At the urgent insistence of his relatives Mr. Richard Ffrench, the step-son of the Honorable Robert Charlton of Charleton Place, agrees and marries a young girl in order to avoid any possible hint at impropriety.
Written by May Agnes Fleming (1840-1880); 38 chapters; 396 pages; 127,000 words.
Transcribed and edited by Jeffrey Merrow from the 1878 Carleton edition.
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Chapters:
[ PART FIRST. ]
- I.—Shaddeck Light;
- II.—Charlton Place;
- III.—A Fairy Tale;
- IV.—A Man’s Letter;
- V.—Before Breakfast;
- VI.—After Breakfast;
- VII.—In the Cool of the Evening;
- VIII.—By the Light of the Moon;
- IX.—How the Game was Made;
- X.—The End of the Fairy Tale;
- XI.—Shaddeck Light;
- XII.—An Evening at Shaddeck Light;
- XIII.—A Night at Shaddeck Light;
- XIV.—A Morning at Shaddeck Light;
- XV.—Captain Dick’s Wooing;
- XVI.—How Dora Does It;
- XVII.—A Girl’s Letter;
- XVIII.—The Days Before;
- XIX.—Captain Dick’s Wedding;
- XX.—Post-Nuptial;
- XI.—“The Girl I Left Behind Me.”
- XXII.—“When Day is Done.”
[ PART SECOND. ]
- I.—Vera;
- II.—A Look Behind;
- III.—“Love Took up the Glass of Time.”
- IV.—At Dawn of Day;
- V.—A Summer Afternoon;
- VI.—A Summer Night;
- VII.—“We Fell Out, My Wife and I.”
- VIII.—“O, We Fell Out, I Know not Why.”
- IX.—Charlton Place;
- X.—Husband and Wife;
- XI.—A Cry in the Night;
- XII.—In the Dead Hand;
- XIII.—In the Dark Hour;
- XIV.—Tracked;
- XV.—Trapped;
- XVI.—Shaddeck Light.