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Richard Carvel
VOLUME 8   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER LI. How an Idle Prophecy came to pass
Winston Churchill
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       _ Captain Clapsaddle not being at his lodgings, I rode on to the Coffee
       House to put up my horse. I was stopped by Mr. Claude.
       "Why, Mr. Carvel," says he, "I thought you on the Eastern Shore. There
       is a gentleman within will be mightily tickled to see you, or else his
       protestations are lies, which they may very well be. His name? Now,
       'Pon my faith, it was Jones--no more."
       This thing of being called for at the Coffee House stirred up unpleasant
       associations.
       "What appearance does the man make?" I demanded.
       "Merciful gad!" mine host exclaimed; "once seen, never forgotten, and
       once heard, never forgotten. He quotes me Thomson, and he tells me of
       his estate in Virginia."
       The answer was not of a sort to allay my suspicions.
       "Then he appears to be a landowner?" said I.
       "'Ods! Blest if I know what he is," says Mr. Claude. "He may be
       anything, an impostor or a high-mightiness. But he's something to strike
       the eye and hold it, for all his Quaker clothes. He is swarth and
       thickset, and some five feet eight inches--full six inches under your
       own height. And he comes asking for you as if you owned the town between
       you. 'Send a fellow to Marlboro' Street for Mr. Richard Carvel, my good
       host!' says he, with a snap of his fingers. And when I tell him the news
       of you, he is prodigiously affected, and cries--but here's my gentleman
       now!"
       I jerked my head around. Coming down the steps I beheld my old friend
       and benefactor, Captain John Paul!
       "Ahoy, ahoy!" cries he. "Now Heaven be praised, I have found you at
       last."
       Out of the saddle I leaped, and straight into his arms.
       "Hold, hold, Richard!" he gasped. "My ribs, man! Leave me some breath
       that I may tell you how glad I am to see you."
       "Mr. Jones!" I said, holding him out, "now where the devil got you
       that?"
       "Why, I am become a gentleman since I saw you," he answered, smiling.
       "My poor brother left me his estate in Virginia. And a gentleman must
       have three names at the least."
       I dropped his shoulders and shook with laughter.
       "But Jones!" I cried. "'Ad's heart! could you go no higher? Has your
       imagination left you, captain?"
       "Republican simplicity, sir," says he, looking a trifle hurt. But I
       laughed the more.
       "Well, you have contrived to mix oil and vinegar," said I. "A landed
       gentleman and republican simplicity. I'll warrant you wear silk-knit
       under that gray homespun, and have a cameo in your pocket."
       He shook his head, looking up at me with affection.
       "You might have guessed better," he answered. "All of quality I have
       about me are an enamelled repeater and a gold brooch."
       This made me suddenly grave, for McAndrews's words had been ringing in my
       ears ever since he had spoken them. I hitched my arm into the captain's
       and pulled him toward the Coffee House door.
       "Come," I said, "you have not dined, and neither have I. We shall be
       merry to-day, and you shall have some of the best Madeira in the
       colonies." I commanded a room, that we might have privacy. As he took
       his seat opposite me I marked that he had grown heavier and more browned.
       But his eye had the same unfathomable mystery in it as of yore. And
       first I upbraided him for not having writ me.
       "I took you for one who glories in correspondence, captain," said I; "and
       I did not think you could be so unfaithful. I directed twice to you in
       Mr. Orchardson's care."
       "Orchardson died before I had made one voyage," he replied, "and the
       Betsy changed owners. But I did not forget you, Richard, and was
       resolved but now not to leave Maryland until I had seen you. But I burn
       to hear of you," he added. "I have had an inkling of your story from the
       landlord. So your grandfather is dead, and that blastie, your uncle, of
       whom you told me on the John, is in possession."
       He listened to my narrative keenly, but with many interruptions. And
       when I was done, he sighed.
