| Blood | |
| Nathaniel Murphy in His Sister's Bedroom, 1798 | p. 13 |
| He Contemplates a Stolen Bozzetto of Canova's Cupid and Psyche, 1811 | p. 14 |
| He Remembers a Bottle of Leoville-Barton, 1807 | p. 16 |
| He Thinks of the Meaning of Constant Happiness, 1807 | p. 17 |
| He Considers His Wife, 1789 | p. 18 |
| He Considers His Great Luck, 1812 | p. 19 |
| He Remembers a Girl of the Callanans, 1829 | p. 20 |
| In Illness, He Considers His Wife, 1827 | p. 21 |
| He Watches His Wife Create a Silhouette Portrait, 1812 | p. 22 |
| He Loses a Silver Ring of M. Billon, 1814 | p. 23 |
| He Turns to His Wife, 1797 | p. 24 |
| He Feels Moisture Falling, August 1st, 1802 | p. 26 |
| He Spends Christmas at Clonakilty, 1809 | p. 27 |
| He Buries His Father, 1809 | p. 28 |
| He Goes Through His Father's Belongings, 1809 | p. 29 |
| He Writes to His Estranged Sister, 1803 | p. 30 |
| He Walks with His Son, 1799 | p. 31 |
| He Mourns for His Nephew, Lt. Alan Mundy, 1814 | p. 32 |
| At the Annual Grand Masquerade, 1826 | p. 33 |
| He Meets His Future Sister-in-Law, Miss Teresette O'Neill, 1811 | p. 34 |
| He Considers His Wife's Three Cats, 1793 | p. 36 |
| He Recalls a Letter from Home, 1771 | p. 37 |
| He Considers the Rev. Dill-Wallace, 1817 | p. 38 |
| He at the Grave of Amade Dill-Wallace, 1800 | p. 40 |
| He Collects His Framed Etching of Cardinal Consalvi, 1823 | p. 42 |
| He Prays to the Memory of Cardinal Ludovisi, 1769 | p. 43 |
| He Contemplates His Failure, Rome, 1772 | p. 44 |
| He Serves Mass at Advent, Rome, 1771 | p. 45 |
| Memory | p. 49 |
| Trade | |
| Nathaniel Murphy Disembarks at Passage, 1801 | p. 157 |
| He Considers His New Eye-Glasses, 1800 | p. 158 |
| He Recalls the Jeanie, America-Bound, 1775 | p. 159 |
| At the Ordination of Father Layton, 1803 | p. 160 |
| He Considers Four Young Nuns, 1789 | p. 161 |
| He Considers Bishop John Bernstein, 1789 | p. 162 |
| He Meets Eight Presbyterians Upon the Quays, 1829 | p. 163 |
| He Addresses the Committee of Merchants, 1818 | p. 164 |
| He Dines at the Nile Street Coffee-House, 1800 | p. 165 |
| At East Ferry, 1801 | p. 166 |
| He Remembers His First Meeting with James Barry, 1769 | p. 167 |
| At the Castel S. Angelo in His Youth, 1770 | p. 169 |
| He Remembers Cholera and Pine Trees at Naples, 1772 | p. 170 |
| At the Adelphi, Thinking of James Barry, 1788 | p. 171 |
| He Remembers the Val di Comino, 1770 | p. 173 |
| He Recalls James Barry R.A., 1812 | p. 174 |
| He Reconsiders Mr Barry's Neglected Gifts, 1830 | p. 175 |
| His Tragic Sense of Life, 1831 | p. 176 |
| He is Painted by Mr Daniel Maclise, 1830 | p. 177 |
| He Reads a Poem of Dr Hickey's from Lisbon, 1831 | p. 178 |
| He Buys a Copy of Childe Harold, 1814 | p. 180 |
| At Mr O'Ferrell's New Villa, 1826 | p. 181 |
| He Hears Memory and Praise of Bishop Clayton, 1797 | p. 183 |
| He Learns of the Death of J.J. Callanan, 1829 | p. 184 |
| He Contemplates the Autumn of 1814 | p. 186 |
| He Witnesses Another Hanging, 1813 | p. 187 |
| He Meets Lt. Hennessy, Cork Militia, 1799 | p. 188 |
| He Looks Upon Another Dead Child, 1803 | p. 189 |
| He Witnesses a Military Execution, 1804 | p. 190 |
| He Considers the Misfortunes of Dublin, 1793 | p. 191 |
| He Comes Upon the Cork Militia, 1798 | p. 192 |
| He Purchases a Street Ballad, 1789 | p. 193 |
| He Walks the Marsh, 1824 | p. 194 |
| He Loses a Silver Buckle, 1797 | p. 185 |
| His Tattered Copy of The Mineral Waters of Ireland, 1794 | p. 196 |
| He Sees a Warehouse Burning, August, 1798 | p. 197 |
| He is Overwhelmed by Edinburgh in Old Age, 1831 | p. 198 |
| He Encounters the Poor of Cork Harbour, 1829 | p. 199 |
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