on of the Spirit 386
IX. In which Dickie Shakes Hands with the Devil 397
BOOK V
RAKE'S PROGRESS
I. In which the Reader is Courteously Entreated to
Grow Older by the Space of Some Four Years, and
to Sail Southward Ho! Away 417
II. Wherein Time is Discovered to Have Worked Changes 429
III. Helen de Vallorbes Apprehends Vexatious Complications 438
IV. "Mater Admirabilis" 447
V. Exit Camp 455
VI. In which M. Paul Destournelle Has the Bad Taste to
Threaten to Upset the Apple-cart 469
VII. Splendide Mendax 479
VIII. Helen de Vallorbes Learns Her Rival's Name 490
IX. Concerning that Daughter of Cupid and Psyche Whom
Men Call Voluptas 506
X. The Abomination of Desolation 511
XI. In which Dickie Goes to the End of the World and
Looks Over the Wall 526
BOOK VI
THE NEW HEAVEN AND THE NEW EARTH
I. Miss St. Quentin Bears Witness to the Faith that
is in Her 544
II. Telling How, Once Again, Katherine Calmady Looked
on Her Son 555
III. Concerning a Spirit in Prison 566
IV. Dealing with Matters of Hearsay and Matters
of Sport 575
V. Telling How Dickie Came to Untie a Certain Tag
of Rusty, Black Ribbon 588
VI. A Litany of the Sacred Heart 600
VII. Wherein Two Enemies are Seen to Cry Quits 611
VIII. Concerning the Brotherhood Founded by Richard
Calmady, and Other Matters of Some Interest 628
IX. Telling How Ludovic Quayle and Honoria St. Quentin
Watched the Trout Rise in the Long Water 639
X. Concerning a Day of Honest Warfare and a Sunset
Harbinger Not of the Night But of the Dawn 655
XI. In which Richard Calmady Bids the Long-suffering
Reader Farewell 679
The History of Sir Richard Calmady
BOOK I
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