- I. How Did He Get It?
- II. By Heavens He Had Better Not!
- III. The Archdeacon's Threat.
- lV. The Clergyman's House at Hogglestock
- V. What The World Thought About It
- VI. Grace Crawley
- VII. Miss Prettyman's Private Room
- VIII. Mr Crawley is Taken to Silverbridge
- IX. Grace Crawley Goes to Allington
- X. Dinner at Framley Court
- XI. The Bishop Sends His Inhibition
- XII. Mr Crawley Seeks for Sympathy
- XIII. The Bishop's Angel
- XIV. Major Grantly Consults a Friend
- XV. Up in London
- XVI. Up at Allington
- XVII. Mr Crawley is Summoned to Barchester
- XVIII. The Bishop of Barchester is Crushed
- XIX. Where Did it Come From?
- XX. What Mr Walker Thought About It
- XXI. Mr Robarts on his Embassy
- XXII. Major Grantly at Home
- XXIII. Miss Lily Dale's Resolution
- XXIV. Mrs Dobbs Broughton's Dinner Party
- XXV. Miss Madalina Demolines
- XXVI. The Picture
- XXVII. A Hero at Home
- XXVIII. Showing How Major Grantly Took a Walk
- XIX. Miss Lily Dale's Logic
- XXX. Showing What Major Grantly Did After his Walk
- XXXI. Showing How Major Grantly Returned to Guestwick
- XXXII. Mr Toogood
- XXXIII. The Plumstead Foxes
- XXXIV. Mrs Proudie Sends For Her Lawyer
- XXXV. Lily Dale Writes Two Words in her Book
- XXXVI. Grace Crawley Returns Home
- XXXVII. Hook Court
- XXXVIII. Jael
- XXXIX. A New Flirtation
- XL. Mr Toogood's Ideas About Society
- XLI. Grace Crawley at Home
- XLII. Mr Toogood Travels Professionally
- XLIII. Mr Crosbie Goes into the City
- XLIV. 'I suppose I must let you have it.'
- XLV. Lily Dale Goes to London
- XLVI. A Bayswater Romance
- XLVII. Dr Tempest at the Palace
- XLVIII. The Softness of Sir Raffle Buffle
- XLIX. Near the Close
- L. Lady Lufton's Proposition
- LI. Mrs Dobbs Broughton Piles her Fagots
- LII. Why Don't You have an It for Yourself?
- LIII. Rotten Row
- LIV. The Clerical Commission
- LV. Framley Parsonage
- LVI. The Archdeacon Goes to Framley
- LVII. A Double Pledge
- LVIII. The Cross-Grainedness of Men
- LIX. A Lady Presents Her Compliments to Miss L.D.
- LX. The End of Jael and Sisera
- LXI. 'It's Dogged as Does it'
- LXII. Mr Crawley's Letter to the Dean
- LXIII. Two Visitors to Hogglestock
- LXIV. Tragedy at Hook Court
- LXV. Miss Van Siever Makes her Choice
- LXVI. Requiescat in Pace
- LXVII. In Memoriam
- LXVIII. The Obstinacy of Mr Crawley
- LXIX. Mr Crawley's Last Appearance at his own Pulpit
- LXX. Mrs Arabin is Caught
- LXXI. Mr Toogood at Silverbridge
- LXXII. Mr Toogood at 'The Dragon of Wantly'
- LXXIII. There is Comfort at Plumstead
- LXXIV. The Crawleys are Informed
- LXXV. Madalina's Heart is Bleeding
- LXXVI. I Think He is Light of Heart
- LXXVII. The Shattered Tree
- LXXVIII. The Arabins Return to Barchester
- LXXIX. Mr Crawley Speaks of his Coat
- LXXX. Miss Demolines Desires to Become a Fingerpost
- LXXXI. Barchester Cloisters
- LXXXII. The Last Scene at Hogglestock
- LXXXIII. Mr Crawley is Conquered
- LXXXIV. Conclusion
LibriVox reader Nicholas Clifford calls this Trollope's best novel in his introduction to the collaborative version of this fine novel - and he is right! A wonderful study of its central character, the proud, irascible, tormented, poverty-stricken clergyman, Josiah Crawley, who pays a heavy price for his human failings when he is brought to trial for the alleged theft of a cheque for twenty pounds. The trial is the source of much grief for his long-suffering family, not least his wife Mary and daughter Grace (the novel's romantic heroine), whilst the Reverend Crawley reminds us more and more of a mad King Lear on the heath. (Summary by Steve Gough)
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