INDEX TO PART II.
- Abusive Language, [321]
- Accidents, [81]
- Adviser, an experienced, is to be consulted in purchasing a Carriage, [118]
- Agreement, form of, [21]
- —— articles of, [56]
- Articles left in a Hackney Coach, [322]
- Axle-trees, [93], [99]
- Back-Light of a Coach, [70]
- Beggars’ dogs, [89]
- Box Coats, [133]
- Blundevill on Horses, [278]
- Braces, the main, [116]
- Buonaparte’s Travelling Chariot, [127]
- Burke, Right Hon. Edmund, [163]
- Cabriolets, [317]
- Carriage, private, its expense compared with the hiring of Hackney Coaches, [286-291]
- Carriages and Chariots, criterion for the price of, [5]
- ——, care of, [201-204]
- ——, travelling, [123]
- ——, length of, [109]
- Cary, Mr., plan of a new map, [293]
- Character of servants, [145]
- Chariot, construction of a, [65]
- Cheapest mode of keeping a Carriage, [33]
- Clock, advantages of a good, [155]
- Clover for horses, [253]
- Coach, when to call a, [312]
- ——, how to call a, [313]
- Coach box, [135]
- Coachmaking art of, [59]
- Coachman, a skilful, [143]
- ——’s livery, [26-31]
- ——, how to give orders to, [146]
- ——, punctuality essential in, [151]
- Coat, coachman’s, [134]
- ——, how to give a horse a fine, [246]
- Colds of horses, [261-266]
- Collinge’s axles, [94]
- Contracts for building Carriages, [53]
- Cook’s Life Preserver for Carriages, [77]
- Country houses vacant until July, [139]
- Cracked heels, remedy for, [265]
- Cushions, seat, [72]
- Dashing Iron, the, [17]
- Dickey Coach box, [79]
- Directions for buying and keeping of an equipage, [1]
- —— as to who should examine the linch-pins, [17]
- Directory, Quaife’s Hackney Coach, [323]
- Diuretic balls for swelled heels, [265]
- Dogs, tax on, should be duly enforced, [88]
- Doors of Carriages, [209]
- Driving, on, [184-191]
- Dry coat, importance of a, [134]
- Ducrow’s theatrical stud, [219]
- Duelling, [228]
- Durability of vehicles, [8]
- Duties, assessed, on men servants, carriages, and horses, [131]
- Elbows of a Carriage, of the, [67]
- Embrocation, anti-rheumatic, [135]
- Environs of town, expedition to dinner in the, [157]
- Equestrian statue of Charles I., [219]
- Evening parties, [136]
- Examination of a second-hand Carriage, [114]
- Exercising of horses, [243]
- Expense of keeping a Carriage, [3]
- —— keeping a Horse, [11]
- Extortion, [321]
- Extra charges made by a coach-builder for all additions, [61]
- Fares, Hackney Coach, [292-318]
- Fifteen good points of a coachman, [165-169]
- Fires, how to manage horses in case of, [272]
- Foresight of a physician, [137]
- Form of a Carriage highly important, [65]
- Genteel man described, a, [135]
- Gentleman, defined by a negro, [227]
- Glass coaches, [49]
- Glasses, coach, [69]
- Gomersal’s personification of Buonaparte, [219]
- Granite Pavement, [101]
- Grass, on sending horses to, [257]
- Grooming and dressing of horses, [245]
- Gruel for horses, [239]
- Guineas not obsolete in accounts, [7]
- Hackney coaches, choice of, [314]
- ——, origin of, [303]
- Hackney coachmen, [296], [314]
- ——man’s charge for jobbing a saddle-horse, [14]
- Hammercloth, [204]
- Hanway’s Travels, [226]
- Harness, [119]
- ——, second-hand, [121]
- Hard-Driving, [185]
- Hats with gold band, [30]
- Hay, how to select, [253]
- Holsters, pistol, to the dickey-box, [123]
- Horses, choice of, [225]
- ——, hints to purchasers of, [223]
- ——, to preserve the health of, [238-244]
- ——, food and provender of, [249-256]
- ——, of a hackney coach, [305], [306]
- ——, age recommended for carriage, [21]
- Horse, expense of a saddle, [11]
- —— balls, [262]
- ——dealers, [45]
- Horsemen, advice to, [273]
- Hostler, derivation of the word, [47]
