| ADVENTURE | PAGE |
| I.— | The outcasting of Cleg Kelly | [1] |
| II.— | The burning of the Whinny Knowes | [5] |
| III.— | Why Cleg Kelly hated his father | [13] |
| IV.— | How Isbel Kelly heard sweet music | [21] |
| V.— | The brigands of the city | [29] |
| VI.— | Cleg turns burglar | [38] |
| VII.— | The adventure of the cockroaches | [45] |
| VIII.— | The flight of Sheemus | [51] |
| IX.— | The warming of the Drabble | [57] |
| X.— | The squaring of the police | [62] |
| XI.— | The boy in the wooden hut | [68] |
| XII.— | Vara Kavannah of the Tinklers' Lands | [72] |
| XIII.— | Cleg's second burglary | [80] |
| XIV.— | Cleg turns diplomatist | [86] |
| XV.— | The fire in Callendar's yard | [94] |
| XVI.— | In the key of boy natural | [101] |
| XVII.— | The Knuckle Dusters | [110] |
| XVIII.— | Big Smith subdues the Knuckle Dusters | [116] |
| XIX.— | The pilgrims of the penny gaff | [123] |
| XX.— | The difficulties of Adonis betwixt two Venuses | [129] |
| XXI.— | An idyll of Bogie roll | [139] |
| XXII.— | The seduction of a bailie | [143] |
| XXIII.— | The amorous adventures of a night-shift man | [147] |
| XXIV.— | The crook in the lot of Cleaver's boy | [153] |
| XXV.— | A comely Providence in a new frock | [157] |
| XXVI.— | R. S. V. P. | [163] |
| XXVII.— | Janet of Inverness tastes the herb bitter-sweet | [167] |
| XXVIII.— | The engine-driver with the beard | [172] |
| XXIX.— | Muckle Alick's Bannockburn | [177] |
| XXX.— | How Geordie Grierson's engine broke its buffer | [181] |
| XXXI.— | The "awfu' woman" | [184] |
| XXXII.— | Maid Greatheart and her pilgrims | [190] |
| XXXIII.— | The babes in the haystack | [194] |
| XXXIV.— | That of Mary Bell, byre lass | [198] |
| XXXV.— | The knight in the soft hat | [202] |
| XXXVI.— | The madness of Hugh Boy | [207] |
| XXXVII.— | Boy Hugh finds out the nature of a kiss | [212] |
| XXXVIII.— | Of Miss Briggs and her ten cats | [216] |
| XXXIX.— | The adventure of Snap's porridge | [222] |
| XL.— | A new kind of hero | [227] |
| XLI.— | "Twa laddies—and a lassie" | [233] |
| XLII.— | Muckle Alick considers | [243] |
| XLIII.— | Town knight and country knight | [247] |
| XLIV.— | Cleg relapses into paganism | [253] |
| XLV.— | The cabin on the summit | [262] |
| XLVI.— | A child of the devil | [268] |
| XLVII.— | The sleep of James Cannon, signalman | [275] |
| XLVIII.— | Muckle Alick sees the distant signal stand at Clear | [284] |
| XLIX.— | Cleg collects tickets | [291] |
| L.— | General Theophilus Ruff | [300] |
| LI.— | The General's establishment | [309] |
| LII.— | The three coffins in the strong-room | [318] |
| LIII.— | A stormy morning at Loch Spellanderie | [326] |
| LIV.— | Kit Kennedy's farewell | [335] |
| LV.— | A young man's fancy | [341] |
| LVI.— | The voices in the marsh | [349] |
| LVII.— | Fighting the beasts | [359] |
| LVIII.— | Within the red door | [367] |
| LIX.— | The beech hedge | [377] |
| LX.— | Cleg's treasure-trove comes to him | [383] |