Boyer, James, his joke, 515. 288, 504. Brandon, Charles, his motto, 173, 451. "Broken Heart, The," by Ford, 49. Brooke, Lord (Fulke Greville), 50. Burial societies, Lamb's essay on, 92. Burney, Admiral, his card boys, 230, Martin, Lamb's sonnet to, 387. Burrell, Miss, Lamb's article upon, 372, Burton, Robert, and Lamb, 31, 175, C Colman, George, licenser of plays, 504. Cabbage," a slang term applied to Comedians, Lamb's favourite, 151, 441. Comic Tales by Dibdin, reviewed, 380. Comus, Lamb on a suppressed passage CONFESSIONS OF A DRUNKARD, 133, 430. COOKE, G. F., IN "RICHARD III.," 36, AS LEAR, 399. 'Cooper's Hill," by Denham, 219. on squirrels, 306, 515. on Vincent Bourne, 530. - donkeys, 514. Cuckoldry, a fantasy upon, 254. Saying Grace," 226. 'English Traveller," by Heywood, 45. Erasmus and Sir Thomas More, 204, 494. EXCURSION, THE, LAMB'S REVIEW OF, F Fable of the Bees, The, by Mandeville, his character by Aaron Hill, 222. Fair Quarrel, A," by Middleton and Fairies, Lamb's prose poem, 315. 'Faithful Shepherdess," by Fletcher, 55. - dedication, probably by Lamb, 465. Hazlitt upon, 237, 486. Jeremy Taylor upon, 238, 486. FIELD, BARRON, HIS POEMS, 197, 469. 314, 518. "Gin Lane," by Hogarth, 73. William, jr., an unwelcome guest, Goldsmith, Oliver, "The Deserted Vil- GOOD CLERK, THE, A CHARACTER, 127, Goodenough, Rev. Mr., his awful death, GOULD, MRS., (MISS BURRELL) IN "DON 46 GRAVE, THE Choice of a, 376, 541. - first edition, 388. GRAY'S BARD, 155, 443. Gray, Thomas, Lamb's criticisms upon, 155, 221, 373, 381, 540, 544. "The Elegy," 221. his Latin ode, 381, 544. Gresham, Sir Thomas, legend of, 519. 451. Helen of Troy and America, 156, 444. Heywood, Thomas, 45. Highmore, Joseph, a passage from, 527. Hissing at theatres, essay on, 87, 411. HOGARTH, THE GENIUS AND CHARACTER and Reynolds compared, 76. analogous to Smollett and Fielding, Holcroft, Thomas, Lamb's friend, 232, Hone's Every-Day Book and Table Book, Hone, William, his career, 506. "Honest Whore, The," by Dekker, 43, 76. Hood, Thomas, his Odes and Addresses, | Keats, John, and Lamb, 471. 285, 501. his drawing of Mary Lamb, 314, "Plea of the Midsummer KELLY, MISS, at Bath, 184. Lamb's praises of, 185-190, 459. L "Lælius," his reply to Lamb, 490. - his imitations of Burton, 31, 394. - on Richard III., 36, 105, 374, 398. on Shakespeare's contemporaries, on modern Jews, 42. on love's sectaries, 43. on distinctions in apparel, 44. on proper names, 69, 407. on the genius of Hogarth, 70, 407. on the character of an undertaker, on the tragedies of Shakespeare,97. on the character of Hamlet, 100. on King Lear, 107, 321, 345. on stage accessories, 110. on Thomas Fuller, 112, 417. on inordinate appetite, 118, 124. - on Defoe's Complete Tradesman, - on the character of Robert Lloyd, on a drunkard's fate, 133. on Christ's Hospital, 139, 434. on Reynolds and Da Vinci, 149, Lamb, Charles, on Fulton's epigrams, 156, | Lamb, Charles, on spurious book lovers, 444. on Dryden and Collier, 157, 444. on his first play, 158, 445. on theatre audiences, 158. on Wordsworth's Excursion, 160, on the character of tailors, 172, 449. on Wither's poetry, 181, 453. on Mrs. Jordan and Miss Kelly, in praise of Miss Kelly, 185, 186, on Brome's "Jovial Crew," 187, on Bickerstaff's "Hypocrite," 188, on the acting of Dowton, 188. - on Falstaff's Letters, 191, 468. on Barron Field's poems, 197, 469. on John Keats, 200, 470. on Sir Thomas More, 203, 471. and De Quincey, 213, 474. on the character of Ritson, 219. on his friends, 229, 480. on the charges at Westminster on the Gunpowder Treason, 238, on Sycorax in "The Tempest," his invented life of Liston, 248, 491. on cuckoldry, 254, 492. on lotteries, 259, 494. is taken to the Guildhall to see the lottery drawn, 260. on the marriage of Nonconformists, his invented autobiography of his essay signed "Lepus," 270, on thoughtless visitors, 270, 497. - - 273. on the mortifications of author- and the last peach, 283, 501. on the temptation to pilfer, 284. on the religion of actors, 287, 503. on February 29, 297. on his earliest school-days, 299. 513. on cruelty to animals, 304, 514. on beadles, 307, 515. and the bookseller, 308. - on the Queenlike Closet, 308, 516, -- on Enfield styles, 315, 518. his paraphrase of Hood, 315, 519. on Shakespeare's "improvers," on cleanliness and godliness, 324. on Defoe, 325, 523. on Clarence songs, 328, 524. on Vincent Bourne, 337, 530. on his own Album Verses, 340, 531. on the death of Munden, 341, 532. on presents of game, 343, 533. on beggars, 344, 534. on marriage, 344. on beautiful wives, 344. on elopements, 345. his story of Will Dockwray, 345. on Milton, 345, 376. - on parentheses, 346, 535- - on advice, 347. - on laxity in words, 348. on Shakespeare's character, 349, |