Some typographical errors have been corrected;.
CONTENTS.
[Part I. ]
[Chapter I., ][II., ][ III. ]
[Part II. ]
[IV., ][V. ]
[Part III. ]
[VI., ][VII. ]
[Part IV. ]
[VIII., ][IX. ]
[Part V. ]
[X., ][XI. ]
[Part VI. ]
[XII., ][XIII. ]
[Part VII. ]
[XIV., ][XV. ]
[Part VIII. ]
[XVI., ][XVII., ][XVIII. ]
[Part IX. ]
[XIX., ][XX., ][XXI. ]
[Part X. ]
[XXII., ][XXIII., ][XXIV. ]
[Part XI. ]
[XXV., ][XXVI., ][XXVII. ]
(etext transcriber's note)

A PRINCESS OF THULE.

BY
W I L L I A M B L A C K,
AUTHOR OF
“A DAUGHTER OF HETH,” “MADCAP VIOLET,” “STRANGE ADVENTURES OF A PHAETON,” Etc.
NEW YORK:
JOHN W. LOVELL COMPANY,
14 & 16 Vesey Street.

A PRINCESS OF THULE.

———
By WILLIAM BLACK.
———

CHAPTER I.
“LOCHABER NO MORE.”

ON a small headland of the distant island of Lewis, an old man stood looking out on a desolate waste of rain-beaten sea. It was a wild and wet day. From out of the lowering Southwest fierce gusts of wind were driving up volumes and flying rags of clouds, and sweeping onward at the same time the gathering waves that fell hissing and thundering on the shore. Far as the eye could reach, the sea and the air and the sky seemed to be one indistinguishable mass of whirling and hurrying vapor, as if beyond this point there were no more land, but only wind and water, and the confused and awful voice of their strife.