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DUBLIN
UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE,
A
Literary and Political Journal.
VOL. LXVII.
JANUARY TO JUNE, 1866.
BIB
DUBLIN:
GEORGE HERBERT, 117, GRAFTON-STREET.
HURST & BLACKETT, LONDON.
MDCCCLXVI,
DUBLIN: PRINTED BY ALEXANDER THOM, 87 & 88, abbey-STREET.
INDEX TO VOL. LXVII.
ALL IN THE DARK: A Winter's Tale, in
Four Parts. By J. S. LE FANU. Chap.
I., Gilroyd Hall and its Mistress; Chap.
II., A Letter; Chap. III., Miss Dinah
Perfect and her Guests; Chap. IV.,
Violet Darkwell; Chap. V., Aunt Dinah
is in the Horrors, and Captain Drake
puts his Nightcap in his Pocket; Chap.
VI., In which the Witches Assemble;
Chap. VII., The Familiar Speaks; Chap.
VIII., William Maubray's Vision; Chap.
IX., In which Miss Violet says what she
thinks of Mr. Vane Trevor, and is Violet
no longer; Chap. X., Vane Trevor is
Discussed and Appears, page 198. Chap.
XI., Under the Chestnuts; Chap. XII.,
Croquet; Chap. XIII., Unsociable;
Chap. XIV., A Sunny Morning; Chap.
XV., Dinner at Revington; Chap. XVI.,
Over their Claret; Chap. XVII., Moon-
shine; Chap. XVIII., Supper; Chap.
XIX, Debate; Chap. XX., Farewell;
Chap. XXI., William Consults a Sage;
Chap. XXII., An Advertisement; Chap.
XXIII., Kineton Hall; Chaps. XXIV.,
XXV., William Maubray Arrives; Chap.
XXVI., William Maubray begins to ex-
cite an Interest, page 310. Chap.
XXVII., From Kincton to Gilroyd;
Chap. XXVIII., The Piping Bullfinch;
Chap XXIX., A Message in the "Ri-
vals;" Chap. XXX., The Lord of Bur-
leigh; Chap. XXXI., A Friend Appears;
Chap. XXXII., A Confidence; Chap.
XXXIII., The Ladies make Inquisition;
Chap. XXXIV., Trevor and Maubray
in the Drawing-room; Chap. XXXV.,
They Converse; Chap. XXXVI., The
Evening; Chap. XXXVII., Vane Trevor
at the Gate of Gilroyd; Chap. XXXVIII.,
Vane Trevor walks down to see Miss
Violet; Chap. XXXIX., Vane Trevor
opens his Mind; Chap. XL., Miss
Kineton Knox proposes a Walk with
William; Chap. XLI., How they Talked;
Chap. XLII., Confidences; Chaps. XLIII.,
XLIV., Back to Cambridge; Chap.
XLVI., Violet Darkwell at Gilroyd
again, page 422. Chap. XLVII., Miss
Perfect's Toilet; Chap. XLVIII., The
Prodigal; Chap. XLIX., "After Death
my Ghost shall haunt you;" Chap. L.,
Violet and William in the Drawing-
room; Chap. LI., A Dream; Chap. LII.,
Next Morning; Chap. LIII., The
Flower; Chap. LIV., Doctor Drake goes
to Gilroyd; Chap. LV., Suspense; Chap.
LVI., Some Particulars; Chap. LVII.,
Doctor Wagget, Further Particulars;
Chap. LVIII., Revington Flowers; Chap.
LIX., Vane Trevor sees Miss Violet;
Chap. LX., The Momentous Question;
Chap. LXI., A Doubt Troubles Maubray,
page 557. Chaps. XLII., XLIII., The
Furniture begins to Talk; Chap. LXIV.,
William Maubray is Tormented; Chap.
LXV., An Ambuscade; Chap. LXVI.,
Pursuit; Chap. LXVII., The Ghost Re-
appears; Chap. LXVIII., The Phantom
is Tracked; Chap. LXIX., Some Small
Events and Flaws; Chap. LXX, Wil-
liam Maubray in London; Chap. LXXI.,
Violet Darkwell tells Miss Wagget that
Queen Anne is Dead; Chap. LXXII.,
The Chimes of Saxton, page 617.
Ancient Art, Caricature in, 98.
Balzac in Undress: The Jardies; Balzac
at Tea; The Seal Ring of the Prophet;
More Golden Dreams; The Wonderful
Walnut Tree; Balzac's Famous Debts;
Balzac and the Garde Champetre; The
Jardies in a State of Siege; Balzac's
Night Walks; Balzac as a Botanist;
Balzac in search of an expressive Name;
Balzac as Feuilletonist; Balzac takes
a Collaborateur; Balzac as Dramatist-
"Vautrin," Les Ressources de Quinola,
603-17.
BEATRICE: By Hyacinth Con Carolan.
Scene - The Island of Torcello; the
Fisherman's Cottage, 110; a Rich Cham-
ber in the Palazzo of Nerea, 113.
Brehon Manuscripts, The, 13.
Caricature in Ancient Art: Transcendental
Causes of Laughter; Vulgar Causes of
Laughter; Caricature in Egypt; Car-
icature among the Greeks; Our Obliga-
tions to Pliny; What we Owe to the
Frescoes; Sterne's Obligations to the
Antique; How the Crisbet and the Fox
figured in the Frescoes; Noxious Insects
in Amber; the Ancestors of the Lilli-
putians; the Ceramic Art in Gaul; Our
Own Legacies (?) to Posterity; the
Author of Ancient Caricature - 98-
109.
Carols from the Cancioneros: By Denis
Florence MacCarthy, 687.
Cattle Disease of 1744, The, 350.
Charing-Cross Cigar, A.: By Mortimer
Collins, 463.
Cowardice and Courage: an Essay, 586.
Dreams, Omens, and Predictions, 506.
English Monachism, Rise and Progress of,
24, 151, 403, 643.
Episodes of the Irish Jacobite Wars, Some,
699.
Fenianism: Its antecedents; the position of
the Roman Catholic Clergy with regard
to it; its American calculations; the
effect on it of the close of the Civil Strife
in America; the "Moderate Party" in
Ireland, 116-120.
Fenian Conspiracy, The, in England and
Ireland: Story of the Plot; the Incep-
tion and Development of the Conspiracy