| | | PAGE |
| | Introduction | [ix]. |
| I. | The Guru and his Greedy Disciple | [1] |
| II. | The Donkey-man and the Precious Stone | [10] |
| III. | The Fakir and the Bhânds | [17] |
| IV. | The Miserly Moslem Priest and his Wife | [22] |
| V. | The King’s Son, his Friend, and the Fakir | [35] |
| VI. | Secundur Zulf-Kur-Nain | [43] |
| VII. | The Farmer, the Crocodile, and the Jackal | [54] |
| VIII. | Faith Opposed to Magic | [61] |
| IX. | The Fakir and his Quarrelsome Wife | [70] |
| X. | The Farmer and the Revenue Sowar | [76] |
| XI. | Mūltān as Hot as Fire | [79] |
| XII. | Shāitān and his Savage Wife | [84] |
| XIII. | Sakhi, the Generous Moslem | [91] |
| XIV. | The Priest, the Washerman, and the Ass | [104] |
| XV. | Akbar and his Minister | [112] |
| XVI. | The Rajah, his Minister, and the Shepherd | [121] |
| XVII. | The Banjāra, his Dog, and the Banker | [128] |
| XVIII. | How an Evil Spirit was Exorcised | [138] |
| XIX. | Bahadūr Singh and the Blind Beggar | [144] |