A King for an Hour, 592, 630.
Dogget, Thomas, an Irish Actor, Lifeof, 513. Altercation between Lord Lyndhurst and Dr. Dodd, The Unfortunate, A neglected Lord Melbourne, 132.
Biography, Part I., 257; Part II., 385. Alphonse Karr; Amenities of French Li- Draoideachta—The Magic of the Ancient terature, 132.
Irish, 148. A Neglected Biography; Life of the “Un- Dublin Society, 3. fortunate Dr. Dodd," 257, 385.
Duchies, The Danish, their Rights, Cus- American Methodism, The Camp Meetings toms, and Legends, 344.
of, described, 475, 476. American Scenes and Portraits, 112.
Earlier Type of the Sensational Novel ; Ancient Irish, The, Magic of, 148.
Tracings of, 460. An Old Irish Actor and his Times—from Early Opinions of George Sand, 494. 1691 to 1721; Thomas Dogget, 513.
Editors, New, of Shakespeare, 230. Armstrong Guns, The Defects of, 546. Epic Poetry ; Notes on Dante, 504. Aspromonte, Conduct of Garibaldi at, ex Episcopal Non-superintendence in Ireland, amined, 491.
79. Autobiographical MS., A Passage from an,
Estimates, The, for 1864-5, for Irish National 564.
Education, and how constructed, 608. Baden Vanity Fair. 1., The Fair ; II., The Etchings of the Southern American Confe- Company; III., The Players; IV., The
deracy, 214. Play; V., Rouge Gagne, 702.
FAIRY MYTHOLOGY OF IRELAND, The:-- Biographies and Personal Sketches of Mananan, Son of Lir ; King Cormac's Leonidas Polk, the Southern Soldier-
Trials ; Cliona of Munster; Finvar, the Bishop; Generals Lee, Longstreet, Fairy King of Connaught; The Pooka of “ Stonewall ” Jackson, and Beauregard ;
Murroe ; The Banshee of the O'Briens; of President Davis, 112 and 214. Of
The Black Cattle of Durzy Island; The General Garibaldi and Cavour, 483. Silkie Wife; The Avenging Wave; the Of Charles Knight, 456. Of Wilks and The Fairy-Cure; The Fairy-stricken Ser- Dogget, Irish Actors, 310 and 513. Of vant; The recovered Bride; The Love George Sand and Alphonse Karr, 494 Philtre~page 640. and 321. Of Dr. Dodd, 257 and 385. Falstaff's Wake; a Dramatic Sketch, by Of Lord Lyndhurst, 123. Of Paul Thomas Irwin, 222. Feval, 226.
Female Felon Biography, 440. Biography, Felon; Review of “Prison Ma- Feval, Paul-a Breton Man of Letters, 226.
tron's” “Memoirs of Jane Cameron,” 440. Future of the Cotton Trade, 117. Bishops' Incomes –Are they too high in Garibaldi, General, Incidents in Career of, Ireland ? 377.
483. Caprera, Interior of Garibaldi's House de- George Sand, Madame, Early Opinions of, scribed, 485, 486.
494. Cavour, Victor Emmanuel, and Garibaldi, Grand Tour, The; Fourth Excursion.--The
remarkable interview between, previous Court of Saxony, 549.
to the French War in Lombardy, 487. Grape and the Star, The, A Poem, 338. Centuries—Two Half Centuries of the Light Gyges, The Ring of, 99.
Literature of France, 243. Century, Half a, of Literary Recollections, Ideals in Poetry, Demoniac, 29. 456.
In Church: A Poem, 470.
Irish Church: Her “ Reformers" and her Clubs, The, of Dublin, 12. Comedy, The Old Italian, 67.
Foes, 363. Confederacy, Etchings of the, 214.
Irish, Magic of the Ancient, 148. “Congregationalism” fatal to the Irish
Irish Magic in the days of Cormac, 424. Church, 363, 379.
Irish Literature—The Last Sighs of a Celtic Constitutional Principles, Garibaldi's con-
Storm, 94. stant adherence to, 483.
