THE STANDARD BEARER. CHAPTER I. THE YEAR TERRIBLE. CHAPTER II. THE BLOOD OF THE MARTYRS. CHAPTER III. THE LITTLE LADY OF EARLSTOUN. CHAPTER V. I CONSTRUCT A RAFT. [ The Narrative is again from the MS. of Quintin MacClellan. ] CHAPTER VI. ACROSS THE MOONLIGHT. CHAPTER VIII. THE MUSTER OF THE HILL FOLK. CHAPTER IX. I MEET MARY GORDON FOR THE SECOND TIME. CHAPTER X. THE BLUE BANNER IS UP. CHAPTER XII. THE LASS IN THE KIRKYARD. CHAPTER XIII. MY LADY OF PRIDE. CHAPTER XIV. THE TALE OF MESS HAIRRY. CHAPTER XVI. THE CORBIES AT THE FEAST. CHAPTER XVII. THE BONNY LASS OF EARLSTOUN. CHAPTER XVIII. ONE WAY OF LOVE. CHAPTER XIX. ANOTHER WAY OF LOVE. ( Comment and Addition by Hob MacClellan. ) CHAPTER XX. MUTTERINGS OF STORM. ( The Narrative of Quintin MacClellan resumed. ) CHAPTER XXI. THE EYES OF A MAID. CHAPTER XXII. THE ANGER OF ALEXANDER-JONITA. ( Comment and Addition by Hob MacClellan. ) CHAPTER XXIII. AT BAY. ( The Narrative of Quintin MacClellan is resumed. ) CHAPTER XXIV. MARY GORDON'S LAST WORD. CHAPTER XXV. BEHIND THE BROOM. CHAPTER XXVI. JEAN GEMMELL'S BARGAIN WITH GOD. CHAPTER XXVII. RUMOUR OF WAR. ( Connect and Addition by Hob MacClellan. ) CHAPTER XXVIII. ALEXANDER-JONITA'S VICTORY. CHAPTER XXIX. THE ELDERS OF THE HILL FOLK. ( The Narrative taken up again by Quintin MacClellan. ) CHAPTER XXX. SILENCE IS GOLDEN. CHAPTER XXXI. THE FALL OF EARLSTOUN. CHAPTER XXXIII. THE DEMONIAC IN THE GARRET. CHAPTER XXXIV. THE CURSING OF THE PRESBYTERY. CHAPTER XXXV. LIKE THE SPIRIT OF A LITTLE CHILD. CHAPTER XXXVI. THE STONE OF STUMBLING. CHAPTER XXXVII. FARE YOU WELL! CHAPTER XXXVIII. "I LOVE YOU, QUINTIN!" CHAPTER XXXIX. THE LAST ROARING OF THE BULL. THE STANDARD BEARER BOOKS BY S. R. CROCKETT. ===== Uniform edition. Each, 12 mo. Cloth, $1.50. ===== Lads’ Love. Illustrated. In this fresh and charming story, which in some respects recalls “The Lilac Sunbonnet,” Mr. Crockett returns to Galloway and pictures the humor and pathos of the life which he knows so well. [Image of text decoration unavailable.] Cleg Kelly, Arab of the City. His Progress and Adventures. [Image of text decoration unavailable.] “A masterpiece which Mark Twain himself has never rivaled.... If ever there was an ideal character in fiction it is this heroic ragamuffin.”—London Daily Chronicle. “In no one of his books does Mr. Crockett give us a brighter or more graphic picture of contemporary Scotch life than in ‘Cleg Kelly.’ It is one of the great books.”—Boston Advertiser. [Image of text decoration unavailable.] Bog-Myrtle and Peat. “Here are idyls, epics, dramas of human life written in words that thrill and burn.... All are set down in words that are fit, chaste, and noble. Each is a poem that has the immortal flavor.”—Boston Courier. [Image of text decoration unavailable.] The Lilac Sunbonnet. “A love story pure and simple—one of the old-fashioned, wholesome, sunshiny kind, with a pure-minded, sound-hearted hero, and a heroine who is merely a good and beautiful woman; and if any other love story half so sweet has been written this year it has escaped our notice.”—New York Times. New York: D. APPLETON AND COMPANY. THE STANDARD BEARERBY |