Country Luck.

BY
J O H N H A B B E R T O N,
AUTHOR OF “BRUETON’S BAYOU,” ETC.
PHILADELPHIA:
J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY.
1887.
All Rights Reserved.

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Copyright, 1887, by J. B. Lippincott Company.
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CONTENTS.

CHAPTER PAGE
[I.]—How it came about[5]
[II.]—Family Councils[16]
[III.]—“Down to York”[27]
[IV.]—The Tramlay Reception[36]
[V.]—Not so Dreadful after all[44]
[VI.]—Reconstruction[52]
[VII.]—At her Side[62]
[VIII.]—Himself for Company[74]
[IX.]—News, yet no News[80]
[X.]—Agnes Dinon’s Party[88]
[XI.]—Drifting from Moorings[101]
[XII.]—Iron looks up[109]
[XIII.]—“While yet afar off”[117]
[XIV.]—Going Home[126]
[XV.]—The Fatted Calf,—but the Neighbors, too[135]
[XVI.]—More News that was not enough[142]
[XVII.]—Father and Son[149]
[XVIII.]—The New Clerk[158]
[XIX.]—Hopes and Fears[168]
[XX.]—An Old Question repeated[178]
[XXI.]—Haynton rouses itself[186]
[XXII.]—Several Green-eyed Monsters[196]
[XXIII.]—E. & W.[205]
[XXIV.]—Iron looks still higher[212]
[XXV.]—E. & W. again[220]
[XXVI.]—Some Minds relieved[229]
[XXVII.]—Among the Ruins[240]
[XXVIII.]—“And e’en the Fates were Smiling”[249]
[XXIX.]—So they were Married[257]

C O U N T R Y L U C K.