Italian Comedy, The Old; or, Harlequin Convent and Monastic Schools, Irish, Grants
and Scaramouch, 67. to, 603-619.
King for an Hour, A, 592; Second Part- Corsica, Story of Theodore of, Part the First, conclusion, 630.
592 ; Part the Second, 630. Court of Frederic William-Third Excur- Lansdowne, Marquis of: strong Speech in sion in the Grand Tour, 197.
favour of the Irish Church, 365. Court of Saxony, The, 549.
Legends, Curious Danish, 344.
Léon Gozlan-A Word about his Life and Critics, The Pulpit and its, 77. Customs, Curious, of the Danish People, 344.
Writings, 673. Cymric Literature in the Middle Ages, 303.
Life of Laurence Sterne, Fitzgerald's, re-
viewed, 328. Dante, Notes on, 504.
LITERATURE–French, 321 ; Cymric, in Demoniac Ideals in Poetry, 29.
Middle Ages, 303; Scottish and Irish, 94.
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Life in Munich, 696.
George M.Henry; Baptist Wriothesly Lyrists: Herrick-Ben Jonson-Carew,380. Noel's “Rebellion in America ;" Colonel Lyndhurst, Lord, elaborate Memoir of, 123. Fremantle's “ Three Months in the
Southern States;” Mrs. Greenhow's “My Middle Ages, Cymric Literature in, 303.
Imprisonment, and the First Year of Milton's Minor Poems, 619.
Abolition Rule at Washington;" Dr. My Aunt Margaret's Adventure. Chap. I.,
Doran's “Their Majesties' Servants- Aunt Margaret at Home; Chap. II., My Aunt Margaret on the Road ; Chap. III.,
Annals of the English Stage, from Bet- The Moon Rises ; Chap. IV., Perturba-
terton to Edmund Kean;" Samuel Philips
Day's “Down South, or an Englishman's tion; Chap. V., The “Good Woman;"
Experiences at the Seat of the American Chap. VI., The White Chamber ; Chap. VII., An accident befalls the Candle ;
War;" Speech of Mr. Spence on the South-
ern American Question, at Glasgow, pub- Chap. VIII., Of a figure seen by my Aunt; Chap. IX., The Funeral Visita-
lished as a pamphlet; “ The Works of
William Shakespeare," edited by W. E. tion ; Chap. X., How it all happened, 268.
Clark, M.A., J. Glover, M.A., and W.
A. Wright, M.A.; “The Life of Lau- New England Society Forty Years Ago, 473. rence Sterne, by Percy Fitzgerald, Nineveh : an Oriental Poem, 589.
M.R.I.A. ; Gosch's “ Denmark and Ger- Notes on Dante, Critical and Philosophical, many since 1815;" . Captain Marryat's 504.
" Residence in Jutland—the Danish O'Brien, William, An Irish Actor, Life of, 668.
Isles, and Copenhagen ;" “ Germany
versus Denmark, by a Liverpool Mer- Passage from an Autobiographical MS., chant, being a short account of the 564.
Slesvig-Holstein Question ;" Moles- Patronymics in Denmark, Curiosities of, 353. worth's “ Denmark in 1692;" Memoirs Paul Feval, a Breton Man of Letters, 226. of Jane Cameron, the Female Convict," by Personal Sacrifices of Southern Leaders, a Prison Matron; "Forty Years of Ameri- 218, 219.
can Life,"by Dr. Thomas L. Nichols;" “Pe- Phases of Life in Federal America, 471. culiar-a Tale of the Great Transition," Pictures of Dublin Fashion, 5, 6.
by Epes Sargent, edited by William “ Place-Hunting in Federal America, Howitt; “Passages of a Working Life,
Ruinous Social Effects of, 116, 117. during Half a Century, with a prelude Poetry, Epic-Essay on, 504.
of Early Reminiscences;" by Charles Political Morality of Lord Lyndhurst, 126, Knight; “ Colonel Chambers's Gari- 127.
baldi and Italian Unity;" Colonel Portraits, American Scenes and, 112. Vecchij's “Garibaldi at Caprera ;" Count Protests of the Bishop of Derry and Dr. Charles Arrivabene's “Italy under Victor
P. S. Henry against Innovations in Irish Emmanuel;" De La Rive's “Reminiscences
National Education Scheme, 603-619. of the Life and Character of Count Pulpit, The, and its Critics, 77. .
