L. DOUGALLTHE MERMAID.CONTENTS.
- CHAPTER
- [I.] — The bent twig
- [II.] — The sad-eyed child
- [III.] — Lost in the sea
- [IV.] — A quiet life
- [V.] — Seen through blear eyes
- [VI.] — "From hour to hour we ripe"
- [VII.] — "A sea change"
- [VIII.] — Belief in the impossible
- [IX.] — The sea-maid's music
- [X.] — Towed by the beard
- [XI.] — Years of discretion
- [I.] — The hand that beckoned
- [II.] — The isles of St. Magdalen
- [III.] — Between the surf and the sand
- [IV.] — Where the devil lived
- [V.] — Devilry
- [VI.] — The sea-maid
- [VII.] — The grave lady
- [VIII.] — How they lived on The Cloud
- [IX.] — The sick and the dead
- [X.] — A light-giving word
- [XI.] — The lady's husband
- [XII.] — The maiden invented
- [XIII.] — White birds; white snow; white thoughts
- [XIV.] — The marriage scene
- [I.] — How we hunted the seals
- [II.] — Once more the vision
- [III.] — "Love, I speak to thy face"
- [IV.] — Hope born of spring
- [V.] — To the higher court
- [VI.] — "The night is dark"
- [VII.] — The wild waves whist
- [VIII.] — "God's in his heaven"
- [IX.] — "God's puppets, best and worst"
- [X.] — "Death shrive thy soul!"
- [XI.] — The riddle of life
- [XII.] — To call a spirit from the vasty deep
- [XIII.] — The evening and the morning