The Windsor Magazine (1895–1901) – Indexes to Fiction,
Research Guide by Catharine Vaughan-Pow
Table of Contents
Introduction
The Windsor Magazine, published by Ward, Lock and Bowden (later Ward, Lock and Co.), first appeared in January 1895 and finally ceased publication in 1939. From its first issue, the magazine perceived itself as a periodical which was read throughout the Empire by a diverse audience which was nonetheless united in its concern for the well-being of the Empire and its desire for a high-quality periodical. The Foreword to the first number makes it clear that the magazine’s loyalties are apparent even in the title, as the editors refer to it as a debutante which is “Making its obeisance to its Sovereign and to the public alike, mingling devotion to the gracious lady on the throne and to her three direct heirs, whose portraits are here presented with loyalty to some of the best and widest interests of her subjects” (1). The magazine could not claim a Royal seal of approval, (although a footnote in the March 1895 number did inform readers that “Her Majesty the Queen has been graciously pleased to accept a copy of the first number of the WINDSOR MAGAZINE” [303]), but it could, and did, represent itself as essential reading for those interested in the contemporary literary and social worlds of the 1890s. Moreover, the magazine’s subtitle, Illustrated Monthly for Men and Women,” indicated an inclusiveness which designated all members of upper- and middle-class imperial society as potential readers, and the editorial perspective concerning the publication’s appropriateness for this broad audience did not publicly deviate from this stance. However, while it is true that the editors did not openly acknowledge that the magazine’s material did alter, careful reading reveals that by 1900, only six years after the magazine’s establishment, the material offered to readers had subtly shifted in both content and focus.
The Foreword of the first issue clearly outlined the magazine’s objectives which were to “offer its readers the best in fiction” and to do so in such a way that “the dominant note of this magazine will be buoyant” (2). Throughout its history it alluded frequently to this self-confident objective: in volume 6, for example, it assured its audience that “the Windsor has thousands of readers” (“Editor’s Postbag” 72) and in volume 10 referred to itself as “Wonderful Windsor!,” a term which was apparently bestowed upon it by the Times.1 In terms of a wider comparison, it has been regarded as a rival to the Strand Magazine,2 and possibly saw itself as such, although no direct acknowledgment of other periodicals ever appeared in the pages of the magazine. It published the work of many popular writers including Rudyard Kipling, Edith Nesbit, Eden Phillpotts, Conan Doyle, Barry Pain, Robert Barr, Max Pemberton, CJ. Cutcliffe Hyne and Israel Zangwill, all of whom contributed to other monthly journals such as the Strand, the Idler and Cassell’s Family Magazine. This certainly could be regarded as seeking its readers from the upper-middle-class audience of these publications.
The magazine was of a standard format which remained unchanged until at least after the First World War. Each issue, apart from the December number, was approximately 120 pages, printed on 6-inch by 9-inch glossy paper and square bound. It was a monthly publication, costing sixpence per issue at first, later rising to one shilling, with bound volumes appearing at six-monthly, rather than yearly, intervals, although given that each volume was at least six-hundred pages in length, there is an obvious practicality to binding at six-monthly intervals. Interestingly, although the first volume commenced in January 1895, and the second in July of that year, this numbering was soon altered; volume 4 covered only the five months of July-November 1896, with volume 5 commencing in December 1896. From this point, new volumes commenced in December and June. These six-monthly volumes were bound in green boards with a central gilt outline drawing of Windsor Castle by Herbert Railton, with spine titling also in gilt. Titling and a floral motif on the front board were outlined in red as was an insignia on the spine. This binding remained largely unchanged between 1894 and 1910, although the use of gilt was not consistent during this time and by 1914 had been discontinued. There were no additional Christmas or summer numbers, but the December issue was approximately forty pages longer than the others and contained more short stories and poetry and fewer non-fiction articles. Occasionally, an additional short novel was issued with the December number, but this was bound separately, rather than printed in the main body of the magazine;3 a notable example of a Windsor supplement is a reprint of Conan Doyle’s A Study in Scarlet, the copyright of which was owned by Ward, Lock, and which appeared in December 1895 as an accompaniment to the larger Christmas number, presumably to enhance sales of the newly established periodical. This reprint of Conan Doyle’s first Sherlock Holmes story underscores the Windsor Magazine’s possible rivalry with the Strand, as it was of course in the latter publication that the short stories featuring Sherlock Holmes first appeared.
Between 1895 and 1910, there were few changes in the editorship of the Windsor Magazine. Initially, the editors were William Sprigg and Flora Klickmann; Sprigg appears to have left the magazine during its first two years of publication, and his place was taken by Duncan Williamson, who remained in his position until 1898. After 1898, Arthur Hutchinson was appointed editor, a position which he occupied until 1927. Flora Klickmann remained with Ward, Lock until after James Bowden’s departure from the firm in 1899; by 1904 she was working for the Wesleyan Methodist Missionary Society, but the exact date of her final departure is unclear. Klickmann was the only one of the editors to have articles published under her name in the Windsor Magazine’, although Arthur Hutchinson was a prolific author,4 none of his work appeared in the magazine. It is notable that the names of the various editors were never shown, and no mention was made of changes in the editorship. A section called “The Editor’s Scrapbook” appeared in every issue after December 1895, consisting of short anecdotes, verses, jokes and brief comments on society. There is no editorial commentary, and no personal editorial presence is apparent. The magazine therefore appeared to exist as an entity in itself, rather than reflecting a specific editorial persona, and this might well have been intended to enhance the sense of universality that the Windsor strove to promote to its imperial readership. This lack of personal presence is apparent even in the announcement of material to be published in a new volume; photographs of contributors, together with positive reviews of their work, together with commendations of the Windsor Magazine itself form the basis of this promotional writing. Interestingly, despite the lack of overt, identified editorial presence, there are few anonymous articles and no anonymous fiction in the magazine, indicating the increasing importance of the signature and the persona of the writer at this time.
II
The magazine’s format remained largely unchanged throughout the 1890s and 1900s; thus each number contained two serial stories, one or more short stories, and at least one poem. As a rule, each serial was contained within the limits of the six-monthly volume, although there were some longer serializations such as Guy Boothby’s Doctor Nikola which ran in volumes 3 and 4, Hall Caine’s The Christian in volumes 5 and 6 and Rider Haggard’s Ayesha: the Return of She in volumes 21 and 22. The magazine prided itself on publishing fiction by popular and established authors such as Rudyard Kipling, Hall Caine, Justus Miles Forman, Rider Haggard, and Conan Doyle, as well as by emerging writers such as P.G. Wodehouse and E.F. Benson. The magazine also published fiction by colonial authors such as the Australians Ada Cambridge, Ethel Turner, Mary Gaunt and Mayne Lindsay, and the Canadians, Charles D.G. Roberts and Gilbert Parker. It also featured occasional fiction by Americans in addition to Forman, such as Bret Harte and Grace Richmond, and while the Windsor Magazine appears not to have circulated in America, fiction such as Kipling’s Stalky & Co. stories frequently appeared in US publications simultaneously with their British publication. When the fiction serialized in the magazine was subsequently published in book form, Ward, Lock and Co. was not necessarily the publisher. For example, several of Kipling’s Stalky stories were published by Macmillan after appearing in the Windsor.
Non-fiction covered a variety of concerns, but contemporary society and its organisation was the predominant theme. Thus, writers explained various aspects of government and economics, at local, national and international levels, while contemporary concerns in art, music, biography and sport served as a basis for a large number of articles. There were also several series; for example, the first and second volumes contained six articles entitled Unknown London and another six entitled Suburban London by H.D. Lowry and T.S. Crowther, each of which gave an account of a specific location in London. Volumes 14, 16 and 26 contain three series of articles by Cecil de Thierry entitled The Naval Bases of the Empire, which analyse the workings of various naval ports. Certain writers focused on one concern only, and their work appeared at wider intervals. An example of this is found in the ten articles on public and government finances by J. Holt Schooling which appeared at random intervals between 1897 and 1905, while Gambier Bolton’s nine articles on animals were published between 1896 and 1903.
In addition to this broad range of non-fiction, there were articles which took the form of fiction, as a short story or anecdote, but which were based on, or intended to be, a purely factual account. An example is W.H. Fitchett’s “Jack’s Fighting Courage” in volume 9, which begins in documentary style with some general comments about the courage of the “average British sailor” but is followed by a highly coloured narrative of a particular example of that courage. Occasionally, this deliberate blurring of boundaries can mislead the reader, and it is only when the conclusion of the piece is reached that the author reveals the desired focus of the narrative. An example of this can be found in “The Enshrined Matchbox,” published in volume 2 (1895). This is an account of a meeting between a street boy who sells matches for a living and a man.who buys a box of matches and is mistakenly given incorrect change. To rectify his error, which was to his advantage, the boy pursues the man, gives him the correct change and is then informed that the purchaser of the matches is the Prince of Wales. The boy is rewarded with a place at a naval college, and is assured that the Prince will keep the matchbox. This account is initially presented as a short narrative; there is nothing to distinguish it from any other short fiction until the conclusion is reached. At this point the writer, Alfred T. Story, intervenes, explains that the fiction is in fact an account of an actual event, and directs the reader toward a reading of the text which does not permit any questioning of the context which produced the happening, or any possible outcome other than the one given. Such semi-fictional narratives have been included in the indexes below as they functioned much in the manner of the didactic writing associated with the religious fiction of the late-nineteenth century and can be read in much the same way.
The magazine was copiously illustrated, with regular contributions from well-known magazine artists of the day such as Maurice Greiffenhagen, Hilda Cowham, Harold Copping, Frederick Pegram, Henry Austin, Stanley L. Wood, Cecil Aldin, S.E. Waller and Harry Fumiss, all of whom published in a wide variety of journals, and whose illustrations accompanied much of the fiction that appeared in the Windsor. Indeed, certain of these artists became associated with a specific type of writing, so that Maurice Greiffenhagen’s sombre style featuring massively drawn figures that dominate the picture invariably illustrates dramatic stories such as Mary Cholmondeley’s “The Understudy,” Justus Miles Forman’s The Quest and Rider Haggard’s Ayesha: the Return of She. S.E. Waller’s and H.M. Paget’s more delicate historical illustrations accompany historical fiction such as Halliwell Sutcliffe’s short stories and Robert Barr’s The Strong Arm, while the comic and satiric illustrations by Stanley L. Wood (whose line drawings accompanied his own tale of “A ‘Tenderfoot’ in Texas”) and by Harry Fumiss are frequently found in non-fiction, particularly that which gives accounts of other cultures (see, for example, Canadian Sketches, vol 11, 1899/1900). Non-fiction was frequently also illustrated by photographs, and this mix of visual images proved most attractive. The importance of art and illustration in the magazine’s format is bome out by the inclusion of a regular article focusing on a specific artist or illustrator, period in art, or treasures of a specific art gallery. By 1896, these lengthy articles (they were between 12 and 15 pages in length) were appearing in each issue and were accompanied by numerous black-and-white illustrations of the artwork under discussion. By 1910, one or two colour plates were included in each volume, and the magazine had embarked on an ambitious series entitled England’s Story in Portrait and Picture, which examined artistic representations of every period in English history, beginning with the Roman occupation. This followed a series of biographical studies by Austin Chester of various contemporary artists (not all of whom were necessarily destined for glory), and this in turn had followed descriptions of the collections of a number of provincial art galleries.
III
Thematically, the Windsor Magazine reveals the concerns and anxieties of the late Victorian and Edwardian periods, both in terms of British society and in the ways in which the colonies and major international powers were represented. The limitations inherent in publishing a monthly periodical composed largely of lengthy articles meant that the Windsor could not respond directly and immediately to national events; for example, there is no article dealing directly with the death of Victoria in 1901, although there is a discussion of the coronation ritual later in the relevant volume. However, it is possible to assess the dominant concerns of the time as they appeared in its pages.
Kemp, Mitchell and Trotter identify “the recognition of suburban humanity as an irreversible feature of modem England” (xi) essential to the literary culture of the time, and the Windsor certainly supports this. Much of the fiction is centred on urban, suburban and business life, particularly as these were represented in the constantly shifting social terrain of the middle classes. There was an increasing emphasis on the insecurity and uncertainty of income and social position, and added to this was a focus on the increasing isolation of the individual, obvious despite the growing crowds in the cities. Arnold Bennett’s The Loot of Cities: the Adventures of a Millionaire in Search of Joy (vol 20, 1904) underscored this as did Robert Barr’s Young Lord Stranleigh, (vol 27, 1907/8), Arthur Morrison’s The Dorrington Deedbox (vol 5, 1896/7) and Barry Pain’s City Chronicles (vol 13, 1900/1). Allied with this increasing sense of isolation and insecurity is the notion that the world is not what it seems and that truth and reality must be actively sought for and revealed. There is the possibility that the individual may be participating in a complex masquerade and that morality may be subverted to expedience. Given this, there was a growing interest in mystery and detective fiction which depended upon the recognition of pattern and the establishment of reality. While Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes stories were dominant in this genre, there were numerous other authors also writing detective stories. Four examples published in the Windsor are Arthur Morrison’s The Chronicles of Martin Hewitt, Investigator (vol 1, 1895), and The Adventures of Martin Hewitt (vol 3, 1896), Percy Andreae’s Lauder Caine the Confessor (vol 4, 1896), Baroness Orczy’s Skin O’ My Tooth: His Memoirs by his Confidential Clerk (vol 18, 1903) and Stories of the Gold Star Line (vol 9, 1898/9) by L.T. Meade and Robert Eustace. In each of these series it is noticeable that the central character is a lone investigator whose exploits are described by a close associate who, while admiring the protagonist, does not comprehend how or why his actions are undertaken. Thus, the investigator, while clarifying a seemingly incomprehensible series of events, remains an enigma in himself and is occasionally represented as working outside the law to attain the desired result (see, for example, the protagonist of Baroness Orczy’s Skin O’My Tooth, a lawyer who uses unorthodox and even illegal methods to gain his ends).
A fascination with the blurring of moral boundaries and perspectives was in itself a characteristic of the time. A concern with criminal behaviour, in which the criminal was not automatically apprehended became apparent—so a successful and stylish swindle performed by an attractive protagonist as in Fred M. White’s short story “The Language of Flowers” (vol 29, 1908/9) and C.J. Cutcliffe Hyne’s “The Twins” (vol 32, 1910) was presented as something which the reader could at least sympathise with, if not emulate. It must not be forgotten that this was the era of the “gentleman thief,” such as E.W. Homung’s Raffles, whose birth and breeding overrode conventional social norms and, in doing so, argued for the recognition of values that superseded middle-class conventions of religion and morality. This suggested that moral codes were a matter of expedience rather than absolute constructs and were dependent to a large extent upon the internal acknowledgment of a class structure that defined the moral characteristics pertaining to each level of society. The insecurity and anxiety that this suggested is evident in the number of stories in which the assumption of another’s identity is foregrounded together with the need to define precisely the origins of one’s family. This is coupled with an increasing focus on historical fiction; such stories tended to be located predominantly either in times of unrest such as the English Civil War, or the Scottish uprising of 1745, or in eras associated with public nostalgia for a lost “golden age” such as the reign of Elizabeth or a generalised “middle ages” remarkable for idealised notions of chivalric order. (See, for example, Robert Barr’s The Strong Arm, [vol 11, 1899/1900], and S.R. Crockett’s Joan of the Sword [vol 9, 1897/8]). Like detective and mystery stories these tales centred upon the re-establishment of a pattern of everyday living and a reassuring restoration of the status quo, if only at the individual level.
Concurrent with this interest in the past is an increasing focus on technological and social development and its implications for the future. Nonfiction in the Windsor offered readers accounts of the development of radio and telegraphy (“Marconi’s Achievement: Telegraphing across the Ocean Without Wires,” vol 15), electricity (“How London gets her Electric Light,” vol 13), new concepts in astronomy (“The Other Side of the Moon,” vol 8), the invention and subsequent rapid adoption of the car (“The Momentous Motor,” vol 18), and the invention of the airship together with its potential for use in war (“The Aerial Battleship,” vol 32). This concern with advances in technology was also apparent in some of the short fiction published in the magazine; examples included “A Scientific Balloon” (vol 3, 1896), “The Aerial Brickfield” (vol 6, 1897), “Frictional Electricity” (vol 17, 1902/3) and “From Pole to Pole: an Account of a Journey Through the Axis of the Earth; Collated from the Diaries of the Late Professor Haffkin and his Niece, Mrs Arthur Princeps” (vol 20, 1904). However, unlike the non-fiction mentioned above, these stories, particularly the last-named, demonstrated an awareness of the comical aspects of human reliance on technology, even while stressing the importance of technological progress and its potential benefits for human society.
IV
While clearly demonstrating the centrality of British domestic and social life in its selection of material, the Windsor never lost sight of the significance of both colonial and foreign issues in its contents. Thus from its first appearance, the magazine obviously included a colonial audience in its readership, and both fiction and non-fiction encompassed imperial and other international themes. The magazine clearly responded to significant events such as the outbreak of the Boer War (1899) and the celebration of Australian Federation in 1901, but did so in ways which would reassure its domestic audience of the supremacy of the Empire; thus, Frederick Dolman’s “The Colonial Office” and “Leaders in the Australian Commonwealth,” both published in 1901, carefully explained to readers the working of Australian political institutions while also affirming that Australia would remain a loyal part of the Empire after Federation. York Hopewell’s “Remember Majuba! an Interview with the Man who has Most Cause for Doing So” (1901) initially appears to have little to do with the Boer War, focusing as it does on a battle fought against the Zulus, but Hopewell makes plain the need to support the present war effort by emphasising the past sacrifices and achievements of soldiers who had recently fought in other South African campaigns. Of more contemporary interest are Robert Machray’s 1900 articles “Our Reserve of Generals” and “Soldiers of the Press: all About War Correspondents and their Work” and George A. Wade’s “To the Memory of the Brave: How the Public Schools Honour their Dead Heroes” (also published in 1900); however, it must be noted that these articles do not assess the Boer War in any great detail, concentrating instead on rather more peripheral issues. These non-fiction articles are essentially expository rather than analytical or argumentative and as such reflect an editorial stance which remains constant throughout the Windsor in the period under discussion; the magazine does not attempt to analyse the underlying causes of contemporary events (something which a monthly magazine would find difficult to do given the need to go to press well in advance of publication date), but instead offers new perspectives on current affairs.
In terms of the fictional representation of imperial and international issues, the Windsor Magazine demonstrates the underlying concerns of the time. An increasing fascination with the exotic and alien can be seen in stories such as Anthony Hope’s Ruritanian novel Sophy of Kravonia, (vol 23, 1905/6; vol 24, 1906), Max Pemberton’s White Walls (vol 30, 1909), and Justus Miles Forman’s The Quest (vol 29, 1908/9). The last is particularly interesting as it demonstrates the inability of modem society to assimilate those who do not conform to its ways; the protagonist succeeds in his quest (which is remarkable for its chivalric associations), but cannot remain within society, and he and his wife withdraw to an unnamed island in the South Seas where they can successfully live according to their own beliefs. Together with this concern with the exotic, there is an increasing focus on political unrest and stories of invasion and spying, such as Max Pemberton’s Pro Patria (vol 12, 1900). Pro Patria was serialized during the latter part of 1900 and centres on a proposed channel tunnel and the threat that this apparently progressive idea poses to national security. Short stories by E. Phillips Oppenheim and Francis Gribble also deal with political and social unrest: Oppenheim’s series of short stories (vol 13, 1900/1) focuses on incidents in the career of an inexperienced but capable young diplomat, and Gribble depicts a number of events in the life of an Anarchist named (appropriately) Stromboli (vol 12, 1900; vol 13, 1900/1). Occasionally, the fear of invasion and social unrest is coupled with a focus on the alien and their destabilising potential, as in Rider Haggard’s Ayesha: the Return of She (vol 21 1904/5, vol 22 1905) in which the depiction of Ayesha’s almost superhuman status is coupled with a desire for military conquest. Given the threat of civic and moral disruption with which both of these themes were imbued, the Edwardian sense of anxiety is here doubly emphasised.
Fictional representations of colonial and American society also reflect specific imperial concerns. Canadian life, for example, is realised wholly in terms of mining and pioneer farming with little mention of any established urban communities. The beneficial influences of isolated western communities can be seen in stories such as Harold Bindloss’s Hawtrey’s Deputy (vol 31, 1909/10; vol 32, 1910); here the simpler life of the farmer, apparently uncomplicated by the problems of urban existence, allows the characters of the protagonists to be assessed accurately and also provides a context in which the morally dubious can be redeemed. Clearly, this apparent simplicity is not what it appears to be, as it can also permit concealment and deception to feature as an intrinsic part of the story; however, this is carefully minimised and can even be presented positively if it supports the overall aim of praising the pioneering lifestyle.
Similar stereotypical representations of American and Australian life also appear, with an important exception in the case of the latter. Thus, depictions of America focus either on commerce and the figure of the shrewd businessman of humble origins (as in Spencer Leigh Hughes’s “The Panjandrum Incident” [vol 11, 1899/1900]) or the rough, but morally unambiguous society of the American West (see for example Owen Rhoscomyl’s “The Kid: a New Story of Cowboy Life”, vol 4, 1896, and Guy Boothby’s “The Treasure of Sacramento Nick”, vol 7, 1897/8). Occasionally the two perspectives are represented simultaneously as in Henry A. Hering’s “The Dry Calculator of Silas P. Cornu,” (vol 7, 1897/8) in which the protagonist is clearly an able man of business, but his naivety blinds him to the subtleties of urban business practices. Australian society is similarly represented with a marked emphasis upon the Bush or mining communities as in F. Fitzgerald’s “At the Bush Inn” (vol 6, 1897) and “Pollie Palmer” (vol 8, 1898), Alfred Slade’s “The Conversion of Toughie” (vol 7, 1897/8) and Guy Boothby’s “The Reformation of the Jackeroo” (vol 6, 1897). However, it is interesting to note that there is one author whose representations of Australian society do not depict either of these themes and that is Ethel Turner.
Turner is an example of a colonial author whose relationship with the Windsor Magazine, and indeed with Ward, Lock who published the majority of her novels, has been clearly documented.5 Between 1895 and 1907, Turner wrote twenty stories for the magazine, for which she was paid between five and ten pounds each. These stories focused primarily on suburban Sydney and the lives of middle-class families whose surroundings very obviously did not conform to those depicted in the popular stereotypes of Australia referred to above. Thus, stories such as “Saucepan Sketch”(vol 2, 1895), “Bedtime at Brown’s: a Very Domestic Sketch” (vol 6, 1897), “What the Postman Brought” (vol 8, 1898) and “Early Morning at Brown’s” (vol 14, 1901) all describe the daily activities of middle-class suburban living in Australia. Consequently, they might be said to represent precisely that readership at which the Windsor Magazine was aimed.
V
In terms of broad content (in type if not amount), the Windsor Magazine remained largely unchanged between 1894 and 1910. However, as noted previously, there were some changes apparent in the focus of the magazine, particularly in terms of its perception of its audience. Thus, despite the subtitle’s gesture towards inclusiveness and the statement in the Foreword to the first number that “It is to the home that the WINDSOR MAGAZINE desires specially to appeal” (1), it is clear that the magazine was swiftly redirected toward a predominantly male audience. Initially, there did appear articles which were specifically directed to a female readership; the first volume included articles on fashion by Charlotte O’Conor Eccles, advice on housekeeping by Mrs Humphrey and a plea for Marriage Insurance as a means of providing some resource for widows or abandoned wives. However, by 1898 this type of article with an avowedly female focus was no longer being published, although articles on male hobbies and sports continued to appear. Even serials such as Cotterel Hoe’s Jennie Baxter, Journalist (vols 7 and 8, 1897/8) and Mrs C.N (Alice) Williamson’s The Career of Joan Carthew: the Adventures of a Girl who had Nothing and Wanted Everything, (vol 19, 1903/4), both written from the perspective of their female protagonists, nevertheless reinforced the gender divisions of Edwardian society even while praising the apparent independence and unconventional ity of the protagonist. Both heroines do achieve a measure of economic independence which is not surprising—as Kemp, Mitchell and Trotter indicate, “Edwardian writers . . . give serious attention to women at work” (xiv). However, Hoe and Williamson do this in a context which is ultimately directed toward the successful establishment of their protagonists as wives who will support their husbands in their endeavours.
One significant change that did occur in the format of the Windsor Magazine was in the increasing amount of space that was given to fiction. Volume 1 for example contained two serialized novels and twelve short stories, and volume 2 published a further two serializations and twenty short stories. Seven years later in 1902, volume 15 contained 36 stories, including the two novels, and volume 16 contained 32. A further increase is evident throughout the rest of the decade, volumes 31 and 32 containing 63 and 37 stories respectively. While it is clear that the increase in fiction is partly attributable to the presence of the larger Christmas number with its greater number of short stories, it is evident that this is not the only reason for this change, and as the journal did not increase appreciably in size, it follows that there is an obvious decrease in the amount of non-fiction that appeared. No explanation is given for this change in emphasis, but it would be reasonable to assume that it occurred in response to the demands of the readership. Given that between 1895 and 1914 “fiction was the most important section of the leisure industry” (Kemp, Mitchell and Trotter, xv), it would appear that the Windsor Magazine responded to this development and gave its audience the fiction that it demanded. The curtseying debutante of the Foreword of volume 1 had become a story-telling matron who, in her own words, represented “a triumph in magazine literature” (vol 16, 659).
