Title: Index of the Project Gutenberg Works of James Matthew Barrie
Author: J. M. Barrie
Editor: David Widger
Release date: February 4, 2019 [eBook #58824]
                Most recently updated: July 5, 2019
Language: English
Credits: Produced by David Widger
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
| CHAPTER I | PETER BREAKS THROUGH | 
| CHAPTER II | THE SHADOW | 
| CHAPTER III | COME AWAY, COME AWAY! | 
| CHAPTER IV | THE FLIGHT | 
| CHAPTER V | THE ISLAND COME TRUE | 
| CHAPTER VI | THE LITTLE HOUSE | 
| CHAPTER VII | THE HOME UNDER THE GROUND | 
| CHAPTER VIII | THE MERMAIDS' LAGOON | 
| CHAPTER IX | THE NEVER BIRD | 
| CHAPTER X | THE HAPPY HOME | 
| CHAPTER XI | WENDY'S STORY | 
| CHAPTER XII | THE CHILDREN ARE CARRIED OFF | 
| CHAPTER XIII | DO YOU BELIEVE IN FAIRIES? | 
| CHAPTER XIV | THE PIRATE SHIP | 
| CHAPTER XV | 'HOOK OR ME THIS TIME' | 
| CHAPTER XVI | THE RETURN HOME | 
| CHAPTER XVII | WHEN WENDY GREW UP | 
 
 
 
 
 
 
| Page | ||
| PART I | Early Days | 3 | 
| PART II | The Never-Never-Never Land | 27 | 
| PART III | The Mermaids' Lagoon | 43 | 
| PART IV | The Underground Home | 51 | 
| PART V | The Pirate Ship | 65 | 
| PART VI | Home, Sweet Home | 79 | 
| TO FACE PAGE | |
| With the Spring comes Wendy | colour-plate frontispiece | 
| With Michael sitting on her Back | colour-plate 6 | 
| The Shadow held on beautifully | 14 | 
| Wendy gently kissed his Cheek | colour-plate 16 | 
| Away they floated | 22 | 
| Slightly was dancing merrily with an Ostrich | colour-plate 28 | 
| "The Crocodile! the Crocodile!" | 32 | 
| The Indians crept silently up | 34 | 
| The Lost Boys knelt before her | colour-plate 38 | 
| She was combing her Long Tresses | 43 | 
| She slipped out of his Grasp | 44 | 
| A Fierce Fight ensued | 46 | 
| Spreading his Coat to the Wind, he sailed merrily | colour-plate 48 | 
| Seized by One of the Swarthy Ruffians | 59 | 
| He perceived Tinker Bell in his Glass | colour-plate 62 | 
| The Pirate Ship | 66 | 
| "That Man is mine!" | colour-plate 72 | 
| Right into the Jaws of the Crocodile! | 74 | 
| Nurse to the Papooses! | 76 | 
| He would live in the Kennel till his Children's Return | 80 | 
 
 
| CHAPTER I | THE GRAND TOUR OF THE GARDENS | 
| CHAPTER II | PETER PAN | 
| CHAPTER III | THE THRUSH'S NEST | 
| CHAPTER IV | LOCK-OUT TIME | 
| CHAPTER V | THE LITTLE HOUSE | 
| CHAPTER VI | PETER'S GOAT | 
 
 
 
| CHAPTER I | THE GRAND TOUR OF THE GARDENS | 
| CHAPTER II | PETER PAN | 
| CHAPTER III | THE THRUSH'S NEST | 
| CHAPTER IV | LOCK-OUT TIME | 
| CHAPTER V | THE LITTLE HOUSE | 
| CHAPTER VI | PETER'S GOAT | 
 
 
 
 
| THE LITTLE WHITE BIRD | |
| I | David and I Set Forth Upon a Journey | 
| II | The Little Nursery Governess | 
| III | Her Marriage, Her Clothes, Her Appetite, and an Inventory of Her Furniture | 
| IV | A Night-Piece | 
| V | The Fight For Timothy | 
| VI | A Shock | 
| VII | The Last of Timothy | 
| VIII | The Inconsiderate Waiter | 
| IX | A Confirmed Spinster | 
| X | Sporting Reflections | 
| XI | The Runaway Perambulator | 
| XII | The Pleasantest Club in London | 
| XIII | The Grand Tour of the Gardens | 
| XIV | Peter Pan | 
| XV | The Thrush's Nest | 
| XVI | Lock-Out Time | 
| XVII | The Little House | 
| XVIII | Peter's Goat | 
| XIX | An Interloper | 
| XX | David and Porthos Compared | 
| XXI | William Paterson | 
| XXII | Joey | 
| XXIII | Pilkington's | 
| XXIV | Barbara | 
| XXV | The Cricket Match | 
| XXVI | The Dedication | 
 
