VOLUME II
| XVIII | Reflections | 3 |
| XIX | A Mistake Discovered | 11 |
| XX | Virtue never appears so amiable as when reaching
forth her hand to raise a fallen sister. Chapter of Accidents |
19 |
| XXI | Teach me to feel another's woe, Pope.
To hide the fault I see, That mercy I to others show That mercy show to me. |
28 |
| XXII | Sorrows of the Heart | 34 |
| XXIII | A Man May Smile, and Smile, and Be a Villain | 40 |
| XXIV | Mystery Developed | 48 |
| XXV | Reception of a Letter | 58 |
| XXVI | What Might Be Expected | 63 |
| XXVII | Pensive she mourn'd, and hung her languid head, Like a fair lily overcharg'd with dew. |
70 |
| XXVIII | A Trifling Retrospect | 80 |
| XXIX | We Go Forward Again | 87 |
| XXX | And what is friendship but a name, A charm that lulls to sleep, A shade that follows wealth and fame, But leaves the wretch to weep. —Goldsmith. |
94 |
| XXXI | Subject Continued | 101 |
| XXXII | Reasons Why and Wherefore | 107 |
| XXXIII | Which People Void of Feeling Need Not Read | 113 |
| XXXIV | Retribution | 122 |
| XXXV | Conclusion | 128 |
xv