       "You are always finding friends, Richard," said he; "no matter what your
       misfortunes, they are ever double discounted. As for me; I am like
       Fulmer in Mr. Cumberland's 'West Indian': 'I have beat through every
       quarter of the compass; I have bellowed for freedom; I have offered to
       serve my country; I have'--I am engaging to betray it. No, Scotland is
       no longer my country, and so I cannot betray her. It is she who has
       betrayed me."
       He fell into a short mood of dejection. And, indeed, I could not but
       reflect that much of the character fitted him like a jacket. Not the
       betrayal of his country. He never did that, no matter how roundly they
       accused him of it afterward.
       To lift him, I cried:
       "You were one of my first friends, Captain Paul" (I could not stomach the
       Jones); "but for you I should now be a West Indian, and a miserable one,
       the slave of some unmerciful hidalgo. Here's that I may live to repay
       you!"
       "And while we are upon toasts," says he, bracing immediately, "I give you
       the immortal Miss Manners! Her beauty has dwelt unfaded in my memory
       since I last beheld her, aboard the Betsy." Remarking the pain in my
       face, he added, with a concern which may have been comical: "And she is
       not married?"
       "Unless she is lately gone to Gretna, she is not," I replied, trying to
       speak lightly.
       "Alack! I knew it," he exclaimed. "And if there's any prophecy in my
       bones, she'll be Mrs. Carvel one of these days."
       "Well captain," I said abruptly, "the wheel has gone around since I saw
       you. Now it is you who are the gentleman, while I am a factor. Is it
       the bliss you pictured?"
       I suspected that his acres were not as broad, nor his produce as salable,
       as those of Mount Vernon.
       "To speak truth, I am heartily tired of that life," said he. "There is
       little glory in raising nicotia, and sipping bumbo, and cursing negroes.
       Ho for the sea!" he cried. "The salt sea, and the British prizes. Give
       me a tight frigate that leaves a singing wake. Mark me, Richard," he
       said, a restless gleam coning into his dark eyes, "stirring times are
       here, and a chance for all of us to make a name." For so it seemed ever
       to be with him.
       "They are black times, I fear," I answered.
       "Black!" he said. "No, glorious is your word. And we are to have an
       upheaval to throw many of us to the top."
       "I would rather the quarrel were peacefully settled," said I, gravely.
       "For my part, I want no distinction that is to come out of strife and
       misery."
       He regarded me quizzically.
       "You are grown an hundred years old since I pulled you out of the sea,"
       says he. "But we shall have to fight for our liberties. Here is a glass
       to the prospect!"
       "And so you are now an American?" I said curiously.
       "Ay, strake and keelson,--as good a one as though I had got my sap in the
       Maine forests. A plague of monarchs, say I. They are a blotch upon
       modern civilization. And I have here," he continued, tapping his pocket,
       "some letters writ to the Virginia printers, signed Demosthenes, which
       Mr. Randolph and Mr. Henry have commended. To speak truth, Richard, I am
       off to Congress with a portmanteau full of recommendations. And I was
       resolved to stop here even till I secured your company. We shall sweep
       the seas together, and so let George beware!"
       I smiled. But my blood ran faster at the thought of sailing under such a
       captain. However, I made the remark that Congress had as yet no army,
       let alone a navy.
       "And think you that gentlemen of such spirit and resources will lack
       either for long?" he demanded, his eye flashing.
       "Then I know nothing of a ship save the little I learned on the John," I
       said.
       "You were born for the sea, Richard," he exclaimed, raising his glass
       high. "And I would rather have one of your brains and strength and
       handiness than any merchant's mate I ever sailed with. The more
       gentlemen get commissions, the better will be our new service."
       At that instant came a knock at the door, and one of the inn negroes
       to say that Captain Clapsaddle was below, and desired to see me.
       I persuaded John Paul to descend with me. We found Captain Daniel seated
       with Mr. Carroll, the barrister, and Mr. Chase.