Acknowledgements
This project could not have been completed without the staff at the Fryer Library, University of Queensland whose assistance was invaluable. I am also deeply indebted to the Library staff at the University of New South Wales who were persuaded to send precious volumes of the Windsor Magazine to Queensland, and to the Queensland Parliamentary Library, the Mitchell Library at the State Library of New South Wales and the Barr Smith Library at the University of Adelaide. Barbara Garlick was the enthusiastic and patient adviser that she has always been for me, and David—-thank you for the iBook and the technical advice!
- I have been unable to trace this reference. [↩]
- See, for example, commentary on the FictionMags Index, a website which briefly describes the history of a large number of publications in relation to one another: http://users.ev1.net/~homeville/fictionmag/Ostart.htm. [↩]
- For instance, two pieces of fiction appeared as separate supplements to volume 27—Ambrose Pratt’s The Remittance Man, 1907: 209-320; Fred M. White’s “The Lord of the Manor,” 1907: 331-70. In one copy of volume 27 I have examined (from the University of New South Wales), these items were bound in with the rest of the volume (although not part of the volume’s consecutive numbering) with the word “Supplement” added next to the page numbers. No other bound volumes I have seen contain bound-in supplements, either other copies of volume 27 or any other volume. Details of these supplements have not been included in either the author or chronological indexes because of the random nature of their survival in this form. [↩]
- He was also apparently editor of the Daily Graphic between 1912 and 1916, according to Sandra Kemp, Charlotte Mitchell and David Trotter, eds, Edwardian Fiction: an Oxford Companion (Oxford: Oxford UP, 1997), 200. [↩]
- See, for example, A.T. Yarwood’s From a Chair in the Sun, Ringwood, Vic: Penguin, 1994. [↩]
Author Index
Abel, Isabella S. “The Obeah-Man.” 25 (1906/7): 387-92.
Achurch, Janet. “My Runaway Wife.” 5 (1896/7): 489-94.
Adams, Herbert. “A Consignment from Yarmouth.” 4 (1896): 295-300. Adeler, Max. “The Flying Dutchman.” 19 (1903/4): 125-30.
—. “Frictional Electricity.” 17 (1902/3): 57-62.
—. “Mary Jones.” 18 (1903): 265-71.
Agnus, Orme [John C. Higginbotham]. “Abner, the Watchdog,” 27 (1907/8): 497-504.
—. “The Coming of a Soldier.” 12 (1900): 347-56.
—. Love in Our Village. 11 (1899/1900): 385-93, 412-25, 603-15, 735-46. —. “The Miraculous Inspiration of Mr Jesty.” 12 (1900): 431-40.
—. “Mrs Dishman’s Ghosts.” 28 (1908): 50-58.
—. “The Poet’s Love.” 12 (1900): 203-15.
—. “A Portrait by Kneller.” 26 (1907): 548-56.
—. “Vickery’s Deplorable Stratagem.” 12 (1900): 63-72.
—. “The Village Autocrat.” 27 (1907/8): 319-26.
Akerman, P.B. “A Cruel Murder.” 5 (1896/7): 155-59.
Alden, W[illiam].L[ivingston]. “Besieged.” 10 (1899): 53-60.
—. “A Scientific Balloon.” 3 (1896): 75-80.
—. “A Very Satisfactory Fog.” 2 (1895): 529-34.
Alexander, Mrs. “His Retaining Fee.” 14 (1901): 419-27.
Allen, Grant. “The Pirate of Cliveden Reach.” 7 (1897/8): 668-76.
Andreae, Percy. The Emperor’s Detective. 7 (1897/8): 267-78, 381-92, 50918,607-18,750-61. 8 (1898): 67-77.
—. Lauder Caine the Confessor. 4 (1896): 561-72. 5 (1896/7): 200-10, 625-40, 709-22.
Appelbee, A.S. “Canine Keepers.” 16 (1902): 449-54.
Archer, Laura M. “The Lonely Woman.” 16 (1902): 575-81.
Arnold, Edwin Lester. “The Menagerie Ship.” 26 (1907): 329-34.
Atkins, M. Alison. “The Nut Tree: a Fairy Story.” 24 (1906): 578-86.
Austin, L.F. “The Ghost’s‘Double’.” 7 (1897/8): 123-34.
—. “A Stolen Battleship.” 10 (1899): 525-31.
Avery, Harold. “The Bureau Drawer.” 3 (1896): 230-32.
Baden-Powell, R[obert]. S[tephenson]. “A Story of the Matabele Rising: a Test of Friendship.” 4 (1896): 428-31.
Bailey, H[enry]. C[hristopher]. “The Devil of Marston.” 20(1904): 145-52.
—. “The King’s Way.” 17 (1902/3): 159-66.
—. “The Knight of Mayford.” 15 (1901/2): 241-47.
—. “The Lone Hand.” 21 (1904/5): 180-86.
—. “The Love of Money.” 26 (1907): 584-92.
—. “The Men in Buckram.” 22 (1905): 446-54.
—. “The Nun ofNewstead.” 19(1903/4): 145-53.
—. “Politics and the Grocer.” 27 (1907/8): 377-86.
—. “Sir Albert’s Fall.” 16(1902): 162-68.
—. “Sir Bertram’s Tryst.” 22 (1905): 355-62.
Bain, Robert. “The Prince Disguises Himself.” 5 (1896/7): 732-39.
Baines, G.M. “By Flashlight.” 12 (1900): 225-34.
—. “Mr Pilkley’s Felony.” 21 (1904/5): 641-50.
Baring-Gould, Sabine. “Margery Coade.” 17 (1902/3): 137-45.
—. “The Red-Haired Girl.” 19 (1903/4): 197-204.
Barlow, Jane. “The Hins’ Housekeeper.” 19 (1903/4): 369-74.
Barmby, Cuthbert. “How Trevor’s Pile was Made.” 25 (1906/7): 650-55.
Barr, Robert. “The Absent-Minded Coterie.” 23 (1905/6): 753-70.
—. “The Countess Decides.” 19 (1903/4): 583-93.
—. “The Cousin from Canada.” 30 (1909): 319-27.
—. “A Deputation to the King.” 15 (1901/2): 385-93.
—. “The Kidnapping of Rockevelt.” 18 (1903): 135-47.
—. “Lady Alicia’s Emeralds.” 23 (1905/6): 295-306.
—. “A Matter of Motives.” 15 (1901/2): 192-204.
—. “The Mystery of the Five Hundred Diamonds.” 20 (1904): 618-32.
—. “A Question of Money.” 16 (1902): 243-54.
—. “The Scientist and the Shop-Girl.” 31 (1909/10): 167-77.
—. The Speculations of Jack Steele. 22 (1905):/19-30, 141-51,263-74, 383-96, 596-606, 690-700.
—. The Strong Arm. 11 (1899/1900): 35-48, 258-72, 355-64, 471-80, 550-62, 707-18.
—. “Two and a Motor.” 21 (1904/5): 713-32.
—. “A Wild Boar Rampant.” 26 (1907): 677-86.
—. “The Windfall.” 25 (1906/7): 351-60.
—. Young Lord Stranleigh. 27 (1907/8): 79-88, 280-97, 423-39, 531-48, 648-58, 785-803.
—. “Within an Ace of the End of the World.” 13 (1900/1): 17-26.
Barratt, James. “A Stormy Courtship.” 14 (1901): 683-90.
Barrett, Dorothea. “A Country Holiday.” 30 (1909): 328-32.
—. “A New Zealand Pilgrimage.” 31 (1909/10): 432-36.
—. “At Old Yard Farm.” 30(1909): 522-25.
—. “A Rickshaw Ride in Durban.” 30 (1909): 153-56.
Barrow, Kathleen M. “‘Ars Longa’.” 15 (1901/2): 657-64.
Barry, John Arthur. “A British Resident.” 7 (1897/8): 682-92.
—. “A Deal With Spain.” 8 (1898): 483-89.
Bateman, May. “The Mystery of Whigham Hall.” 24 (1906): 476-84.
Beardsley, Alice. “Honeymooners, Limited.” 29 (1908/9): 443-48.
—. “Mutton Chops and Cupid.” 26 (1907): 323-28.
—. “Percy Biggs’s Lorelei.” 28(1908): 151-58.
Bell, C.C. “A Judgement of Paris.” 30 (1909): 680-86.
Bell, R.S. Warren. “Fortunato’s Revenge.” 28 (1908): 76-82.
Bennett, Arnold. “The Baby’s Bath.” 25 (1906/7): 321-28.
—. “His Worship the Goosedriver.” 19 (1903/4): 255-64.
—. The Loot of Cities: the Adventures of a Millionaire in Search of Joy. 20
(1904): 107-16, 227-36, 347-56, 467-76, 587-96, 655-63.
—. “Nocturne at the Majestic.” 19 (1903/4): 735-45.
—. “The Silent Brothers.” 26 (1907): 231-40.
Benson, E[dward].F[rederick]. “A Double Misfit.” 17 (1902/3): 291-97.
—. “The Superannuation Department.” 23 (1905/6): 253-60.
—. “A Woman’s Ambition.” 13 (1900/1): 147-54.
Bensusan, S[amuel].L[evy]. “The Autobiography of a Wild Rabbit.” 17 (1902/3): 249-56.
—. “The Life of a Red Deer.” 25 (1906/7): 621-30.
—. “A Night with Poachers.” 19(1903/4): 551-56.
—. “The Story of Hob, the Ferret.” 25 (1906/7): 433-41.
—. “The Wild-Fowl Decoy.” 9 (1898/9): 417-22.
Best, George A. “Dora’s Last Prize.” 32 (1910): 706-10.
Bindloss, Harold. “Gillatly’s March.” 26(1907): 197-203.
—. Hawtrey’s Deputy. 32 (1910): 17-34, 175-94, 306-16, 427-43, 557-80, 676-98.
Bleackley, Horace. “An All England Eleven.” 13 (1900/1): 725-34.
—. “Caught at the Wicket.” 14 (1901): 90-98.
—. “Married v. Single.” 13 (1900/1): 591-96.
—. “Playing A Substitute.” 12 (1900): 308-19.
—. “What Might Have Been.” 15 (1901/2): 629-36.
—. “The Willow at Sea.” 12 (1900): 56-73.
—. “With the Boers.” 15 (1901/2): 740-44.
Blissett, Nellie K. “The Preaching in Paradise Court.” 3 (1896): 695-98.
Boardman, W.H. “A Kind of Hero.” 23 (1905/6): 368-72.
Boden, G.H. “The Discovery of London.” 17 (1902/3): 363-68.
Boothby, Guy. A Bid for Fortune: or, Dr Nikola’s Vendetta. 1 (1895): 1-16, 217-35, 342-55, 441-50, 513-23, 657-68. 2 (1895): 33-44, 152-62, 312-22,455-69,552-61.
—. “By Right of Conquest.” 3 (1896): 468-72.
—. Doctor Nikola. 3 (1896): 1-11, 128-42,239-52,405-18,525-37,629-47. 4(1896): 3-19,221-36.
—. “The Family Honour.” 15 (1901/2): 164-68.
—. “The Great Dives’ Elopement.” 4 (1896): 439-43.
—. “The Great Tipperary.” 13 (1900/1): 59-68.
—. “His Better Half.” 2 (1895): 445-49.
—. Lady Belverton’s Secret.” 3 (1896): 597-600.
—. Long Live the King! 11 (1899/1900): 69-81, 191-208,313-34,433-54, 567-84, 683-702.
—. Pharos the Egyptian. 8 (1898): 31-47, 141-66, 243-59, 393-415, 513-39, 621-48.
—. “Promotion.” 4 (1896): 280-83.
—. “A Private Arrangement.” 2 (1895): 671-74.
—. “The Reformation of the Jackeroo.” 6 (1897): 279-83.
—. “Through Toil and Tribulation.” 2 (1895): 521-24.
—. “The Treasure of Sacramento Nick.” 7(1897/8): 82-93.
—. “A Veldt Love Story.” 15 (1901/2): 671-85.
Bowen, Marjorie [Gabrielle Margaret Vere Campbell]. “The Confession of Floris Heenvliet.” 31 (1909/10): 469-73.
—. “The Quack.” 32 (1910): 329-33.
Braithwaite, Dorothy. “Joyce and the Hooligan.” 19 (1903/4): 674-76.
—. “A Question of Identity.” 25 (1906/7): 431-32.
Brand, Annie Eliza. “The Cut Direct.” 4 (1896): 331-37.
Brazier, A.O. “A Terrible Alternative.” 4(1896): 191-98.
Brenan, Gerald. “Love and Old Books.” 16 (1902): 319-22.
Bretherton, Ralph Harold. “The Chair.” 29 (1908/9): 425-34.
Britton, J.J. “Hedger Bob.” 13 (1900/1): 486-88.
—. “In the Hay field.” 14 (1901): 201-04.
—. “Salem Jones, Shepherd.” 17 (1902/3): 553-59.
Brown, Anna Robeson. “The Red Night at Raglan: Being a Tale of Master Roger Selby, Once Esquire in the Service of His Grace the Marquis of Worcester.” 5 (1896/7): 223-30.
Bruce, Barbara. “Ambition.” 10 (1899): 390-92.
Bryant, Emily M. “The Baby in the ’Bus.” 29 (1908/9): 152-54.
—. “Lion the Matchmaker.” 15 (1901/2): 792-800.
Bullock, Shan F. “A Beggar’s Benefit.” 2 (1895): 585-87.
—. “Her Soger Boy.” 4 (1896): 314-20.
—. “Mrs Breen’s ‘At Home’.” 6 (1897): 695-702.
—. “Shan’s Diversion.” 5 (1896/7): 328-32.
Burgin, G[eorge].B[rown]. “The Man Who Was Goin’to Kick.” 2 (1895): 251-56.
—. “Tollevents’Troubles.” 2 (1895): 711-18.
Busbridge, A.W. “Pugsby’s Manufacture of Diamonds.” 26 (1907): 43-50.
Burrow, Charles Kennett. “Dunbar’s First Lesson.” 10 (1899): 69-73.
—. “Mrs Medway’s Folly.” 11 (1899/1900): 290-94.
—. “On a Haystack.” 10 (1899): 158-62.
Butler, Ellis Parker. “The Heart of a Man.” 19 (1903/4): 131-37.
Byrde. M.B. “The Results of a Kipling Story.” 4 (1896): 451-57.
Caine, Hall. The Christian. 5 (1896/7): 17-46,165-91, 289-306, 413-34, 535-55, 657-82. 6 (1897): 34-58, 125-51, 247-71, 369-93, 491-521, 613-41.
—. Unto the Third and Fourth Generation. 15 (1901/2): 97-118, 213-30. Calthrop, Dion Clayton. “Pot Luck.” 32 (1910): 392-98.
Cambridge, Ada. “The Ambushed Enemy.” 7 (1897/8): 239-46.
—. “A Chaperon.” 1 (1895): 363-73.
—. “A Peer’s Romance.” 6 (1897): 579-88.
—. “The Wind of Destiny.” 4 (1896): 49-57.
Capes, Bernard. “Tony’s Drum.” 32 (1910): 383-91.
Carr, Mrs Comyns [Alice Laura Vansittart]. “Heroes of the Hearth.” 14 (1901): 541-50.
—. “Votes for Women.” 32 (1910): 60-68.
Castle, Agnes, and Egerton Castle. “The Golden Apple.” 23 (1905/6): 141 -54.
—. “The Heart of Lord Mandeville.” 19 (1903/4): 467-77.
—. If Youth But Knew. 21 (1904/5): 166-78,293-306,412-26,471-84,595-607, 771-86.
—. “To the Tune of Little Red Heels.” 19 (1903/4): 161-75.
Chambers, Robert. “The Little Sexton.” 6 (1897): 235-38.
Chambers, Rosalind. “The Sultan’s Aide-de-Camp.” 10(1899): 538-44.
Chesney, Weatherby. “The Vanishing of Major Vaughan.” 17 (1902/3): 111-16.
Cholmondeley, Mary. “The Lowest Rung.” 28 (1908): 264-74.
—. “The Understudy.” 27(1907/8): 131-40.
Churchill, Winston Spencer. “On the Flank of the Army.” 17 (1902/3): 453-60.
Churton, Maud, and Horace Wyndham. “The Pansy Girl.” 16 (1902): 402-05.
Clarke, B.A. “An Attack of the Blues.” 14 (1901): 373-80.
—. “Blackballed.” 11 (1899/1900): 134-39.
—. “A Cure for Genius.” 29 (1908/9): 546-52.
—. “A Favourite of Fortune.” 17 (1902/3): 793-800.
—. “A Host Against Them.” 20 (1904): 404-12.
—. “Interchangeable Parts.” 16 (1902): 264-68.
—. “A Levy en Masse.” 18 (1903): 613-20.
—. “A Man to Run.” 18 (1903): 388-96.
—. “Minnows and Tritons.” 18 (1903): 209-16.
—. “The Passing of Pharoah.” 16 (1902): 564-68.
—. “The Pretenders.” 17 (1902/3): 63-71.
—. “A Reduced Consul.” 24 (1906): 421-26.
—. “A Token of Esteem.” 18 (1903): 562-70.
—. “A Turning Movement.” 16 (1902): 611-17.
—. “The Voice of the Turtle.” 17 (1902/3): 531-38.
—. “A Wager of Battle.” 16(1902): 110-16.
—. “The Wrath of Mrs Barker.” 15 (1901/2): 51-58.
Clifford, W.K. “The Eavesdropper.” 28 (1908): 629-36.
Cobb, Thomas. “Five Years After.” 18 (1903): 650-56.
Coke, Desmond F.T. “The Bargain-Rummagers.” 22 (1905): 480-84.
Conyers, Dorothea. “Mrs O’Dea’s Lodger.” 31 (1909/10): 225-30.
Cooper, Edward H. “Nancy’s Reason.” 19 (1903/4): 780-84.
Copping, Arthur E. “Smacksmen’s Stories.” 8 (1898): 350-56.
Cotterell, Constance. ‘“Though Mountains Meet Not’.” 28 (1908): 439-45.
Couper, M.M. “Montmorency.” 16 (1902): 685-88.
Cranson, J.H. “The Metamorphosis of Corpus Delicti.” 10 (1899): 326-34.
Crawford, F. Marion. “A Handful of Carnations.” 27 (1907/8): 251-56.
Crockett, S[amuel.R[utherford]. “By Right of Salvage.” 29 (1908/9): 67-72.
—. “A Corsair of the Dunes: the Story of a Former Volunteer Fleet.” 23 (1905/6): 185-94.
—. “The Count and the Little Gertrud: a Story of the Seven Weeks War.” 3 (1896): 479-93.
—. Joan of the Sword. 9 (1898/9): 79-94, 225-36, 384-96,499-510, 621-36,735-44. 10(1899): 13-24,201-18, 293-311, 429-51, 563-84,645-72.
—. Little Esson. 24 (1906): 64-79, 205-18, 297-310, 427-40, 563-77, 673-93.
—. Strong Mac. 17 (1902/3): 79-92, 233-48, 386-402, 493-507, 587-605, 744-60. 18 (1903): 70-84, 155-74, 289-305, 443-58, 507-26, 621-39. —. “The Treasure of the Faas.” 27 (1907/8): 715-20.
Crow, O. “A Land Serpent at Sea.” 27 (1907/8): 613-18.
—. “Private Bell, Signaller.” 22 (1905): 628-33.
Daniels, H. G. “Military Tactics.” 25 (1906/7): 783-85.
Dart, Edith C[harlotte].M[aria], “A Little Moment.” 25 (1906/7): 361-66.
Davis, Richard Harding. In the Fog. 15 (1901/2): 476-90, 573-82, 693-705.
—. Ranson’s Folly. 16 (1902): 375-84, 589-96, 696-710.
Davis, Sam. “The First Piano in Camp.” 16 (1902): 558-62.
Dawe, Carlton. “The High Priest of Chung-King.” 10(1899): 701 -10.
—. “The Society of Ten Thousand Hopes.” 10 (1899): 34-44.
—. “The Stolen Emperor.” 8 (1898): 196-203.
Dawson, A.J. “The Autobiography of a Brumby.” 26 (1907): 73-80.
Deakin, Dorothea. “The Duckpond.” 22 (1905): 290-98.
Dean, Mrs Andrew [Cecily Sidgwick]. “Anne and the Anarchist.” 10 (1899): 225-36.
Deeping, Warwick. “Barbe of the Black Hair.” 28 (1908): 661-72.
—. “Sword Before Tongue.” 32 (1910): 655-64.
Dickens, Mary Angela. “A Cause of Quarrel.” 7 (1897/8): 254-58.
Dobson, John. “Jake Webster’s Pal: a Bush Mystery.” 22 (1905): 211-18.
Donaldson, Gertrude E. See under Beatrice Heron-Maxwell.
Doyle, A. Conan. “The King of the Foxes.” 8 (1898): 123-32.
—. “A Shadow Before.” 9 (1898/9): 48-57.
—. “The Three Correspondents.” 4 (1896): 373-86.
Drummond, Hamilton. “Bicester’s Directorate.” 18 (1903): 554-61.
—. “The Cardinal’s Comedy.” 22(1905): 721-30.
—. “A Cast in the Dark.” 21 (1904/5): 131-39.
—. “The Custom of Brettinoro.” 21 (1904/5): 559-70.
—. “The Knot-Hole.” 26(1907): 168-76.
—. “Professor Ahlbome, Collector.” 15 (1901/2): 777-85.
—. “The Secret of the South Pole.” 15 (1901/2): 612-20.
—. “The Tryst.” 24 (1906): 599-606.
—. “Ubi Satanas Habitat.” 23 (1905/6): 631-40.
—. “When There is no Shadow.” 20 (1904): 334-40.
Duncan, Norman. “A Lad o’ Wits.” 29 (1908/9): 642-46.
Durant, H.R. “The Unknown.” 30 (1909): 657-68.
Eccles, Charlotte O’Conor. “The Corpse in the Hayhouse.” 4 (1896): 112-16.
Eckersley, Arthur. “The Obstacle.” 31 (1909/10): 413-20.
Eustace, Robert. See under L.T. Meade.
Fagan, James B. “The Boots of Carloccio.” 28 (1908): 321-26.
Fitchett, W.H. “Jack’s Fighting Courage.” 9 (1898/9): 41-46.
Fitzgerald, F. “At the Bush Inn.” 6 (1897): 339-45.
—. “Pollie Palmer.” 8 (1898): 381-86.
Fletcher, J[oseph].S[mith]. “The Death that Lurks Unseen.” 9 (1898/9): 443-60.
—. “Young Mr Merrill’s Love Affair.” 29 (1908/9): 298-306.
Fodor, Helen. “Violet’s Flat.” 27 (1907/8): 735-39.
Forman, Justus Miles. “Andrea del Sarto.” 20 (1904): 497-501.
—. Bianca’s Daughter. 31 (1909/10): 93-107, 236-58, 378-98, 483-504, 625-47, 781-96.
—. “Bondage.” 22 (1905): 109-18.
—. “Break O’ Day.” 28 (1908): 142-50.
—. “Calypso.” 20 (1904): 703-10.
—. “A Castle in Spain.” 18 (1903): 205-08.
—. “The Countess.” 30 (1909): 263-73.
—. “The French Maid.” 22 (1905): 319-26.
—. The Garden of Lies. 19 (1903/4): 81-100, 291-308, 375-92, 510-30, 601-21,751-72.
—. “The Gravosa Road.” 27 (1907/8): 269-79.
—. “The Harvest Moon.” 30 (1909): 385-95.
—. “Hayes and the Harvest Moon.” 32 (1910): 137-46.
—. “The Honour of Saint Cere.” 27 (1907/8): 627-36.
—. “Irene of Trebizond.” 32 (1910): 271-94.
—. “The Islands of the Blest.” 28 (1908): 387-95.
—. “The Kingdom of Exile.” 20 (1904): 12-17.
—. “The King’s Bargain.” 26 (1907): 353-62.
—. “The Lady’s Maid.” 21 (1904/5): 805-14.
—. “The Man of Mystery.” 28(1908): 509-19.
—. “Mrs Cromwell’s Heart.” 22 (1905): 463-71.
—. “‘Night and the Curtains Drawn.’“ 27 (1907/8): 195-99.
—. The Quest. 29(1908/9): 103-24,273-94,349-69,469-91,591-612,769-95.
—. “A Recruit in Diplomacy.” 22 (1905): 229-40.
—. Ulysses McCleod. 23 (1905/6): 93-98, 322-28, 443-50, 566-72, 650-56, 792-98.
—. “Val Le Morte.” 30(1909): 593-606.
—. “The Waterloo of Mr Jimmy Rogers.” 21 (1904/5): 662-70.
—. “The Woman in Black.” 32(1910): 107-18.
Fraser, J. Malcolm. See under B. Fletcher Robinson.
Fraser, John Foster. “How Percy Willoughby Won.” 1 (1895): 426-31.
Fraser, W[illiam].Alexander]. “The Colonel’s Guest.” 8 (1898): 495-503.
Freeman, R[ichard].Austin, and Ashdown Piers. “By the Black Deep.” 17 (1902/3): 677-86.
Gallon, Tom. “The Angel of the White Feet.” 25 (1906/7): 177-84.
—. “The Baby that Stood Between.” 23 (1905/6): 409-18.
—. “The Hanging Judge.” 32 (1910): 725-32.
“A Gardener.” “Rosamania: a Duologue for Gardeners.” 24 (1906): 449-51.
Gaunt, Mary. “Quits.” 9 (1898/9): 61-69.
—. “Sweetbriar in the Desert.” 29 (1908/9): 493-98.
