Ancient English Culture; 603. Ancient, Mediæval, and Modern Preaching; 123.
BISHOP PERCY'S FOLIO MANUSCRIPT: The Lord of Linne in his two Dresses; Dis- covery of the Folio MS.; "Robin Hood's Garland;" Harmony of a Gaelic and Anglo-Norman Legend; A Century of our old Poetic Fictions; Revival of the old Ballads and Romances; An Arthu- rian Ballad; History of the present Undertaking; Sketch of the Life of Bishop Percy; 230.
BRITISH ARMS AND SOLDIERS, ANCIENT AND MODERN: Celts and Romans in Conflict; Ancient Arms; The Feudal System; Armour from a Modern Point of View; Some Chivalric Details; Wea- pons of our Henrys and Edwards; Head- Armour; Body Armour, its Merits and Defects; How Armies were raised and disbanded; The Wrong side of the War- Carpet; Our Irish Allies; Prince Hal at the Pawnbrokers; The Free-Lances; A Standing Army organized; 629.
tian Influence of the Cross; Legend of the Cross; The San Greal; 702.
Gown and Town Rows at Oxford, and their Historical Significance; 363. GREAT (A) MAN'S RELAXATIONS: Scott and Dumas, a Parallel a la Plutarque; La Chasse a la Pipée; A terrible British Pointer; Mysouff I.; Mysouff II., and the Three Famous Monkeys; 203.
HAUNTED LIVES. BY J. S. LE FANU, Author of "Uncle Silas," "The House by the Churchyard," &c.: Chap. I., Laura Challys Gray; II., Brothers of Mercy; III., "Ad Misericordiam ;" IV., M. de Beaumirail; V., Beyond the Pre- cincts of Guildford House; VI., A Dia- mond Locket; VII., "Robert le Diable;" VIII., Alfred Dacre; IX., An Adven- ture; X., A Few Words in the Hall; XI., De Beaumirail's Ambassador; 564. Chap. XII., De Profundis; XIII., Tea; XIV., Another Visit; XV., Beethoven; XVI., Consultation; XVII., Lord Arden- broke's Advice; XVIII., A True Knight; XIX., Who are the Dacres? XX., They drink Tea; XXI., A Strange Face; XXII., Charles objects to the new Wor- ship; XXIII., Laura Gray's Fortune told; XXIV., XXV., 669. HOUSEHOLD STORIES OF THE HINDOOs : Chundun Rajah; The Brave Seventee Bai; The Jackal, the Barber, and the Brahmin with his seven Daughters; Sing Rajah and the Cunning little Jackals; The Valiant little Chattee-Maker; 454.
Dublin Book Auctions and Book Buyers of JOHN HALLER'S NIECE. By Russell Gray.
EARLY IRISH BUILDINGS AND THEIR
ARCHITECTS: Who the Cuthites were; The Corruption of Primeval Revelations; The Author's (Marcus Keane) Theory at variance with Keating's; Our supposed Obligations to the Danaans; The Ante- Christian Reverence of the Cross; The Serpent gets his due; Irish Stone Crosses and their Sculptures; Anticipated Cruci- fixions: 106.
Edmund Burke,-a Historical Study; 597. England and her Fenian Enemy; 115. EUROPEAN FOLK LORE: The Wild Duck,
a Bohemian Story; Sivga's Son, a Shet- land Tale; The Wolf and the Nightin- gale, a Household Story of Sweden; The Dwarf's Festival, a Norwegian Legend; The Ogre, a German Tale; 317. EXPLORINGS IN THE TWILIGHT. Schamir
and the Blue Flower; The Piper of Hameln; The Divining Rod; Pre-Chris-
Chap. XXIX., The Old, Old Years; Chap. XXX., The Same Old Story: Chap. XXXI., "The Virtues which We write in Water;" Chap. XXXII., Out on the Terrace; Chap. XXXIII., The Wilder- ness; Chap. XXXIV., Never in Earnest now; Chap. XXXV., After the Hounds; Chap. XXXVI., Not Yet; Chap. XXXVII., Among the Fairies; Chap. XXXVIII., Some New Voices; Chap. XXXIX., Pour passer le Temps; Chap. XL., Face to Face; Chap. XLI., Oh, Death in Life! 52; Chap. XLII., At the Dower House; Chap. XLIII., Death on the Pale Horse; Chap. XLIV., Standing Alone; Chap. XLV., A New Story; Chap. XLVI., A Long Good-bye; Chap. XLVII., Milly's Triumph; Chap. XLVIII., Lady Darrell in Doubt; Chap. XLIX., Breaking the Ice; Chap. L., Merry as a Marriage Bell; Chap. LI., Victor's Dream; Chap. LII., Ethel's Trouble; Chap. LIII., Not All! 170;
Chap. LIV., Spring Days; Chap. LV., Ethel's Letter; Chap. LVI., Wedding Bells; Chap. LVII., Still Waiting; Chap. LVIII., Home Again, 267; Chap. LIX., Einsam! Einsam! Chap. LX., The Barren Shore; Chap. LXI., A Terrible Wrong; Chap. LXII., In which Somebody Proposes for Somebody; Chap. LXIII., Too True; Chap. LXIV., Sunny Italy; Chap. LXV., Freddy's Legacy; Chap. LXVI., In which Somebody Marries Somebody; Chap. LXVII., At Naples; Chap. LXVIII., Forgiven; Chap. LXIX., The Days that Grow into Years; Chap. LXX., War to the Knife; Chap. LXXI., The Light of Stars; Chap. LXXII., Love's Young Dream; Chap. LXXIII., "Home Sweet Home;" Chap. LXXIV.; LXXV., Step Gently! 415; Chap. LXXVI., A New Home; Chap. LXXVII., The End of It; Chap. LXXVIII., Conclusion.
