his last evening with Field, 307, 308
Thorne, Charles H., Jr., i., 260
Ticknor & Co., ii., 107
Tilden, S.J., ii., 253
“To a Blue Jay,” i., 334-336
“To Clara Doty Bates,” ii., 85, 86
Todd, Charles S., ii., 319
Tree, Judge Lambert, lampooned by Field, ii., 214-217
“Tribune Primer,” i., 146;
not Field’s first book, ii., 107
“Tribute of the Thrush, The,” ii., 320
Tufts, Rev. James, i., 54;
educates Eugene Field, i., 73-78
“Valentine, A,” ii., 129
“Vision of the Holy Grail, The,” i., 333
Walters Gallery, The, described, ii., 16-21
“Wanderer, The,” i., 154-157
Ward, Mrs. Humphry, believes two of Field’s
yarns, ii., 153-155
Warner, Charles Dudley, i., 134
Waterloo, Stanley, i., 98
“Werewolf, The,” ii., 115
Wilcox, Ella Wheeler, involved in a controversy over
“Love and
Laughter,” i., 326-328
Wilde, Oscar, impersonated by Field, i., 171, 172
Wilson, Francis, i., 96, 148;
made fun of, 229, 230;
issues “Echoes from the Sabine Farm,”
ii., 155-157, 165, 166;
buys Sir Walter Scott’s chair, 190,
191
Wilson & Son, John, letters to Slason Thompson concerning
Field’s
“Little Books,”
ii., 133-136
“Winfreda,” ii., 129
“Wit of the Silurian Age,” i., 291
“With Trumpet and Drum,” ii., 264
Wood, Mrs. Hanna, i., 24, 25
“Wynken, Blynken, and Nod,” ii., 116
“Yvytot,” ii., 146, 147

