CONTENTS OF THE THIRD PART,
of 1833.
ORIGINAL PAPERS.
PAGE | ||
A few Words from the Proprietor | 1 | |
On the Anonymous in Periodicals | 2 | |
My Acquaintance with the late Edmund Kean, by T, C. Grattan, Bsq. | 7, 143 | |
Factory | 17 | |
Dick Doleful | 18 | |
Chess | 22 | |
The Divorcée Dévote, by the Author of the O'Hara Tales | 25 | |
Journal of Conversations with Lord Byron, by Lady Blessington, Nos.X., XI. | 33, 414 | |
Hidden Literary Treasure | 47 | |
The First of September | 63 | |
Seasonable Ditties—No. I. Don't Talk of September— No. II The Month of October is bad!— No. III. The last Summer Bonnet—No. IV. All hail to thee, hoary December! | 64, 142, 300, 423 | |
Curates of Ireland | 65 | |
Sonnet | 73 | |
The Post-Mortem Cogitation of the liate popular Mr. Smith | 74 | |
Curates of Ireland | 65 | |
Men and Books | 79 | |
Monthly Commentary | 86, 212, 340, 489 | |
The Lion's Mouth | 91, 252, 496 | |
My Travelling Acquaintance, by the Author of "High-Ways and By-Ways," No. I. The Hero of Waterloo—No. II. The Philosopher of the Odenwald | 129, 266 | |
Translations from the Greek Anthology | 151 | |
Inhabitants of a Country Town, by Miss Mitford.—No. I. A Great Man in Retirement—No. II. Peter Jenkins | 152, 278 | |
The City of the Clyde | 160 | |
Paganini's Fiddle | 166 | |
The Ruined Laird, by the Hon. Mrs. Norton | 171, 301 | |
To the Portrait of Dante | 180 | |
On the Progress of Music from the Commencement of the present Century, Nos. III., IV. | 181, 453 | |
The late Mr. Tardy | 193 | |
England and the English | 206 | |
The Metropolitan Theatres—a Chronological History of their Origin and Progress | 257 | |
The Female Convict Ship. By T. H. Bayly | 277 |