Cavour;" “Histoire de ma vie,” par Pulpit Eloquence and its Eccentricities, 82, George Sand. 83.
Revival,” The late, in America, Singular POEMS AND DRAMATIC SKETCHES:-Sen Phases of, 476.
sation, A Satire, 86; Soul in Space, 133; Ryder, Thomas, An Irish Actor, Life of, 658. Falstaff's Wake, by T. Irwin, 222; Song Sand, Madame George, Life and Writings of Spring, by Metrodorus O'Mahony, 213; The Grape and the Star, 338; Scenes, American, and Portraits, 112.
of, 494. Spring-a Sonnet, 384; In Church, by
. Scottish and Irish Literature, 94. Uter, 470; Timon, 512 ; Nineveh, 589; ORPHEUS, by T. Irwin-Prelude ; Or- Sensation--a Satire, 86. pheus ; Girl's Song ; Orpheus's Hymn to
Sensational Novel, Earlier Type of the, 460. Eurydice ; Love Reverie of Orpheus; Shakespeare, New Editors, 230.
Servants, Their Majesties', 155. Nuptial Song; The Death-day of Eury- dice; Invocation ; The Voyage of Orpheus Shakespearean Notes, No. 1., 89; No. II.,
281. to Hades ; Voyage; The Druid Isle; An Isle of Torment | Lethe ; The Music Sheridan, Report of; Chief Inspector of
National Schools, on the “Extinguish- Clime; Approach to the Elysian Isle ;
ment” of the Lay Principle, 607. Prayer Song; Invocation to Death ; Or- pheus's approach to the Land of Death; Society, The, of Dublin, 3.
Some Amenities of French Literature, 321. Death-528-543; The Cluricaun, 625.
Song of Spring, by Metrodorus O'Mahony, REVIEWS :-Williams' (late American Mi 213.
nister to Turkey), "Rise and Fall of the Soul in Space-a Sonnet, 133. Model Republic;" “The Cotton Trade, Spring-a Poem, 384. its bearing upon the Prosperity of Star, The, and the Grape, a Poem, 338. Great Britain and Commerce of the Sterne, Fitzgerald's Life of, 328. American Republics, considered in con Story of Theodore of Corsica-a King for nexion with the Question of Negro an Hour, 592, 630. Slavery in the Confederate States," by "Stump" Oratory in the Far West, 115, 116.
The Cluricaun-a Poem, 625. The Fairy Mythology of Ireland, 640 THE IRISH EDUCATION QUESTION :- The
Present position of; Review of the late Parliamentary Papers and other docu- ments affecting the New Rules" of the National Education Board, in favour of Convent and Monastic Schools, together with an examination of the working of the System, as illustrated by the Report of the Census Commissioners for the year 1861, and the most recent Returns
in Thom's Directory for 1864—page 603. The Modern Clown and Old World Harle.
quin, 71. The old Italian Comedy, Essay on, 67. The Pulpit and its Critics, Counsels and
Warnings, 77. The Ring of Gyges, 99. The Grape and the Star, 338. The Danish Duchies, their Political Posi-
tion, and the real Sentiment of their Populations, 344. Third Excursion “The Grand Tour,” 197. “ Their Majesties' Servants," from Betterton
to Edmund Kean, 155. Two Half Centuries of French Light Li-
terature, 243. Two Old Irish Actors and their Contem-
poraries-Thomas Ryder and William O'Brien :- Thomas Ryder, 658; William O'Brien, 668.