       "Captain," I said to my old friend, "I have a rare joy this day in making
       known to you Mr. John Paul Jones, of whom I have spoken to you a score of
       times. He it is whose bravery sank the Black Moll, whose charity took me
       to London, and who got no other reward for his faith than three weeks in
       a debtors' prison. For his honour, as I have told you, would allow him
       to accept none, nor his principles to take the commission in the Royal
       Navy which Mr. Fox offered him."
       Captain Daniel rose, his honest face flushing with pleasure. "Faith, Mr.
       Jones," he cried, when John Paul had finished one of his elaborate bows,
       "this is well met, indeed. I have been longing these many years for a
       chance to press your hand, and in the names of those who are dead and
       gone to express my gratitude."
       "I have my reward now, captain," replied John Paul; "a sight of you
       is to have Richard's whole life revealed. And what says Mr. Congreve?
       "'For blessings ever wait on virtuous deeds,
       And tho' a late, a sure reward succeeds.'
       "Tho' I would not have you believe that my deed was virtuous. And you,
       who know Richard, may form some notion of the pleasure I had out of his
       companionship."
       I hastened to present my friend to the other gentlemen, who welcomed him
       with warmth, though they could not keep their amusement wholly out of
       their faces.
       "Mr. Jones is now the possessor of an estate in Virginia, sirs," I
       explained.
       "And do you find it more to your taste than seafaring, Mr. Jones?"
       inquired Mr. Chase.
       This brought forth a most vehement protest, and another quotation.
       "Why, sir," he cried, "to be
       'Fixed like a plant on his peculiar spot,
       To draw nutrition, propagate, and rot,'
       is an animal's existence. I have thrown it over, sir, with a right good
       will, and am now on my way to Philadelphia to obtain a commission in the
       navy soon to be born."
       Mr. Chase smiled. John Paul little suspected that he was a member of the
       Congress.
       "This is news indeed, Mr. Jones," he said. "I have yet to hear of the
       birth of this infant navy, for which we have not yet begun to make
       swaddling clothes."
       "We are not yet an infant state, sir," Mr. Carroll put in, with a shade
       of rebuke. For Maryland was well content with the government she had
       enjoyed, and her best patriots long after shunned the length of
       secession. "I believe and pray that the King will come to his senses.
       And as for the navy, it is folly. How can we hope to compete with
       England on the sea?"
       "All great things must have a beginning sir," replied John Paul,
       launching forth at once, nothing daunted by such cold conservatism.
       "What Israelite brickmaker of Pharaoh's dreamed of Solomon's temple?
       Nay, Moses himself had no conception of it. And God will send us our
       pillars of cloud and of fire. We must be reconciled to our great
       destiny, Mr. Carroll. No fight ever was won by man or nation content
       with half a victory. We have forests to build an hundred armadas, and I
       will command a fleet and it is given me."
       The gentlemen listened in astonishment.
       "I' faith, I believe you, sir," cried Captain Daniel, with admiration.
       The others, too, were somehow fallen under the spell of this remarkable
       individuality. "What plan would you pursue, sir?" asked Mr. Chase,
       betraying more interest than he cared to show.
       "What plan, sir!" said Captain John Paul, those wonderful eyes of his
       alight. "In the first place, we Americans build the fastest ships in the
       world,--yours of the Chesapeake are as fleet as any. Here, if I am not
       mistaken, one hundred and eighty-two were built in the year '71. They
       are idle now. To them I would issue letters of marque, to harry
       England's trade. From Carolina to Maine we have the wood and iron to
       build cruisers, in harbours that may not easily be got at. And skilled
       masters and seamen to elude the enemy."
       "But a navy must be organized, sir. It must be an unit," objected Mr.
       Carroll. "And you would not for many years have force enough, or
       discipline enough, to meet England's navy."
