'That Very Mab'
         CHAPTER I. — UNDER TWO FLAGS.

         CHAPTER II. — DISILLUSIONS.

         CHAPTER III. — THE ORIGIN OF RELIGION.

         CHAPTER IV. — THE POET AND THE PALÆONTO-THEOLOGIST

         CHAPTER V. — ST. GEORGE FOR MERRY ENGLAND

         CHAPTER VI. — JUSTICE AND THE NEW DEMOCRACY.

         CHAPTER VII. — MACHINERY AND THE SUCCESSFUL MERCHANT.

         CHAPTER VIII. — THE BEAUTIFUL.

         CHAPTER IX. — IN WHICH THE NIHILIST, THE DEMOCRAT,

         AND THE PROFESSOR OFFER A SUGGESTION TO THE BISHOP.

         CHAPTER X. — THE SUBSEQUENT CAREER OF THE NIHILIST.

         CHAPTER XI. — HOME AND FOREIGN POLICY COMBINED.

         CHAPTER XII. — THE DELUGE.

   The moonlight, in wave on wave of silver, flooded all the Sacred Island. Far away and faint ran the line of the crests of Samoa, like the hills of heaven in the old ballad, or a scene in the Italian opera. Then came a voice from the Calling Place, and the smooth sea thrilled, and all the fishes leaped, and the Sacred Isle itself was moved, and shuddered to its inmost heart. Again and again came the voice, and now it rose and fell in the cadences of a magical song (or

    Karakia

   , if we

    must

   have local colour), and the words were not of this world. Then, behold, the smooth seas began to break and plash round the foremost cape of the Holy Island, and to close again behind, like water before the keel and behind the stern of a running ship, so they plashed, and broke, and fell. Next the surface was stirred far off with the gambolling and sporting of innumerable fishes; the dolphin was 
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