Gethen, F.H, “In Hawker’s Court.” 4 (1896): 354-56.
Gibbon, Perceval. “Quixote of the Veldt.” 25 (1906/7): 813-18.
Gilchrist, R. Murray. “For Owd Times’ Sake.” 15 (1901/2): 421-27.
—. “The Locked Book of Humphrey Gardom.” 2 (1895): 98-102.
Gleig, Charles. Prehistoric Tales. 23 (1905/6): 515-20, 657-61, 787-92.
Golding, Harry. See under Frederick Shine.
Goode, W.A.M. “The Archbishop’s Experiment.” 22 (1905): 428-38.
—. “Head Night.” 27 (1907/8): 265-68.
—. “How Ludovic Went to Parson’s Green.” 28 (1908): 60-65.
—. “Jason Orchard’s Decision.” 21 (1904/5): 262-69.
—. “Mis’ Lavinia.” 27 (1907/8): 368-76.
—. “A Question of Colour.” 25 (1906/7): 127-36.
—. “The Star Man.” 21 (1904/5): 519-27.
Grand, Sarah. [Frances Elizabeth McFall] “A New Sensation.” 11 (1899/1900): 144-52.
Graves, Clotilde. “The Compleat Housewife; the Story of a Battaglio Pie.” 31 (1909/10): 421-31.
—. “A Relief Expedition.” 31 (1909/10): 521-30.
—. “A Sailor’s Home.” 29(1908/9): 525-44.
—. “A Strategic Movement.” 23 (1905/6): 527-34.
Gribble, Francis. “The Counter-Revolution.” 13 (1900/1): 339-48.
—. “The Friend of the Policeman.” 13 (1900/1): 581-90.
—. “The Flunted Pole.” 13 (1900/1): 227-36.
—. “The Man with the Ultimatum.” 13 (1900/1): 451-60.
—. “The Secret Society.” 19 (1903/4): 557-66.
—. “The Short Shrift of the Filibuster.” 12 (1900): 700-08.
—. “Stromboli and the Guns.’ 12 (1900): 567-76.
Griffith, George [George Griffith Jones]. “From Pole to Pole: an Account of a Journey Through the Axis of the Earth; Collated from the Diaries of the Late Professor Haffkin and his Niece, Mrs Arthur Princeps.” 20 (1904): 531-44 Griffiths, Arthur. “My Evil Genius.” 4 (1896): 80-86.
Grew, E.S. “The Relief Ticket.” 2 (1895): 405-09.
Grey, Rowland. “On the Eve of San Marco.” 10 (1899): 340-44.
Grogan, Walter E. “The Disappointing Prisoner.” 22 (1905): 90-96.
—. “The Fair Guide.” 26 (1907): 661-68.
Haggard, H[enry], Rider. Ayesha: the Return of ‘She’. 21 (1904/5): 27-46, 237-54, 365-85,499-511, 617-37, 745-64. 22 (1905): 41-56, 169-82, 299-318, 405-20, 539-53.
—. “Lost on the Veldt.” 17 (1902/3): 185-94.
Hamilton, Cosmo [Cosmo Gibbs], “Mr Rackett’s Queen Elizabeth.” 17 (1902/3): 257-63.
Hanna, James K. “Other People’s Children.” 20 (1904): 164-70.
Hanshew, T.W. “In the Tunnel.” 23 (1905/6): 375-82.
Hare, Christopher. “How the Bees Swarmed, and What Came of It.” 6 (1897): 456-61.
Harland, Henry. “The Bag of Gold.” 18 (1903): 533-36.
—. “The Big Peach.” 20 (1904): 275-79.
Harraden, Beatrice. “The Clarionet Player.” 17 (1902/3): 28-32.
—. “The First Wife’s Picture.” 31 (1909/10): 345-58.
—. “Love Among the Brasses.” 14 (1901): 243-53.
Harris, A.L. “Pins and Needles.” 32 (1910): 540-42.
Harrison, Austin. “At Call of Dawn.” 31 (1909/10): 761-64.
—. “Initiation.” 30 (1909): 627-38.
Harte, Bret. “The Boom in the ‘Calaveras Clarion’.” 9 (1898/9): 557-67.
—. “Dick Spindler’s Family Christmas.” 9 (1898/9): 119-29.
—. “The Secret of Sobriente’s Well.” 10 (1899): 103-12.
—. “Under the Eaves.” 11 (1899/1900): 84-95.
—. “When the Waters Were Up at ‘Jules’.” 8 (1898): 363-73.
Harward, A. “The Red-Haired Boy Next Door.” 8 (1898): 582-84.
Havell, Alfred C. “Plato: the Recollections of a Dog.” 5 (1896/7): 309-14.
Haw, George. “The Snowed-Up Mail-Train.” 7 (1897/8): 624-32.
—. “A Tale of Two Spectres.” 10 (1899): 682-90.
Hawtrey, George P. “A Pleasant Dinner Party.” 14 (1901): 194-200.
Hazell, Howard. “For Love of Her.” 6 (1897): 162-66.
Heming, Arthur. “The Buffalo Spirit.” 25 (1906/7): 185-95.
—. “The Spirit Wolf.” 23 (1906): 307-21.
—. “The Talking Moose.” 27 (1907/8): 387-96.
—. “The Way of the Wilderness.” 23 (1905/6): 131-40.
Herbertson, Agnes Grozier. “The Christmas-Tree.” 31 (1909/10): 121-24.
—. “The Fairy Boat-Maker.” 16 (1902): 455-58.
—. “A Misplaced Allegiance.” 30 (1909): 578-82.
Hering, Henry A. “The Ghost of Eugene Aram.” 11 (1899/1900): 336-43.
—. “The Ghosts of Nether Talkington.” 5 (1896/7): 597-603.
—. “Marmaduke Dulcimer, Codicil Forger.” 17 (1902/3): 515-25.
—. “The O.P.Q. Rays.” 27 (1907/8): 440-48.
—. “The Rise of New Harrogate.” 9 (1898/9): 105-09.
—. “Silas P. Comu’s Dry Calculator.” 7 (1897/8): 225-30.
—. “The Vanished Prime Minister.” 15 (1901/2): 249-58.
Heron-Maxwell, Beatrice. “A New Administration.” 9 (1898/9): 247-56.
Heron-Maxwell, Beatrice, and Gertrude E. Donaldson. “A Border Raid.” 16 (1902): 211-19.
Hewlett, Maurice. Brazenhead in Milan. 29(1908/9): 179-86,229-36,394-402, 517-24.
Hibbard, George. “The Way it Was.” 29 (1908/9): 415-24.
Hickling H. “A Chat with a Water Bailiff.” 6 (1897): 703-08.
Hickson, Mrs Murray [Mabel]. “The Story of Mary Baintree.” 7(1897/8): 729-34.
Hilliers, Ashton. “Birdseed and the Nineteen-Pointer.” 28 (1908): 232-40.
—. “A Bit of Crown Derby.” 29 (1908/9): 371-80.
—. “The Outrageousness of a Mere Boy.” 26 (1907): 108-18.
—. “The Quiet Sort.” 32 (1910): 208-22.
Hine, Muriel F. “Eyes of Gold.” 16 (1902): 431-40.
—. “A Gipsy Wooing.” 11 (1899/1900): 507-14.
—. “A Seaside Comedy.” 9 (1898/9): 431-35.
Hird, Frank. “Alone in the Workhouse.” 1 (1895): 529-33.
Flodder, Reginald. See under Edgar Turner.
Hoe, Cottrel. Jennie Baxter, Journalist. 7 (1897/8): 204-17, 324-36, 471 -82, 569-79, 710-21. 8 (1898): 51-61, 175-86, 292-303, 445-55.
Holder, Charles F. “The Biography of a Man-Eater.” 23 (1905/6): 419-26.
Holmes, H.J. “A Pocket Burrow.” 17 (1902/3): 153-58.
Hope, Anthony [Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins]. “Celeste.” 5 (1896/7): 502-19.
—. “Foreordained.” 20 (1904): 257-63.
—. Helena’s Path. 26(1907): 19-31, 145-59,296-310,383-92,529-39.
—. “Love’s Logic.” 22(1905): 506-12.
—. More Dolly Dialogues. 13 (1900/1): 293-96, 403-07, 533-37. 14 (1901): 137-40.
—. “Mrs Thistleton’s Princess.” 20(1904): 18-32.
—. “Prudence and the Bishop.” 25 (1906/7): 20-26.
—. “The Riddle of Countess Runa.” 20 (1904): 421-28.
—. “River and Ring.” 29 (1908/9): 37-42.
—. “Slim-Fingered Jim.” 20(1904): 137-44.
—. Sophy of Kravonia. 23 (1905/6): 22-34, 227-41, 351-67, 472-88, 595-609,716-32. 24(1906): 19-33, 141-51,263-74,385-400,506-16.
Hopkins, Tighe. “Her Third Hunter.” 4 (1896): 65-72.
Homung, E[mest].W[illiam]. “The Widow of Piper’s Point.” 2 (1895): 874-81
Housman, Laurence. “The Way of the Wind: an Eastern Love Story.” 26 (1907): 211-20.
—. “Winkiboo.” 23 (1905/6): 180-84.
Howard, Keble [John Keble Bell]. “Celia and the Actor.” 28 (1908): 89-95.
—. “Celia’s Dreadful Fright.” 28 (1908): 411-16.
—. “Celia’s Elopement.” 28 (1908): 308-13.
—. “Celia’s Filial Piety.” 28(1908): 520-26.
—. “Celia’s Splendid Plan.” 26 (1907): 461-66.
—. “Celia’s Test Cure.” 28 (1908): 191-97.
—. “Celia’s Wedding Group.” 28 (1908): 707-14.
—. “Enid’s Awful Discovery.” 27 (1907/8): 160-65.
—. “Martha and the Village Idiot.” 26 (1907): 90-96.
Hoyt, Eleanor. “The Woman Who Forgot.” 21 (1904/5): 542-48.
Hughes, Spencer Leigh. “A Case in Point.” 15 (1901/2): 723-30.
—. “A Little Misunderstanding.” 18 (1903): 107-16.
—. “The Member for Dullminster.” 8 (1898): 230-36.
—. “Mr Gladstone’s Double.” 6(1897): 545-50.
—. “The Panjandrum Incident.” 11 (1899/1900): 667-72.
—. “A Parliamentary Proposal.” 9(1898/9): 133-39.
—. “A School of Oratory.” 8 (1898): 660-65.
—. “Who Goes Home?” 7 (1897/8): 435-39.
Hulbert, William Davenport. “A Bear and Her Cubs.” 21 (1904/5): 357-64.
—. “What the Trout Stream Saw.” 18 (1903): 483-92.
Hunt, Mrs Alfred. “A Self-Denying Ordinance.” 14 (1901): 667-76.
Hurry, Alfred. “Jacob.” 8 (1898): 465-66.
Hyne, C[harles].J[ohn], Cutliffe. “The Banker and the Breeches Buoy.” 31 (1909/10): 178-82.
—. “The Oldest Worship in the World: a Restoration.” 6 (1897): 650-56.
—. Thompson’s Progress. 14 (1901): 17-30, 167-81, 307-19, 389-400, 521-33, 651-60. 15 (1901/2): 32-42, 316-26, 368-79, 555-64, 601-11, 757-66.
—. “The Twins.” 32 (1910): 51-58.
Innes, Norman. “Bianca Drinks.” 30 (1909): 86-90.
—. “By Order of the Squire.” 30 (1909): 314-18.
—. “The Eyes of Benedetta.” 28 (1908): 528-32.
—. “In Time of War.” 31 (1909/10): 686-92.
—. “Uncle Jabez.” 31 (1909/10): 64-72.
—. “Wit and Understanding.” 29 (1908/9): 719-23.
Ismail, Cairo. “The Palace of Waters.” 2 (1895): 625-29.
—. “The Strange Story of the Sheik Djezzar-Ben-Yousef.” 2 (1895): 50-57.
Jacobs, W[illiam].W[ymark]. “Jerry Bundler.” 7 (1897/8): 57-62.
—. The Skipper’s Wooing. 6 (1897): 173-88, 303-19, 432-51.
Jameson, E.M. “The Right Honourable.” 9 (1898/9): 669-72.
Jephson, Lady. “The Judge’s Widow: a Study in Human Nature.” 1 (1895): 709-12.
Jerome, Jerome K[lapka], “The End of it All.” 16 (1902): 618-23.
—. “The Marriage Question.” 16 (1902): 305-11.
—. “The Soul of Nicholas Snyders, the Miser of Zandam.” 22 (1905): 337-46.
—. Tea-Table Talk. 16 (1902): 43-48, 136-42.
—. Tommy and Co. 19 (1903/4): 38-50, 277-86, 345-56, 492-504, 651-66, 709-22.
—. “What Becomes of It.” 16 (1902): 385-90.
—. “What is Woman Made of?” 16 (1902): 537-43.
Johnston, Annie Fellows. “By Courtesy of the Clown.” 12 (1900): 136-45.
Johnston, Harry H. “The Snakes’ Curse.” 26 (1907): 441-43.
Johnston, Hubert McBean. “The Viaduct.” 29 (1908/9): 320-26.
Jordan, Kate. “Cazabon’s Way.” 29 (1908/9): 238-47.
—. “In Snow and Candlelight.” 26 (1907): 476-84.
—. “Sir Arthur of Beetle Alley.” 30 (1909): 396-400.
Keightley, Ethel. “Love Among the Willows.” 32 (1910): 303-05.
—. “Philosophy and Cupid.” 31 (1909/10): 559-62.
Kellett, E.E. “Catching Two Tartars.” 29 (1908/9): 94-102.
—. “A Fool and His Folly.” 17 (1902/3): 411-18.
—. “A Lost Opportunity.” 22 (1905): 701-07.
—. “Precision of Language.” 19 (1903/4): 181-86.
—. “A Theorist.” 28(1908): 165-72.
—. “Thicker Than Water.” 23 (1905/6): 664-72.
—. “An Unknown Quantity.” 24(1906): 198-204.
Kemahan, Coulson. “How the Aberdeen Terrier Got his Long Back.” 30 (1909): 643-45.
—. Captain Shannon. 4 (1896): 31-42, 133-46, 252-70, 401-20, 526-40.
Kemahan, Mary. “A Long Interruption.” 3 (1896): 181-93.
—. “Sophie—Dramatic Agent.” 15 (1901/2): 394-98.
King, Albert E. “The Balancing Burglar.” 21 (1904/5): 531-34.
King, K. Douglas. “Baby Brannigan.” 14 (1901): 568-76.
Kipling, Rudyard. “The Bonds of Discipline.” 18 (1903): 243-57.
—. “The Cat that Walked by Himself.” 16 (1902): 483-90.
—. “The Elephant’s Child,” 15 (1901/2): 333-45.
—. “The Mother Hive.” 29 (1908/9): 27-36.
—. “Mrs Bathurst.” 20 (1904): 376-86.
—. “A Sahib’s War.” 15 (1901/2): 3-16.
—. Stalky & Co. 9 (1898/9): 28-40, 188-202, 292-305, 403-16, 523-35, 643-56.
—. “Steam Tactics.” 17 (1902/3): 3-17.
—. “The Tabu Tale.” 18 (1903): 363-71.
—. ‘Their Lawful Occasions’. 19 (1903/4): 3-13, 225-37.
—. “A Tour of Inspection.” 21 (1904/5): 3-14.
—. “An Unqualified Pilot.” 1 (1895): 121-29.
—. “With the Night Mail.” 23 (1906): 52-66.
Lancaster, G.B [Edith Joan Lyttleton]. “The Dignity of Life.” 27 (1907/8): 721-30.
—. “The Divided Soul.” 30 (1909): 569-77.
—. “His Lady of an Hour.” 30 (1909): 49-54.
—. “The Little Girl and Dering.” 32(1910): 505-11.
—. “Peyton’s Bag.” 30 (1909): 205-10.
—. “When Duty Calls.” 27 (1907/8): 666-76.
Leatherdale, G.F. “The Second-Form Master.” 6(1897): 594-98.
Le Breton, John [M. Harte Potts and Thomas Murray Ford]. “A Coward.” 4 (1896): 176-80.
Le Queux, William. “The City in the Sky.” 1 (1895): 613-19.
Lee, Albert. “The Transfer of Tompkins’s Ghost.” 18 (1903): 409-14.
Lees, Victoria. “Her Employer.” 31 (1909/10): 648-58.
Lennoys, Annie. “The Crowning of Esther.” 19 (1903/4): 484-88.
Leslie, Charles D. “Green Money.” 21 (1904/5): 787-91.
—. “A Little Mistake.” 5 (1896/7): 612-16.
Lewis, Charles B. “At Devil’s Run.” 4 (1896): 544-49.
Lindsay, Mayne. “Armand’s Treasure.” 12 (1900): 679-87.
—. “The Dying of Lord Oudenarde.” 10 (1899): 185-91.
—. “The Exception.” 4 (1896): 309-11.
—. “The Masters of the Art.” 5 (1896/7): 349-62.
—. “Naboth’s Daughter.” 6 (1897): 568-74.
—. “One Shall Be Taken.” 9 (1898/9): 542-45.
—. “The Ride from the Dead.” 9 (1898/9): 486-90.
—. “A Singular Coincidence.” 6 (1897): 665-71.
—. “Some Potatoes and a Woman.” 21 (1904/5): 686-92.
—. “The Stolen Day.” 10 (1899): 611-21.
—. “A Toss for a Wife.” 5 (1896/7): 79-83.
—. “The Triumph of Sandy.” 20 (1904): 633-41.
—. “The Valley of Sapphires.” 8 (1898): 307-15.
—. The Whirligig. 13 (1900/1): 75-93, 207-22, 303-19, 469-85, 547-64, 703-18.
—. “The Witch Baby.” 8 (1898): 675-80.
Litsey, Edwin Carlisle. “The King of the Northern Shore.” 19 (1903/4): 645-50.
Little, Clarke. “The Story of a Puncture.” 18 (1903): 313-18.
Lluellyn, Amy. “The Coming of Elizabeth.” 11 (1899/1900): 241-49.
Locke, William J. “An Old-World Episode.” 31 (1909/10): 42-54.
London, Jack. “Brown Wolf.” 25 (1906/7): 531-40.
—. “The House of Mapuhi.” 30 (1909): 17-30.
—. “The Leopard Man’s Story.” 19 (1903/4): 489-91.
—. “The One Thousand Dozen.” 20 (1904): 175-85.
—. “The Shadow and the Flash.” 24 (1906): 354-62.
—. “The Turning Point.” 26 (1907): 394-400.
Lowry, H.D. “The Courtship of Dick Trevena.” 1 (1895): 321-26.
—. “The Third Night.” 2 (1895): 742-46.
Maartens, Maarten [Joost Marius Willem van der Poorten-Schwarz]. “The Death-Way.” 24 (1906): 53-60.
—. “Israels.” 23 (1905/6): 778-86.
—. “The Library.” 25(1906/7): 196-204.
—. “Teetotal.” 25 (1906/7): 663-75.
—. “Tuberculin.” 24 (1906): 631-39.
Maclaren, Ian [Rev. John Watson]. “Against Heavy Odds.” 25 (1906/7): 565-72.
—. “The Baillie’s Double.” 14 (1901): 107-14.
—. “The Brigandage of Commerce.” 25 (1906/7): 688-94.
—. “The Division of Guilt.” 25 (1906/7): 76-82.
—. “The Fall of Goliath.” 13 (1900/1): 431-37.
—. “The Left Hand of Samuel Dodson.” 7 (1897/8): 30-44.
—. “The Making of a Man.” 23 (1905/6): 116-22.
—. “Men of their Hands.” 25 (1906/7): 442-50.
—. “The Minister of St. Bede’s.” 4 (1896): 487-97.
—. “Miss Poppleton’s Young Gentlemen.” 25 (1906/7): 732-38.
—. A Scots Grammar School. 10 (1899): 82-89, 133-40, 250-58, 399-409, 491-98, 629-36.
—. “The Spider’s Web.” 25 (1906/7): 248-56.
—. “The Triumph of the Seminary.” 14 (1901): 332-40,
—. Unsolved. 17 (1902/3): 40-48, 319-26, 438-46, 545-52, 660-66, 705-13.
—. Young Barbarians. 12 (1900): 81-88, 183-92, 251-58, 379-87, 493-500, 612-20.
Maclaughlan, Hugh S. “The Obituary Specialist.” 6 (1897): 217-19.
Macnaughtan, S. “Mr Bliss and the Secret Village.” 32 (1910): 512-20.
Mandley, Percy G. “The Specimen-Cases.” 23 (1905/6): 535-42.
Mann, Mary E. “Clomaynes’ Clerk.” 26 (1907): 723-30.
Mansergh, Mrs Henry [Jessie]. “An Idyll of the Cinematographe.” 7 (1897/8): 363-68.
—. “Miss Paton of Chicago.” 10 (1899): 91-96.
Mansford, Charles J. “At the Pyramid of the Sacred Bulls.” 3 (1896): 386-91.
—. “The Luck of the Little Garrison.” 1 (1895): 493-98.
Marsh, Richard. “The Kit-Bag.” 17 (1902/3): 298-309.
—. “La Haute Finance: a Tale of the Biggest Coup on Record.” 15 (1901/2): 407-14.
—. “My Aunt’s Excursion.” 15 (1901/2): 283-92.
—. “Staggers.” 13 (1900/1): 611-21.
Martin, Mrs Herbert. “Is Love a Dream?” 1 (1895): 37-42.
Martley, Henry. “A Cyclist’s Story.” 15 (1901/2): 497-502.
Mason, A[lfred].E[dward].W[oodley]. “The Clock.” 31 (1909/10): 593-603.
—. “Green Paint.” 31 (1909/10): 23-41.
Mathias, Muriel. “Good Intentions.” 31 (1909/10): 811-16.
Maugham, W[illiam]. Somerset. “Good Manners.” 25 (1906/7): 715-22.
Maxwell, W[illiam].B[abington]. “An Amateur.” 25 (1906/7): 599-605.
—. “Lady Wragford’s Miracle.” 13 (1900/1): 357-65.
—. “The Last Man In.” 31 (1909/10): 111-20.
May, Danae. “Uncle Bob.” 7 (1897/8): 590-95.
May bank, Thomas. “The Joke’s Progress.” 26 (1907): 576-82.
McChesney, Dora Greenwell. “The Blind Ghost.” 31 (1909/10): 322-26.
McEwan, Thomas. “Beveridge’s Bicycle.” 4 (1896): 211-12.
Meade, L.T [Elizabeth Thomasina]. “The Love Adventures of Primrose Ward.” 7(1897/8): 125-34.
Meade, L.T. [Elizabeth Thomasina], and Robert Eustace [Robert Eustace Barton]. “The D. Line.” 11 (1899/1900): 223-35.
—. The Heart of a Mystery. 14 (1901): 51-62, 225-35, 287-97, 459-69, 586-96, 699-710.
—. Stories of the Gold Star Line. 9 (1898/9): I “The Jewelled Cobra” 145-56; II “The Cypher with the Human Key” 266-77; III The Rice-Paper Chart” 330-41 ; IV “In the Jaw of the Dog” 470-82; V “The Yellow Flag” 583-95; VI “The Sacred Chank” 687-700.
Merriman, Henry Seton [Hugh Stowell Scott], The Grey Lady. 1 (1895): 87-102, 141-54, 273-80, 386-98, 557-65, 691-97. 2 (1895): 65-73, 186-96, 269-81,411-25, 504-15.
Mills, John. “The Aerial Brickfield.” 6 (1897): 64-71.
Milman, Constance. “A Good-Looking Young Man.” 6 (1897): 682-87.
Mitford, Bertram. “A Veldt Vendetta.” 2 (1895): 491-97.
Mitton, G[eraldine].E[dith], “The Boy and the Bicycle.” 24 (1906): 337-46.
—. “The Coward.” 28 (1908): 702-06.
—. “The Line of Fate.” 12 (1900): 586-94.
Moberly, L.G. “Armand—Au Revoir!” 22 (1905): 183-88.
—. “The First and Last.” 20 (1904): 285-92.
—. “His Brother’s Keeper.” 23 (1905/6): 288-94.
—. “The Little Brown Boy.” 17 (1902/3): 647-51.
—. “A Sundial Story.” 30 (1909): 211-18.
—. “‘This, My Son—’.” 26 (1907): 516-22.
—. “‘Through Thine Own Heart Also’.” 29 (1908/9): 655-60.
Molyneux, Beatrice. “The Touching Tale of a Plum Pudding.” 5 (1896/7): 125-33.
Monkton, Ernest. “Going A-Milking.” 14 (1901): 505-12.
Moore, F. Frankfort. “The Eccentric Honeymoon.” 3 (1896): 325-33.
—. “The Fur Coat.” 11 (1899/1900): 121-28.
—. “The Mysterious Typewriter.” 31 (1909/10): 535-45.
—. “Rosamund’s Lady.” 31 (1909/10): 721-30.
Morrison, Arthur. Adventures of Martin Hewitt. Third Series. 3 (1896): 96-112, 202-17, 285-300, 440-54, 569-82, 652-64.
—. The Chronicles of Martin Hewitt, Investigator. 1 (1895): 49-63, 169-87, 289-303, 409-25, 541-55, 630-43,
—. The Dorrington Deedbox. 5 (1896/7): 244-58, 370-82, 458-71, 583-95, 692-707. 6(1897): 97-111.
Muir, Ward. “Fair Exchange and Robbery.” 14 (1901): 631-40.
