Concerning accepting an invitation from Hunt to visit "for a dish of tea and a gossip", Webster's acceptance of Hunt's play; Edmund's appreciation of Hunt's kindness and Ollier's son Charles' street patrols.
Concerning Middleton's Shelley and his writings; its misinformation; the impossibility of writing a complete account of Shelley's life until all of his contemporaries are dead; the subject of the forgeries of letters; his willingness to aid Edmund...
[Officers and members] -- Clubs represented -- Report of Credential committee -- [Minutes of the thirty-third annual session...] -- [Officers and members] -- Clubs represented -- [Minutes of the thirty-fourth annual session...] -- Officers for...
Concerning his sending a number of Blackwood's to Ollier and another volume to Edmund Ollier; his having marked a quotation from Sherlock in the Spectator.
Concerning the letter Ollier sent him [upon the death of Marianne]; his thankfulness that life's sorrows have made him patient and the comfort he receives in the belief that "the next world must be the piecing out and completion of our yearning...