A
Adams, Herbert—
A Virtue of Necessity[7]
Alexander, Geo.—
Introduction to "Art of Elocution"[4]
America Abroad (J. W. Cundall)[21]
Anna Marsden's Experiment (Ellen Williams)[15]
Asmodeus (edited by Justin Hannaford)[6]
Ashes Tell no Tales (Mrs A. S. Bradshaw)[7]
Ascher, Isidore G.—
A Social Upheaval[8]
B
Bachelor Ballads (H. A. Spurr)[21]
Beckford, Geo.—
Vathek[6]
Bible Stories Retold[4]
Bradshaw, Mrs Albert S.—
Ashes Tell no Tales[7]
Gates of Temptation[14]
Bye-ways of Crime (R. J. Power-Berrey)[4]
C
Carnie, T. West—
In Quaint East Anglia[5]
Comedy of Temptation (T. Coutts)[9]
Coutts, Tristram—
Pottle Papers[20]
Comedy of Temptation[9]
Pottle Progress[21]
Cundall, J. W.—
London[21]
America Abroad[21]
Cry in the Night (A. Golsworthy)[7]
D
Daniels, Heber—
Dona Rufina[13]
Darab's Wine-Cup (B. Kennedy)[16]
Dan Leno, Hys Booke (Dan Leno)[20]
Death and the Woman (A. Golsworthy)[18]
Devil in a Domino (C. L'Epine)[17]
Devil on Two Sticks (Le Sage)[6]
De Brémont, Comtesse—
A Son of Africa[7]
The Gentleman Digger[9]
De Soisson—
The Path of the Soul[5]
Dolomite Cavern (W. P. Kelly)[11]
Dona Rufina (Heber Daniels)[13]
E
East Anglia, In Quaint (T. W. Carnie)[21]
"English Writers of To-day" Series—
Rudyard Kipling (G. F. Monkshood)[1]
Thomas Hardy (W. L. Courtney)[2]
Geo. Meredith (Walter Jerrold)[2]
Bret Harte (T. E. Pemberton)[2]
Richard Le Gallienne (C. R. Gull)[2]
Arthur Wing Pinero (H. Fyffe)[2]
W. E. Henley (G. Gamble)[2]
English Parnassian School (Sir G. Douglas)[2]
Realistic Writers (J. Hannaford)[2]
Escott, T. H. S.—
A Trip to Paradoxia[3]
Elocution, The Art of (Ross Ferguson)[4]
Epicurean, The (edited by Justin Hannaford)[6]
F
Fame, the Fiddler (S. J. A. Fitz-Gerald)[16]
Famous Hamlets (C. Scott)[4]
Ferguson, Ross—
The Art of Elocution[4]
Fetters of Fire (Compton Reade)[7]
Fellow-Passengers (R. Pyke)[18]
Fitz-Gerald, S. J. Adair—
Fame, the Fiddler[16]
That Fascinating Widow[17]
The Grand Panjandrum[19]
G
Galt, John—
Ringan Gilhaize[6]
Gates of Temptation, The (Mrs A. S. Bradshaw)[14]
Gentleman Digger, The (Comtesse de Brémont)[9]
Girl of the North, A (H. Milicite)[7]
Golsworthy, Arnold—
A Cry in the Night[7]
Death and the Woman[18]
Grayl, Druid—
Nonsense Numbers, etc.[19]
Pillypingle Pastorals[20]
Grand Panjandrum, The (S. J. A. Fitz-Gerald)[19]
Green, Percy B.—
A History of Nursery Rhymes[5]
Green Passion (A. P. Vert)[10]
Guides, etc.[21]
H
Hall, Sydney—
Temptation of Edith Watson[9]
Hamlets, Some Famous (C. Scott)[4]
Herman, Henry—
The Sword of Fate[9]
Hypocrite, The (Anonymous)[13]
I
In Monte Carlo (H. Sienkiewicz)[12]
In Quaint East Anglia (T. W. Carnie)[21]
J
Jocular Jingles (Druid Grayl)[19]
Johnson, Dr—
Rasselas[6]
K
Kelly, W. Patrick—
The Dolomite Cavern[11]
Kennedy, Bart—
A Man Adrift[5]
Darab's Wine-Cup[16]
The Wandering Romanoff[13]
L
Lady of the Leopard, The (C. L'Epine)[12]
Lady of Criswold, The (L. Outram)[14]
Le Sage—
Asmodeus; or, The Devil on Two Sticks[6]
L'Epine, Charles—
The Devil in a Domino[17]
The Lady of the Leopard[12]
Leno, Dan—
Dan Leno, Hys Booke[20]
Longstaff, W. Luther—
Weeds and Flowers[6]
The Tragedy of the Lady Palmist[12]
Lord Jimmy (G. Martyn)[14]
London (J. W. Cundall)[21]
M
Man Adrift, A (B. Kennedy)[5]
Madonna Mia (C. Scott)[11]
Martyn, Geo.—
Lord Jimmy[14]
Martin, Ernest—
Shadows[18]
M'Millan, Mrs Alec—
The Weird Well[9]
Miss Malevolent (Author of "The Hypocrite")[9]
Milicite, Helen—
A Girl of the North[7]
Monkshood, G. F.—
Woman and the Wits[5]
Rudyard Kipling[1]
My Lady Ruby[12]
Moore, Thomas—
The Epicurean[6]
Mora (T. W. Speight)[7]
