| Martha Hilton. “With her sweeping brocades and a cushion towering upon her powdered head” | [Frontispiece]. |
| Priscilla at the spinning wheel | [14] |
| “In his rough cradle by the sounding sea” | [17] |
| Rose Standish | [21] |
| “The daring and spirited girl” | [25] |
| “Or in calmer moments reading the blessed promises of His word” | [29] |
| Miles Standish | [33] |
| “Up and down the sands I’d pace” | [36] |
| “Her respected parent” | [37] |
| “There, too, came Priscilla” | [41] |
| “Ponds set like jewels in the ring of the green woods” | [43] |
| “First happened on the Mayflower” | [45] |
| “The blushing Sabbatia” | [47] |
| John Alden | [49] |
| “Silvers its wave, its rustling wave” | [51] |
| The wedding procession | [53] |
| Grape-vine | [56] |
| Woodbine | [57] |
| The ships of the merchants | [59] |
| “Up-stairs and down-stairs ran the streets” | [64] |
| “Houses set ‘catty cornered’” | [65] |
| “An old Marbleheader” | [67] |
| “The solid dignity of the old Town House” | [69] |
| “The old graveyard” | [71] |
| “The wild azalea” | [74] |
| “The blackberry clings and crowds” | [75] |
| Butterfly | [75] |
| “Again he came riding” | [77] |
| “Bravely attired in small clothes and wigs” | [81] |
| “She learned to play on the harpsichord” | [83] |
| Frankland | [85] |
| “Tragic battlings of heart and conscience” | [87] |
| “All the more did she turn to Frankland” | [89] |
| “The giant box and a few ancient trees” | [92] |
| “At the banquets” | [93] |
| “His ancestral home” | [95] |
| “The opera was the finest on the continent” | [97] |
| Agnes Surriage | [99] |
| “They again visited Lisbon” | [102] |
| “Married a wealthy banker of Chichester” | [104] |
| “The little figure with the swishing bucket” | [108] |
| “Sly damsels in Puritan caps” | [110] |
| “Gold laced dandies at Newport” | [111] |
| “Nor need link herself with the neighboring yokel whom Providence had assigned her” | [113] |
| Where Governor Wentworth was born | [114] |
| “A fishmonger in London” | [115] |
| “He had the mortification to see her prefer one Shortridge, a mechanic” | [117] |
| “His snuff-boxes and his bowls” | [118] |
| Governor Benning Wentworth | [119] |
| Wentworth house at Little Harbor | [121] |
| “Her strategic eye upon master’s deciduous charms” | [123] |
| “The great buck of his day” | [127] |
| “Fiddling at Stoodley’s far into the morning” | [131] |
| “Wharves now rotting along the harbor-borders” | [133] |
| Old houses | [139] |
| An old English church | [139] |
| Picturesque barns | [140] |
| The Weston flag-staff | [141] |
| “Houses sheltered by great elms” | [142] |
| “Past fertile farms” | [142] |
| “Over picturesque stone bridges” | [143] |
| “Here is a noble elm” | [144] |
| The Wayside Inn, Sudbury | [145] |
| Great elms at Hopkinton | [149] |
| Shirley Place | [151] |
| The Royall House, Medford | [153] |
| Medford Square | [155] |
| Street leading to Moll Pitcher’s | [156] |
| Moll Pitcher’s house and the graveyard | [157] |
| Some fishermen’s hats | [159] |
| Circle Street and Floyd Ireson’s house | [161] |
| “This is where the sailors in pigtails and petticoats used to be” | [165] |
| St. John’s, Portsmouth | [168] |
| The Gardiner House and the linden | [169] |
| Stoodley’s | [171] |
| Plymouth, the home of Priscilla | [172] |
| A country road | [173] |
| Decorative designs | [Title], [7], [8], [9], [12], [105], [106], [134], [175] |
| Initials | [15], [63], [109], [137] |