Dutch Room, page 32. Part IX., Chap. LXIX., I revisit Brandon Hall; Chap. LXX., Lady Macbeth ; Chap. LXXI., Mr. Larkin is vis-à-vis with a concealed Companion ; Chap. LXXII., The Dumb Companion discloses himself ; Chap. LXXIII., Of a Spectre which Old Tamar saw; Chap. LXXIV., The Meeting in the Long Pond Alley ; Chap. LXXV., Sir Harry Bracton's Invasion of Gy- lingden; Chap. LXXVI., Mark Wyl- der's Hand ; Chap. LXXVII., The Mask Falls; Chap. LXXVIII., We take leave of our Friendsconclusion-page
161. Yankee Phraseology, Extraordinary Cha-
racter of, 477. YAXLEY AND ITS NEIGHBOURHOOD. Chap.
I., The Father, the Child, and the Pupil ; Chap. II., A Sketch of the Past; Chap. III., Remonstrances and Coaxings; Chap. IV., Dillon Crosbie; Chap. V., The Present to the Sick Man; Chap. VI., The Walk in the Snow—The Maledic- tion, page 13. Chap. VII., Mrs. Meiklam ; Chap. VIII., Dillon receives a Present; Chap. IX., The Messenger comes; Chap. X., Lizette leaves the Cottage, page 134. Chap. XI., Mrs. Pilmer is dis- turbed; Chap. XII., Mrs. Meiklam's Thoughts about Lizette; Chap. XIII., The Birthday Fête; Chap. XIV., Some Arrangements concerning Dillon Crosbie; Chap. XV., The Last Night and the Last Morning; Chap. XVI., Lizette and Bessie; Chap. XVII., A Removal determined upon, page 286. Chap XVIII., Tom Ryder's early Courtship; Chap. XIX., The new Will; Chap. XX., An unfortunate Meeting ; Chap. XXI., The Bell that Luke Bagly hears; Chap. XXII., The sudden Call; Chap. XXIII., Some unpleasant Reports spread about Yaxley ; Chap. XXIV., Mr. Hilbert has something to say to Mrs. Copley ; Chap. XXV., Farewells, page 407. Chap. XXVI., The Journey to London; Chap. XXVII., An unexpected Meeting ; Chap. XXVIII., The Arrival at Mark- ham House; Chap. XXIX., A Dear Friend's Welcome; Chap. XXX., Re- miniscences; Chap. XXXI., Miss Pil. mer's Confidential Information; Chap. XXXII., An unexpected Summons; Chap. XXXIII., An unwelcome Visitor; Chap. XXXIV., A Letter from Yaxley; Chap. XXXV., The Dimming Sight, page 568. Chap. XXXVI., Mrs. Pilmer, has a private Interview with Mr. Ryder; Chap. XXXVII., L'Amour Tendre ; Chap. XXXVIII., Hopeless ; Chap. XXXIX., Waiting ; Chap. XL., An- guish Unknown; Chap. XLI., The wrong part of the Letter, page 685.
Whitworth, Armstrong, and Rival Guns, 544. Wicked Captain Walshawe of Wauling: A
Tale. Chap. I., Peg O'Neill pays the Captain's Debts ; Chap. II., The Blessed Candle; Chap. III., My Uncle Watson visits Wauling; Chap. IV., In the Par- lour ; Chap. V., The Bed-Chamber; Chap. VI., The Extinguisher is lifted; Chap. VII., The Visitation culminates-
conclusion-449. Wilks the Actor: His later Career in Lon-
don, 310. Windsor, when George the Third was King,
457. “Woman's Rights" in Ecclesiastical Mat-
ters in America, 477. Writings of Alphonse Karr, 321. WYLDER'S HAND: By the Author of " The
House by the Churchyard" (continued from previous Volume.) Part VIII. Chap. LX., The Brandon Conservatory; Chap. LXI., Concerning a new danger which threatened Captain Stanley Lake; Chap. LXII., Miss Rachel Lake becomes violent; Chap. LXIII., The Attorney in Redman's Dell; Chap. LXIV., Rachel Lake before the Accuser; Chap. LXV., In which Dame Dutton is visited; Chap. LXVI., The Captain explains why Mark Wylder absconded; Chap. LXVII., The Ace of Hearts; Chap. LXVIII., In the
DUBLIN: Printed by ALEXANDER THOM, 87 & 88, Abbey-street.
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