Page
Lady Jean, a Tale,[1]
Fallacies of the Young.—“Fathers have Flinty Hearts,”[27]
Bruntfield, a Tale of the Sixteenth Century,[32]
The Passing Crowd,[41]
A Tale of the Forty-Five,[44]
Removals,[61]
Victims,[71]
Fallacies of the Young.—“Acquaintances,”[83]
Subjects of Conversation,[86]
Secure Ones,[89]
To Scotland,[98]
Story of Mrs Macfarlane,[100]
The Downdraught,[118]
Tale of the Silver Heart,[134]
Cultivations,[152]
Fits of Thrift,[157]
Susan Hamilton, a Tale of Village Life,[163]
Flitting Day,[182]
Fallacies of the Young.—“Debtors and Creditors,”[193]
General Invitations,[197]
Confessors,[205]
A Chapter of Political Economy,[209]
The Drama,[214]
Recognitions,[218]
The Ladye that I Love,[226]
Pay your Debt![227]
Children,[238]
Tea-Drinking,[246]
Husbands and Wives,[249]
They,[255]
Relations,[258]
The Strangers’ Nook,[261]
Nobody to be Despised,[265]
Trust to Yourself,[270]
Leisure,[275]
My Native Bay,[278]
Advancement in Life,[279]
Controllers-General,[286]
A Turn for Business,[291]
Setting up,[296]
Consuls,[303]
Country and Town Acquaintances,[309]
Where is my Trunk?[314]

SPIRIT

OF

CHAMBERS’S JOURNAL.


LADY JEAN.—A Tale.

The Yerl o’ Wigton had three dauchters,

Oh, braw walie! they were bonnie!

The youngest o’ them, and the bonniest too,