraordinary, 301. Punch,receipt for making a bowl of, 570.
Three Weeks before Marriage, 590. T. H., Mrs., see Holme.
ToujoursGai, the French or English,572. Translation of a Sonnet by Iasso, sce Sonnet.
Trinity College, extract from a Manu. script found in, see, Cambridge 'Row!'
Uncle Sam's Peculiarities Journeys from New York to Philadelphia and back, 40, 134, 294: American boarding houses, 581.
Vaslyn, The Courier, by, 90. Venice, lines on, 193. Veteran's Death-bed, 571.
Reminiscences of the Inauguration of Wade, J. A., Matilda to King John by,
George IV., see Coronation Miseries. Restaurants in Paris, peep at the, 228.
Sabbath, description of a Parisian, 194. Sargent, E., Gonello the Jester by, 556. Scoggin's Jests, story taken from, 343. Sheehan, John, Paddy Flynn by, 31. Sheridan, Miss L. H., Lines to a Cough by, 470.
Smith, Rev. Sydney, anecdote of, 305. Songs-of the Fire King, 93; of the Gondolier, 203; of the Sun, 352; of the Bayadere, 413 of the Earth to the Moon, 450.
Sonnets-translation of a Sonnet by Tasso, 30.
Soubrette, the, see Adventures in Paris. Stanzas written in Autumn, 482. Sun, song of the, 352.
Supper of Bacchus, a poem, 542.
Thomas, William J., Joe Miller and the Jesters of all times and climes by, 338.
556; Three Weeks before Marriage by, 590. Charles Dibdin, and National Song.626.
Walter Childe, legend of, canto III. 17;
canto IV. 121,127; canto V. 440, 537. Warlock, the, a charade, 89. Washington, General, remarks respect. ing, 405.
Washington Irving, sce Irving. Waterloo, No. V., Nutmegs for Night. ingales, see Nutmegs. Wellington, Duke of, lines on secing the representation of him on the arch Whitehead, C., Narrative of John at Hyde Park Corner, 276. Ward Gibson by, 383.
White Horse Hill, origin of the name of, 123 n.
Wide Awake Club, proceedings of the,
Will-ing Mourners, lines on, 511. Witches' Frolic, see Family Stories. Wolf Adventure, see Anecdotes of Mili- tary Service.
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