       "I would never meet it, sir," he replied instantly. "That would be the
       height of folly. I would divide our forces into small, swift-sailing
       squadrons, of strength sufficient to repel his cruisers. And I would
       carry the war straight into his unprotected ports of trade. I can name
       a score of such defenceless places, and I know every shoal of their
       harbours. For example, Whitehaven might be entered. That is a town of
       fifty thousand inhabitants. The fleet of merchantmen might with the
       greatest ease be destroyed, a contribution levied, and Ireland's coal cut
       off for a winter. The whole of the shipping might be swept out of the
       Clyde. Newcastle is another likely place, and in almost any of the Irish
       ports valuable vessels may be found. The Baltic and West Indian fleets
       are to be intercepted. I have reflected upon these matters for years,
       gentlemen. They are perfectly feasible. And I'll warrant you cannot
       conceive the havoc and consternation their fulfilment would spread in
       England."
       If the divine power of genius ever made itself felt, 'twas on that May
       evening, at candle-light, in the Annapolis Coffee House. With my own
       eyes I witnessed two able and cautious statesmen of a cautious province
       thrilled to the pitch of enthusiasm by this strange young man of eight
       and twenty. As for good Captain Daniel, enthusiasm is but a poor word to
       express his feelings. A map was sent for and spread out upon the table.
       And it was a late hour when Mr. Chase and Mr. Carroll went home,
       profoundly impressed. Mr. Chase charged John Paul look him up in
       Congress.
       The next morning I bade Captain Daniel a solemn good-by, and rode away
       with John Paul to Baltimore. Thence we took stage to New Castle on the
       Delaware, and were eventually landed by Mr. Tatlow's stage-boat at
       Crooked Billet wharf, Philadelphia.
       A BRIEF SUMMARY, WHICH BRINGS THIS BIOGRAPHY TO THE FAMOUS
       FIGHT OF THE BON HOMME RICHARD AND THE SERAPIS
       BY DANIEL CLAPSADDLE CARVEL
       Mr. Richard Carvel refers here to the narrative of his experiences in the
       War of the Revolution, which he had written in the year 1805 or 1806.
       The insertion of that account would swell this book, already too long,
       out of all proportion. Hence I take it upon myself, with apologies, to
       compress it.
       Not until October of that year, 1775, was the infant navy born. Mr.
       Carvel was occupied in the interval in the acquirement of practical
       seamanship and the theory of maritime warfare under the most competent of
       instructors, John Paul Jones. An interesting side light is thrown upon
       the character of that hero by the fact that, with all his supreme
       confidence in his ability, he applied to Congress only for a first
       lieutenancy. This was in deference to the older men before that body.
       "I hoped," said he, "in that rank to gain much useful knowledge from
       those of more experience than myself." His lack of assertion for once
       cost him dear. He sailed on the New Providence expedition under
       Commodore Hopkins as first lieutenant of the Alfred, thirty; and he soon
       discovered that, instead of gaining information, he was obliged to inform
       others. He trained the men so thoroughly in the use of the great guns
       "that they went through the motions of broadsides and rounds exactly as
       soldiers generally perform the manual exercise."
       Captain Jones was not long in fixing the attention and earning the
       gratitude of the nation, and of its Commander-in-Chief, General
       Washington. While in command of the Providence, twelve four-pounders,
       his successful elusions of the 'Cerberus', which hounded him, and his
       escape from the 'Solebay', are too famous to be dwelt upon here.
       Obtaining the Alfred, he captured and brought into Boston ten thousand
       suits of uniform for Washington's shivering army. Then, by the bungling
       of Congress, thirteen officers were promoted over his head. The
       bitterness this act engendered in the soul of one whose thirst for
       distinction was as great as Captain Jones's may be imagined. To his
       everlasting credit be it recorded that he remained true to the country to
       which he had dedicated his life and his talents. And it was not until
       1781 that he got the justice due him.
       That the rough and bluff captains of the American service should have
       regarded a man of Paul Jones's type with suspicion is not surprising.
       They resented his polish and accomplishments, and could not understand
       his language. Perhaps it was for this reason, as well as a reward for
       his brilliant services, that he was always given a separate command. In
       the summer of 1777 he was singled out for the highest gift in the power
       of the United States, nothing less than that of the magnificent frigate
       'Indien', then building at Amsterdam. And he was ordered to France in
       command of the 'Ranger', a new ship then fitting at Portsmouth. Captain
       Jones was the admiration of ail the young officers in the navy, and was
       immediately flooded with requests to sail with him. One of his first
       acts, after receiving his command, was to apply to the Marine Committee
       for Mr. Carvel. The favour was granted.
