n. 244
LX.--Being a Chapter of Hoops, Feathers, and Brilliants,
and Bucks And Fiddlers. 249
LXI.--In Which the Ghosts of a By-gone Sin Keep Tryst. 254
LXII.--Of a Solemn Resolution Which Captain Devereux Registered
Among His Household Gods, With a Libation. 257
LXIII.--In Which a Liberty Is Taken With Mr. Nutter's Name,
and Mr. Dangerfield Stands at the Altar. 261
LXIV.--Being a Night Scene, in Which Miss Gertrude Chattesworth,
Being Adjured By Aunt Becky, Makes Answer. 266
LXV.--Relating Some Awful News That Reached the Village,
and How Dr. Walsingham Visited Captain Richard Devereux
at His Lodgings. 271
LXVI.--Of a Certain Tempest That Arose and Shook the
Captain's Spoons And Tea-cups; and How the Wind
Suddenly Went Down. 274
LXVII.--In Which a Certain Troubled Spirit Walks. 278
LXVIII.--How an Evening Passes at the Elms, and Dr. Toole Makes
a Little Excursion; and Two Choice Spirits Discourse,
and Hebe Trips in With The Nectar. 281
LXIX.--Concerning a Second Hurricane That Raged in Captain
Devereux's Drawing-room, and Relating How Mrs. Irons
Was Attacked With a Sort Of Choking in Her Bed. 285
LXX.--In Which an Unexpected Visitor Is Seen in the
Cedar-parlour of The Tiled House, and the Story of
Mr. Beauclerc and the 'flower de Luce' Begins To
Be Unfolded. 290
LXXI.--In Which Mr. Irons's Narrative Reaches Merton Moor. 295
LXXII.--In Which the Apparition of Mr. Irons Is Swallowed in
Darkness. 300
LXXIII.--Concerning a Certain Gentleman, with a Black Patch
Over His Eye, who made some Visits with a Lady,
in Chapelizod and its Neighbourhood. 304
LXXIV.--In Which Doctor Toole, in His Boots, Visits Mr. Gamble,
and Sees an Ugly Client of That Gentleman's; and
Something Crosses an Empty Room. 307
LXXV.--How a Gentleman Paid a Vis
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