Page:Trivia (John Gay) to which is added London (Samuel Johnson) (1809).djvu/88

Rh Cold, the description of a, i, 267.

Collier's cart, iii, 25

Common-sewers, i, 171

Constable, his consideration,iii,315.

Country, the author's love of his, i, 21

Countryman perplexed to find the way, ii, 73

Covent-garden, ii, 343, 547

Cries of the town, observations upon the, ii, 425

Critics, fate of, iii, 413

Crowd parted by a coach, iii, 83.

Doll, melancholy story of her death, ii, 381

Drays, when not to be followed, ii, 288

Dress, propriety of, to be observed, i, 129

Drummers, improper at a wedding, ii, 17

Drury-lane, dangerous to virtue, iii, 259

Dustman, to whom offensive, ii, 37; spiteful to gilded chariots, ii, 529

Evening described, iii, 9

Fair, kept on the Thames, ii, 369

Fair weather, signs of, i, 143

Farrier's shop, description of a, i, 251

Father, the happiness of a child who knows his own, ii, 177

Female guides not to be trusted, ii, 87

Female walkers, what necessary for, i, 209

Fire, description of a, iii, 353

Fire-engines, iii, 369

Fireman, his virtue, iii, 362

Fishmonger, description of his stall, ii, 413

Football described, ii, 347

Footman, prudence of a, in rainy weather, i, 127; very arrogant, iii, 157

Fop, the description of a, walking, ii, 53; ill consequence of passing too near a, ii, 57

Friday, how to know, ii, 419

Friend, the author walks with a, ii,475; rules to walk with a, iii,87

Frost, an episode of the great,ii,357

Funeral, the walker's contemplation on a, iii, 225

Gamester, his chariot described, i, 115

Glazier, his skill at football, ii, 355

Guinea-droppers, iii, 249 Hands, their use, iii, 243

Hawker, at what time he cries news, ii, 21

Health acquired by walking, i, 69

Horses, like Parthians, ii, 292

House blown up, description of a, iii, 381

Industry not exempt from death, ii, 389

Invention of pattens, i, 219

Jugglers to be avoided, ii, 285

June, what cry denotes that month, ii, 431

Knocker of a door, an observation on a, ii, 467

Labourers returned from work, iii, 13

Ladies, walking the streets, i, 105; in the Park, what indicated by, i, 145; dress neither by reason nor instinct, i, 149

Lantern, what it indicates in the middle of the street, iii, 335

Lawyer passing the street in a coach, ii, 579

Legs, their use, iii, 241

Letchers, old, where they frequent, ii, 281

Linkman, where not to be trusted, iii,