       My grandfather had earned much commendation from his superiors. He had
       sailed two cruises as master's mate of the Cabot, and was then serving as
       master of the Trumbull, Captain Saltonstall. This was shortly after that
       frigate had captured the two British transports off New York.
       Captain Jones has been at pains to mention in his letters the services
       rendered him by Mr. Carvel in fitting out the Ranger. And my grandfather
       gives a striking picture of the captain. At that time the privateers,
       with the larger inducements of profit they offered, were getting all the
       best seamen. John Paul had but to take two turns with a man across the
       dock, and he would sign papers.
       Captain Jones was the first to raise the new flag of the stars and
       stripes over a man-o'-war. They got away on November 14, 1777, with a
       fair crew and a poor lot of officers. Mr. Carvel had many a brush with
       the mutinous first lieutenant Simpson. Family influence deterred the
       captain from placing this man under arrest, and even Dr. Franklin found
       trouble, some years after, in bringing about his dismissal from the
       service. To add to the troubles, the Ranger proved crank and slow-
       sailing; and she had only one barrel of rum aboard, which made the men
       discontented.
       Bringing the official news of Burgoyne's surrender, which was to cause
       King Louis to acknowledge the independence of the United States, the
       Ranger arrived at Nantes, December 2. Mr. Carvel accompanied Captain
       Jones to Paris, where a serious blow awaited him. The American
       Commissioners informed him that the Indien had been transferred to France
       to prevent her confiscation. That winter John Paul spent striving in
       vain for a better ship, and imbibing tactics from the French admirals.
       Incidentally, he obtained a salute for the American flag. The cruise of
       the Ranger in English waters the following spring was a striking
       fulfilment, with an absurdly poor and inadequate force, of the plan set
       forth by John Paul Jones in the Annapolis Coffee House. His descent upon
       Whitehaven spread terror and consternation broadcast through England, and
       he was branded as a pirate and a traitor. Mr. Carvel was fortunately not
       of the landing party on St. Mary's Isle, which place he had last beheld
       in John Paul's company, on the brigantine John, when entering
       Kirkcudbright. The object of that expedition, as is well known, was to
       obtain the person of the Earl of Selkirk, in order to bring about the
       rescue of the unfortunate Americans suffering in British prisons. After
       the celebrated capture of the sloop-of-war Drake, Paul Jones returned to
       France a hero.
       If Captain Jones was ambitious of personal glory, he may never, at least,
       be accused of mercenary motives. The ragged crew of the Ranger was paid
       in part out of his own pocket, and for a whole month he supported the
       Drake's officers and men, no provision having been made for prisoners.
       He was at large expense in fitting out the Ranger, and he bought back at
       twice what it was worth the plate taken from St. Mary's Isle, getting but
       a tardy recognition from the Earl of Selkirk for such a noble and
       unheard-of action. And, I take pride in writing it, Mr. Carvel spent
       much of what he had earned at Gordon's Pride in a like honourable manner.
       Mr. Carvel's description of the hero's reception at Versailles is graphic
       and very humorous. For all his republican principles John Paul never got
       over his love of courts, and no man was ever a more thorough courtier.
       He exchanged compliments with Queen Marie Antoinette, who was then in the
       bloom of her beauty, and declared that she was a "good girl, and deserved
       to be happy."
       The unruly Simpson sailed for America in the Ranger in July, Captain
       Jones being retained in France "for a particular enterprise." And
       through the kindness of Dr. Franklin, Mr. Carvel remained with him. Then
       followed another period of heartrending disappointment. The fine ship
       the French government promised him was not forthcoming, though Captain
       Jones wrote a volume of beautiful letters to every one of importance,
       from her Royal Highness the Duchess of Chartres to his Most Christian
       Majesty, Louis, King of France and Navarre. At length, when he was
       sitting one day in unusual dejection and railing at the vanity of courts
       and kings, Mr. Carvel approached him with a book in his hand.
