Page:The female Quixote, or, The adventures of Arabella (1752).pdf/13



In which one would imagine the Adventure concluded, but for a Promise that something else is to come.

In which the Adventure is really concluded, tho' possibly not as the Reader expected.

In which some Contradictions are very happily reconciled.

In which a Mistake, in point of Ceremony, is rectified.

In which a Lover is severely punished for Faults the Reader never would have discovered, if he had not been told what they were.

Contains several Incidents, in which the Reader is expected to be extremely interested.

In which a logical Argument is unseasonably interrupted.

In which the Reader will find a Specimen of the true Pathetic, in a Speeech of Oroondates—The Adventure of the Books.

The Adventure of the Books continued.

BOOK II.

In which the Adventure of the Books is happily concluded.