The Fate of Fenella. Contents: “Fenella”, Helen Mathers; “Kisme”, Justin Mccarthy; “How it Strikes a Contemporary”, Francis Eleanor Trollope; “Between Two Fires”, Arthur Conan Doyle; “Complications”, Mary Crommelin; “A Woman’s View of the Matter”, F.C. Phillips; “So Near – So Far Away”, “Rita” [Pseud.]; “The Tragedy”, Joseph Hatton; “Free Once Again”, Mrs. Lovett Cameron; “Lord Castleton Explains”, Bram Stoker; “Madame De Vigny’s Revenge”, Florence Marryat; “To Live or Die”, Frank Danby; “The Scars Remained”, Mrs. Edward Kennard; “Derelict”, Richard Dowling; “Another Rift”, Mrs. Hungerford; “In New York”, Arthur A’Beckett; “Confined in a Madhouse”, Jean Middlemass; “Within Sight of Home”, Clement Scott; “A Vision From the Sea”, Clo Graves; “Through Fire and Water”, H.W. Lucy; “Alive or Dead?”, Adeline Sergeant; “Retribution”, George Manville Fenn; “Sick Unto Death”, “Tasma” [Pseud.]; “Whom the Gods Hate Die Hard”, F. Anstey.
269. “Chapter X” of “The Fate of Fenella”, The Gentlewoman 4 (1892): 138-9.
270. “Lord Castleton Explains”, [i.e., “Chapter X”], rpt in John Seymour ed., The Fate of Fenella, A Novel, Leipzig: Tauchnitz, 1892.
271. “Lord Castleton Explains”, [i.e., “Chapter X”], rpt in J.S. Wood ed., The Fate of Fenella, by twenty-four well-known authors, with seventy illustrations, “Third and cheaper edition”, London: Hutchinson, 1892.
272. “The Fate of Fenella”, [i.e., “Chapter X”], rpt in Peter Haining ed., Shades of Dracula. Bram Stoker’s Uncollected Stories, London: William Kimber, 1982, pp.91-100.
273. “A Deed of Vengeance?” [i.e., “Chapter X”], rpt in Peter Haining ed., Midnight Tales, London: Peter Owen, 1990, pp.98-106.