- Hours, early, [139]
- Hydrophobia, [83-92]
- Imperials, [124]
- Inside handles to Carriages, [77]
- Inventory, important, [201]
- Job, to, or hire a Carriage, [54]
- Jobbing Horses, [44]
- Knee-boot to Coach box, [135]
- Lamps, circular, [106]
- Landau, or Landaulet, [52]
- Leather, condition of the, [121]
- Lining of a Coach, its best colour, [71]
- Letter requiring an immediate answer, when useful, [154]
- Livery, [26-31]
- —— stables, [15]
- Locks to the doors of a Carriage, [76]
- Luggage, heavy, [322]
- Macadamised streets truly beneficial, [99-101]
- Map of London, [172]
- Markham’s way to wealth, [277]
- Master, the good, [133]
- Matching of a horse, [23]
- Midnight meetings, [138]
- —— conversation, [141]
- New road from Paddington to Islington, [173]
- Newcastle, Duke of, his directions for the management of horses, [230], [246]
- Nuisances, public, [83-92]
- Oil, [107]
- Oil-skin covers, [125]
- Old Carriages and Chariot, selling of, [62]
- One-horse Carts the cause of accidents, [187]
- Open Carriages, [39]
- Ornaments of Carriages, [104]
- Paint, spare, [210]
- Perambulator for measuring distances, [298]
- Pembroke, Earl of, [251]
- Plated furniture, of, [105]
- Posting in Ireland, rates of, [42]
- Presents to servants, how rendered advantageous to the donor, [25]
- Price of new Carriages, of various denominations, [16]
- Profits of a Hackney Coachman, [305]
- Provender for horses, [255]
- Proverb, useful old, [46]
- Punctuality indispensable in a Coachman, [151]
- Quaife, Mr., Surveyor to the Board of Hackney Coaches, [296]
- Rattling of the Coach, [205]
- Reason for Coachmen not liking Collinge’s axle-trees, [96]
- Regent’s Park, the, [174]
- Repairs of Carriages, [212]
- Roads, the commissioners of the, [178]
- Rochefort, Monsieur R. de, [250]
- Rough-shodding in frosts, [28]
- Royal anecdote, [6]
- Safety braces, [126]
- Screwing the bolts, [204]
- Shades, green silk spring sun, [73]
- Shafts for a single horse occasionally applied to a Chariot, [20]
- Shakspeare, quotations from, [26]
- Shoeing, [159]
- Soft water preferable for a horse’s drink, [252]
- Spikes to fix on the hind standards, [82]
- Sleep disturbed by workmen purposely noisy at an early hour, [87]
- Sorbière’s description of London, [172]
- Springs of Carriages, how best constructed, [108]
- ——, cording of, [126]
- Stable, the, [266]
- Stands, Hackney Coach, [188]
- State Coach of George III., [4]
- Steps of a Carriage, [210]
- Strangers behind a Carriage dangerous, [82]
- Straw-yard, [11]
- Street Act of the Metropolis, [86]
- Streets, care of Carriage in the public, [191]
- Street-keepers, [83]
- Stuffing of a Carriage preposterous, [69]
- Swift, Dean, quotation from, [164]
- Symmetry of the Horse, true, [219]
- Time, best, to bring out a new Carriage, [60]
- Tires of the wheels should be watched, [102]
- Tom Thrifty’s maxim, [153]
- Tools, a Coachman’s, [170]
- Trunk covers, [124]
- Turnpikes, [31]
- Valetudinarians, kind of springs for Carriages most beneficial to, [169]
- Value of well-matched Coach-horses, [23]
- Varnished panels, [207]
- Varnish, how to remedy cracks in the, [208]
- Visits, paying of, [171]
- Vulgar Tongue, Francis Grose’s Dictionary of the, [48]
- Under-springs, [217]
- Wager, Duke of Queensberry’s, [221]
- Wages, [25]
- Washing and cleaning the Carriage and harness, [203]
- Wax candles, [106]
- Wheels, of, [99]
- Wheels, tiring of, [17]
- Wicks, lamps with two flat, [107]
- Winch for the axle-trees, by whom best kept, [95]
- Yellow Chrome, the best colour for a Chariot, [73]
- Zinc, ointment for sore heels, [264]
THE END.
J. MOYES, TOOK’S COURT, CHANCERY LANE.