Munro, Alick. “The Cave-Dweller.” 18 (1903): 537-45.
—. “The Courage of a Coward.” 16 (1902): 229-36.
—. “The Phantom Fisherman.” 20 (1904): 78-82.
—. “The Unknown Quantity.” 22 (1905): 521-30.
—. “The ‘Vigo’s’ Captains.” 18 (1903): 91-94.
Neele, F. Woodward. “On the Rack.” 9 (1898/9): 605-10.
Nesbit, E[dith]. “By a Mere Accident.” 19 (1903/4): 250-54.
—. “The G. B.” 8 (1898): 472-76.
—. “The House of Silence.” 23 (1905/6): 507-14,
—. “The Letter in Brown Ink.” 10 (1899): 352-56.
—. “The Lover, the Girl, and the Onlooker.” 17 (1902/3): 93-99.
—. “Lucy.” 29 (1908/9): 403-10.
—. “Merely Strangers.” 15 (1901/2): 141-48.
—. “Molly, the Measles, and the Missing Will.” 22 (1905): 668-77.
—. “The Nobleness of Oswald.” 10 (1899): 550-56.
—. “A Perfect Stranger.” 10 (1899): 169-77.
—. “Saccharissa and the Candlesticks.” 31 (1909/10): 712-16.
—. “Unexceptionable References.” 15 (1901/2): 271-77.
—. “While It is Yet Day.” 21 (1904/5): 110-16.
—. “The Wishing-Tree.” 6 (1897): 59-60.
Noble, Edward. “An Island Inferno.” 31 (1909/10): 441-48.
—. “A Question of Longitude.” 8 (1898): 79-85.
Norris, Frank. “Miracle Joyeux.” 13 (1900/1): 665-71.
North, Laurence. “The Bridge.” 32 (1910): 711-14.
—. “A Common Cause.” 32 (1910): 75-80.
—. “Colonel Bogey.” 32 (1910): 595-600.
—. “Diana and the Comet.” 32 (1910): 154-58.
—. “Elsa in Goblin-Land.” 32 (1910): 334-38.
Oliver, Owen [Sir Joshua Albert Flynn]. “The Box of Tricks.” 30 (1909): 65-70.
—. “The Gardener.” 28 (1908): 583-90.
—. “A House of Love.” 32 (1910): 643-48.
—. “Little Love.” 25 (1906/7): 796-803.
—. “They Called It Love.” 31 (1909/10): 305-14.
O’Neill, H.C. “The Sunday-School Treat.” 31 (1909/10): 677-80.
—. “Tim.” 30(1909): 310-13.
Onions, Oliver. “The Ghost.” 25 (1906/7): 612-20.
Oppenheim, E[dward]. Phillips. “The Ambassador’s Dilemma.” 12(1900): 452-58.
—. “An Aristocratic Socialist.” 17 (1902/3): 196-204.
—. “The Ghost of Old John Hill.” 15 (1901/2): 128-34.
—. “The Hidden Army.” 23 (1905/6): 688-94.
—. “The Little Anna Gold Mine.” 27 (1907/8): 169-76.
—. “The Little Grey Lady.” 21 (1904/5): 286-92.
—. “A Mad Christmas.” 13 (1900/1): 104-08.
—. “The Man who Saved the President’s Life.” 17 (1902/3): 715-22.
—. “The Man whom Nobody Liked.” 19 (1903/4): 25-30.
—. “My Dreadful Secret.” 13 (1900/1): 629-35.
—. “My First Diplomatic Mission.” 13 (1900/1): 376-80.
—. “A Shocking Mesalliance.” 14 (1901): 447-54.
—. “The Tragedy of a Night.” 15 (1901/2): 523-32.
—. “The Two Ambassadors.” 21 (1904/5): 535-41.
—. “The Two Gamblers.” 13 (1900/1): 651-58.
—. “An Unlucky Rehearsal.” 13 (1900/1): 418-22.
Orczy, Baroness [Emma Magdalena Rosalia Marie Josepha Barbara], ‘Skin O ’ My Tooth His Memoirs, by his Confidential Clerk. 18 (1903): 36-45, 227-36, 348-56,419-28, 588-96, 701-10.
Osbome, Lloyd. “Coal Oil Johnny.” 24(1906): 528-38.
—. “The Great Motor Syndicate.” 25 (1906/7): 299-309.
Osbome, William Hamilton. “The Scheme of Sutcliffe, Swindler.” 19 (1903/4): 703-08.
Oscar, W.N. “Annulling a Prophecy.” 12 (1900): 469-76.
O’Sullivan, Vincent. “The Turn of the Tide.” 32 (1910): 351-53.
Pain, Barry. “Aunt Martha.” 26 (1907): 695-97.
—. “A Certain Man.” 5 (1896/7): 97-99.
—. “The Cheat.” 21 (1904/5): 117-20.
—. “Chrisimissima.” 31 (1909/10): 273-78.
—. City Chronicles. 13 (1900/1): 120-27, 191-200, 330-33, 489-97, 572-80, 682-88. 14 (1901): 76-82, 149-56, 271-78, 405-10, 489-94, 614-19. —. “A Doubtful Case.” 29(1908/9): 130-34.
—. “The ’Eighty-Seven.” 30 (1909): 639-42.
—. “The Failure of Professor Palbeck.” 5 (1896/7): 145-52.
—. “The Feast and the Reckoning.” 28 (1908): 478-84.
—. “The Girl with the Beautiful Hair.” 24 (1906): 724-28.
—. “An Idyll of the Sea.” 25(1906/7): 141-44.
—. “In the Marmalade.” 32 (1910): 444-48.
—. “The Lady of the Pillar-Box.” 32 (1910): 317-21.
—. “Lovers on an Island.” 17 (1902/3): 573-79.
—. “Mr Ashley’s Failure.” 14 (1901): 350-56.
—. “The Pavement Poet.” 26 (1907): 311-12.
—. “The Rout.” 25 (1906/7): 417-18.
—. “The Secret of Discipline.” 30 (1909): 515-21.
—. “The Spoiling of Veronica.” 2 (1895): 135-42.
—. “The Street of Peace.” 20 (1904): 153-55 —. “The Thirteenth Column.” 1 (1895): 255-63.
—. “The Unfinished Game.” 30 (1909): 439-45.
—. “A Vicious Circle.” 31 (1909/10): 368-70.
—. “Work in Winter.” 27(1907/8): 166-68.
Parker, Gilbert. “As Deep as the Sea.” 26 (1907): 263-72.
—. “The Cup of Trembling.” 27 (1907/8): 25-34.
—. “George’s Wife.” 27 (1907/8): 591-601.
—. “A Man, A Famine, and a Heathen Boy.” 15 (1901/2): 169-78.
—. “Marcile.” 27 (1907/8): 351-60.
—. “Once at Red Man’s River: a Tale of the Early Days of the Border.” 27 (1907/8): 474-82.
—. “Qu’Appelle? Who Calls?” 28 (1908): 297-307.
—. “Sara.” 31 (1909/10): 108-10.
—. “To-Morrow.” 27 (1907/8): 230-40.
—. “Watching the Rise of Orion.” 25 (1906/7): 28-38.
Parker, Oscar. “The Conversion of John Trent.” 16 (1902): 99-105.
—. “Peter Brady, Millionaire.” 17 (1902/3): 560-66.
Peacock, F.M. “Society Pals.” 8 (1898): 702-05.
Pemberton, Max. The Gold Wolf: the Story of a Man and His Money. 16 (1902): 63-82, 173-90, 275-95, 411-30, 497-518, 635-58.
—. Kronstadt. 7 (1897/8): 3-19, 175-92, 285-97, 407-22, 527-43, 647-63.
—. The Lodestar. 25 (1906/7): 101-19,279-92,399-416,493-512,631-49, 739-63.
—. Pro Patria. 12 (1900): 33-54, 155-68, 273-96, 397-414, 517-36, 629-50.
—. Varsity Tales. 5 (1896/7): 3-70, 341-48, 438-44, 563-70, 723-30. 6 (1897): 73-80.
—. White Walls. 30 (1909): 71-85, 177-92, 279-93, 421-38, 537-56, 687-711.
Penrose, Mrs H.H [Mary Elizabeth]. “Concerning Bad Jokes by a Boy who Hears Them.” 23 (1905/6): 242-44.
—. “Concerning Bicycles by a Boy who Has One.” 23 (1905/6): 775-77.
—. “Concerning Clothes by a Boy who Wears Them.” 23 (1905/6): 99-101.
—. “Concerning Common Sense by a Boy who Has None.” 22 (1905): 439-42.
—. “Concerning‘Coolness’by a Boy who Values It.” 22 (1905): 189-92.
—. “Concerning Cricket by a Boy who Plays It.” 22 (1905): 57-59.
—. “Concerning Essays by a Boy who Wrote One.” 19 (1903/4): 622-25.
—. “Concerning Football by a Boy who Likes It.” 24 (1906): 640-42.
—. “Concerning Good-Bye by a Boy who Said It.” 24 (1906): 643-44.
—. “Concerning Languages by a Boy who Leams Them.” 20 (1904): 649-52.
—. “Concerning Literary Taste by a Boy who Cultivates It.” 22(1905): 554-56.
—. “Concerning Mothers by a Boy who Has One.” 18 (1903): 415-18.
—. “Concerning Motor-Mania by a Boy who Has Experienced It.” 24 (1906): 61-63.
—. “Concerning Neatness by a Boy who Dislikes It.” 23 (1905/6): 543-45. —. “Concerning Other Fellows by a Boy who Observes Them.” 22(1905): 287-89.
—. “Concerning Parties by a Boy who Goes to Them.” 24 (1906): 525-27. —. “Concerning Popularity by a Boy who Scorns It.” 21 (1904/5): 528-30. —. “Concerning Records by a Boy who Broke One.” 24 (1906): 275-78.
—. “Concerning Rotters by a Boy who Knows One.” 21 (1904/5): 163-65. —. “Concerning ‘Sucks’ by a Boy who Suffered One.” 21 (1904/5): 638-40.
Perrin, Alice. “Beynon, of the Irrigation Department.” 4 (1896): 587-600. —. “A Perverted Punishment.” 6 (1897): 406-12.
Philips, F.C. “The Superior Servant.” 3 (1896): 436-39.
Phillips, Henry Wallace. “In the Absence of Rules: as Told by Red Saunders.” 27 (1907/8): 659-65.
—. “Red Saunders at Big Bend: Enter Mr. Sett, and Exit the Dog.” 22 (1905): 580-86.
—. “A Touch of Nature.” 23 (1905/6): 245-52.
Phillpotts, Eden. “The Bankruptcy of Bannister.” 26 (1907): 273-80.
—. “The ‘Bolsover’ Prize.” 23 (1905/6): 84-92.
—. “Captain Barker’s Bell.” 32 (1910): 261-66.
—. “The Cherub and the Lute.” 29 (1908/9): 57-65.
—. “The Death of Auguste Chatenay.” 28 (1908): 431-38.
—. “The Doctor’s Parrot.” 26 (1907): 418-26.
—. “The Four Lovers.” 32 (1910): 419-26.
—. “The Good Conduct Prize.” 26 (1907): 629-36.
—. “The Gratitude of Johnny Gee.” 21 (1904/5): 55-62.
—. “Half-Mast.” 31 (1909/10): 143-47.
—. “The Holiday Competition.” 26 (1907): 507-15.
—. “Hyacinthe and Honorine.” 25 (1906/7): 227-40.
—. “The Last of the Dorias.” 22 (1905): 634-42.
—. “Peters, Detective.” 26(1907): 52-60.
—. “Richmond and the Major-General.” 27 (1907/8): 177-84.
—. “The Spectre at Montbarre’s.” 3 (1896): 61-67.
—. “Three Birds With One Stone.” 20 (1904): 545-53.
—. “The Tiger’s Tail.” 26(1907): 177-86.
—. “The Tower of the Wild Hunter.” 2(1895): 14-21.
—. “The Wheat Rick.” 32(1910): 195-201.
—. “White Heather.” 32 (1910): 629-33.
Phipps, J. Filmer. “The Strange Case of the Ship ‘Mercy’.” 6 (1897): 559-63.
Piers, Ashdown. See under R. A. Freeman.
Pilkington, Elizabeth C. “A Message in Sugar.” 18 (1903): 397-402.
—. “Milly’s Old Lavender Gown.” 10 (1899): 419-24.
Pope, Jessie. “The Comet’s Tail.” 31 (1909/10): 817-18.
—. “The Finding of Towser.” 27(1907/8): 740-46.
—. “Miss Mentor and I.” 31 (1909/10): 371-77.
—. “Mrs Pettifer’s Turkey.” 31 (1909/10): 203-06.
—. “My Mistake.” 29 (1908/9): 811-16.
—. “Our Patrol.” 30 (1909): 457-64.
—. “The Poacher.” 18 (1903): 273-80.
—. “Pym’s Sister.” 32 (1910): 87-92.
—. “The Tale of the Sandy Stray.” 27 (1907/8): 515-20.
—. “Why the Aurora was Wrecked.” 26 (1907): 568-74.
Price, Nancy. “Cupid in Motley.” 31 (1909/10): 773-75.
Prichard, K[ate]., and Hesketh Prichard [E. and H. Heron]. “Broomridge’s Substitute.” 30(1909): 139-47.
—. “The God of the Lagoon.” 11 (1899/1900): 57-64.
—. “The Thief.” 28 (1908): 637-46.
Pryce, Richard. “Drusilla Proposes.” 31 (1909/10): 604-06.
“Q” [Arthur Quiller-Couch]. “The Hotwells Duel.” 17 (1902/3): 213-19.
Railton, Mrs Herbert. “Polly: a Story for Children.” 19 (1903/4): 238-41. Ramsay, R. “Another Patient.” 15 (1901/2): 542-46.
—. “An Awful Chance.” 23 (1905/6): 123-30.
—. “A Late Visitor.” 9 (1898/9): 719-24.
—. “The Marrying of the Doctor.” 9 (1898/9): 314-20.
—. “Settling the Eastern Question.” 7 (1897/8): 311-18.
Raston, Edith A. “Mr. Heathwell’s Overcoat.” 9 (1898/9): 209-15. Rawson, Maud Stepney. “Love and the Jambiste.” 29 (1908/9): 661-69.
—. “The Poet’s Harvest.” 28 (1908): 558-4.
Rhodes, Harrison. “The Amazing Elopement.” 21 (1904/5): 347-56.
—. Charles Edward. 20 (1904): 91-99, 186-94, 308-18, 447-56, 502-12, 689-98.
—. “A Guide to Eldorado.” 24 (1906): 457-68.
—. “Lady Angela’s Methods.” 21 (1904/5): 227-36.
—. “When Culture Comes in at the Door.” 25 (1906/7): 523-30.
—. “A Wife for Lord Thomas.” 30 (1909): 507-14.
Rhoscomyl, Owen. “The Kid: a New Study of Cowboy Life.” 4 (1896): 509-16.
Rice, Alice Hegan. “Cupid Goes Slumming.” 29 (1908/9): 739-46. Richardson, Frank. “Bunkhum.” 22 (1905): 202-10.
—. “A Gamble in Whiskers.” 21 (1904/5): 158-62.
—. “The Man in Red Whiskers.” 23 (1905/6): 102-10.
—. “Phantom Fittings.” 28 (1908): 454-60.
—. “The Tomlinson Letters.” 27 (1907/8): 403-09.
Richmond, Grace. “The Argument for the Defence.” 25 (1906/): 656-62. Rickert, Edith. “The Capitulation of Her Parents.” 6 (1897): 474-80.
—. “The Power of the Past.” 18 (1903): 184-90.
—. “White Lucy.” 29 (1908/9): 563-70.
Ridge, W[illiam]. Pett. “Ah Lun’s Gift.” 9 (1898/9): 359-67.
—. “Easy Come.” 17 (1902/3): 146-51.
—. “Mr and Mrs Ranger with Misfortune Intervening.” 16 (1902): 196-202.
—. “Mr Wentworth’s Score.” 4 (1896): 20-24.
—. “Mrs Ballard’s First.” 11 (1899/1900): 209-15.
—. “On the Central.” 3 (1896): 306-09.
—. “What They Will Say on Jubilee Day.” 6 (1897): 21-22.
Rivers, Frances. “An Artistic Conclusion.” 24 (1906): 441-46.
—. “The Better Part.” 27 (1907/8): 620-26.
—. “The Caprice of Beatrix.” 24 (1906): 152-56.
—. “An Emotional Cheap-Jack.” 26 (1907): 601-06.
—. “‘A Fool i’ the Forest’.” 28 (1908): 221-26.
—. “The Force of Example.” 23 (1905/6): 546-52.
—. “The Homeward Call.” 29 (1908/9): 252-56.
—. “The Husband of Mina Joy.” 25 (1906/7): 293-98.
—. “In the Consulting-Room.” 27 (1907/8): 397-402.
—. “In the Moonlight.” 28 (1908): 553-57.
—. “An Invader.” 23 (1905/6): 427-33.
—. “The Itinerary of a Day.” 25(1906/7): 120-26.
—. “Love’s Analysis.” 23 (1905/6): 155-62.
—. “Memories.” 25 (1906/7): 550-56.
—. “The Mood and the Hour.” 28 (1908): 96-102.
—. “The Point of View.” 27 (1907/8): 769-73.
—. “A Policy that Sat Above Conscience.” 28 (1908): 396-402.
—. “The Profession of Porson.” 26 (1907): 204-10.
—. “Such is Fame.” 27 (1907/8): 303-08.
—. “Taken at the Flood.” 24 (1906): 701-10.
—. “The Time of Roses.” 28 (1908): 342-48.
—. “‘Train Up a Child—’.” 27 (1907/8): 549-53.
—. “‘VoxPopuli’.” 24(1906): 317-24.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “The Antlers of the Caribou.” 31 (1909/10): 681-85.
—. “Black Swamp.” 31 (1909/10): 776-80.
—. “The Decoy.” 20 (1904): 611-17.
—. “The Fight at the Wallow.” 28 (1908): 349-53.
—. “The Freedom of the Black-Faced Ram.” 19 (1903/4): 531-38.
—. “From the Teeth of the Tide.” 28 (1908): 426-30.
—. “The Glutton of the Great Snow.” 27 (1907/8): 242-50.
—. “Grey Lynx’s Last Flunting.” 31 (1909/10): 315-20.
—. “The Grey Master.” 30 (1909): 99-108.
—. “In the Deep of the Snow.” 27 (1907/8): 105-16.
—. “In the Silences.” 29 (1908/9): 500-04.
—. “In the Unknown Dark.” 29 (1908/9): 257-62.
—. “The Iron Edge of Winter.” 29(1909): 135-38.
—. “The Isle of Birds.” 32 (1910): 69-74.
—. “The King of the Flaming Hoops.” 30 (1909): 465-76.
—. “Little Bull of the Barrens.” 32 (1910): 202-06.
—. “Last Bull.” 30 (1909): 561-68.
—. “The Lord of the Glass House.” 29 (1908/9): 733-38.
—. “MacPhairrson’s Happy Family.” 29 (1908/9): 682-92.
—. “The Master of Golden Pool.” 20 (1904): 33-38.
—. “Melindy and the Lynxes.” 29 (1908/9): 389-93.
—. “The Monarch of Park Barren.” 30 (1909): 333-42.
—. “On the Roof of the World.” 31 (1909/10): 148-51.
—. “The Passing of the Black Whelps.” 18 (1903): 218-26.
—. “The Rivals of Ringwaak.” 20 (1904): 457-66.
—. “The Sentry of the Sedge-Flats.” 31 (1909/10): 474-78.
—. “The Sun-Gazer.” 30 (1909): 219-28.
—. “The Terror of the Air.” 22 (1905): 80-82.
—. “The Theft.” 32 (1910): 699-705.
—. “A Torpedo in Feathers.” 32 (1910): 589-94.
—. “A Tree-Top Aeronaut.” 32 (1910): 323-28.
—. “The Truce.” 20 (1904): 522-30.
—. “The Tunnel Runners.” 32 (1910): 472-78.
—. “Under the Ice-Roof.” 26 (1907): 687-94.
—. “The White-Slashed Bull.” 28 (1908): 533-39.
—. “The Window in the Shack.” 28 (1908): 173-80.
Roberts, Morley. “The Gamblers of Gravel Mountain.” 6 (1897): 527-35.
Robinson, B[ertram], Fletcher, and J. Malcolm Fraser. The Trail of the
Dead. 17 (1902/3): 121-29, 264-74, 370-79, 477-86, 627-38, 734-43.
Robinson, F.W. “Young White’s Love Affair.” 2 (1895): 618-24.
Rowland, Flenry C. “The Doubting of the Doctor.” 24 (1906): 179-85.
Russell, Fox. “Poor Marmaduke: a Hunting Story.” 7 (1897/8): 497-99.
Seton, Ernest Thompson. “Amaux: the Chronicle of a Homing Pigeon.” 22 (1905): 193-201.
—. “The Boy and the Lynx.” 21 (1904/5): 733-41.
—. “Little Warhorse: the Story of a Jack-Rabbit.” 22 (1905): 31-40.
—. “The Slum Cat.” 21 (1904/5): 651-61.
—. “The Winnipeg Wolf.” 22 (1905): 347-54.
Setoun, J.P. “In the Power of the Brigands.” 17 (1902/3): 622-26.
Shannon, W.F. “The Destroyers.” 7 (1897/8): 553-59.
Shine, Frederick, and Harry Golding. “The Sower who Did not Reap.” 28 (1908): 283-88.
Shorter, Dora Sigerson. “The Hanging of O’Dwyer.” 21 (1904/5): 444-48. Shorter, Mrs Clement [Dora]. “The Father Confessor.” 12 (1900): 23-26.
—. “The Three Travellers.” 10 (1899): 375-84.
Sinclair, Upton. “The Overman.” 25(1906/7): 145-57.
Slade, Alfred. “The Conversion of Toughie.” 7 (1897/8): 138-43.
—. “The Fourteenth and the Flag.” 6 (1897): 230-34.
—. “Germaine and the Ghost.” 10 (1899): 267-76.
—. “How They Carried the Good News to Parson’s Green.” 8 (1898): 277-82.
—. “Me and My Chum Dick.” 5 (1896/7): 106-13.
—. “Mrs Captain Proctor.” 12 (1900): 331-39.
—. “The Trick That Triumphed.” 6 (1897): 419-23.
Smith, Ellen Ada. “A Mutiny in the Corps d’Elite.” 30 (1909): 112-18. Smith, H.E. Caldwell. “The Relapse.” 31 (1909/10): 301-04.
—. “The Tale of a Tank.” 32 (1910): 460-62.
Somerset, Lady Henry. “The Great House and the Village.” 32 (1910): 639-42.
Sousa, John Philip. “The Fifth String.” 17 (1902/3): 333-54.
Sparrow, Walter Shaw. “The Cabinet with Forty Niches.” 32 (1910): 649-54.
Spence, Edward F. “A Company Scandal.” 15 (1901/2): 509-12.
—. “The Power of Money.” 32 (1910): 81-86.
—. “A Quaint Entanglement.” 4(1896): 162-66.
—. “The Will of Cyrus Wellcome.” 16 (1902): 330-34.
Spence, Maud Winifred. “Love on a See-Saw.” 14 (1901): 435-38.
Spence, Percy. “A Danger Signal.” 2 (1895): 610-17.
St John, Christopher. “The Coronation of Mathilde.” 23 (1905/6): 277-87.
—. “Vain Glory.” 27 (1907/8): 489-96.
Stayton, Frank. “A Woman’s Whim.” 31 (1909/10): 59-63.
Steel, Flora Annie. “Dry Goods.” 31 (1909/10): 196-202.
—. “His Chance.” 29(1908/9): 89-93.
—. “An Incident of the Sepoy Mutiny.” 15 (1901/2): 453-60.
—. “‘London Town’.” 13 (1900/1): 163-69.
—. “Mother.” 28 (1908): 29-34.
—. “The Perfume of the Rose.” 11 (1899/1900): 17-25.
—. “Silver Speech and Golden Understanding.” 29 (1908/9): 713-18.
—. “The Squaring of the Gods.” 16 (1902): 7-15.
—. “The Value of a Vote.” 31 (1909/10): 749-52.
Stevenson, Benjamin Coxe. “Jenny.” 18 (1903): 328-38.
Stockton, Frank R. “Nat Baker’s Passenger.” 18 (1903): 682-86.
Stoker, T. “The Justice of the Raj.” 13 (1900/1): 745-50.
Story, Alfred T. “The Enshrined Match-Box.” 2 (1895): 649-55.
Strain, E.H. “Dr Contarini’s School.” 7 (1897/8): 451-59.
—. “God’s Glow-Worm.” 4 (1896): 471-80.
Sutcliffe, Halliwell. “The Groom who Missed his Purse.” 24 (1906): 661 -72.
—. “The Jolly Smugglers.” 31 (1909/10): 753-60.
—. “An Old-Time Gretna Tale.” 11 (1899/1900): 103-12.
—. “The Panelled Room.” 22 (1905): 73-79.
—. “The Raid of the Bold Buccleugh.” 13 (1900/1): 129-37.
—. “The Sexton’s Tale.” 11 (1899/1900): 177-84.
—. “The Theft of the Hanging Judge.” 15 (1901/2): 70-78.
Swire, R. “Rubber.” 32 (1910): 634-38.
Taylor, J. Paul. “The May-Fly.” 8 (1898): 48-50.
Taylor, Una Artevelde. “The Dream-Hawker.” 30 (1909): 91-98.