John Home, The Author of Douglas, 657.
Irish Land Pacification, 713.
MEDIEVAL FICTIONS AND THEIR SOURCES:
The Localization of Legends: William Tell: Beth Gellert; Melusina; the blessed Isles in the Atlantic, 590. MOLIERE'S PREDECESSORS; Corneille and some of his Contemporaries; Richelieu and his Dramatic Delusions; Comedy before Moliere; A Few of Moliere's Fellow Labourers, 158.
MOLIERE AT HOME AND AT THE PLAY: Ancient and Modern Contrasts; Youth of Moliere; Early Theatrical Struggles; Provincial Campaigns; Armande's Girlhood; The First Step Upwards; The Hotel Rambouillet and its Precieuses Ridicules; Ancient and Modern Nomenclature; Moliere at the Palais Royal; The Facheux and its Origin; An Ill-assorted Marriage; All about the School for Wives; Moliere obliged to make Frames, 345.
My Queen: Chap. I., 532.; Chaps. II., III., IV., 646.
My Photograph Book in Thirty Years to come, 289.
PARISIAN THEATRE, (A), Two HUNDRED YEARS AGO: Scarcity of Moliere's Autographs; Journal kept in Moliere's Troupe; The Miseries of a Removal Moliere's Good Heartedness; Dealings of Authors and Actors; Moliere at Home; His Books and Portraits; "The Misan
thrope;' ""Le Médecine Malgre Lui; 470. POETRY: Ad Pyrrham, 168; A Dream,
552; My Photograph Book in Thirty Years to come, 289; Sacred Vows, 211; Spring Thoughts, 344; Step Gently, 105; Voices Calling, 414. REVIEWS: Ancient Irish Architecture, &c., by Marcus Keane, 106, 328; Bishop Percy's Folio MS., 230; British Army, by
Sir Sibbald D. Scott, 629; Curious Myths of the Middle Ages, by the Rev. S. Baring-Gould, 590; Edmund Burke, a Historical Study, by Henry Morley, 597; Histoire de Mes Bêtes, par Alexandre Dumas, 203; Medieval Myths, by Rev. S. Baring-Gould, 702; Old Deccan Days, by Miss Frere, 454; Operations of War, by Captain Bruce Hamley, 483; Social Life in Moray in former days, by E. Dunbar Dunbar, 40; Spiritual Wives, by W. Hepworth Dixon, 261. Roman Actor (A),-Quintus Roscius, 405.
Satire Claims Something to be said for it, 3, 212.
Science (The) of War, 483. SOCIAL LIFE IN MORAY, a Century and a Half ago; The Whereabouts of Moray; Education; Things Medical; Prices of Provisions; Postal Arrangements; Travel- ling-Inn-keepers' Bills, &c.; Fishing, Pressing and Smuggling; One Bad Wo- man in Elginshire; Special Constables; Spelling and Composition of Ladies of Rank; Christmas in Elgin; Classics; How the Bailies refreshed Themselves; Small-Beer Chronicles; Things Clerical; Fossæ et Furcæ Jus, 40. Spiritual Wives, 261.
Spring Thoughts, 344. Step Gently, 105.
SWEET ANNE PAGE: Chap. XIII, an Elope- ment; Chap. XIV., Stephen in London; Chap. XV., Mr. and Mrs. Morfill, 20; Chap. XVI., Isola Chester; Chap. XVII., Stephen's Dream; Chap. XVIII., The Piccadilly Papyrus; Chap. XIX., The Panther Woo'd; Chap. XX, The Old Wolf, 135. Chap. XXI., Isola Rossa; Chap. XXII., Three Love Affairs; Chap. XXIII., The Gathering of the Clan; Chap. XXIV., Pringle; Chap. XXV., A Glass of Montrachet, 295. Chap. XXVI., The Wolf's Den; Chap. XXVII., Menage ou Menagerie; Chap. XXVIII., Morfill's Appointment; Chap. XXIX., Stephen Langton's Guest, 381. Chap. XXX., A Black Night's Work; Chap. XXXI., Father and Daughter; Chap. XXXII.,, Behind in London, 503. Chap. XXXIII., Faust and Mephistopheles; Chap. XXXIV., Padding and Confession; Chap. XXXV., The Earl in Pursuit, 618.
TOWERS AND TEMPLES OF EARLY IRELAND: The Round Towers; Early Churches; Concluding Remarks, 328.
Usurer's Ghost (The)-A Fireside Legend, 335.
VITAL FAITH: Paul, Augustine, Luther,
DUBLIN: Printed by ALEXANDER THOM, 87 & 88, Abbey-street.
« PreviousContinue » |