 
 
| ACT I. | AT LOAM HOUSE, MAYFAIR | 
| ACT II. | THE ISLAND | 
| ACT III. | THE HAPPY HOME | 
| ACT IV. | THE OTHER ISLAND | 
 
 
| ACT I | 
| ACT II | 
| ACT III | 
 
 
| ACT I | 
| ACT II | 
| ACT III | 
| ACT IV | 
 
 
| I. | THE SCHOOLHOUSE | 
| II. | THRUMS | 
| III. | THE AULD LICHT KIRK | 
| IV. | LADS AND LASSES | 
| V. | THE AULD LICHTS IN ARMS | 
| VI. | THE OLD DOMINIE | 
| VII. | CREE QUEERY AND MYSY DROLLY | 
| VIII. | THE COURTING OF T'NOWHEAD'S BELL | 
| IX. | DAVIT LUNAN'S POLITICAL REMINISCENCES | 
| X. | A VERY OLD FAMILY | 
| XI. | LITTLE RATHIE'S "BURAL" | 
| XII. | A LITERARY CLUB | 
| J. M. BARRIE . . . . . . . . . Frontispiece | 
| Sabbath at T'nowhead | 
 
 
| THE OLD LADY SHOWS HER MEDALS | 
| THE NEW WORD | 
| BARBARA'S WEDDING | 
| A WELL-REMEMBERED VOICE | 
 
 
| And clung to it, his teeth set. | 
| "She is standing behind that tree looking at us." | 
| She did not look up, she waited. | 
 
 
 
| chap. | page | |
| I. | Matrimony and Smoking compared | 1 | 
| II. | My First Cigar | 11 | 
| III. | The Arcadia Mixture | 18 | 
| IV. | My Pipes | 27 | 
| V. | My Tobacco-Pouch | 38 | 
| VI. | My Smoking-Table | 45 | 
| VII. | Gilray | 52 | 
| VIII. | Marriot | 60 | 
| IX. | Jimmy | 70 | 
| [pg viii] X. | Scrymgeour | 78 | 
| XI. | His Wife's Cigars | 87 | 
| XII. | Gilray's Flower-Pot | 94 | 
| XIII. | The Grandest Scene in History | 103 | 
| XIV. | My Brother Henry | 116 | 
| XV. | House-Boat "Arcadia" | 124 | 
| XVI. | The Arcadia Mixture Again | 133 | 
| XVII. | The Romance of a Pipe-Cleaner | 143 | 
| XXVIII. | What could he do? | 151 | 
| XIX. | Primus | 159 | 
| XX. | Primus to his Uncle | 168 | 
| XXI. | English-grown Tobacco | 177 | 
| XXII. | How Heroes smoke | 186 | 
| XXIII. | The Ghost of Christmas Eve | 194 | 
| XXIV. | Not the Arcadia | 202 | 
| XXV. | A Face that haunted Marriot | 209 | 
| XXVI. | Arcadians at Bay | 216 | 
| XXVII. | Jimmy's Dream | 223 | 
| XXVIII. | Gilray's Dream | 231 | 
| XXIX. | Pettigrew's Dream | 239 | 
| XXX. | The Murder in the Inn | 247 | 
| XXXI. | The Perils of not Smoking | 252 | 
| XXXII. | My Last Pipe | 260 | 
| XXXIII. | When my Wife is Asleep and all the House is Still | 269 | 
 
 
| I. | ENGAGED? | 
| II. | THE S. D. W. S. P.? | 
| III. | THE GREAT SOCIAL QUESTION? | 
| IV. | WOMAN'S RIGHTS? | 
| V. | DYNAMITERS? | 
| VI. | A CELEBRITY AT HOME? | 
| VII. | EXPERIMENTING? | 
| VIII. | A LOST OPPORTUNITY? | 
| IX. | THE ROOT OF THE MATTER? | 
| X. | THE OLD OLD STORY? | 
 
 
| J. M. BARRIE . . . . . . . . . . . . Frontispiece | 
| The square foot of glass where Jess sat in her chair and looked down the brae | 
 
 
| ACT I | 
| ACT II | 
| ACT III | 
| ACT IV | 
 
 
 
