342
A house of correction 342
Four hundred single cells 343
Comparison with English prisons 344
Inns and landlords 344
At Washington 344
Hotel extortion 345
Philadelphia penitentiary 345
The solitary system 345
Solitary prisoners 346
Talk with inspectors 346
Bookseller Carey 347
Changes of temperature 347
Henry Clay 348
Proposed journeyings 348
Letters from England 349
Congress and Senate 349
Leading American statesmen 349
The people of America 350
Englishmen "located" there 350
"Surgit amari aliquid" 351
The copyright petition 351
At Richmond 351
Irving appointed to Spain 352
Experience of a slave city 353
Incidents of slave-life 353
Discussion with a slaveholder 353
Feeling of South to England 354
Levees at Richmond 354
One more banquet accepted 355
My gift of _Shakspeare_ 355
Home letters and fancies 356
Self-reproach of a noble nature 356
Washington Irving's leave-taking 357
CHAPTER XXII. 1842.
Pages 358-380.
CANAL-BOAT JOURNEYS: BOUND FAR WEST. AET. 30.
Character in the letters 358
The _Notes_ less satisfactory 359
Personal narrative in letters 359
The copyright differe
|