My Lady Ruby (G. F. Monkshood)[12]
N
New Tale of the Terror, A (Author of "The Hypocrite")[8]
Nonsense Numbers (D. Grayl)[19]
Nursery Rhymes, A History of (P. B. Green)[5]
O
Obscure Apostle (Orzeszko)[7]
Outrageous Fortune (Anonymous)[10]
Outram, Leonard—
The Lady of Criswold[14]
Owen, J. L.—
Seven Nights with Satan[10]
P
Path of the Soul (C. S. de Soisson)[5]
People, Plays, and Places (C. Scott)[3]
Pelican Tails (F. M. Boyd, etc.)[17]
Pillypingle Pastorals (D. Grayl)[20]
Pootle Papers, The (T. Coutts)[20]
Pootle's Progress, The (T. Coutts)[21]
Power-Berrey, R. J.—
Bye-Ways of Crime[4]
Pyke, Rivington—
The Fellow-Passengers[18]
R
Rae-Brown, Campbell—
The Shadow on the Manse[12]
The Resurrection of His Grace[15]
Rasselas (Edited by Justin Hannaford)[6]
Reade, Compton—
Fetters of Fire[7]
Resurrection of His Grace (C. Rae-Brown)[15]
Ringan Gilhaize (Edited by Sir G. Douglas)[6]
S
Sadleir, Mrs Maria M.—
Such is the Law[7]
Scott, Clement—
The Wheel of Life[2]
Madonna Mia[11]
People, Plays, and Places[3]
Sisters by the Sea[3]
Famous Hamlets[4]
Seven Nights with Satan (J. L. Owen)[10]
Shadows (E. Martin)[18]
Shams (Anonymous)[8]
Shadow on The Manse (C. Rae-Brown)[12]
Sienkiewicz, Henryk—
In Monte Carlo[12]
Sisters by the Sea (C. Scott)[3]
Son of Africa, A (Comtesse de Brémont)[7]
Social Upheaval, A (I. G. Ascher)[8]
Speight, T. W.—
Mora; One Woman's History[7]
Spurr, Harry A.—
Bachelor Ballads[21]
Stage, Year Book of (Greening and Hannaford)[5]
Such is the Law (M. M. Sadleir)[7]
Sword of Fate, The (H. Herman)[9]
T
Temptation of Edith Watson (S. Hall)[9]
That Fascinating Widow (S. J. A. Fitz-Gerald)[17]
Thompson, Creswick J.—
Zoroastro[9]
Tragedy of the Lady Palmist, The (W. L. Longstaff)[12]
Trip to Paradoxia, A (T. H. S. Escott)[3]
V
Vathek (Edited by Justin Hannaford)[6]
Vert, Anthony P.—
The Green Passion[10]
Virtue of Necessity, A (H. Adams)[7]
W
Wandering Romanoff, The (B. Kennedy)[13]
Weeds and Flowers (W. L. Longstaff)[6]
Weird Well, The (A. M'Millan)[9]
Wheel of Life, The (C. Scott)[2]
Williams, Ellen—
Anna Marsden's Experiment[15]
Woman and the Wits (G. F. Monkshood)[5]
Y
Year Book of the Stage (Greening and Hannaford)[5]
Z
Zoroastro (C. J. S. Thompson)[9]

Transcriber's note

The following changes have been made to the text:

[Page 13]: Was chishmaclavers (refers to my conscience—conscience again! Hae, Davie, tak thir clishmaclavers to Andrew Oliphant. It'll be spunk to his zeal. We maun strike our adversaries wi' terror, and if we canna wile them back to the)

[Page 15]: Was land (youngsters; and bidding him draw near and to kneel down, he laid his hand on his head and mumbled a benedicite; the which, my grandfather said, was as the smell of rottenness to his spirit, the lascivious)

[Page 17]: Was hyprocrisy (heart was so stung with what he heard, that he could scarcely feign the necessary hypocrisy which the peril he stood in required—"Is this Mill in the castle?")

[Page 52]: Was they they (No sooner were they well gone than my grandfather came from his hiding-place, and twisting a wisp of straw round his horse's feet, that)

[Page 59]: Was peebles (and he forgot, in hearkening to the cheerful prattle of the Garnock waters, as they swirled among the pebbles by the roadside, the pageantries of that mere bodily worship which had worked on the)

[Page 67]: Was drwan (seek redress as became true lieges, by representation and supplication. Accordingly a paper was drawn up, wherein they set forth how, for conscience sake, the Reformed had been long afflicted with banishment,)