Gay, the poet, remarks respecting him, 85. Geraldine, daughter of the Earl of Kil- dare, remarks respecting the Earl of Surrey's supposed attachment to her, 299.
Gleig, Rev. G. R. Chelsea Veterans by,
Godshill, legend of the church of, 255. Golden Legend, No. III. a lay of St. Dunstan, 88.
Gore, Mrs. National Songs by, 295. Grave, the, a poem, from the German of Rosegarten, 366.
Hampton Court, account of the erection of the palace at, 297; royal occupants of, 300.
Harem Unveiled, the, 389. Harryson, Katherine, accused of witch- craft, 32 n.
Hatchment, the, a poem, 286.
Herbert, Edward, sonnet on the Anniver-
sary of the Battle of Trafalgar by, 542. Hogarth, George, character and conduct of Louis XVI. by, 305.
Hooton, Charles, Colin Clink by, 96. 206. 414. 528. 623.
How to Feed a Lion, a poem, 23. Hudson River Steam-boat Dialogues, see Uncle Sam's Peculiarities. Humbug, Prospectus of an intended Course of Lectures on the Philosophy of, 599.
Hume, the Historian, his defence of sui- cide, 518.
Indigence and Benevolence, see Moral Economy of Large Towns. Ingoldsby, Thomas, a Lay of St. Dunstan by, 88; Cœlebs in search of a Cenotaph, 353; some account of a New Play, 639.
Inman, G. E. Old Morgan at Panama by,
45; the Conqueror's Grandsire, 271. Inquest, the, by Lieut. Johns, 603. Insanity, Hereditary, remarks on, 527 n. Irving, Washington, the Crayon Papers by, 24, 159.
Isle of Wight, Tales and Legends of the: Tale of St. Nicholas, 66; Wulfhere, the kind-hearted, 69; the Queen's Bower at Borthwood, 253; account of Godshill, 255; a Legend of Puckaster, 368.
Jack, Captain, story of, 322. Jack Sheppard, continuation of his adven- tures, 1; his burglary at Dollis Hill, 15; quarrels with Jonathan Wild, 19; escapes from Clerkenwell Prison, 21;
visits Jonathan Wild in the dress of Quilt Arnold, 110; discovers his re- lationship to Sir Rowland Trenchard, 117; warns Thames Darrell of his danger, 128; visits his mother in Bed- lam, 134; captured by Jonathan Wild, and conveyed to Newgate, 139; ac- count of his escape from the Condemn- ed Hold, 226; visits his mother at Dollis Hill, 241; overtaken by Jona- than Wild, 242; account of his trick- ing Shotbolt the gaoler, 325; his cap- ture by Jonathan Wild, 429; impri- soned in Newgate, 436; his portrait taken by Sir James Thornhill, 442; sketched by Hogarth, 447; again es- capes from Newgate, 543; rescues Thames Darrell from Jonathan Wild's power, 557; his last interview with his mother, 559.
Jenkinson, Olinthus, Adventures of a Maintop-crosstree-man by, 73; the Harem Unveiled, 389.
Jerdan, William, Baron von Dullbrainz by, 316.
Johns, Richard, the Inquest by, 603. Joyce Jocund, How to feed a Lion by, 23. Julia, lines to, 462.
Longfellow, H. W. The Reaper and the Flowers by, 482.
Louis XVI, King of France, character and conduct of, 305; his Diary, 306. Lovat, Matthew, account of his suicide, 523.
Mackay, Charles, Rambles among the Rivers by, 79. 151, 296; Ancient and Modern Mohocks, 357.
M'Jilton, J. N. the Old Elm by, 140. M'Teague, P. The Spalpeen by, 288.396; those Sweet, those Happy Days, 574; the Moonbeam, 614. Maintop-crosstree-man, adventures of, 73. Mallet, the friend of Thomson, his song in praise of the Thames, 84.
Malta, account of the Plague there in 1813, 59; its capricious ravages, 62; vigorous means employed by the autho- rities, 63, 64.
Marie Antoinette, Queen of France, re- marks on Louis's treatment of, 315. Mathews, Kemble, and Mustapha the Cat, 350.
Millengen, Dr. Remarkable Suicides by,
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Play, some account of a New, by Thomas Ingoldsby, 639.
Plunkett, A. H. The Samphire Gatherer's Story by, 33.
Poems. How to feed a Lion, 23; Old Morgan at Panama, 43; Retiring from Business, 65; Blind Girl to her Mo- ther, 78; the Old Elm, 140; the Con- queror's Grandsire, 271; the Hatch- ment, 286; London by Moonlight, 303; the First Farewell, 352; the Grave, 366; the Withered Rose, 380; Reaper and the Flowers, 482; those Sweet, those Happy Days, 574; the Moonbeam, 614.
Pope, remarks on his monument in Twick- enham Church, 152; account of his grotto, 153; of his losing his intellect previous to his dissolution, 155. Power of Beauty, lines on the, 388. Priolland Zelie, account of her suicide, 519.
Prospectus of an intended Course of Lec- tures on the Philosophy of Humbug,
Socrates, his opinion of suicide, 517. Songs
National Songs, No. I. 295; Those Dustmen's Bells, 428; Song of Mallet in praise of the Thames, 84. Sonnets-on the anniversary of the Battle of Trafalgar, 542; Farewell Sonnet, 597.
Spalpeen, the, story of, 288; Chapter ii, 396.
Subaltern, The, papers by the author of --The Veterans of Chelsea Hospital, 51. 450; Legends of Lochs and Glens, 195.
Suicide, remarks on, 516; opinions of an-
cient philosophers respecting, 577; in- stances of modern cases of suicide, 318; a table of suicidal cases, 527; suicide from hereditary insanity, 527 n. Surrey, Earl of, remarks on his supposed attachment to the Fair Geraldine, daughter of the Earl of Kildare, 299. Strawberry Hill, the residence of Horace Walpole, account of its previous pos- sessors, 155.
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Vendôme, Chronicles of the Place, 381. Veterans of Chelsea Hospital, 51. Vincent Eden, the Oxonian, account of his meeting with Mr. Walrus, 172; ac- cepts the invitation to dine with the Brothers' Club, 176; obtains a Trinity Scholarship, 341; the Brothers' Club at Henley, 646.
Wade, J. A. Lines to a Lady Singing by, 50; Retiring from Business, 65; the First Farewell, 352; the Withered Rose, 380; the Dead Bird, 395; lines to Julia, 462; to Alura, 475. Whitehead, Paul, remarks on his heart being deposited in the mausoleum of Lord Despencer, 156.
Wild Sports in the South of France, see Pyrenean Hunter.
Withered Rose, a poem, 380.
Wolfert's Roost, see Crayon Papers. Wolf-hunting in the Landes, see Pyre- nean Hunter.
Wolsey, Cardinal, his palace at Hampton Court, 296; presents it to Henry VIII, 297; his reverse of fortune, 298. Wulfhere the Kindhearted, legend of, 69.
Young Girl, lines to a, 108.
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