Misson (quoted), [4];
on valentines, [24], [25];
on private marriages, [27];
costliness of marriage festivities, [32];
on funerals, [41];
visits of ceremony, [73];
the penny post, [99];
beaus, [105];
ladies' use of patches, [130];
the English at table, [141];
on the little bread and much meat eaten by the English, [141];
his eulogy of plum pudding, [143];
on fish, [144];
coffee-houses, [163], [164];
taverns, [175];
bull-baiting, [225];
cock-fighting, [226];
professional sword-play, [239];
on the English love of boxing, [240], [241];
football, [242];
the interior of Drury Lane theatre, [252], [253];
public libraries, [294];
the 'London Gazette,' [297];
'touching' for the evil, [325];
Bath and its visitors, [329];
Sunday in London, [338];
the religious sects, [349], [350];
Quakers, [352];
Thames wherries, [358];
pleasure barges, [360];
shop signs, [368];
on the milkmaids' festival, [369];
Hyde Park, [370];
street lighting, [370];
hanging criminals, [408];
the peine forte et dure, [410];
benefit of clergy, [416];
gipsies, [421];
the pillory, [424];
ducking-stools, [425];
the relative vice in London and Paris, [423]
Mitre tavern, [178]
'Mob's Hole,' [64]
Mobs (dress), [34], [71], [184]
Moco stones (moss agates), [120], [137]
Mohocks, the, [67], [382]- [384];
as an association, [386];
royal proclamation against, [387]
Mohun, Lord, his duel with the Duke of Hamilton, [394];
his adventure with Ned Wicks, the highwayman, [412]
'Moll Peatley' (a dance), [20];
music, [440]
Moll White, the Coverley witch, [93]
Money, value of, contrasted with that of the present day, [115]