—. “The Phantom Circus.” 32 (1910): 582-88.
Tracy, Louis. “At Sea!” 28 (1908): 599-606.
—. “A Matter of Initials.” 18 (1903): 493-96.
Thanet, Octave. “The Hero of Company G.” 12 (1900): 103-14.
Thomas, Chauncey. “Ruggles’ First Case.” 23 (1905/6): 170-78.
Thomson, Adam R. “A Case of Plagiarism.” 6 (1897): 709-14.
—. “The Result of an Accident.” 22 (1905): 83-89.
Thomson, W. Harold. “Nervous Peggy.” 31 (1909/10): 287-89.
Thurston, E. Temple. “Chatterbox.” 28 (1908): 681-86.
Thurston, Katherine Cecil. “In the Dark.” 29 (1908/9): 141-51.
—. “Life.” 31 (1909/10): 152-66.
—. “The Six Candles.” 28(1908): 159-64.
—. “Temptation.” 25 (1906/7): 50-62.
—. “The Times Change.” 27 (1907/8): 53-69.
Treheme, Philip. “Crudeson’s Castle.” 12 (1900): 553-58.
Turner, Edgar, and Reginald Hodder. “The Invention of Ephraim Gadde.” 28 (1908): 722-30.
—. “The Lion and the Unicom.” 22 (1905): 443-45.
Turner, Ethel. “Bedtime at Brown’s: a Very Domestic Sketch.” 6 (1897): 355-61.
—. “A Champion in Ankle-Straps.” 5 (1896/7): 392-402.
—. “The Child of the Children.” 7(1897/8): 144-53.
—. “The Day of the Snail.” 26 (1907): 335-42.
—. “The Doing of It.” 4 (1896): 92-98.
—. “Early Morning at Brown’s.” 14 (1901): 37-42.
—. “If Not the Rose.” 16 (1902): 151-55.
—. “The Gloves of Gregan McAlister.” 5 (1896/7): 749-56.
—. “In the Silence of the Sleep-Time.” 21 (1904/5): 94-98.
—. “Mr Jessop’s Experiment.” 22(1905): 569-79.
—. “A Parental Birthday,” 26 (1907): 444-51.
—. “Portraits—While You Wait.” 18 (1903): 46-52.
—. “A Saucepan Sketch.” 2 (1895): 632-37.
—. “The School at Jimboree.” 5 (1896/7): 56-64.
—. “Second Nature.” 8 (1898): 549-57.
—. “The Silence Broken.” 18 (1903): 671-81.
—. “A Suburban Terrace.” 8 (1898): 101-06.
—. “The Tale of the Tiny House.” 22 (1905): 678-79.
—. “A Vagabond Day.” 13 (1900/1): 265-74.
—. “What the Postman Brought.” 8 (1898): 332-39.
Turner, Reginald. “A Hypnotic Fraud.” 28 (1908): 447-53.
—. “A Ladder of Letters.” 28(1908): 575-82.
Tynan, Katherine. “A Gentleman of the Road.” 11 (1899/1900): 627-33.
Vachell, Horace Annesley. “A Cutlet for a Cutlet.” 27 (1907/8): 35-43.
—. “Paradise.” 29(1908/9): 193-202.
Vaizey, Mrs George de Home [Jessie Mansergh]. “Sybilla.” 24 (1906): 80-86.
Vane, G. See under F. Glen Walker.
Vemet, Helen. “On the Difficulty of Obtaining String.” 30 (1909): 557-60.
Von Hutton, Baroness. “Mrs Algy’s Delightful Morning.” 26 (1907): OS-72.
—. “Mrs Lyndon’s Adventure.” 26 (1907): 647-54.
—. “One Worm’s Turning.” 23 (1905/6): 195-204.
—. “Ragtime.” 30 (1909): 148-52.
Vorse, Mary Heaton. “The Boy who Didn’t Catch Things.” 21 (1904/5): 323-26.
Walker, F. Glen, and G. Vane. “The Chestnut -Seller.” 18 (1903): 667-70. Wallace, Edgar. “His Game.” 32(1910): 529-38.
Warden, Florence [Florence E. James]. “Lady Anne’s Trustee.” 22 (1905): 653-67.
—. “The Vicar’s Visitor.” 30 (1909): 477-84.
Watson, H[enry].B[rereton]. Marriott. “Big Game.” 24 (1906): 91-100.
—. “The Bravo.” 28(1908): 19-27.
—. “The Cockerel.” 29 (1908/9): 621-29.
—. “Ewes Manor.” 27 (1907/8): 70-78.
—. “Full Moon.” 32 (1910): 463-71.
—. “The Knight Errant.” 21 (1904/5): 83-92.
—. “Lady Molly Calverley.” 19 (1903/4): 408-18.
—. “The Lady with the Key.” 32 (1910): 354-62.
—. “The Man who Could not Swim.” 23 (1905/6): 399-408.
—. “On the Stairs.” 20 (1904): 50-60.
Watson, Rosamund Marriott. “The White Marble Sphinx.” 20 (1904): 664-70.
West-Taylor, H. “A Flutter in ‘Yanks’.” 11 (1899/1900): 487-92.
Westall, William. “Sworn as Dead.” 19 (1903/4): 677-86.
—. “A Tale of Two Treasures.” 7 (1897/8): 69-79.
Weston, James. “A Lucky Snapshot.” 6 (1897): 322-30.
Whishaw, Fred. “A Bid for Popularity.” 15 (1901/2): 301-08.
—. “Pioneers of Nihilism.” 7 (1897/8): 347-53.
—. “Submarine Strategy.” 18(1903): 191-97.
White, Frederick] M[errick], “After Reynolds.” 31 (1909/10): 279-86.
—. “Applied Mechanics.” 30 (1909): 723-30.
—. “The Balance of Nature.” 26 (1907): 557-67.
—. “The Black Admiral.” 28 (1908): 354-62.
—. “The Black Narcissus.” 15 (1901/2): 83-93.
—. “Blind.” 17(1902/3): 174-84.
—. “A Block of Marble.” 28(1908): 198-206.
—. “The Buff Gauntlet.” 26 (1907): 81- 89.
—. “The Charlatan.” 24 (1906): 231-40.
—. “Crossed Swords.” 27(1907/8): 562-70.
—. “The Dormer Window.” 16 (1902): 347-56.
—. “The Eye of the Camera.” 29(1908/9): 155-62.
—. “A Game of Draughts.” 19 (1903/4): 67-75.
—. “The Heart of the Anarchist.” 18 (1903): 468-76.
—. “The Kingmaker’s Token.” 28 (1908): 67-75.
—. “The Language of Flowers.” 29 (1908/9): 647-54.
—. “A Liberal Education.” 18 (1903): 657-66.
—. “The Luck of the Game.” 26 (1907): 427-435.
—. “A Masked Battery.” 27 (1907/8): 684-92.
—. “A Matter of Kindness.” 18 (1903): 19-29.
—. “The Midnight Call.” 24(1906): 109-18.
—. “The Northern Light.” 20 (1904): 562-70.
—. “One of the Old Guard.” 15 (1901/2): 437-46.
—. “The Onus of the Charge.” 23 (1905/6): 809-18.
—. “The Other Man’s Story.” 21 (1904/5): 197-206.
—. “A Record Round.” 31 (1909/10): 563-70.
—. “Red Petals.” 19 (1903/4): 419-29.
—. “The Salmon Poachers.” 32 (1910): 235-40.
—. “The Shebeeners.” 16 (1902): 466-76.
—. “Sub Rosa.” 32(1910): 605-10.
—. “The Sword of Justice.” 27(1907/8): 808-16.
—. “The Thirty-Seventh Month.” 30 (1909): 354-62.
—. “The Throat of the Wolf.” 13 (1900/1): 246-56.
—. “The Unexpected.” 29(1908/9): 803-10.
—. “The Waterwitch.” 32 (1910): 479-84.
White, Harold. “An Error of Justice.” 12 (1900): 659-64.
—. “An Honourable Estate.” 21 (1904/5): 397-402.
—. “The Picture of the Year.” 17 (1902/3): 773-79.
—. “A Scrape.” 16 (1902): 673-80.
White, Roma [Blanche Oram]. “The Elopement of Dry den Tar.” 6(1897): 82-89.
White, Stewart Edward. “The Saving Grace.” 11 (1899/1900): 653-60.
White, William Allen. “James Sears: a Naughty Person.” 11 (1899/1900): 585-94.
—. “Much Pomp and Several Circumstances.” 14 (1901): 205-15. Wildridge, Oswald. “Captain Jerry, Master Mariner.” 26 (1907): 698-705. —. “Concerning a Letter and a Parable.” 28 (1908): 108-18.
—. “The Doctor’s Diploma.” 20 (1904): 429-38.
—. “The Plotters.” 20 (1904): 210-18.
Wilkinson, Florence. “The Hundredth Bow.” 26 (1907): 670-76.
Willes, John. “A Limb of the Law.” 30 (1909): 230-40.
—. “Two of a Kind.” 30 (1909): 38-48.
Williamson, Mrs C.N [Alice Muriel], The Career of Joan Carthew: the Adventures of a Girl who had Nothing and Wanted Everything. 19 (1903/4): 115-24, 316-26, 436-46, 540-50, 626-35, 791-99.
Winter, John Strange [Henrietta Stannard]. “The Canon in Residence.” 6 (1897): 201-06.
—. “Mr Archdeacon.” 3 (1896): 680-90.
Wodehouse, P[elham].G[renville]. “A Benefit Match.” 24(1906): 330-36. —. “The Fifteenth Man.” 25 (1906/7): 169-76.
—. “The Guardian.” 28 (1908): 462-70.
—. “Ladies and Gentlemen v. Players.” 28 (1908): 275-81.
Wood, H.F. Wiber. “The Leaning Tower of Pisa.” 27 (1907/8): 602-08.
Wood, J. Hickory. “Greatness Thrust Upon Him.” 10 (1899): 591-97.
Wood, Stanley L. “A‘Tenderfoot’in Texas.” 5 (1896/7): 47-55, 473-79.
Wood, Walter. “The Wedding Run of Skipper Bain.” 8 (1898): 603-10.
—. “Trapping a Mullah.” 10 (1899): 459-68.
Wyatt, Ivor. “The Phonographic Watch.” 1 (1895): 692-96.
Wyndham, Horace. See under Maud Churton.
Young, William R. “The Morose Passenger.” 3 (1896): 165-71.
Zangwill, Israel. “The Bearer of Burdens.” 13 (1900/1): 35-47.
—. “A Dictionary in Distress.” 25 (1906/7): 475-84.
—. “The Joyous Comrade.” 7(1897/8): 108-14.
—. “The Red Mark.” 21 (1904/5): 140-48.
Chronological Index
Vol 1 (January-June 1895)
Boothby, Guy. A Bid for Fortune: or, Dr Nikola’s Vendetta. 1: 1-16, 217-35, 342-55,441-50,513-23,657-68.
Martin, Mrs Herbert. “Is Love a Dream?” 1: 37-42.
Morrison, Arthur. The Chronicles of Martin Hewitt, Investigator. 1: 49-63, 169-87, 289-303, 409-25, 541-55, 630-43,
Merriman, Henry Seton [Hugh Stowell Scott]. The Grey Lady. 1: 87-102, 141-54, 273-80, 386-98, 557-65, 691-97.
Kipling, Rudyard. “An Unqualified Pilot.” 1:121-9.
Pain, Barry. “The Thirteenth Column.” 1:255-63.
Lowry, H.D. “The Courtship of Dick Trevena.” 1: 321-26.
Cambridge, Ada. “A Chaperon.” 1: 363-73.
Fraser, John Foster. “How Percy Willoughby Won.” 1: 426-31.
Mansford, Charles J. “The Luck of the Little Garrison.” 1: 493-98.
Hird, Frank. “Alone in the Workhouse.” 1: 529-33.
Le Queux, William. “The City in the Sky.” 1:613-19.
Wyatt, Ivor. “The Phonographic Watch.” 1: 692-96.
Jephson, Lady. “The Judge’s Widow: a Study in Human Nature.” 1:709-12.
Vol 2 (July-December 1895)
Phillpotts, Eden. “The Tower of the Wild Hunter.” 2: 14-21.
Boothby, Guy. A Bid for Fortune: or, Dr Nikola’s Vendetta. 2: 33-44, 152-62, 312-22, 455-69,552-61.
Ismail, Cairo. “The Strange Story of the Sheik Djezzar-Ben-Yousef.” 2: 50-57. Merriman, Henry Seton. The Grey Lady. 2: 65-73, 186-96, 269-81,411-25, 504-15.
Gilchrist, R. Murray. “The Locked Book of Humphrey Gardom.” 2: 98-102.
Pain, Barry. “The Spoiling of Veronica.” 2:135-42.
Burgin, G[eorge].B[rown]. “The Man Who Was Goin’to Kick.” 2:251-56.
Grew, E.S. “The Relief Ticket.” 2: 405-09.
Boothby, Guy. “His Better Half.” 2: 445-49.
Mitford, Bertram. “A Veldt Vendetta.” 2: 491-97.
Boothby, Guy. “Through Toil and Tribulation.” 2: 521-24.
Alden, W[illiam].L[ivingston]. “A Very Satisfactory Fog.” 2: 529-34.
Bullock, Shan F. “A Beggar’s Benefit.” 2:585-87.
Spence, Percy. “A Danger Signal.” 2:610-17.
Robinson, F.W. “Young White’s Love Affair.” 2: 618-24.
Ismail, Cairo. “The Palace of Waters.” 2: 625-29.
Turner, Ethel. “A Saucepan Sketch.” 2: 632-37.
Story, Alfred T. “The Enshrined Match-Box.” 2: 649-55.
Boothby, Guy. “A Private Arrangement.” 2:671-74.
Burgin, G[eorge].B[rown]. “Tollevents’Troubles.” 2:711-18.
Lowry, H.D. “The Third Night.” 2: 742-46.
Homung, E[mest].W[illiam]. “The Widow of Piper’s Point.” 2:874-81.
Vol 3 (January-June 1896)
Boothby, Guy. Doctor Nikola. 3: 1-11,128-42,239-52,405-18,525-37,629-47. Phillpotts, Eden “The Spectre at Montbarre’s.” 3: 61-67.
Alden, W[illiam].L[ivingston]. “A Scientific Balloon.” 3: 75-80.
Morrison, Arthur. Adventures of Martin Hewitt. Third Series. 3:96-112,202-17, 285-300, 440-54, 569-82, 652-64.
Young, William R. “The Morose Passenger.” 3:165-71.
Kemahan, Mary. “A Long Interruption.” 3: 181-93.
Avery, Harold. “The Bureau Drawer.” 3: 230-32.
Ridge, W[illiam]. Pett. “On the Central.” 3: 306-09.
Moore, F. Frankfort. “The Eccentric Honeymoon.” 3:325-33.
Mansford, Charles J. “At the Pyramid of the Sacred Bulls.” 3: 386-91.
Philips, F.C. “The Superior Servant.” 3:436-39.
Boothby, Guy. “By Right of Conquest.” 3: 468-72.
Crockett, S[amuel].R[utherford]. “The Count and the Little Gertrud: a Story of the Seven Weeks War.” 3: 479-93.
Boothby, Guy. “Lady Belverton’s Secret.” 3: 597-600.
Winter, John Strange [Henrietta Stannard]. “Mr Archdeacon.” 3: 680-90.
Blissett, Nellie K. “The Preaching in Paradise Court.” 3: 695-98.
Vol 4 (July-November 1896)
Boothby, Guy. Doctor Nikola. 4:3-19,221-236.
Ridge, W[illiam]. Pett. “Mr Wentworth’s Score.” 4: 20-24.
Kemahan, Coulson. Captain Shannon. 4: 31-42, 133-46, 252-70, 401-20, 526-40. Cambridge, Ada. “The Wind of Destiny.” 4: 49-57.
Hopkins, Tighe. “Her Third Hunter.” 4: 65-72.
Griffiths, Arthur. “My Evil Genius.” 4: 80-86.
Turner, Ethel. “The Doing of It.” 4: 92-98.
Eccles, Charlotte O’Conor. “The Corpse in the Hayhouse.” 4:112-16.
Spence, Edward F. “A Quaint Entanglement.” 4: 162- 66.
Le Breton, John [M. Harte Potts and Thomas Murray Ford]. “A Coward.” 4: 176-80.
Brazier, A.O. “A Terrible Alternative.” 4: 191-98.
McEwan Thomas. “Beveridge’s Bicycle.” 4: 211-12.
Boothby, Guy. “Promotion.” 4: 280-83.
Adams, Herbert. “A Consignment from Yarmouth.” 4: 295-300.
Lindsay, Mayne. “The Exception.” 4:309-11.
Bullock, Shan F. “Her Soger Boy.” 4: 314-20.
Brand, Annie Eliza. “The Cut Direct.” 4: 331-37.
Gethen, F.H, “In Hawker’s Court.” 4: 354-56.
Doyle, A. Conan. “The Three Correspondents.” 4: 373-86.
Baden-Powell, R[obert].S[tephenson]. “A Story of the Matabele Rising: a Test of Friendship.” 4: 428-31.
Boothby, Guy. “The Great Dives’ Elopement.” 4: 439-43.
Byrde. M.B. “The Results of a Kipling Story.” 4: 451-57.
Strain, E.H. “God’s Glow-Worm.” 4:471-80.
Maclaren, Ian [Rev. John Watson]. “The Minister of St. Bede’s.” 4: 487-97. Rhoscomyl, Owen. “The Kid: a New Study of Cowboy Life.” 4: 509-16.
Lewis, Charles B. “At Devil’s Run.” 4: 544-49.
Andreae, Percy. Lauder Caine the Confessor. 4:561-72 Perrin, Alice. “Beynon, of the Irrigation Department.” 4: 587-600.
Vol 5 (December 1896-May 1897)
Caine, Hall. The Christian. 5: 17-46,165-91,289-306,413-34,535-55,657-82. Wood, Stanley L. “A ‘Tenderfoot’ in Texas.” 5: 47-55, 473-79.
Turner, Ethel. “The School at Jimboree.” 5: 56-64.
Lindsay, Mayne. “A Toss for a Wife.” 5: 79-83.
Pain, Barry. “A Certain Man.” 5: 97-9.
Slade, Alfred. “Me and My Chum Dick.” 5: 106-13.
Molyneux, Beatrice. “The Touching Tale of a Plum Pudding.” 5: 125-33.
Pain, Barry. “The Failure of Professor Palbeck.” 5:145-52.
Akerman, P.B. “A Cruel Murder.” 5:155-59.
Andreae, Percy. Lauder Caine the Confessor. 5:200-10,625-40,709-22.
Brown, Anna Robeson. “The Red Night at Raglan: Being a Tale of Master Roger Selby, Once Esquire in the Service of His Grace the Marquis of Worcester.” 5: 223-30.
Morrison, Arthur. The Dorrington Deedbox. 5: 244-58, 370-82, 458-71, 583-95, 692-707.
Pemberton, Max. Varsity Tales. 5: 263-70, 341-48, 438-44, 563-70, 723-30. Havell, Alfred C. “Plato: the Recollections of a Dog.” 5: 309-14.
Bullock, Shan F. “Shan’s Diversion.” 5: 328-32.
Lindsay, Mayne. “The Masters of the Art.” 5: 349-62.
Turner, Ethel. “A Champion in Ankle-Straps.” 5: 392-402.
Achurch, Janet. “My Runaway Wife.” 5:489-94.
Hope, Anthony [Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins]. “Celeste.” 5:502-19.
Hering, Henry A. “The Ghosts of Nether Talkington.” 5: 597-603.
Leslie, Charles D. “A Little Mistake.” 5:612-16.
Bain, Robert. “The Prince Disguises Himself.” 5: 732-39.
Turner, Ethel. “The Gloves of Gregan McAlister.” 5: 749-56.
Vol 6 (June-November 1897)
Ridge, W[illiam]. Pett. “What They Will Say on Jubilee Day.” 6:21-22.
Caine, Hall. The Christian. 6: 34-58, 125-51, 247-71, 369-93, 491-521, 613-41. Nesbit, E[dith]. “The Wishing-Tree.” 6: 59-60.
Mills, John. “The Aerial Brickfield.” 6: 64-71.
Pemberton, Max. Varsity Tales. 6: 73-80.
White, Roma [Blanche Oram]. “The Elopement of Dryden Tar.” 6: 82-89. Morrison, Arthur. The Dorrington Deedbox. 6: 97-111.
Hazell, Howard. “For Love of Her.” 6:162-66.
Jacobs, W.W. The Skipper’s Wooing. 6:173-88,303-19,432-51.
Winter, John Strange [Henrietta Stannard]. “The Canon in Residence.” 6: 201-06. Maclaughlan, Hugh S. “The Obituary Specialist.” 6: 217-19.
Slade, Alfred. “The Fourteenth and the Flag.” 6: 230-34.
Chambers, Robert. “The Little Sexton.” 6: 235-38.
Boothby, Guy. “The Reformation of the Jackeroo.” 6: 279-83.
Weston, James. “A Lucky Snapshot.” 6: 322-30.
Fitzgerald, F. “At the Bush Inn.” 6: 339-45.
Turner, Ethel. “Bedtime at Brown’s: a Very Domestic Sketch.” 6: 355-61.
Perrin, Alice. “A Perverted Punishment.” 6:406-12.
Slade, Alfred. “The Trick That Triumphed.” 6: 419-23.
Hare, Christopher. “How the Bees Swarmed, and What Came of It.” 6: 456-61. Rickert, Edith. “The Capitulation of Her Parents.” 6: 474-80.
Roberts, Morley. “The Gamblers of Gravel Mountain.” 6: 527-35.
Hughes, Spencer Leigh. “Mr. Gladstone’s Double.” 6:545-50.
Phipps, J. Filmer. “The Strange Case of the Ship ‘Mercy’.” 6: 559-63.
Lindsay, Mayne. “Naboth’s Daughter.” 6: 568-74.
Cambridge, Ada. “A Peer’s Romance.” 6:579-88.
Leatherdale, G.F. “The Second-Form Master.” 6: 594-98.
Hyne, C[harles]. J[ohn]. Cutliffe. “The Oldest Worship in the World: a Restoration.” 6: 650-56.
Lindsay, Mayne. “A Singular Coincidence.” 6:665-71.
Milman, Constance. “A Good-Looking Young Man.” 6: 682-87.
Bullock, Shan F. “Mrs Breen’s ‘At Home’.” 6: 695-702.
Hickling H. “A Chat with a Water Bailiff.” 6: 703-08.
Thomson, Adam R. “A Case of Plagiarism.” 6:709-14.
Vol 7 (December 1897-May 1898)
Pemberton, Max. Kronstadt. 7:3-19, 175-92,285-97,407-22,527-43,647-63. Maclaren, Ian [Rev. John Watson], “The Left Hand of Samuel Dodson.” 7: 30-44. Jacobs, W[illiam].W[ymark]. “Jerry Bundler.” 7: 57-62.
Westall, William. “A Tale of Two Treasures.” 7: 69-79.
Boothby, Guy. “The Treasure of Sacramento Nick.” 7: 82-93.
Zangwill, Israel. “The Joyous Comrade.” 7:108-14.
Austin, L.F. “The Ghost’s‘Double’.” 7:123-34.
Meade, L.T [Elizabeth Thomasina]. “The Love Adventures of Primrose Ward.” 7: 125-34.
Slade, Alfred. “The Conversion of Toughie.” 7: 138-43.
Turner, Ethel. “The Child of the Children.” 7: 144-53.
Hoe, Cottrel. Jennie Baxter, Journalist. 7: 204-17, 324-36, 471-82, 569-79, 710-21.
Hering, Henry A. “Silas P. Comu’s Dry Calculator.” 7: 225-30.
Cambridge, Ada. “The Ambushed Enemy.” 7:239-46.
Dickens, Mary Angela. “A Cause of Quarrel.” 7: 254-58.
Andreae, Percy. The Emperor’s Detective. 7: 267-78, 381-92, 509-18, 607-18, 750-61.
Ramsay, R. “Settling the Eastern Question.” 7: 311-18.
Whishaw, Fred. “Pioneers of Nihilism. 7: 347-53.
Mansergh, Mrs Henry [Jessie]. “An Idyll of the Cinematographe.” 7: 363-68. Hughes, Spencer Leigh. “Who Goes Home?” 7: 435-39.
Strain, E.H. “Dr Contarini’s School.” 7: 451-59.
Russell, Fox. “Poor Marmaduke: a Hunting Story.” 7: 497-99.
Shannon, W.F. “The Destroyers.” 7:553-59.
May, Danae. “Uncle Bob.” 7: 590-95.
Haw, George. “The Snowed-Up Mail-Train.” 7: 624-32
Allen, Grant. “The Pirate of Cliveden Reach.” 7: 668-76.
Barry, John Arthur. “A British Resident.” 7: 682-92.
Hickson, Mrs Murray [Mabel]. “The Story of Mary Baintree.” 7: 729-34.
Vol 8 (June-November 1898)
Boothby, Guy. Pharos the Egyptian. 8: 31-47, 141-66, 243-59, 393-415, 513-39, 621-48.
Taylor, J. Paul. “The May-Fly.” 8: 48-50.
Hoe, Cottrel. Jennie Baxter, Journalist. 8: 51-61, 175-86, 292-303, 445-55. Andreae, Percy. The Emperor’s Detective. 8:67-77.
Noble, Edward. “A Question of Longitude.” 8: 79-85.
Turner, Ethel. “A Suburban Terrace.” 8:101-06.
