Chapter I. Containing instructions very necessary to be perused by modern critics.
Chapter IV. Containing infallible nostrums for procuring universal disesteem and hatred.
Chapter V. Showing who the amiable lady, and her unamiable maid, were.
Chapter VII. In which are concluded the adventures that happened at the inn at Upton.
Chapter VIII. In which the history goes backward.
Chapter IX. The escape of Sophia.
Chapter I. A crust for the critics.
Chapter II. The adventures which Sophia met with after her leaving Upton.
Chapter III. A very short chapter, in which however is a sun, a moon, a star, and an angel.
Chapter IV. The history of Mrs Fitzpatrick.
Chapter V. In which the history of Mrs Fitzpatrick is continued.
Chapter VI. In which the mistake of the landlord throws Sophia into a dreadful consternation.
Chapter VII. In which Mrs Fitzpatrick concludes her history.
Chapter X. Containing a hint or two concerning virtue, and a few more concerning suspicion.
Chapter IV. The adventure of a beggar-man.
Chapter V. Containing more adventures which Mr Jones and his companion met on the road.
Chapter IX. Containing little more than a few odd observations.
Chapter X. In which Mr Jones and Mr Dowling drink a bottle together.
Chapter XIII. A dialogue between Jones and Partridge.
Chapter XIV. What happened to Mr Jones in his journey from St Albans.
Chapter II. What befel Mr Jones on his arrival in London.
Chapter III. A project of Mrs Fitzpatrick, and her visit to Lady Bellaston.