- 01 - Madame Pratolungo Presents Herself
- 02 - Madame Pratolungo Makes a Voyage on Land
- 03 - Poor Miss Finch
- 04 - Twilight View of the Man
- 05 - Candlelight View of the Man
- 06 - A Cage of Finches
- 07 - Daylight View of the Man
- 08 - The Perjury of the Clock
- 09 - The Hero of the Trial
- 10 - First Appearance of Jicks
- 11 - Blind Love
- 12 - Mr. Finch Smells Money
- 13 - Second Appearance of Jicks
- 14 - Discoveries at Browndown
- 15 - Events at the Bedside
- 16 - First Result of the Robbery
- 17 - The Doctor's Opinion
- 18 - Family Troubles
- 19 - Second Result of the Robbery
- 20 - Good Papa Again!
- 21 - Madame Pratolungo Returns to Dimchurch
- 22 - The Twin-Brother's Letter
- 23 - He Sets Us All Right
- 24 - He Sees Lucilla
- 25 - Nugent Puzzles Madame Pratolungo
- 26 - He Proves Equal to the Occasion
- 27 - He Finds a Way out of it
- 28 - He Crosses the Rubicon
- 29 - Parliamentary Summary
- 30 - Herr Grosse
- 31 - 'Who Shall Decide when Doctors Disagree?'
- 32 - Alas for the Marriage!
- 33 - The Day Between
- 34 - Nugent Shows his Hand
- 35 - Lucilla Tries her Sight
- 36 - The Brothers Meet
- 37 - The Brothers Change Places
- 38 - Is There No Excuse for Him?
- 39 - She Learns to See
- 40 - Traces of Nugent
- 41 - A Hard Time for Madame Pratolungo
- 42 - The Story of Lucilla: Told by Herself
- 43 - Lucilla's Journal, continued
- 44 - Lucilla's Journal, continued
- 45 - Lucilla's Journal, continued
- 46 - The Italian Steamer
- 47 - On the Way to the End. First Stage
- 48 - On the Way to the End. Second Stage
- 49 - On the Way to the End. Third Stage
- 50 - The End of the Journey
- 51 - Epilog: Madame Pratolungo's Last Words
“Poor Miss Finch.” That is what everyone calls the courageous protagonist of this book. In other words, “poor thing, she’s blind, isn’t it awful?” Ha! Lucilla Finch is the wisest of all the characters, in spite of, and perhaps because of, her blindness. This story is about her trials, tribulations and triumphs. She reminds me of myself. Not the falling recklessly in love and being pulled this way and that by foolish young men and mad old doctors. I mean that, like her, I’m blind and proud of it!
(Introduction by Sandra G)
Editing by TriciaG & Nadine Eckert-Boulet
Editing by TriciaG & Nadine Eckert-Boulet
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