Doyle, A. Conan. “The King of the Foxes.” 8: 123-32.
Dawe, Carlton. “The Stolen Emperor.” 8:196-203.
Hughes, Spencer Leigh. “The Member for Dullminster.” 8: 230-36.
Slade, Alfred. “How They Carried the Good News to Parson’s Green.” 8: 277-82. Lindsay, Mayne. “The Valley of Sapphires.” 8:307-15.
Turner, Ethel. “What the Postman Brought.” 8: 332-39.
Copping, Arthur E. “Smacksmen’s Stories.” 8:350-56.
Harte, Bret. “When the Waters Were Up at ‘Jules’.” 8: 363-73.
Fitzgerald, F. “Pollie Palmer.” 8:381-86.
Hurry, Alfred. “Jacob.” 8: 465-66.
Nesbit, E[dith], “The G. B.” 8:472-76.
Barry, John Arthur. “A Deal With Spain.” 8: 483-89.
Fraser, W[illiam].A[lexander], “The Colonel’s Guest.” 8:495-503.
Turner, Ethel. “Second Nature.” 8: 549-57.
Harward, A. “The Red-Haired Boy Next Door.” 8: 582-84.
Wood, Walter. “The Wedding Run of Skipper Bain.” 8: 603-10.
Hughes, Spencer Leigh. “A School of Oratory.” 8: 660-65.
Lindsay, Mayne. “The Witch Baby.” 8: 675-80.
Peacock, F.M. “Society Pals.” 8: 702-05.
Vol 9 (December 1898-May 1899)
Kipling, Rudyard. Stalky & Co. 9: 28-40, 188-202, 292-305, 403-16, 523-35, 643-56.
Fitchett, W.H. “Jack’s Fighting Courage.” 9: 41-46.
Doyle, A. Conan. “A Shadow Before.” 9: 48-57.
Gaunt, Mary. “Quits.” 9:61-69.
Crockett, S[amuel]. R[utherford]. Joan of the Sword. 9: 79-94, 225-36, 384-96, 499-510, 621-36, 735-44.
Hering, Henry A. “The Rise of New Harrogate.” 9:105-09.
Harte, Bret. “Dick Spindler’s Family Christmas.” 9:119-29.
Hughes, Spencer Leigh. “A Parliamentary Proposal.” 9:133-39.
Meade, L.T [Elizabeth Thomasina]., and Robert Eustace [Robert Eustace Barton]. Stories of the Gold Star Line. 9:1 “The Jewelled Cobra” 145-56; II “The Cypher with the Human Key” 266-77; III The Rice-Paper Chart” 330-41 ; IV “In the Jaw of the Dog” 470-82; V “The Yellow Flag” 583-95; VI “The Sacred Chank” 687-700.
Raston, Edith A. “Mr Heath well’s Overcoat.” 9: 209-15.
Heron-Maxwell, Beatrice. “A New Administration.” 9: 247-56.
Ramsay, R. “The Marrying of the Doctor.” 9: 314-20.
Ridge, W[illiam]. Pett. “Ah Lun’s Gift.” 9: 359-67.
Bensusan, S[amuel] L[evy], “The Wild-Fowl Decoy.” 9: 417-22.
Hine, Muriel F. “A Seaside Comedy.” 9:431-35.
Fletcher, J[oseph].S[mith], “The Death that Lurks Unseen.” 9: 443-60.
Lindsay, Mayne. “The Ride from the Dead.” 9: 486-90.
Lindsay, Mayne. “One Shall Be Taken.” 9: 542-45.
Harte, Bret. “The Boom in the‘Calaveras Clarion’.” 9:557-67.
Neele, F. Woodward. “On the Rack.’ 9: 605-10.
Jameson, E. M. “The Right Honourable.” 9: 669-72.
Ramsay, R. “A Late Visitor.” 9: 719-24.
Vol 10 (June-November 1899)
Crockett, S[amuel].R[utherford]. Joan of the Sword. 10: 13-24, 201-18, 293-311, 429-51,563-84, 645-72.
Dawe, Carlton. “The Society of Ten Thousand Hopes.” 10: 34-44.
Alden, W[illiam].L[ivingston]. “Besieged.” 10: 53-60.
Burrow, Charles Kennett. “Dunbar’s First Lesson.” 10: 69-73.
Maclaren, Ian [Rev. John Watson]. A Scots Grammar School. 10: 82-89, 133-40, 250-58, 399-409, 491-98, 629-36.
Mansergh, Mrs Henry [Jessie]. “Miss Paton of Chicago.” 10:91-96.
Harte, Bret. “The Secret of Sobriente’s Well.” 10:103-12.
Burrow, Charles Kennett. “On a Haystack.” 10: 158-62.
Nesbit, E[dith]. “A Perfect Stranger.” 10:169-77.
Lindsay, Mayne. “The Dying of Lord Oudenarde.” 10:185-91.
Dean, Mrs Andrew [Cecily Sidgwick]. “Anne and the Anarchist.” 10:225-36. Slade, Alfred. “Germaine and the Ghost.” 10: 267-76.
Cranson, J. H. “The Metamorphosis of Corpus Delicti.” 10: 326-34.
Grey, Rowland. “On the Eve of San Marco.” 10: 340-44.
Nesbit, E[dith]. “The Letter in Brown Ink.” 10: 352-56.
Shorter, Mrs Clement [Dora]. “The Three Travellers.” 10: 375-84.
Bruce, Barbara. “Ambition.” 10: 390-92.
Pilkington, Elizabeth C. “Milly’s Old Lavender Gown.” 10:419-24.
Wood, Walter. “Trapping a Mullah.” 10: 459-68.
Austin, L.F. “A Stolen Battleship.” 10:525-31.
Chambers, Rosalind. “The Sultan’s Aide-de-Camp.” 10:538-44.
Nesbit, E. “The Nobleness of Oswald.” 10:550-56.
Wood, J. Hickory. “Greatness Thrust Upon Him.” 10: 591-97.
Lindsay, Mayne. “The Stolen Day.” 10: 611-21.
Haw, George. “A Tale of Two Spectres.” 10:682-90.
Dawe, Carlton. “The High Priest of Chung-King.” 10: 701-10.
Vol 11 (December 1899-May 1900)
Steel, Flora Annie. “The Perfume of the Rose.” 11:17-25.
Barr, Robert. The Strong Arm. 11: 35-48, 258-72, 355-64, 471-80, 550-62, 707-18.
Prichard, K[ate]., and Hesketh Prichard. “The God of the Lagoon.” 11: 57-64. Boothby, Guy. Long Live the King! 11: 69-81, 191-208, 313-34, 433-54, 567-84, 683-702.
Harte, Bret. “Under the Eaves.” 11: 84-95.
Sutcliffe, Halliwell. “An Old-Time Gretna Tale.” 11:103-12.
Moore, F. Frankfort. “The Fur Coat.” 11: 121-28.
Clarke, B.A. “Blackballed.” 11:134-39.
Grand, Sarah [Frances Elizabeth McFall]. “A New Sensation.” 11: 144-52. Sutcliffe, Halliwell. “The Sexton’s Tale.” 11:177-84.
Ridge, Wfilliam]. Pett. “Mrs Ballard’s First.” 11: 209-15.
Meade, L.T [Elizabeth Thomasina]., and Robert Eustace [Robert Eustace Barton].
“The D. Line.” 11:223-35.
Lluellyn, Amy. “The Coming of Elizabeth.” 11: 241-49.
Burrow, Charles Kennett. “Mrs Medway’s Folly.” 11: 290-94.
Hering, Henry A. “The Ghost of Eugene Aram.” 11: 336-43.
Agnus, Orme [John C. Higginbotham]. Love in Our Village. 11: 385-93, 412-25, 603-15, 735-46.
West-Taylor, H. “A Flutter in ‘Yanks’.” 11: 487-92.
Hine, Muriel F. “A Gipsy Wooing.” 11:507-14.
White, William Allen. “James Sears: a Naughty Person.” 11: 585-94.
Tynan, Katherine. “A Gentleman of the Road.” 11: 627-33.
White, Stewart Edward. “The Saving Grace.” 11: 653-60.
Hughes, Spencer Leigh. “The Panjandrum Incident.” 11: 667-72.
Vol 12 (June-November 1900)
Shorter, Mrs Clement [Dora]. “The Father Confessor.” 12: 23-26.
Pemberton, Max. Pro Patria. 12: 33-54, 155-68, 273-96, 397-414, 517-36, 629-50.
Bleackley, Horace. “The Willow at Sea.” 12: 56-73
Agnus, Orme [John C. Higginbotham]. “Vickery’s Deplorable Stratagem.” 12: 63-72.
Maclaren, Ian [Rev. John Watson]. Young Barbarians. 12: 81-88, 183-92 251-58, 379-87, 493-500,612-20.
Thanet, Octave. “The Hero of Company G.” 12:103-14.
Johnston, Annie Fellows. “By Courtesy of the Clown.” 12: 136-45.
Agnus, Orme [John C. Higginbotham]. “The Poet’s Love.” 12: 203-15.
Baines, G.M. “By Flashlight.” 12:225-34.
Bleackley, Horace. “Playing A Substitute.” 12: 308-19.
Slade, Alfred. “Mrs Captain Proctor.” 12:331-39.
Agnus, Orme [John C. Higginbotham]. “The Coming of a Soldier.” 12: 347-56. Agnus, Orme [John C. Higginbotham]. “The Miraculous Inspiration of Mr Jesty.” 12:431-40.
Oppenheim, E[dward]. Phillips. “The Ambassador’s Dilemma.” 12: 452-58. Oscar, W.N. “Annulling a Prophecy.” 12: 469-76.
Treheme, Philip. “Crudeson’s Castle.” 12:553-58.
Gribble, Francis. “Stromboli and the Guns.’ 12:567-76.
Mitton, G[eraldine]E[dith]. “The Line of Fate.” 12:586-94.
White, Harold. “An Error of Justice.” 12: 659-64.
Lindsay, Mayne. “Armand’s Treasure.” 12:679-87.
Gribble, Francis. “The Short Shrift of the Filibuster.” 12: 700-08.
Vol 13 (December 1900-May 1901)
Barr, Robert. “Within an Ace of the End of the World.” 13: 17-26.
Zangwill, Israel. “The Bearer of Burdens.” 13: 35-47.
Boothby, Guy. “The Great Tipperary.” 13: 59-68.
Lindsay, Mayne. The Whirligig. 13: 75-93, 207-22, 303-19, 469-85, 547-64, 703-18.
Oppenheim, E[dward]. Phillips. “A Mad Christmas.” 13:104-08.
Pain, Barry. City Chronicles. 13: 120-27, 191-200, 330-33, 489-97, 572-80, 682-88.
Sutcliffe, Halliwell. “The Raid of the Bold Buccleugh.” 13:129-37.
Benson, E[dward]. Frederick]. “A Woman’s Ambition.” 13: 147-54.
Steel, Flora Annie. “‘London Town’.” 13:163-69.
Gribble, Francis. “The Hunted Pole.” 13: 227-36.
White, Frederick] M[errick], “The Throat of the Wolf.” 13: 246-56.
Turner, Ethel. “A Vagabond Day.” 13: 265-74.
Hope, Anthony [Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins]. More Dolly Dialogues. 13: 293-96, 403-07, 533-37.
Gribble, Francis. “The Counter-Revolution.” 13: 339-48.
Maxwell, W[illiam].B[abington], “Lady Wragford’s Miracle.” 13: 357-65. Oppenheim, E[dward]. Phillips. “My First Diplomatic Mission.” 13: 376-80. Oppenheim, E[dward]. Phillips. “An Unlucky Rehearsal.” 13:418-22.
Maclaren, Ian [Rev. John Watson]. “The Fall of Goliath.” 13:431-37.
Gribble, Francis. “The Man with the Ultimatum.” 13:451-60.
Britton, J.J. “Hedger Bob.” 13:486-88.
Gribble, Francis. “The Friend of the Policeman.” 13:581-90.
BleackJey, Horace. “Married v. Single.” 13:591-96.
Marsh, Richard. “Staggers.” 13:611-21.
Oppenheim, Efdward]. Phillips. “My Dreadful Secret.” 13: 629-35.
Oppenheim, E[dward]. Phillips. “The Two Gamblers.” 13: 651-58 Norris, Frank. “Miracle Joyeux.” 13:665-71.
Bleackley, Horace. “An All England Eleven.” 13: 725-34.
Stoker, T. “The Justice of the Raj.” 13:745-50.
Vol 14 (June-November 1901)
Hyne, C[harles].J[ohn]. Cutliffe. Thompson’s Progress. 14: 17-30, 167-81, 307-19,389-400, 521-33,651-60.
Turner, Ethel. “Early Morning at Brown’s.” 14: 37-42.
Meade, L.T [Elizabth Thomasina]., and Robert Eustace [Robert Eustace Barton]. The Heart of a Mystery. 14: 51-62, 225-35, 287-97, 459-69, 586-96, 699-710.
Pain, Barry. City Chronicles. 14: 76-82, 149-56, 271-78, 405-10, 489-94, 614-19. Bleackley, Horace. “Caught at the Wicket.” 14: 90-98.
Maclaren, Ian [Rev. John Watson]. “The Baillie’s Double.” 14:107-14.
Hope, Anthony [Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins]. “More Dolly Dialogues.” 14: 137-40.
Hawtrey, George P. “A Pleasant Dinner Party.” 14: 194-200.
Britton, J.J. “In the Hayfield.” 14:201-04.
White, William Allen. “Much Pomp and Several Circumstances.” 14: 205-15. Harraden, Beatrice. “Love Among the Brasses.” 14: 243-53.
Maclaren, Ian [Rev. John Watson]. “The Triumph of the Seminary.” 14: 332-40. Pain, Barry. “Mr Ashley’s Failure.” 14: 350-56.
Clarke, B.A. “An Attack of the Blues.” 14: 373-80.
Alexander, Mrs. “His Retaining Fee.” 14: 419-27.
Spence, Maud Winifred. “Love on a See-Saw.” 14: 435-38.
Oppenheim, E[dward]. Phillips. “A Shocking Mesalliance.” 14: 447-54. Monkton, Ernest. “Going A-Milking.” 14:505-12.
Carr, Mrs Comyns [Alice Laura Vansittart]. “Heroes of the Hearth.” 14: 541-50. King, K. Douglas. “Baby Brannigan.” 14: 568-76.
Muir, Ward. “Fair Exchange and Robbery.” 14: 631-40.
Hunt, Mrs Alfred. “A Self-Denying Ordinance.” 14: 667-76.
Barratt, James. “A Stormy Courtship.” 14:683-90.
Vol 15 (December 1901-May 1902)
Kipling, Rudyard. “A Sahib’s War.” 15:3-16.
Hyne, C[harles].J[ohn]. Cutliffe. Thompson’s Progress. 15: 32-42, 316-26, 368-79,555-64, 601-11,757-66.
Clarke, B.A. “The Wrath of Mrs Barker.” 15:51-58.
Sutcliffe, Halliwell. “The Theft of the Hanging Judge.” 15: 70-78.
White, Frederick] M[errick]. “The Black Narcissus.” 15:83-93.
Caine, Hall. “Unto the Third and Fourth Generation.” 15: 97-118, 213-30. Oppenheim, E[dward]. Phillips. “The Ghost of Old John Hill.” 15: 128-34. Nesbit, E[dith], “Merely Strangers.” 15:141-48.
Boothby, Guy. “The Family Honour.” 15:164-68.
Parker, Gilbert. “A Man, A Famine, and a Heathen Boy.” 15: 169-78.
Barr, Robert. “A Matter of Motives.” 15: 192-204.
Bailey, H[enry].C[hristopher]. “The Knight of Mayford.” 15: 241-47.
Hering, Henry A. “The Vanished Prime Minister.” 15: 249-58.
Nesbit, E[dith]. “Unexceptionable References.” 15: 271-77.
Marsh, Richard. “My Aunt’s Excursion.” 15: 283-92.
Whishaw, Fred. “A Bid for Popularity.” 15: 301-08.
Kipling, Rudyard. “The Elephant’s Child.” 15: 333-40.
Barr, Robert. “A Deputation to the King.” 15: 385-93.
Kemahan, Mary. “Sophie—Dramatic Agent.” 15:394-98.
Marsh, Richard. “La Haute Finance: a Tale of the Biggest Coup on Record.” 15: 407-14.
Gilchrist, R. Murray. “For Owd Times’ Sake.” 15: 421-27.
White, Frederick] M[errick]. “One of the Old Guard.” 15: 437-46.
Steel, Flora Annie. “An Incident of the Sepoy Mutiny.” 15: 453-60.
Davis, Richard Harding. In the Fog. 15: 476-90, 573-82, 693-705.
Martley, Henry. “A Cyclist’s Story.” 15: 497-502.
Spence, Edward F. “A Company Scandal.” 15:509-12.
Oppenheim, E[dward]. Phillips. “The Tragedy of a Night.” 15: 523-32.
Ramsay, R. “Another Patient.” 15:542-46.
Drummond, Hamilton. “The Secret of the South Pole.” 15:612-20.
Bleackley, Horace. “What Might Have Been.” 15: 629-36.
Barrow, Kathleen M. “‘Ars Longa’.” 15:657-64.
Boothby, Guy. “A Veldt Love Story.” 15: 671-85.
Hughes, Spencer Leigh. “A Case in Point.” 15: 723-30.
Bleackley, Horace. “With the Boers.” 15: 740-44.
Drummond, Hamilton. “Professor Ahlbome, Collector.” 15:777-85.
Bryant, Emily M. “Lion the Matchmaker.” 15:792-800.
Vol 16 (June-November 1902)
Steel, Flora Annie. “The Squaring of the Gods.” 16: 7-15.
Jerome, Jerome K[lapka], Tea-Table Talk. 16:43-48,136-42.
Pemberton, Max. The Gold Wolf: the Story of a Man and His Money. 16: 63-82, 173-90, 275-95, 411-30, 497-518, 635-58.
Parker, Oscar. “The Conversion of John Trent.” 16: 99-105.
Clarke, B.A. “A Wager of Battle.” 16:110-16.
Turner, Ethel. “If Not the Rose.” 16:151-55.
Bailey, H[enry].C[hristopher]. “Sir Albert’s Fall.” 16: 162-68.
Ridge, W[illiam]. Pett. “Mr and Mrs Ranger With Misfortune Intervening.” 16: 196-202.
Heron-Maxwell, Beatrice, and Gertrude E. Donaldson. “A Border Raid.” 16: 211-19.
Munro, Alick. “The Courage of a Coward.” 16: 229-36.
Barr, Robert. “A Question of Money.” 16:243-54.
Clarke, B.A. “Interchangeable Parts.” 16:264-68.
Jerome, Jerome K[lapka]. “The Marriage Question.” 16: 305-11.
Brenan, Gerald. “Love and Old Books.” 16: 319-22.
Spence, Edward F. “The Will of Cyrus Wellcome.” 16: 330-34.
White, Fred[erick] M[errick]. “The Dormer Window.” 16:347-56.
Davis, Richard Harding. Ranson’s Folly. 16: 375-84, 589-96, 696-710.
Jerome, Jerome K[lapka]. “What Becomes of It.” 16:385-90.
Churton, Maud, and Horace Wyndham. “The Pansy Girl.” 16: 402-05.
Hine, Muriel F. “Eyes of Gold.” 16:431-40.
Appelbee, A.S. “Canine Keepers.” 16: 449-54.
Herbertson, Agnes Grozier. “The Fairy Boat-Maker.” 16:455-58.
White, Frederick] M[errick]. “The Shebeeners.” 16: 466-76.
Kipling, Rudyard. “The Cat that Walked by Himself.” 16:483-90.
Jerome, Jerome K[lapka]. “What is Woman Made of?” 16: 537-43.
Davis, Sam. “The First Piano in Camp.” 16: 558-62.
Clarke, B.A. “The Passing of Pharoah.” 16:564-68.
Archer, Laura M. “The Lonely Woman.” 16:575-81.
Clarke, B.A. “A Turning Movement.” 16: 611-17.
Jerome, Jerome K[lapka]. “The End of it All.” 16: 618-23.
White, Harold. “A Scrape.” 16: 673-80 Couper, M.M. “Montmorency.” 16: 685-88.
Vol 17 (December 1902-May 1903)
Kipling, Rudyard. “Steam Tactics.” 17:3-17.
Harraden, Beatrice. “The Clarionet Player.” 17:28-32.
Maclaren, Ian [Rev. John Watson]. Unsolved. 17: 40-48, 319-26, 438-46, 545-52, 660-66, 705-13.
Adeler, Max. “Frictional Electricity.” 17:57-62.
Clarke, B.A. “The Pretenders.” 17:63-71.
Crockett, S[amuel].R[utherford]. Strong Mac. 17: 79-92, 233-48, 386-402, 493-507, 587-605, 744-60.
Nesbit, E[dith]. “The Lover, the Girl, and the Onlooker.” 17: 93-99.
Chesney, Weatherby. “The Vanishing of Major Vaughan.” 17:111-16.
Robinson, B[ertram], Fletcher, and J. Malcolm Fraser. The Trail of the Dead. 17: 121-29, 264-74, 370-79, 477-86, 627-38, 734-43.
Baring-Gould, Sabine. “Margery Coade.” 17:137-45.
Ridge, Wfilliam], Pett. “Easy Come.” 17: 146-51.
Holmes, H.J. “A Pocket Burrow.” 17:153-58.
Bailey, H[enry].C[hristopher]. “The King’s Way.” 17:159-66.
White, Frederick] M[errick]. “Blind.” 17: 174-84.
Flaggard, H[enry]. Rider. “Lost on the Veldt.” 17: 185-94.
Oppenheim, E[dward]. Phillips. “An Aristocratic Socialist.” 17: 196-204.
“Q” [Arthur Quiller-Couch]. “The Hotwells Duel.” 17: 213-19.
Bensusan, S[amuel].L[evy]. “The Autobiography of a Wild Rabbit.” 17: 249-56. Hamilton, Cosmo [Cosmo Gibbs]. “Mr Rackett’s Queen Elizabeth.” 17: 257-63. Benson, E[dward].Frederick]. “A Double Misfit.” 17:291-97.
Marsh, Richard. “The Kit-Bag.” 17:298-309.
Sousa, John Philip. “The Fifth String.” 17: 333-54.
Boden, G.H. “The Discovery of London.” 17: 363-68.
Kellett, E.E. “A Fool and His Folly.” 17:411-18.
Churchill, Winston Spencer. “On the Flank of the Army.” 17: 453-60.
Hering, Henry A. “Marmaduke Dulcimer, Codicil Forger.” 17:515-25.
Clarke, B.A. “The Voice of the Turtle.” 17:531-38.
Britton, J.J. “Salem Jones, Shepherd.” 17:553-59.
Parker, Oscar. “Peter Brady, Millionaire.” 17:560-66.
Pain, Barry. “Lovers on an Island.” 17: 573-79.
Setoun, J.P. “In the Power of the Brigands.” 17: 622-26.
Moberly, L.G. “The Little Brown Boy.” 17: 647-51.
Freeman, R[ichard]. Austin, and Ashdown Piers. “By the Black Deep.” 17: 677-86.
Oppenheim, E[dward]. Phillips. “The Man who Saved the President’s Life.” 17: 715-22.
White, Harold. “The Picture of the Year.” 17: 773-79 Clarke, B.A. “A Favourite of Fortune.” 17:793-800.
Vol 18 (June-November 1903)
White, Fred[erick] M[errick]. “A Matter of Kindness.” 18:19-29.
Orczy, Baroness [Emma Magdalena Rosalia Marie Josepha Barbara], ‘Skin O ’ My Tooth His Memoirs, by his Confidential Clerk. 18: 36-45, 227-36, 348-56, 419-28, 588-96, 701-10.
Turner, Ethel. “Portraits—While You Wait.” 18:46-52.
Crockett, S[amuel]. R[utherford]. Strong Mac. 18: 70-84, 155-74, 289-305, 443-58, 507-26, 621-39.
Munro, Alick. “The ‘Vigo’s’ Captains.” 18: 91-94.
Hughes, Spencer Leigh. “A Little Misunderstanding.” 18: 107-16.
Barr, Robert. “The Kidnapping of Rockevelt.” 18:135-47.
Rickert, Edith. “The Power of the Past.” 18:184-90.
Whishaw, Fred. “Submarine Strategy.” 18:191-97.
Forman, Justus Miles. “A Castle in Spain.” 18:205-08.
Clarke, B.A. “Minnows and Tritons.” 18: 209-16.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “The Passing of the Black Whelps.” 18: 218-26.
Kipling, Rudyard. “The Bonds of Discipline.” 18:243-57.
Adeler, Max. “Mary Jones.” 18:265-71.
Pope, Jessie. “The Poacher.” 18:273-80.
Little, Clarke. “The Story of a Puncture.” 18: 313-18.
Stevenson, Benjamin Coxe. “Jenny.” 18:328-38.
Kipling, Rudyard. “The Tabu Tale.” 18:363-71.
Clarke, B.A. “A Man to Run.” 18:388-96.
Pilkington, Elizabeth C. “A Message in Sugar.” 18: 397-402.
Lee, Albert. “The Transfer of Tompkins’s Ghost.” 18:409-14.
Penrose, Mrs. H.H [Mary Elizabeth]. “Concerning Mothers by a Boy who has One.” 18:415-18.
White, Frederick] M[errick]. “The Heart of the Anarchist.” 18: 468-76.
Hulbert, William Davenport. “What the Trout Stream Saw.” 18:483-92.
