Walter Scott’s shorter fictions come in different shapes and sizes, and live in different types of publications, whether the periodical, short story collection, anthology, gift book or multivolume novel. Even completed novels were augmented with snatches of new prose that ought to be treated as separate stories. This article examines what I am calling Scott’s three main wandering tales: “The Fortunes of Martin Waldeck” (The Antiquary [1816]), “Wandering Willie’s Tale” (Redgauntlet [1824]) and “Donnerhugel’s Narrative” (Anne of Geierstein [1829]). A wandering tale is essentially a short story that can feasibly stand apart from the novel in which it first appeared but whose textual mobility depends on, and can have an impact upon, the host no...