Many of McGonagall’s works had the task of improving the reader’s moral outlook, especially by drawing him away from the demon drink. These works show him in narrative mode…
- A Soldier’s Reprieve
- A Tale of Christmas Eve
- A Tale of Elsinore
- Annie Marshall the Foundling
- Forget-Me-Not
- Grif, of the Bloody Hand
- Hanchen, The Maid of the Mill
- Jack Honest, or the Widow and her Son
- Jack o’ the Cudgel, Part I
- Jack o’ the Cudgel, Part II
- Jenny Carrister, The Heroine of Lucknow-Mine
- John Rouat the Fisherman
- Little Pierre’s Song
- Little Popeet: The Lost Child
- Lost on the Prairie
- Nora, The Maid of Killarney
- Saved by Music
- Saving a Train [Version 1]
- Saving a Train [Version 2]
- The Blind Girl
- The Bonnie Lass of Ruily
- The Christmas Goose
- The Death of the Old Mendicant
- The Faithful Dog Fido
- The Little Match Girl
- The Nithsdale Widow and her Son
- The Poacher and his Family
- The Rattling Boy from Dublin
- The Sprig of Moss
- Too Late
- Young Munro the Sailor