BOOK II
BackCHAPTER ONE CHARACTERS OF SILLY PEOPLE, WITH THE PROPER USES FOR WHICH SUCHARE DESIGNED.
CHAPTER TWO GREAT EXAMPLES OF GREATNESS IN WILD, SHEWN AS WELL BY HISBEHAVIOUR TO BAGSHOT AS IN A SCHEME LAID, FIRST, TO IMPOSE ONHEARTFREE BY MEANS OF THE COUNT, AND THEN TO CHEAT THE COUNT OFTHE BOOTY.
CHAPTER THREE CONTAINING SCENES OF SOFTNESS, LOVE, AND HONOUR ALL IN THE GREATSTILE.
CHAPTER FOUR IN WHICH WILD, AFTER MANY FRUITLESS ENDEAVOURS TO DISCOVER HISFRIEND, MORALISES ON HIS MISFORTUNE IN A SPEECH, WHICH MAY BE OFUSE (IF RIGHTLY UNDERSTOOD) TO SOME OTHER CONSIDERABLE SPEECH-MAKERS.
CHAPTER FIVE CONTAINING MANY SURPRISING ADVENTURES, WHICH OUR HERO, WITH GREATGREATNESS, ACHIEVED.
CHAPTER SIX OF HATS.
CHAPTER SEVEN SHEWING THE CONSEQUENCE WHICH ATTENDED HEARTFREE'S ADVENTURES WITHWILD; ALL NATURAL AND COMMON ENOUGH TO LITTLE WRETCHES WHO DEALWITH GREAT MEN; TOGETHER WITH SOME PRECEDENTS OF LETTERS, BEINGTHE DIFFERENT METHODS OF ANSWERING A DUN.
CHAPTER EIGHT IN WHICH OUR HERO CARRIES GREATNESS TO AN IMMODERATE HEIGHT.
CHAPTER NINE MORE GREATNESS IN WILD. A LOW SCENE BETWEEN MRS. HEARTFREE AND HERCHILDREN, AND A SCHEME OF OUR HERO WORTHY THE HIGHEST ADMIRATION,AND EVEN ASTONISHMENT.
CHAPTER TEN SEA-ADVENTURES VERY NEW AND SURPRISING.
CHAPTER ELEVEN THE GREAT AND WONDERFUL BEHAVIOUR OF OUR HERO IN THE BOAT.
CHAPTER TWELVE THE STRANGE AND YET NATURAL ESCAPE OF OUR HERO.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN THE CONCLUSION OF THE BOAT ADVENTURE, AND THE END OF THE SECONDBOOK.
Back