| | PAGE | I. | The Love-Light. | 1 | II. | Runs Alongside the Making of a Minister. | 7 | III. | The Night-Watchers. | 17 | IV. | First Coming of the Egyptian Woman. | 30 | V. | A Warlike Chapter, Culminating in the Flouting of the Minister by the Woman. | 42 | VI. | In Which the Soldiers Meet the Amazons of Thrums. | 50 | VII. | Has the Folly of Looking into a Woman’s Eyes by way of Text. | 62 | VIII. | 3 A.M.—Monstrous Audacity of the Woman. | 69 | IX. | The Woman Considered in Absence—Adventures of a Military Cloak. | 79 | X. | First Sermon Against Women. | 89 | XI. | Tells in a Whisper of Man’s Fall During the Curling Season. | 100 | XII. | Tragedy of a Mud House. | 110 | XIII. | Second Coming of the Egyptian Woman. | 117 | XIV. | The Minister Dances to the Woman’s Piping. | 125 | XV. | The Minister Bewitched—Second Sermon against Women. | 135 | XVI. | Continued Misbehaviour of the Egyptian Woman. | 143 | XVII. | Intrusion of Haggart into These Pages against the Author’s Wish. | 151 | XVIII. | Caddam—Love Leading to a Rupture. | 161 | XIX. | Circumstances Leading to the First Sermon in Approval of Women. | 169 | XX. | End of the State of Indecision. | 177 | XXI. | Night—Margaret—Flashing of a Lantern. | 186 | XXII. | Lovers. | 196 | XXIII. | Contains a Birth, Which is Sufficient for One Chapter. | 205 | XXIV. | The New World, and the Woman Who May Not Dwell Therein. | 211 | XXV. | Beginning of the Twenty-Four Hours. | <
AN EDINBURGH ELEVEN
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