CONTENTS
CHAPTER XXI.—ON THE ELEMENTS OF PARTY POLITICS.
CHAPTER XXII.—ON THE WISDOM OP THE MATRONS.
CHAPTER XXIII.—ON THE ATLANTIC.
CHAPTER XXV.—ON THE SOCIAL VALUE OF THE REPROBATE.
CHAPTER XXVI.—ON FRANKNESS AND FRIENDSHIP.
CHAPTER XXVII.—ON CIRCUMVENTING A STAG.
CHAPTER XXVIII.—ON ENJOYING A RESPITE.
CHAPTER XXIX.—ON THE ADVANTAGES OF READY MONEY.
CHAPTER XXX.—ON THE LEGITIMATE IN ART.
CHAPTER XXXI.—ON A BLACK SHEEP.
CHAPTER XXXII.—ON SHAKESPEARE AND SUPPER.
CHAPTER XXXIII.—ON BLESSING OR DOOM.
CHAPTER XXXIV.—ON THE MESSAGE OF THE LILY.
CHAPTER XXXVI.—ON THE INFLUENCE OF A MAN OF THE WORLD.
CHAPTER XXXVII.—ON THE DEFECTIVE LINK.
HE was still pondering over the many aspects of the question which, to his mind, needed solution, when he returned to the Castle, to find Lord Fotheringay in a chair by the side of a gaunt old man who, at one period of his life, had probably been tall, but who was now stooped in a remarkable way. The stranger seemed very old, so that beside him Lord Fotheringay looked comparatively youthful. Of this fact no one was better aware than Lord Fotheringay.
Edmund Aire