Tracy, Louis. “A Matter of Initials.” 18:493-96.
Harland, Henry. “The Bag of Gold.” 18: 533-36.
Munro, Alick. “The Cave-Dweller.” 18:537-45.
Drummond, Hamilton. “Bicester’s Directorate.” 18:554-61.
Clarke, B.A. “A Token of Esteem.” 18:562-70.
Clarke, B.A. “A Levy en Masse.” 18:613-20 Cobb, Thomas. “Five Years After.” 18:650-56.
White, Frederick] M[errick]. “A Liberal Education.” 18: 657-66.
Walker, F. Glen, and G. Vane. “The Chestnut-Seller.” 18:667-70.
Turner, Ethel. “The Silence Broken.” 18:671-81.
Stockton, Frank R. “Nat Baker’s Passenger.” 18: 682-86.
Vol 19 (December 1903-May 1904)
Kipling, Rudyard. ‘Their Lawful Occasions’. 19:3-13,225-37.
Oppenheim, E[dward]. Phillips. “The Man whom Nobody Liked.” 19: 25-30. Jerome, Jerome K[lapka]. Tommy and Co. 19: 38-50, 277-86, 345-56, 492-504, 651-66,709-22.
White, Frederick] M[errick]. “A Game of Draughts.” 19: 67-75.
Forman, Justus Miles. The Garden of Lies. 19: 81-100, 291-308, 375-92, 510-30, 601-21,751-72.
Williamson, Mrs C.N [Alice Muriel]. The Career of Joan Carthew: the Adventures of a Girl who had Nothing and Wanted Everything. 19:115-24, 316-26, 436-46, 540-50, 626-35, 791-99.
Adeler, Max. “The Flying Dutchman.” 19: 125-30.
Butler, Ellis Parker. “The Heart of a Man.” 19: 131-37.
Bailey, H[enry].C[hristopherj. “The Nun of Newstead.” 19:145-53.
Castle, Agnes, and Egerton Castle. “To the Tune of Little Red Heels.” 19: 161-75. Kellett, E.E. “Precision of Language.” 19:181-86.
Baring-Gould, Sabine. “The Red-Haired Girl.” 19:197-204.
Railton, Mrs Herbert. “Polly; a Story for Children.” 19: 238-41.
Nesbit, E[dith]. “By a Mere Accident.” 19: 250-54.
Bennett, Arnold. “His Worship the Goosedriver.” 19: 255-64.
Barlow, Jane. “TheHins’ Housekeeper.” 19: 369-74.
Watson, H[enry].B[rereton], Marriott. “Lady Molly Calverley.” 19: 408-18. White, Frederick] M[errick]. “Red Petals.” 19: 419-29
Castle, Agnes, and Egerton Castle. “The Heart of Lord Mandeville.” 19: 467-77. Lennoys, Annie. “The Crowning of Esther.” 19: 484-88.
London, Jack. “The Leopard Man’s Story.” 19:489-91.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “The Freedom of the Black-Faced Ram.” 19: 531-38.
Gribble, Francis. “The Secret Society.” 19(1904): 557-66.
Barr, Robert. “The Countess Decides.” 19:583-93.
Bensusan, S[amuel].L[evy]. “A Night with Poachers.” 19(1904): 551-56. Penrose, Mrs H.H [Mary Elizabeth]. “Concerning Essays by a Boy who Wrote One.” 19:622-25 Litsey, Edwin Carlisle. “The King of the Northern Shore.” 19:645-50. Braithwaite, Dorothy. “Joyce and the Hooligan.” 19:674-76.
Westall, William. “Sworn as Dead.” 19: 677-86.
Osbome, William Hamilton. “The Scheme of Sutcliffe, Swindler.” 19: 703-08. Bennett, Arnold. “Nocturne at the Majestic.” 19: 735-45.
Cooper, Edward H. “Nancy’s Reason.” 19: 780-84.
Vol 20 (June-November 1904)
Forman, Justus Miles. “The Kingdom of Exile.” 20: 12-17.
Hope, Anthony [Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins]. “Mrs Thistleton’s Princess.” 20: 18-32.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “The Master of Golden Pool.” 20: 33-38. Watson, H.[enry].B[rereton]. Marriott. “On the Stairs.” 20: 50-60.
Munro, Alick. “The Phantom Fisherman.” 20: 78-82.
Rhodes, Harrison. Charles Edward. 20:91-99, 186-94,308-18,447-56,502-12, 689-98.
Bennett, Arnold. The Loot of Cities: the Adventures of a Millionaire in Search of Joy. 20: 107-16, 227-36, 347-56, 467-76, 587-96, 655-63.
Hope, Anthony [Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins]. “Slim-Fingered Jim.” 20: 137-44. Bailey, H[enry].C[hristopher]. “The Devil of Marston.” 20:145-52.
Pain, Barry. “The Street of Peace.” 20: 153-55.
Hanna, James K. “Other People’s Children.” 20:164-70.
London, Jack. “The One Thousand Dozen.” 20:175-85.
Wildridge, Oswald. “The Plotters.” 20:210-18.
Hope, Anthony [Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins]. “Foreordained.” 20: 257-63. Harland, Henry. “The Big Peach.” 20: 275-79.
Moberly, L. G. “The First and Last.” 20: 285-92.
Drummond, Hamilton. “When There is no Shadow.” 20: 334-40.
Kipling, Rudyard. “Mrs Bathurst.” 20: 376-86.
Clarke, B.A. “A Host Against Them.” 20: 404-12.
Hope, Anthony [Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins]. “The Riddle of Countess Runa.” 20: 421-28.
Wildridge, Oswald. “The Doctor’s Diploma.” 20:429-38.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “The Rivals of Ringwaak.” 20: 457-66. Forman, Justus Miles. “Andrea del Sarto.” 20: 497-501.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “The Truce.” 20: 522-30.
Griffith, George [George Griffith Jones]. “From Pole to Pole: an Account of a
Journey Through the Axis of the Earth; Collated from the Diaries of the Late Professor Haffkin and his Niece, Mrs Arthur Princeps.” 20: 531-44. Phillpotts, Eden. “Three Birds With One Stone.” 20: 545-53.
White, Frederick] M[errick].“The Northern Light.” 20: 562-70.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “The Decoy.” 20: 611-17.
Barr, Robert. “The Mystery of the Five Hundred Diamonds.” 20: 618-32.
Lindsay, Mayne. “The Triumph of Sandy.” 20: 633-41.
Penrose, Mrs H.H [Mary Elizabeth]. “Concerning Languages by a Boy who Leams Them.” 20: 649-52.
Watson, Rosamund Marriott. “The White Marble Sphinx.” 20: 664-70 Forman, Justus Miles. “Calypso.” 20:703-10.
Vol 21 (December 1904-May 1905)
Kipling, Rudyard. “A Tour of Inspection.” 21:3-14.
Haggard, H[enry]. Rider. Ayesha: the Return of ‘She’. 21: 27-46, 237-54, 365-85, 499-511,617-37, 745-64.
Phillpotts, Eden “The Gratitude of Johnny Gee.” 21: 55-62.
Watson, H[enry].B[rereton]. Marriott. “The Knight Errant.” 21:83-92.
Turner, Ethel. “In the Silence of the Sleep-Time.” 21:94-98.
Nesbit, E[dith]. “While It is Yet Day.” 21: 110-16.
Pain, Barry. “The Cheat.” 21: 117-20.
Drummond, Hamilton. “A Cast in the Dark.” 21:131-39.
Zangwill, Israel. “The Red Mark.” 21: 140-48.
Richardson, Frank. “A Gamble in Whiskers.” 21: 158-62.
Penrose, Mrs H.H [Mary Elizabeth]. “Concerning Rotters by a Boy who Knows One.” 21: 163-65.
Castle, Agnes, and Egerton Castle. If Youth But Knew. 21: 166-78, 293-306, 412-26,471-84, 595-607, 771-86.
Bailey, H[enry].C[hristopher]. “The Lone Hand.” 21:180-86.
White, Frederick] Mferrick]. “The Other Man’s Story.” 21: 197-206.
Rhodes, Harrison. “Lady Angela’s Methods.” 21:227-36.
Goode, W.A.M. “Jason Orchard’s Decision.” 21:262-69.
Oppenheim, E[dward]. Phillips. “The Little Grey Lady.” 21: 286-92.
Vorse, Mary Heaton. “The Boy who Didn’t Catch Things.” 21: 323-26.
Rhodes, Harrison. “The Amazing Elopement.” 21:347-56.
Hulbert, William Davenport. “A Bear and Her Cubs.” 21: 357-64.
White, Harold. “An Honourable Estate.” 21:397-402.
Shorter, Dora Sigerson. “The Hanging of O’Dwyer.” 21: 444-48.
Goode, W.A.M. “The Star Man.” 21: 519-27.
Penrose, Mrs H.H [Mary Elizabeth]. “Concerning Popularity by a Boy who Scorns It.” 21: 528-30.
King, Albert E. “The Balancing Burglar.” 21: 531-34.
Oppenheim, E[dward]. Phillips. “The Two Ambassadors.” 21: 535-41.
Hoyt, Eleanor. “The Woman Who Forgot.” 21: 542-48.
Drummond, Hamilton. “The Custom of Brettinoro.” 21:559-70.
Penrose, Mrs H.H [Mary Elizabeth]. “Concerning ‘Sucks’ by a Boy who Suffered One.” 21:638-40.
Baines, G.M. “Mr Pilkley’s Felony.” 21:641-50.
Seton, Ernest Thompson. “The Slum Cat.” 21:651-61.
Forman, Justus Miles. “The Waterloo of Mr Jimmy Rogers.” 21:662-70.
Lindsay, Mayne. “Some Potatoes and a Woman.” 21: 686-92.
Barr, Robert. “Two and a Motor.” 21: 713-32.
Seton, Ernest Thompson. “The Boy and the Lynx.” 21: 733-41.
Leslie, Charles D. “Green Money.” 21:787-91.
Forman, Justus Miles. “The Lady’s Maid.” 21: 805-14.
Vol 22 (June-November 1905)
Barr, Robert. The Speculations of Jack Steele. 22: 19-30,141-51,263-74,383-96, 596-606, 690-700.
Seton, Ernest Thompson. “Little Warhorse: the Story of a Jack-Rabbit.” 22: 31-40.
Haggard, H. Rider. Ayesha: the Return of ‘She’. 22: 41-56, 169-82, 299-318, 405-20, 539-53.
Penrose, Mrs H.H [Mary Elizabeth], “Concerning Cricket by a Boy who Plays It.” 22: 57-59.
Sutcliffe, Halliwell. “The Panelled Room.” 22: 73-79.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas. “The Terror of the Air.” 22: 80-82. Thomson, Adam R. “The Result of an Accident.” 22: 83-89.
Grogan, Walter E. “The Disappointing Prisoner.” 22:90-96.
Forman, Justus Miles. “Bondage.” 22:109-18.
Moberly, L.G. “Armand—Au Revoir!” 22:183-88.
Penrose, Mrs H.H [Mary Elizabeth]. “Concerning ‘Coolness’ by a Boy who Values It.” 22: 189-92.
Seton, Ernest Thompson. “Arnaux: the Chronicle of a Homing Pigeon.” 22: 193-201.
Richardson, Frank. “Bunkhum.” 22: 202-10.
Dobson, John. “Jake Webster’s Pal: a Bush Mystery.” 22:211-18.
Fonnan, Justus Miles. “A Recruit in Diplomacy.” 22: 229-40.
Penrose, Mrs H.H [Mary Elizabeth]. “Concerning Other Fellows by a Boy who Observes Them.” 22: 287-89.
Deakin, Dorothea. “The Duckpond.” 22: 290-98.
Forman, Justus Miles. “The French Maid.” 22:319-26.
Jerome, Jerome K[lapka]. “The Soul of Nicholas Snyders, the Miser of Zandam.” 22: 337-46.
Seton, Ernest Thompson. “The Winnipeg Wolf.” 22: 347-54.
Bailey, H[enry].C[hristopher]. “Sir Bertram’s Tryst.” 22:355-62.
Goode, W.A.M. “The Archbishop’s Experiment.” 22: 428-38.
Penrose, Mrs H. H [Mary Elizabeth]. “Concerning Common Sense by a Boy who Has None.” 22: 439-42.
Turner, Edgar, and Reginald Hodder. “The Lion and the Unicom.” 22: 443-45. Bailey, H[enry].C[hristopher]. “The Men in Buckram.” 22: 446-54.
Forman, Justus Miles. “Mrs Cromwell’s Heart.” 22: 463-71.
Coke, Desmond F.T. “The Bargain-Rummagers.” 22: 480-84.
Hope, Anthony [Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins], “Love’s Logic.” 22: 506-12. Munro, Alick. “The Unknown Quantity.” 22:521-30.
Penrose, Mrs H.H [Mary Elizabeth]. “Concerning Literary Taste by a Boy who Cultivates It.” 22: 554-56.
Turner, Ethel. “Mr Jessop’s Experiment.” 22: 569-79.
Phillips, Henry Wallace. “Red Saunders at Big Bend: Enter Mr. Sett, and Exit the Dog.” 22: 580-86.
Crow, O. “Private Bell, Signaller.” 22: 628-33.
Phillpotts, Eden “The Last of the Dorias.” 22: 634-42.
Warden, Florence [Florence E. James]. “Lady Anne’s Trustee.” 22: 653-67.
Nesbit, E[dith]. “Molly, the Measles, and the Missing Will.” 22: 668-77.
Turner, Ethel. “The Tale of the Tiny House.” 22: 678-79.
Kellett, E.E. “A Lost Opportunity.” 22:701-07.
Drummond, Hamilton. “The Cardinal’s Comedy.” 22:721-30.
Vol 23 (December 1905-May 1906)
Hope, Anthony [Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins]. Sophy ofKravonia. 23: 22-34, 227-41, 351-67, 472-88, 595-609, 716-32.
Kipling, Rudyard. “With the Night Mail.” 23:52-66.
Phillpotts, Eden “The ‘Bolsover’ Prize.” 23: 84-92.
Forman, Justus Miles. Ulysses McCleod. 23: 93-98, 322-28, 443-50, 566-72, 650-56, 792-98.
Penrose, Mrs H.H [Mary Elizabeth]. “Concerning Clothes by a Boy who Wears Them.” 23:99-101.
Richardson, Frank. “The Man in Red Whiskers.” 23: 102-10.
Maclaren, Ian [Rev. John Watson], “The Making of a Man.” 23: 116-22.
Ramsay, R. “An Awful Chance.” 23: 123-30.
Heming, Arthur. “The Way of the Wilderness.” 23:131-40.
Castle, Agnes, and Egerton Castle. “The Golden Apple.” 23: 141-54.
Rivers, Frances. “Love’s Analysis.” 23:155-62.
Thomas, Chauncey. “Ruggles’ First Case.” 23:170-78.
Housman, Laurence. “Winkiboo.” 23: 180-84.
Crockett, S[amuel].R[utherford]. “A Corsair of the Dunes: the Story of a Former Volunteer Fleet.” 23: 185-94.
Von Hutton, Baroness. “One Worm’s Turning.” 23: 195-204.
Penrose, Mrs H.H [Mary Elizabeth]. “Concerning Bad Jokes by a Boy who Hears Them.” 23: 242-44.
Phillips, Henry Wallace. “A Touch of Nature.” 23: 245-52.
Benson, E[dward].Frederick]. “The Superannuation Department.” 23: 253-60.
St John, Christopher. “The Coronation of Mathilde.” 23:277-87.
Moberly, L.G. “His Brother’s Keeper.” 23: 288-94.
Barr, Robert. “Lady Alicia’s Emeralds.” 23:295-306.
Heming, Arthur. “The Spirit Wolf.” 23:307-21.
Boardman, W.H. “A Kind of Hero.” 23:368-72.
Hanshew, T.W. “In the Tunnel.” 23:375-82.
Watson, H[enry].B[rereton]. Marriott. “The Man who Could not Swim.” 23: 399-408.
Gallon, Tom. “The Baby that Stood Between.” 23:409-18.
Holder, Charles F. “The Biography of a Man-Eater.” 23:419-26.
Rivers, Frances. “An Invader.” 23: 427-33.
Nesbit, E[dith], “The House of Silence.” 23:507-14,
Gleig, Charles. Prehistoric Tales. 23: 515-20, 657-61, 787-92.
Graves, Clotilde. “A Strategic Movement.” 23: 527-34.
Mandley, Percy G. “The Specimen-Cases.” 23: 535-42.
Penrose, Mrs H.H [Mary Elizabeth]. “Concerning Neatness by a Boy who Dislikes It.” 23: 543-45.
Rivers, Frances. “The Force of Example.” 23:546-52.
Drummond, Hamilton. “Ubi Satanas Habitat.” 23: 631-40.
Kellett, E.E. “Thicker Than Water.” 23: 664-72
Oppenheim, E[dward]. Phillips. “The Hidden Army.” 23: 688-94.
Barr, Robert. “The Absent-Minded Coterie.” 23:753-70.
Penrose, Mrs H.H [Mary Elizabeth]. “Concerning Bicycles by a Boy who Has One.” 23: 775-77.
Maartens, Maarten [Joost Marius Willem van der Poorten-Schwarz]. “Israels.” 23: 778-86.
White, Frederick] M[errick]. “The Onus of the Charge.” 23: 809-18.
Vol 24 (June-November 1906)
Hope, Anthony [Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins]. Sophy of Kravonia. 24: 19-33, 141-51,263-74,385-400, 506-16.
Maartens, Maarten [Joost Marius Willem van der Poorten-Schwarz]. “The Death-Way.” 24: 53-60.
Penrose, Mrs H.H [Mary Elizabeth]. “Concerning Motor-Mania by a Boy who Has Experienced It.” 24: 61-63.
Crockett, S[amuel].R[utherford]. Little Esson. 24: 64-79, 205-18, 297-310, 427-40, 563-77, 673-93.
Vaizey, Mrs George de Home [Jessie Mansergh]. “Sybilla.” 24: 80-86.
Watson, H[enry].B[rereton]. Marriott. “Big Game.” 24: 91-100.
White, Frederick] M[errick]. “The Midnight Call.” 24:109-18.
Rivers, Frances. “The Caprice of Beatrix.” 24: 152-56.
Rowland, Henry C. “The Doubting of the Doctor.” 24: 179-85.
Kellett, E.E. “An Unknown Quantity.” 24: 198-204.
White, Frederick] Mferrick]. “The Charlatan.” 24:231-40.
Penrose, Mrs H.H [Mary Elizabeth], “Concerning Records by a Boy who Broke One.” 24: 275-78.
Rivers, Frances. “‘Vox Populi’.” 24:317-24.
Wodehouse, P[elham].G[renville]. “A Benefit Match.” 24:330-36.
Mitton, G[eraldine]E[dith]. “The Boy and the Bicycle.” 24: 337-46.
London, Jack. “The Shadow and the Flash.” 24:354-62.
Clarke, B.A. “A Reduced Consul.” 24: 421-26.
Rivers, Frances. “An Artistic Conclusion.” 24:441-46.
“A Gardener.” “Rosamania: a Duologue for Gardeners.” 24: 449-51.
Rhodes, Harrison. “A Guide to Eldorado.” 24: 457-68.
Bateman, May. “The Mystery of Whigham Hall.” 24: 476-84.
Penrose, Mrs H.H [Mary Elizabeth]. “Concerning Parties by a Boy who Goes to Them.” 24: 525-27.
Osbome, Lloyd. “Coal Oil Johnny.” 24: 528-38.
Atkins, M. Alison. “The Nut Tree: a Fairy Story.” 24: 578-86.
Drummond, Hamilton. “The Tryst.” 24: 599-606.
Maartens, Maarten [Joost Marius Willem van der Poorten-Schwarz]. “Tuberculin.” 24:631-39.
Penrose, Mrs H.H [Mary Elizabeth]. “Concerning Football by a Boy who Likes It.” 24: 640-42.
Penrose, Mrs H.H [Mary Elizabeth], “Concerning Good-Bye by a Boy who Said It.” 24: 643-44.
Sutcliffe, Halliwell. “The Groom who Missed his Purse.” 24: 661-72.
Rivers, Frances. “Taken at the Flood.” 24: 701-10.
Pain, Barry. “The Girl With the Beautiful Hair.” 24: 724-28.
Vol 25 (December 1906-May 1907)
Hope, Anthony [Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins]. “Prudence and the Bishop.” 25: 20-26.
Parker, Gilbert. “Watching the Rise of Orion.” 25: 28-38.
Thurston, Katherine Cecil. “Temptation.” 25:50-62.
Maclaren, Ian [Rev. John Watson]. “The Division of Guilt.” 25: 76-82.
Pemberton, Max. The Lodestar. 25: 101-19,279-92,399-416,493-512,631-49, 739-63.
Rivers, Frances. “The Itinerary of a Day.” 25: 120-26.
Goode, W.A.M. “A Question of Colour.” 25: 127-36.
Pain, Barry. “An Idyll of the Sea.” 25: 141-44.
Sinclair, Upton. “The Overman.” 25: 145-57.
Wodehouse, P[elham].G[renville]. “The Fifteenth Man.” 25:169-76.
Gallon, Tom. “The Angel of the White Feet.” 25: 177-84.
Heming, Arthur. “The Buffalo Spirit.” 25:185-95.
Maartens, Maarten [Joost Marius Willem van der Poorten-Schwarz]. “The Library.” 25: 196-204.
Phillpotts, Eden “Hyacinthe and Honorine.” 25: 227-40.
Maclaren, Ian [Rev. John Watson]. “The Spider’s Web.” 25: 248-56.
Rivers, Frances. “The Husband of Mina Joy.” 25:293-98.
Osborne, Lloyd. “The Great Motor Syndicate.” 25:299-309.
Bennett, Arnold. “The Baby’s Bath.” 25: 321-28.
Barr, Robert. “The Windfall.” 25:351-60.
Dart, Edith C[harlotte].M[aria]. “A Little Moment.” 25:361-66.
Abel, Isabella S. “The Obeah-Man.” 25: 387-92.
Pain, Barry. “The Rout.” 25: 417-18.
Braithwaite, Dorothy. “A Question of Identity25:431-32.
Bensusan, S[amuel].L[evy]. “The Story of Hob, the Ferret.” 25: 433-41.
Maclaren, Ian [Rev. John Watson]. “Men of their Hands.” 25:442-50.
Zangwill, Israel. “A Dictionary in Distress.” 25:475-84.
Rhodes, Harrison. “When Culture Comes in at the Door.” 25: 523-30.
London, Jack. “Brown Wolf.” 25:531-40.
Rivers, Frances. “Memories.” 25: 550-56.
Maclaren, Ian [Rev. John Watson]. “Against Heavy Odds.” 25: 565-72.
Maxwell, W[illiam].B[abington]. “An Amateur.” 25: 599-605.
Onions, Oliver [Sir Joshua Albert Flynn]. “The Ghost.” 25: 612-20.
Bensusan, S[amuel].L[evy]. “The Life of a Red Deer.” 25: 621-30.
Barmby, Cuthbert. “How Trevor’s Pile was Made.” 25: 650-55.
Richmond, Grace. “The Argument for the Defence.” 25:656-62 Maartens, Maarten [Joost Marius Willem van der Poorten-Schwarz]. “Teetotal.” 25: 663-75.
Maclaren, Ian [Rev. John Watson]. “The Brigandage of Commerce.” 25: 688-94. Maugham, W[illiam]. Somerset. “Good Manners.” 25:715-22.
Maclaren, Ian [Rev. John Watson]. “Miss Poppleton’s Young Gentlemen.” 25: 732-38.
Daniels, H.G. “Military Tactics.” 25: 783-85.
Oliver, Owen [Sir Joshua Albert Flynn]. “Little Love.” 25: 796-803.
Gibbon, Perceval. “Quixote of the Veldt.” 25:813-18.
Vol 26 (June-November 1907)
Hope, Anthony [Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins]. Helena’s Path. 26: 19-31,145-59, 296-310,383-92, 529-39.
Housman, Laurence. “The Way of the Wind: an Eastern Love Story.” 26: 211-20. Busbridge, A.W. “Pugsby’s Manufacture of Diamonds.” 26: 43-50.
Phillpotts, Eden “Peters, Detective.” 26: 52-60.
Von Hutton, Baroness. “Mrs Algy’s Delightful Morning.” 26: 68-72.
Dawson, A.J. “The Autobiography of a Brumby.” 26: 73-80.
White, Frederick] M[errick]. “The Buff Gauntlet.” 26: 81- 89.
Howard, Keble [John Keble Bell]. “Martha and the Village Idiot.” 26: 90-96. Hilliers, Ashton. “The Outrageousness of a Mere Boy.” 26: 108-18. Drummond, Hamilton. “The Knot-Hole.” 26: 168-76.
Phillpotts, Eden “The Tiger’s Tail.” 26: 177-86.
Bindloss, Harold. “Gillatly’s March.” 26: 197-203.
Rivers, Frances. “The Profession of Porson.” 26:204-10.
Bennett, Arnold. “The Silent Brothers,” 26:231-40.
Parker, Gilbert. “As Deep as the Sea.” 26: 263-72.
Phillpotts, Eden. “The Bankruptcy of Bannister.” 26:273-80.
Pain, Barry. “The Pavement Poet.” 26: 311-12.
Beardsley, Alice. “Mutton Chops and Cupid.” 26: 323-28.
Arnold, Edwin Lester. “The Menagerie Ship.” 26: 329-34.
Turner, Ethel. “The Day of the Snail.” 26: 335-42.
