CHAPTER I. The Hero in London.—Pleasure is often the shortest, as it is the earliest road to Wisdom, and we may say of the World what Zeal-of- the-Land-Busy says of the Pig-Booth, "We escape so much of the other Vanities by our early Entering"
CHAPTER II. Gay Scenes and Conversations.—The New Exchange and the Puppet- Show.—The Actor, the Sexton, and the Beauty
CHAPTER III. More Lions
CHAPTER IV. An intellectual Adventure
CHAPTER V. The Beau in his Den, and a Philosopher discovered
CHAPTER VI. A universal Genius.—Pericles turned Barber.—Names of Beauties in 171-.—The Toasts of the Kit-Cat Club
CHAPTER VII. A Dialogue of Sentiment succeeded by the Sketch of a Character, in whose Eyes Sentiment was to Wise Men what Religion is to Fools; namely, a Subject of Ridicule
CHAPTER VIII. Lightly won, lightly lost.—A Dialogue of equal Instruction and Amusement.—A Visit to Sir Godfrey Kneller
CHAPTER IX. A Development of Character, and a long Letter; a Chapter, on the whole, more important than it seems
CHAPTER X. Being a short Chapter, containing a most important Event
CHAPTER XI. Containing more than any other Chapter in the Second Book of this History