[CHAPTER TWENTY-THIRD]
Mr. E. L. Davenport, his Interference, his Lecture on Stage Business, his Error of Memory or too Powerful Imagination—Why I remain a Dramatic Old Slipper—Contemptuous Words arouse in me a Dogged Determination to become a Leading Woman before leaving Cleveland
[CHAPTER TWENTY-FOURTH]
I recall the Popularity and too early Death of Edwin Adams
[CHAPTER TWENTY-FIFTH]
I See an Actress Dethroned—I make myself a Promise, for the World does Move
[CHAPTER TWENTY-SIXTH]
Mr. Lawrence Barrett the Brilliant and his Brother Joseph the Unfortunate
[CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVENTH]
I Play "Marie" to Oblige—Mr. Barrett's Remarkable Call—Did I Receive a Message from the Dying or the Dead?
[CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHTH]
I accept an Engagement with Mr. Macaulay for Cincinnati as Leading Lady—My Adieus to Cleveland—Mr. Ellsler Presents Me with a Watch
[CHAPTER TWENTY-NINTH]
My first Humiliating Experience in Cincinnati is Followed by a Successful Appearance—I Make the Acquaintance of the Enthusiastic Navoni
[CHAPTER THIRTIETH]
New York City is Suggested to Me by Mr. Worthington and Mr. Johnson—Mr. Ellsler's Mild Assistance—I Journey to New York, and Return to Cincinnati with Signed Contract from Mr. Daly
[CHAPTER THIRTY-FIRST]
John Cockerill and our Eccentric Engagement—I Play a Summer Season at Halifax—Then to New York, and to House-Keeping at Last
[CHAPTER THIRTY-SECOND]
I Recall Mr. John E. Owens, and How He "Settled my Hash"