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21. Relating Among Other Things How Doctor Toole Walked up to the Tiled House; and of His Pleasant Discourse with Mr. Mervyn
Chapter 22. Telling How Mr. Mervyn Fared at Belmont, and of a Pleasant Little Dejeuner by the Margin of the Liffey
Chapter 23. Which Concerns the Grand Dinner at the King’s House, and who Were There, and Something of Their Talk, Reveries, Disputes, And General Jollity
Chapter 24. In which Two Young Persons Understand One Another Better, Perhaps, than Ever They Did Before, Without Saying So
Chapter 25. In which the Sun Sets, and the Merry-Making is Kept up by Candle-Light in the King’s House, and Lily Receives a Warning Which she Does Not Comprehend
Chapter 26. Relating How the Band of the Royal Irish Artillery Played, And, While the Music was Going On, How Variously Different People Were Moved
Chapter 27. Concerning the Troubles and the Shapes that Began to Gather About Doctor Sturk
Chapter 28. In which Mr. Irons Recounts Some Old Recollections About the Pied Horse and the Flower De Luce
Chapter 29. Showing How Poor Mrs. Macnamara was Troubled and Haunted Too, and Opening a Budget of Gossip
Chapter 30. Concerning a Certain Woman in Black
Chapter 31. Being a Short History of the Great Battle of Belmont that Lasted for So Many Days, Wherein the Belligerents Showed So Much Constancy and Valour, and Sometimes One Side and Sometimes T’other was Victorious
Chapter 32. Narrating How Lieutenant Puddock and Captain Devereux Brewed a Bowl of Punch, and How They Sang and Discoursed Together
Chapter 33. In which Captain Devereux’s Fiddle Plays a Prelude to ‘Over the Hills and Far Away.’
Chapter 34. In which Lilias Hears a Stave of an Old Song and There is a Leave-Taking Beside the River
Chapter 35. In which Aunt Becky and Doctor Toole, in Full Blow, with Dominick, the Footman, Behind Them, Visit Miss Lily at the Elms
Chapter 36. Narrating How Miss Lilias Visited Belmont, and Saw a Strange Cocked-Hat in the Shadow by the Window
Chapter 37. Showing How Some of the Feuds in Chapelizod Waxed Fiercer, and Others Were Solemnly Condoned
Chapter 38. Dreams and Troubles, and a Dark Look-Out
Chapter 39. Telling How Lilias Walsingham Found Two Ladies Awaiting Her Arrival at the Elms
Chapter 40. Of a Messenger from Chapelizod Vault who Waited in the Tyled House for Mr. Mervyn
Chapter 41. In which the Rector Comes Home, and Lily Speaks Her Mind, and Time Glides On, and Aunt Rebecca Calls at the Elms
Chapter 42. In which Dr. Sturk Tries this Way and that for a Reprieve on the Eve of Execution
Chapter 43. Showing How Charles Nutter’s Blow Descended, and what Part the Silver Spectacles Bore in the Crisis
Chapter 44. Relating How, in the Watches of the Night, a Vision Came to Sturk, and His Eyes Were Opened
Chapter 45. Concerning a Little Rehearsal in Captain Cluffe’s, Lodging, and a Certain Confidence Between Dr. Sturk and Mr. Dangerfield
Chapter 46. The Closet Scene, with the Part of Polonius Omitted
Chapter 47. In which Pale Hecate Visits the Mills, and Charles Nutter, Esq., Orders Tea
Chapter 48. Swans on the Water
Chapter 49. Swans in the Water
Chapter 50. Treating of Some Confusion, in Consequence, in the Club-Room of the Phoenix and Elsewhere, and of a Hat that was Picked Up
Chapter 51. How Charles Nutter’s Tea, Pipe, and Tobacco-Box Were All Set Out for Him in the Small Parlour at the Mills; and How that Night was Passed in the House by the Church-Yard
Chapter 52. Concerning a Rouleau of Guineas and the Crack of a Pistol
Chapter 53. Relating After what Fashion Dr. Sturk Came Home
Chapter 54. In which Miss Magnolia Macnamara and Dr. Toole, in Different Scenes, Prove Themselves Good Samaritans; and the Great Doctor Pell Mounts the Stairs of the House by the Church-Yard
Chapter 55. In which Dr. Toole, in Full Costume, Stands Upon the Hearth-Stone of the Club, and Illuminates the Company with His Back To the Fire
Chapter 56. Doctor Walsingham and the Chapelizod Christians Meet to the Sound of the Holy Bell, and a Vampire Sits in the Church
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