CONTENTS OF PARTS I. to XXIV. PARODIES.
EACH PART MAY BE PURCHASED SEPARATELY.
| Part 1. | Introduction. | |
| Alfred Tennyson’s | Early Poems. | |
| Part 2. | Alfred Tennyson’s | Early Poems. |
| Part 3. | Alfred Tennyson’s | Later Poems. |
| Part 4. | Page 49 to 62. | Tennyson’s Poems. |
| Pages 62, 63 & 64. | H. W. Longfellow. | |
| Part 5. | Page 65. | A Parody of William Morris. |
| Page 65 to 80. | H. W. Longfellow. | |
| Part 6. | Page 81 to 96. | H. W. Longfellow. |
| Part 7. | Page 97 to 105. | H. W. Longfellow. Hiawatha. |
| Page 105 to 112. | Rev. C. Wolfe. “Not a Drum was heard.” | |
| Part 8. | Page 113. | “Not a Drum was heard.” |
| Page 113 to 128. | Thomas Hood. The Song of the Shirt, etc. | |
| Part 9. | Page 129 to 135. | Thomas Hood. |
| Page 135 to 140. | Bret Harte. | |
| Pages 140 & 141. | Rev. C. Wolfe. “Not a Drum was heard.” | |
| Page 142 to 144. | Alfred Tennyson. | |
| Part 10. | Page 145 to 160. | Alfred Tennyson. |
| Part 11. | Page 161 to 176. | Alfred Tennyson. |
| Part 12. | Page 177 to 186. | Alfred Tennyson. |
| Page 187 to 190. | Rev. C. Wolfe. “Not a Drum was heard.” | |
| Page 190 to 192. | Thomas Hood’s Song of the Shirt. | |
| [Part 13.] | Page 1 to 4. | Parodies on Bret Harte. |
| Pages 4 and 5. | Thomas Hood. | |
| Page 6 to 16. | H. W. Longfellow. | |
| [Part 14.] | Page 17 to 24. | H. W. Longfellow. |
| Page 25 to 40. | Edgar Allan Poe. | |
| [Part 15.] | Page 41 to 64. | Edgar Allan Poe. |
| [Part 16.] | Page 65 to 88. | Edgar Allan Poe. |
| [Part 17.] | Page 89 to 103. | Edgar Allan Poe. |
| Pages 103, 4 & 5. | The Art of Parody. | |
| Page 106 to 112. | “My Mother,” by Miss Anne Taylor. | |
| [Part 18.] | Page 113 to 135. | “My Mother.” |
| Page 136 | The Vulture, (After “The Raven.”) | |
| Page 136 | A Welcome to Battenberg (after Tennyson). | |
| [Part 19.] | Page 137 to 141. | Tennyson’s “The Fleet,” etc. |
| Page 141 to 143. | “My Mother.” | |
| Page 144 to 160. | Hamlet’s Soliloquy. | |
| [Part 20.] | Page 161 to 184. | W. Shakespeare. The Seven Ages of Man, etc. |
| [Part 21.] | Page 185 to 206. | W. Shakespeare. Account of the Burlesques, of his Plays. |
| Page 206 to 208. | Dr. Isaac Watts. | |
| [Part 22.] | Page 209 to 217. | Dr. Isaac Watts. |
| Page 217 to 232. | John Milton. | |
| [Part 23.] | Page 233 | John Milton. |
| Page 233 to 236. | Dryden’s Epigram on Milton. | |
| Page 236 to 238. | Matthew Arnold. | |
| Page 239 to 244. | W. Shakespeare. | |
| Page 244 to 246. | Bret Harte. | |
| Page 246 to 255. | H. W. Longfellow. | |
| Pages 255 and 256 | Thomas Hood. | |
| [Part 24.] | Page 257 to 259. | Thomas Hood. |
| Page 260 to 280. | Alfred Tennyson. |
NOTES AND CORRECTIONS.
The Parody of “The Village Blacksmith,” on [page 9], signed Sphinx, was written by Mr. W. Sappe, of Forest Hill.
Foot Note, page 112.—Mr. Artemus Ward is here credited with the advice “Never to prophecy unless you know,” an Aberdeen correspondent points out that Mr. R. Lowell was the real author, the phrase occurs in “The Biglow Papers:”—
My gran’ther’s rule was safer’n’t is to crow,
Don’t never prophesy—onless ye know.
[Page 232]. Milton’s Epitaph on W. Shakespeare, the fourth line should read:—