Forman, Justus Miles. “The King’s Bargain.” 26: 353-62.
London, Jack. “The Turning Point.” 26: 394-400.
Phillpotts, Eden “The Doctor’s Parrot.” 26:418-26.
White, Frederick] M[errick]. “The Luck of the Game.” 26:427-435.
Johnston, Harry H. “The Snakes’ Curse.” 26: 441-43.
Turner, Ethel. “A Parental Birthday,” 26:444-51.
Howard, Keble [John Keble Bell]. “Celia’s Splendid Plan.” 26: 461-66.
Jordan, Kate. “In Snow and Candlelight.” 26: 476-84.
Phillpotts, Eden “The Holiday Competition.” 26: 507-15.
Moberly, L.G. “‘This, My Son—’.” 26: 516-22.
Agnus, Orme [John C. Higginbotham]. “A Portrait by Kneller.” 26: 548-56.
White, Frederick] M[errick]. “The Balance of Nature.” 26: 557-67.
Pope, Jessie. “Why the Aurora was Wrecked.” 26: 568-74.
Maybank, Thomas. “The Joke’s Progress.” 26: 576-82.
Bailey, H.C. “The Love of Money.” 26:584-92.
Rivers, Frances. “An Emotional Cheap-Jack.” 26:601-06.
Phillpotts, Eden “The Good Conduct Prize.” 26: 629-36.
Von Hutton, Baroness. “Mrs Lyndon’s Adventure.” 26: 647-54.
Grogan, Walter E. “The Fair Guide.” 26:661-68.
Wilkinson, Florence. “The Hundredth Bow.” 26: 670-76.
Barr, Robert. “A Wild Boar Rampant.” 26: 677-86.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “Under the Ice-Roof.” 26: 687-94.
Pain, Barry. “Aunt Martha.” 26: 695-97.
Wildridge, Oswald. “Captain Jerry, Master Mariner.” 26: 698-705.
Mann, Mary E. “Clomaynes’ Clerk.” 26: 723-30.
Vol 27 (December 1907-May 1908)
Parker, Gilbert. “The Cup of Trembling.” 27:25-34.
Vachell, Horace Annesley. “A Cutlet for a Cutlet.” 27: 35-43.
Thurston, Katherine Cecil. “The Times Change.” 27: 53-69.
Watson, H[enry].B[rereton]. Marriott. “Ewes Manor.” 27: 70-78.
Barr, Robert. Young Lord Stranleigh. 27: 79-88, 280-97, 423-39, 531-48, 648-58, 785-803.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “In the Deep of the Snow.” 27: 105-16.
Cholmondeley, Mary. “The Understudy.” 27: 131-40.
Howard, Keble [John Keble Bell]. “Enid’s Awful Discovery.” 27: 160-65.
Pain, Barry. “Work in Winter.” 27: 166-68.
Oppenheim, Efdward]. Phillips. “The Little Anna Gold Mine.” 27: 169-76.
Phillpotts, Eden “Richmond and the Major-General.” 27: 177-84.
Forman, Justus Miles. “‘Night and the Curtains Drawn’.” 27:195-99.
Parker, Gilbert. “To-Morrow.” 27: 230-40.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “The Glutton of the Great Snow.” 27: 242-50.
Crawford, F. Marion. “A Handful of Carnations.” 27: 251-56.
Goode, W.A.M. “Head Night.” 27: 265-68.
Forman, Justus Miles. “The Gravosa Road.” 27: 269-79.
Rivers, Frances. “Such is Fame.” 27: 303-08.
Agnus, Orme [John C. Higginbotham]. “The Village Autocrat.” 27: 319-26.
Parker, Gilbert. “Marcile.” 27:351-60.
Goode, W.A.M. “Mis’ Lavinia.” 27: 368-76.
Bailey, H[enry]. C[hristopher]. “Politics and the Grocer.” 27:377-86.
Heming, Arthur. “The Talking Moose.” 27: 387-96.
Rivers, Frances. “In the Consulting-Room.” 27: 397-402.
Richardson, Frank. “The Tomlinson Letters.” 27:403-09.
Hering, Henry A. “The O.P.Q. Rays.” 27: 440-48.
Parker, Gilbert. “Once at Red Man’s River: a Tale of the Early Days of the Border.” 27: 474-82.
St John, Christopher. “Vain Glory.” 27:489-96.
Agnus, Orme [John C. Higginbotham]. “Abner, the Watchdog,” 27: 497-504.
Pope, Jessie. “The Tale of the Sandy Stray.” 27: 515-20.
Rivers, Frances. “‘Train Up a Child—’.” 27: 549-53.
White, Frederick] M[errick]. “Crossed Swords.” 27: 562-70.
Parker, Gilbert. “George’s Wife.” 27:591-601.
Wood, H.F. Wiber. “The Leaning Tower of Pisa.” 27:602-08.
Crow, O. “A Land Serpent at Sea.” 27:613-18.
Rivers, Frances. “The Better Part.” 27:620-26.
Forman, Justus Miles. “The Honour of Saint Cere.” 27: 627-36.
Phillips, Henry Wallace. “In the Absence of Rules: as Told by Red Saunders.” 27: 659-65.
Lancaster, G.B [Edith Joan Lyttleton]. “When Duty Calls.” 27: 666-76.
White, Frederick] M[errick] “A Masked Battery.” 27: 684-92.
Crockett, S[amuel].R[utherford]. “The Treasure of the Faas.” 27: 715-20.
Lancaster, G.B [Edith Joan Lyttleton]. “The Dignity of Life.” 27: 721-30.
Fodor, Helen. “Violet’s Flat.” 27:735-39.
Pope, Jessie. “The Finding of Towser.” 27:740-46.
Rivers, Frances. “The Point of View.” 27:769-73.
White, Frederick] M[errick], “The Sword of Justice.” 27: 808-16
Vol 28 (June-November 1908)
Watson, H[enry].B[rereton], Marriott. “The Bravo.” 28:19-27.
Steel, Flora Annie. “Mother.” 28: 29-34.
Agnus, Orme [John C. Higginbotham]. “Mrs Dishman’s Ghosts.” 28: 50-58.
Goode, W.A.M. “How Ludovic Went to Parson’s Green.” 28: 60-65.
White, Frederick] M[errick]. “The Kingmaker’s Token.” 28: 67-75.
Bell, R.S. Warren. “Fortunato’s Revenge.” 28: 76-82.
Howard, Keble [John Keble Bell]. “Celia and the Actor.” 28: 89-95.
Rivers, Frances. “The Mood and the Hour.” 28:96-102.
Wildridge, Oswald. “Concerning a Letter and a Parable.” 28:108-18.
Forman, Justus Miles. “Break O’Day.” 28:142-50.
Beardsley, Alice. “Percy Biggs’s Lorelei.” 28:151-58.
Thurston, Katherine Cecil. “The Six Candles.” 28: 159-64.
Kellett, E.E. “A Theorist.” 28: 165-72.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “The Window in the Shack.” 28: 173-80.
Howard, Keble [John Keble Bell]. “Celia’s Test Cure.” 28:191-97.
White, Frederick] M[errick]. “A Block of Marble.” 28:198-206.
Rivers, Frances. “‘A Fool i’the Forest’.” 28:221-26.
Hilliers, Ashton. “Birdseed and the Nineteen-Pointer.” 28: 232-40.
Cholmondeley, Mary. “The Lowest Rung.” 28:264-74.
Wodehouse, P[elham].G[renville]. “Ladies and Gentlemen v. Players.” 28: 275-81.
Shine, Frederick, and Harry Golding. “The Sower who Did not Reap.” 28: 283-88.
Parker, Gilbert. “Qu’Appelle? Who Calls?” 28: 297-307.
Howard, Keble [John Keble Bell]. “Celia’s Elopement.” 28: 308-13.
Fagan, James B. “The Boots of Carloccio.” 28:321-26.
Rivers, Frances. “The Time of Roses.” 28:342-48.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “The Fight at the Wallow.” 28: 349-53.
White, Frederick] M[errick].“The Black Admiral.” 28: 354-62.
Forman, Justus Miles. “The Islands of the Blest.” 28: 387-95.
Rivers, Frances. “A Policy that Sat Above Conscience.” 28: 396-402.
Howard, Keble [John Keble Bell]. “Celia’s Dreadful Fright.” 28: 411-16.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “From the Teeth of the Tide.” 28: 426-30.
Phillpotts, Eden “The Death of Auguste Chatenay.” 28: 431-38.
Cotterell, Constance. “‘Though Mountains Meet Not’.” 28: 439-45.
Turner, Reginald. “A Hypnotic Fraud.” 28:447-53.
Richardson, Frank. “Phantom Fittings.” 28: 454-60.
Wodehouse, P[elham].G[renville]. “The Guardian.” 28: 462-70.
Pain, Barry. “The Feast and the Reckoning.” 28: 478-84.
Forman, Justus Miles. “The Man of Mystery.” 28:509-19.
Howard, Keble [John Keble Bell]. “Celia’s Filial Piety.” 28: 520-26.
Innes, Norman. “The Eyes of Benedetta.” 28:528-32.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “The White-Slashed Bull.” 28: 533-39.
Rivers, Frances. “In the Moonlight.” 28:553-57.
Rawson, Maud Stepney. “The Poet’s Harvest.” 28: 558-74.
Turner, Reginald. “A Ladder of Letters.” 28:575-82.
Oliver, Owen [Sir Joshua Albert Flynn]. “The Gardener.” 28: 583-90.
Tracy, Louis. “At Sea!” 28: 599-606.
Clifford, W.K. “The Eavesdropper.” 28: 629-36.
Prichard, K[ate]., and Hesketh Prichard. “The Thief.” 28: 637-46.
Deeping, Warwick. “Barbe of the Black Hair.” 28: 661-72.
Thurston, E. Temple. “Chatterbox.” 28:681-86.
Mitton, G[eraldine].E[dith]. “The Coward.” 28: 702-06.
Howard, Keble [John Keble Bell]. “Celia’s Wedding Group.” 28: 707-14.
Turner, Edgar, and Reginald Hodder. “The Invention of Ephraim Gadde.” 28: 722-30.
Vol 29 (December 1908-May 1909)
Kipling, Rudyard. “The Mother Hive.” 29: 27-36.
Hope, Anthony [Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins]. “River and Ring.” 29: 37-42.
Phillpotts, Eden “The Cherub and the Lute.” 29: 57-65.
Crockett, S[amuel].R[utherford]. “By Right of Salvage.” 29:67-72.
Steel, Flora Annie. “His Chance.” 29:89-93.
Kellett, E.E. “Catching Two Tartars.” 29:94-102.
Forman, Justus Miles. The Quest. 29: 103-24, 273-94, 349-69, 469-91, 591-612, 769-95.
Pain, Barry. “A Doubtful Case.” 29: 130-34.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “The Iron Edge of Winter.” 29: 135-38.
Thurston, Katherine Cecil. “In the Dark.” 29: 141-51.
Bryant, Emily M. “The Baby in the‘Bus.” 29:152-54.
White, Fred[erick] Mjerrick]. “The Eye of the Camera.” 29: 155-62.
Hewlett, Maurice. Brazenhead in Milan. 29: 179-86,229-36,394-402,517-24.
Vachell, Horace Annesley. “Paradise.” 29: 193-202.
Jordan, Kate. “Cazabon’s Way.” 29: 238-47.
Rivers, Frances. “The Homeward Call.” 29: 252-56.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “In the Unknown Dark.” 29: 257-62.
Fletcher, J[oseph].S[mith]. “Young Mr Merrill’s Love Affair.” 29: 298-306.
Johnston, Hubert McBean. “The Viaduct.” 29: 320-26.
Hilliers, Ashton. “A Bit of Crown Derby.” 29:371-80.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “Melindy and the Lynxes.” 29: 389-93.
Nesbit, E[dith]. “Lucy.” 29:403-10.
Hibbard, George. “The Way it Was.” 29:415-24.
Bretherton, Ralph Harold. “The Chair.” 29: 425-34.
Beardsley, Alice. “Honeymooners, Limited.” 29: 443-48.
Gaunt, Mary. “Sweetbriar in the Desert.” 29: 493-98.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “In the Silences.” 29: 500-04.
Graves, Clotilde. “A Sailor’s Home.” 29: 525-44.
Clarke, B.A. “A Cure for Genius.” 29: 546-52.
Rickert, Edith. “White Lucy.” 29: 563-70.
Watson, H[enry].B[rereton]. Marriott. “The Cockerel.” 29:621-29.
Duncan, Norman. “A Lad o’ Wits.” 29: 642-46.
White, Frederick] M[errick]. “The Language of Flowers.” 29:647-54.
Moberly, L.G. “‘Through Thine Own Heart Also’.” 29: 655-60.
Rawson, Maud Stepney. “Love and the Jambiste.” 29: 661-69.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “MacPhairrson’s Happy Family.” 29: 682-92.
Steel, Flora Annie. “Silver Speech and Golden Understanding.” 29: 713-18.
Innes, Norman. “Wit and Understanding.” 29:719-23.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “The Lord of the Glass House.” 29: 733-38.
Rice, Alice Hegan. “Cupid Goes Slumming.” 29: 739-46.
White, Frederick] M[errick]. “The Unexpected.” 29:803-10.
Pope, Jessie. “My Mistake.” 29:811-16.
Vol 30 (June-November 1909)
London, Jack. “The House of Mapuhi.” 30: 17-30.
Willes, John. “Two of a Kind.” 30:38-48.
Lancaster, G.B [Edith Joan Lyttleton]. “His Lady of an Hour.” 30:49-54.
Oliver, Owen [Sir Joshua Albert Flynn]. “The Box of Tricks.” 30: 65-70. Pemberton, Max. White Walls. 30: 71-85, 177-92, 279-93,421-38, 537-56,687-711.
Innes, Norman. “Bianca Drinks.” 30: 86-90.
Taylor, Una Artevelde. “The Dream-Hawker.” 30:91-98.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “The Grey Master.” 30: 99-108.
Smith, Ellen Ada. “A Mutiny in the Corps d’Elite.” 30: 112-18.
Prichard, K[ate]., and Hesketh Prichard [E. and H. Heron]. “Broomridge’s Substitute.” 30: 139-47.
Von Hutton, Baroness. “Ragtime.” 30: 148-52.
Barrett, Dorothea. “A Rickshaw Ride in Durban.” 30: 153-56.
Lancaster, G.B [Edith Joan Lyttleton]. “Peyton’s Bag.” 30: 205-10.
Moberly, L.G. “A Sundial Story.” 30:211-218.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “The Sun-Gazer.” 30: 219-28.
Willes, John. “A Limb of the Law.” 30: 230-40.
Forman, Justus Miles. “The Countess.” 30: 263-73.
O’Neill, H.C. “Tim.” 30:310-13.
Innes, Norman. “By Order of the Squire.” 30: 314-18.
Barr, Robert. “The Cousin from Canada.” 30: 319-27.
Barrett, Dorothea. “A Country Holiday.” 30: 328-32.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “The Monarch of Park Barren.” 30: 333-42.
White, Frederick] M[errick]. “The Thirty-Seventh Month.” 30: 354-62.
Forman, Justus Miles. “The Harvest Moon.” 30: 385-95.
Jordan, Kate. “Sir Arthur of Beetle Alley.” 30: 396-400.
Pain, Barry. “The Unfinished Game.” 30: 439-45.
Pope, Jessie. “Our Patrol.” 30: 457-64.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas. “The King of the Flaming Hoops.” 30: 465-76.
Warden, Florence [Florence E. James]. “The Vicar’s Visitor.” 30: 477-84.
Rhodes, Harrison. “A Wife for Lord Thomas.” 30: 507-14.
Pain, Barry. “The Secret of Discipline.” 30:515-21.
Barrett, Dorothea. “At Old Yard Farm.” 30: 522-25.
Vernet, Helen. “On the Difficulty of Obtaining String.” 30: 557-60.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “Last Bull.” 30: 561-68.
Lancaster, G.B [Edith Joan Lyttleton]. “The Divided Soul.” 30: 569-77.
Herbertson, Agnes Grozier. “A Misplaced Allegiance.” 30: 578-82.
Forman, Justus Miles. “Val Le Morte.” 30: 593-606.
Harrison, Austin. “Initiation.” 30: 627-38.
Pain, Barry. “The ’Eighty-Seven.” 30: 639-42.
Kemahan, Coulson. “How the Aberdeen Terrier Got his Long Back.” 30: 643-45.
Durant, H.R. “The Unknown.” 30: 657-68.
Bell, C.C. “A Judgement of Paris.” 30: 680-86.
White, Frederick] M[errick]. “Applied Mechanics.” 30: 723-30.
Vol 31 (December 1909-May 1910)
Mason, A[lffed].E[dward].W[oodley]. “Green Paint.” 31:23-41.
Locke, William J. “An Old-World Episode.” 31; 42-54.
Stayton, Frank. “A Woman’s Whim.” 31:59-63.
Innes, Norman. “Uncle Jabez.” 31:64-72.
Forman, Justus Miles. Bianca’s Daughter. 31: 93-107, 236-58, 378-98,483-504, 625-47, 781-96.
Parker, Gilbert. “Sara.” 31: 108-10.
Maxwell, W[illiam].B[abington]. “The Last Man In.” 31:111-20.
Herbertson, Agnes Grozier. “The Christmas-Tree.” 31:121-24.
Phillpotts, Eden “Half-Mast.” 31: 143-47.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “On the Roof of the World.” 31: 148-51. Thurston, Katherine Cecil. “Life.” 31:152-66.
Barr, Robert. “The Scientist and the Shop-Girl.” 31: 167-77.
Hyne, C[harles].J[ohn]. Cutliffe. “The Banker and the Breeches Buoy.” 31: 178-82.
Steel, Flora Annie. “Dry Goods.” 31:196-202.
Pope, Jessie. “Mrs. Pettifer’s Turkey.” 31:203-06.
Conyers, Dorothea. “Mrs O’Dea’s Lodger.” 31:225-30.
Pain, Barry. “Chrisimissima.” 31:273-78.
White, Frederick] M[errick]. “After Reynolds.” 31: 279-86.
Thomson, W. Harold. “Nervous Peggy.” 31: 287-89.
Smith, H.E. Caldwell. “The Relapse.” 31:301-04.
Oliver, Owen [Sir Joshua Albert Flynn]. “They Called It Love.” 31: 305-14. Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “Grey Lynx’s Last Hunting.” 31: 315-20. McChesney, Dora Greenwell. “The Blind Ghost.” 31:322-26.
Harraden, Beatrice. “The First Wife’s Picture.” 31:345-58.
Pain, Barry. “A Vicious Circle.” 31: 368-70.
Pope, Jessie. “Miss Mentor and I.” 31: 371 -77.
Eckersley, Arthur. “The Obstacle.” 31:413-20.
Graves, Clotilde. “The Compleat Housewife; the Story of a Battaglio Pie.” 31: 421-31.
Barrett, Dorothea. “A New Zealand Pilgrimage.” 31: 432-436.
Noble, Edward. “An Island Inferno.” 31: 441-48.
Bowen, Marjorie [Gabrielle Margaret Vere Campbell]. “The Confession of Floris Heenvliet.” 31:469-73.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “The Sentry of the Sedge-Flats.” 31: 474-78.
Graves, Clotilde. “A Relief Expedition.” 31:521-30.
Moore, F. Frankfort. “The Mysterious Typewriter.” 31: 535-45.
Keightley, Ethel. “Philosophy and Cupid.” 31:559-62.
White, Frederick] M[errick].“A Record Round.” 31: 563-70.
Mason, A[lfred].E[dward].W[oodley]. “The Clock.” 31:593-603.
Pryce, Richard. “Drusilla Proposes.” 31:604-06.
Lees, Victoria. “Her Employer.” 31:648-58.
O’Neill, H.C. “The Sunday-School Treat.” 31:677-80.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “The Antlers of the Caribou.” 31: 681-85. Innes, Norman. “In Time of War.” 31: 686-92.
Nesbit, E[dith]. “Saccharissa and the Candlesticks.” 31:712-16.
Moore, F. Frankfort. “Rosamund’s Lady.” 31:721-30.
Steel, Flora Annie. “The Value of a Vote.” 31: 749-52.
Sutcliffe, Halliwell. “The Jolly Smugglers.” 31:753-60.
Harrison, Austin. “At Call of Dawn.” 31: 761-64.
Price, Nancy. “Cupid in Motley.” 31:773-75.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas. “Black Swamp.” 31:776-80.
Mathias, Muriel. “Good Intentions.” 31:811-16.
Pope, Jessie. “The Comet’s Tail.” 31:817-18.
Vol 32 (June-November 1910)
Bindloss, Harold. Hawtrey’s Deputy. 32: 17-34, 175-94,306-16,427-43,557-80, 676-98.
Hyne, C[harles].J[ohn]. Cutliffe. “The Twins.” 32:51-58.
Carr, Mrs Comyns [Alice Laura Vansittart]. “Votes for Women.” 32: 60-68. Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas. “The Isle of Birds.” 32:69-74.
North, Laurence. “A Common Cause.” 32: 75-80.
Spence, Edward F. “The Power of Money.” 32:81-86.
Pope, Jessie. “Pym’s Sister.” 32: 87-92.
Forman, Justus Miles. “The Woman in Black.” 32:107-18.
Forman, Justus Miles. “Hayes and the Harvest Moon.” 32:137-46.
North, Laurence. “Diana and the Comet.” 32: 154-58 Phillpotts, Eden “The Wheat Rick.” 32: 195-201.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “Little Bull of the Barrens.” 32: 202-06
Hilliers, Ashton. “The Quiet Sort.” 32: 208-22.
White, Frederick] M[errick]. “The Salmon Poachers.” 32: 235-40 Phillpotts, Eden “Captain Barker’s Bell.” 32:261-66.
Forman, Justus Miles. “Irene of Trebizond.” 32:271-94.
Keightley, Ethel. “Love Among the Willows.” 32: 303-05.
Pain, Barry. “The Lady of the Pillar-Box.” 32: 317-21.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “A Tree-Top Aeronaut.” 32: 323-28.
Bowen, Marjorie [Gabrielle Margaret Vere Campbell]. “The Quack.” 32: 329-33.
North, Laurence. “Elsa in Goblin-Land.” 32: 334-38.
O’Sullivan, Vincent. “The Turn of the Tide.” 32: 351-53.
Watson, H[enry].B[rereton]. Marriott. “The Lady With the Key.” 32: 354-62.
Capes, Bernard. “Tony’s Drum.” 32:383-91.
Calthrop, Dion Clayton. “Pot Luck.” 32: 392-98.
Phillpotts, Eden “The Four Lovers.” 32: 419-26.
Pain, Barry. “In the Marmalade.” 32: 444-48.
Smith, H.E. Caldwell. “The Tale of a Tank.” 32:460-62.
Watson, H[enry].B[rereton]. Marriott. “Full Moon.” 32:463-71.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “The Tunnel Runners.” 32: 472-78.
White, Frederick] M[errick]. “The Waterwitch.” 32: 479-84.
Lancaster, G.B [Edith Joan Lyttleton]. “The Little Girl and Dering.” 32: 505-11.
Macnaughtan, S. “Mr Bliss and the Secret Village.” 32: 512-20.
Wallace, Edgar. “His Game.” 32: 529-38.
Harris, A.L. “Pins and Needles.” 32: 540-4.
Taylor, Una Artevelde. “The Phantom Circus.” 32:582-88.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “A Torpedo in Feathers.” 32: 589-94.
North, Laurence. “Colonel Bogey.” 32: 595-600.
White, Frederick] M[errick]. “Sub Rosa.” 32: 605-10.
Phillpotts, Eden “White Heather.” 32:629-33.
Swire, R. “Rubber.” 32:634-38.
Somerset, Lady Henry. “The Great House and the Village.” 32: 639-42.
Oliver, Owen [Sir Joshua Albert Flynn]. “A House of Love.” 32:643-48.
Sparrow, Walter Shaw. “The Cabinet with Forty Niches.” 32: 649-54.
Deeping, Warwick. “Sword Before Tongue.” 32: 655-64.
Roberts, Charles G[eorge].D[ouglas]. “The Theft.” 32: 699-705.
Best, George A. “Dora’s Last Prize.” 32: 706-10.
North, Laurence. “The Bridge.” 32:711-14.
Gallon, Tom. “The Hanging Judge.” 32: 725-32.
1I have been unable to trace this reference.
2 See, for example, commentary on the FictionMags Index, a website which briefly describes the history of a large number of publications in relation to one another: http://users.ev1.net/~homeville/fictionmag/Ostart.htm.
3 For instance, two pieces of fiction appeared as separate supplements to volume 27—Ambrose Pratt’s The Remittance Man, 1907: 209-320; Fred M. White’s “The Lord of the Manor,” 1907: 331-70. In one copy of volume 27 I have examined (from the University of New South Wales), these items were bound in with the rest of the volume (although not part of the volume’s consecutive numbering) with the word “Supplement” added next to the page numbers. No other bound volumes I have seen contain bound-in supplements, either other copies of volume 27 or any other volume. Details of these supplements have not been included in either the author or chronological indexes because of the random nature of their survival in this form.
4 He was also apparently editor of the Daily Graphic between 1912 and 1916, according to Sandra Kemp, Charlotte Mitchell and David Trotter, eds, Edwardian Fiction: an Oxford Companion (Oxford: Oxford UP, 1997), 200.
5 See, for example, A.T. Yarwood’s From a Chair in the Sun, Ringwood, Vic: Penguin, 1994.