| PAGE |
| Between You and Me | [1] |
| Man, Manners, and a Story with a Moral to it | [9] |
| Adonis at Home and Abroad, Part I. | [26] |
| Adonis at Home and Abroad, Part II. | [40] |
| Remnants of Stage Dresses | [60] |
| Three Acts and an Epilogue | [67] |
| The Tiring-Bowers of Queens | [88] |
| “La Mode” in her Birthplace | [114] |
| Hats | [129] |
| Wigs and their Wearers | [141] |
| Beards and their Bearers | [158] |
| Swords | [168] |
| Gloves, B⸺s, and Buttons | [185] |
| Stockings | [200] |
| “Masks and Faces” | [204] |
| Puppets for Grown Gentlemen | [212] |
| Touching Tailors | [227] |
| Why did the Tailors choose St. William for their Patron? | [229] |
| The Tailors Measured by the Poets | [240] |
| Sir John Hawkwood, the Heroic Tailor | [261] |
| George Dörfling, the Martial Tailor | [275] |
| Admiral Hobson, the Naval Tailor | [283] |
| John Stow, the Antiquarian Tailor | [285] |
| John Speed, the Antiquarian Tailor | [296] |
| Samuel Pepys, the Official Tailor | [300] |
| Richard Ryan, the Theatrical Tailor | [309] |
| Paul Whitehead, the Poet Tailor | [315] |
| Mems. of “Merchant Tailors” | [322] |
| Chapters on Beaux | [337] |
| The Beaux of the Olden Time | [337] |
| Beau Fielding | [347] |
| Beau Nash | [356] |
| The Prince de Ligne | [370] |
| Beau Brummell | [378] |
| Doctors Ready Dressed | [395] |
| Odd Fashions | [402] |