       "What have you there, Richard?" the captain demanded.
       "Dr. Franklin's Maxims," replied my grandfather. They were great
       favourites with him. The captain took the book and began mechanically
       to turn over the pages. Suddenly he closed it with a bang, jumped up,
       and put on his coat and hat. Mr. Carvel looked on in astonishment.
       "Where are you going, sir?" says he.
       "To Paris, sir," says the captain. "Dr. Franklin has taught me more
       wisdom in a second than I had in all my life before. 'If you wish to
       have any business faithfully and expeditiously performed, go and do it
       yourself; otherwise, send.'"
       As a result of that trip he got the Duras, which he renamed the 'Bon
       homme Richard' in honour of Dr. Franklin. The Duras was an ancient
       Indiaman with a high poop, which made my grandfather exclaim, when he saw
       her, at the remarkable fulfilment of old Stanwix's prophecy. She was
       perfectly rotten, and in the constructor's opinion not worth refitting.
       Her lowest deck (too low for the purpose) was pierced aft with three
       ports on a side, and six worn-out eighteen-pounders mounted there. Some
       of them burst in the action, killing their people. The main battery, on
       the deck above, was composed of twenty-eight twelve-pounders. On the
       uncovered deck eight nine-pounders were mounted. Captain Jones again
       showed his desire to serve the cause by taking such a ship, and not
       waiting for something better.
       In the meantime the American frigate 'Alliance' had brought Lafayette to
       France, and was added to the little squadron that was to sail with the
       'Bon homme Richard'. One of the most fatal mistakes Congress ever made
       was to put Captain Pierre Landais in command of her, out of compliment to
       the French allies. He was a man whose temper and vagaries had failed to
       get him a command in his own navy. His insulting conduct and treachery
       to Captain Jones are strongly attested to in Mr. Carvel's manuscript:
       they were amply proved by the written statements of other officers.
       The squadron sailed from L'Orient in June, but owing to a collision
       between the Bon homme Richard and the Alliance it was forced to put back
       into the Groix roads for repairs. Nails and rivets were with difficulty
       got to hold in the sides of the old Indianian. On August 14th John Paul
       Jones again set sail for English waters, with the following vessels:
       Alliance, thirty-six; Pallas, thirty; Cerf, eighteen; Vengeance, twelve;
       and two French privateers. Owing to the humiliating conditions imposed
       upon him by the French Minister of Marine, Commodore Jones did not have
       absolute command. In a gale on the 26th the two privateers and the Cerf
       parted company, never to return. After the most outrageous conduct off
       the coast of Ireland, Landais, in the 'Alliance', left the squadron on
       September 6th, and did not reappear until the 23d, the day of the battle.
       Mr. Carvel was the third lieutenant of the 'Bon homme Richard', tho' he
       served as second in the action. Her first lieutenant (afterwards the
       celebrated Commodore Richard Dale) was a magnificent man, one worthy in
       every respect of the captain he served. When the hour of battle arrived,
       these two and the sailing master, and a number of raw midshipmen, were
       the only line-officers left, and two French officers of marines.
       The rest had been lost in various ways. And the crew of the 'Bon homme
       Richard' was as sorry a lot as ever trod a deck. Less than three score
       of the seamen were American born; near four score were British, inclusive
       of sixteen Irish; one hundred and thirty-seven were French soldiers, who
       acted as marines; and the rest of the three hundred odd souls to fight
       her were from all over the earth,--Malays and Maltese and Portuguese.
       In the hold were more than one hundred and fifty English prisoners.
       This was a vessel and a force, truly, with which to conquer a fifty-gun
       ship of the latest type, and with a picked crew.
       Mr. Carvel's chapter opens with Landais's sudden reappearance on the
       morning of the day the battle was fought. He shows the resentment and
       anger against the Frenchman felt by all on board, from cabin-boy to
       commodore. But none went so far as to accuse the captain of the
       'Alliance' of such supreme treachery as he was to show during the action.
       Cowardice may have been in part responsible for his holding aloof from
       the two duels in which the Richard and the Pallas engaged. But the fact
       that he poured broadsides into the Richard, and into her off side, makes
       it seem probable that his motive was to sink the commodore's ship, and so
       get the credit of saving the day, to the detriment of the hero who won it
       despite all disasters. To account for the cry that was raised when first
       she attacked the Richard, it must be borne in mind that the crew of the
       'Alliance' was largely composed of Englishmen. It was thought that these
       had mutinied and taken her. _
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Foreword
VOLUME 1
   VOLUME 1 - CHAPTER I. Lionel Carvel, of Carvel Hall
   VOLUME 1 - CHAPTER II. Some Memories of Childhood
   VOLUME 1 - CHAPTER III. Caught by the Tide
   VOLUME 1 - CHAPTER IV. Grafton would heal an Old Breach
   VOLUME 1 - CHAPTER V. "If Ladies be but Young and Fair"
   VOLUME 1 - CHAPTER VI. I first suffer for the Cause
   VOLUME 1 - CHAPTER VII. Grafton has his Chance
VOLUME 2
   VOLUME 2 - CHAPTER VIII. Over the Wall
   VOLUME 2 - CHAPTER IX. Under False Colours
   VOLUME 2 - CHAPTER X. The Red in the Carvel Blood
   VOLUME 2 - CHAPTER XI. A Festival and a Parting
   VOLUME 2 - CHAPTER XII. News from a Far Country
VOLUME 3
   VOLUME 3 - CHAPTER XIII. Mr. Allen shows his Hand
   VOLUME 3 - CHAPTER XIV. The Volte Coupe
   VOLUME 3 - CHAPTER XV. Of which the Rector has the Worst
   VOLUME 3 - CHAPTER XVI. In which Some Things are made Clear
   VOLUME 3 - CHAPTER XVII. South River
   VOLUME 3 - CHAPTER XVIII. The Black Moll.
VOLUME 4
   VOLUME 4 - CHAPTER XIX. A Man of Destiny
   VOLUME 4 - CHAPTER XX. A Sad Home-coming
   VOLUME 4 - CHAPTER XXI. The Gardener's Cottage
   VOLUME 4 - CHAPTER XXII. On the Road
   VOLUME 4 - CHAPTER XXIII. London Town
   VOLUME 4 - CHAPTER XXIV. Castle Yard
   VOLUME 4 - CHAPTER XXV. The Rescue
VOLUME 5
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXVI. The Part Horatio played
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXVII. In which I am sore tempted
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXVIII. Arlington Street
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXIX. I meet a very Great Young Man
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXX. A Conspiracy
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXXI. "Upstairs into the World"
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXXII. Lady Tankerville's Drum-major
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXXIII. Drury Lane
VOLUME 6
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XXXIV. His Grace makes Advances
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XXXV. In which my Lord Baltimore appears .
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XXXVI. A Glimpse of Mr. Garrick
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XXXVII. The Serpentine
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XXXVIII. In which I am roundly brought to task
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XXXIX. Holland House
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XL. Vauxhall
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XLI. The Wilderness
VOLUME 7
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLII. My Friends are proven
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLIII. Annapolis once more
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLIV. Noblesse Oblige
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLV. The House of Memories
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLVI. Gordon's Pride
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLVII. Visitors
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLVIII. Multum in Parvo
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLIX. Liberty loses a Friend
VOLUME 8
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER L. Farewell to Gordon's
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER LI. How an Idle Prophecy came to pass
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER LII. How the Gardener's Son fought the Serapis
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER LIII. In which I make Some Discoveries
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER LIV. More Discoveries.
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER LV. The Love of a Maid for a Man
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER LVI. How Good came out of Evil
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER LVII. I come to my Own again
   Afterward