| PAGE | ||
| I. | The Love-Light. | 1 | 
| II. | Runs Alongside the Making of a Minister. | 7 | 
| III. | The Night-Watchers. | 17 | 
| IV. | First Coming of the Egyptian Woman. | 30 | 
| V. | A Warlike Chapter, Culminating in the Flouting of the Minister by the Woman. | 42 | 
| VI. | In Which the Soldiers Meet the Amazons of Thrums. | 50 | 
| VII. | Has the Folly of Looking into a Woman’s Eyes by way of Text. | 62 | 
| VIII. | 3 A.M.—Monstrous Audacity of the Woman. | 69 | 
| IX. | The Woman Considered in Absence—Adventures of a Military Cloak. | 79 | 
| X. | First Sermon Against Women. | 89 | 
| XI. | Tells in a Whisper of Man’s Fall During the Curling Season. | 100 | 
| XII. | Tragedy of a Mud House. | 110 | 
| XIII. | Second Coming of the Egyptian Woman. | 117 | 
| XIV. | The Minister Dances to the Woman’s Piping. | 125 | 
| XV. | The Minister Bewitched—Second Sermon against Women. | 135 | 
| XVI. | Continued Misbehaviour of the Egyptian Woman. | 143 | 
| XVII. | Intrusion of Haggart into These Pages against the Author’s Wish. | 151 | 
| XVIII. | Caddam—Love Leading to a Rupture. | 161 | 
| XIX. | Circumstances Leading to the First Sermon in Approval of Women. | 169 | 
| XX. | End of the State of Indecision. | 177 | 
| XXI. | Night—Margaret—Flashing of a Lantern. | 186 | 
| XXII. | Lovers. | 196 | 
| XXIII. | Contains a Birth, Which is Sufficient for One Chapter. | 205 | 
| XXIV. | The New World, and the Woman Who May Not Dwell Therein. | 211 | 
| XXV. | Beginning of the Twenty-Four Hours. | 217 | 
| XXVI. | Scene at the Spittal. | 225 | 
| XXVII. | First Journey of the Dominie to Thrums During the Twenty-Four Hours. | 232 | 
| XXVIII. | The Hill before Darkness Fell—Scene of the Impending Catastrophe. | 237 | 
| XXIX. | Story of the Egyptian. | 244 | 
| XXX. | The Meeting for Rain. | 252 | 
| XXXI. | Various Bodies Converging on the Hill. | 259 | 
| XXXII. | Leading Swiftly to the Appalling Marriage. | 268 | 
| XXXIII. | While the Ten O’Clock Bell Was Ringing. | 274 | 
| XXXIV. | The Great Rain. | 281 | 
| XXXV. | The Glen at Break of Day. | 285 | 
| XXXVI. | Story of the Dominie. | 299 | 
| XXXVII. | Second Journey of the Dominie to Thrums During the Twenty-Four Hours. | 308 | 
| XXXVIII. | Thrums during the Twenty-Four Hours—Defence of the Manse. | 315 | 
| XXXIX. | How Babbie Spent the Night of August Fourth. | 324 | 
| XL. | Babbie and Margaret—Defence of the Manse Continued. | 330 | 
| XLI. | Rintoul and Babbie—Breakdown of the Defence of the Manse. | 337 | 
| XLII. | Margaret, the Precentor, and God Between. | 345 | 
| XLIII. | Rain—Mist—The Jaws. | 353 | 
| XLIV. | End of the Twenty-Four Hours. | 363 | 
| XLV. | Talk of a Little Maid Since Grown Tall. | 369 | 
 
 
 
| PAGE | |
| I. Lord Rosebery, | 7 | 
| II. Professor Masson, | 19 | 
| III. Professor Blackie, | 31 | 
| IV. Professor Calderwood, | 41 | 
| V. Professor Tait, | 53 | 
| VI. Professor Fraser, | 67 | 
| VII. Professor Chrystal, | 77 | 
| VIII. Professor Sellar, | 91 | 
| IX. Mr. Joseph Thomson, | 105 | 
| X. Robert Louis Stevenson, | 115 | 
| XI. Rev. Walter C. Smith, D.D., | 129 | 
 
 
 
| PAGE. | |
| James Matthew Barrie, | 15 | 
| A Holiday in Bed, | 23 | 
| Life in a Country Manse, | 37 | 
| Life in a Country Manse—A Wedding in a Smiddy, | 49 | 
| A Powerful Drug, | 61 | 
| Every Man His own Doctor, | 73 | 
| Gretna Green Revisited, | 87 | 
| My Favorite Authoress, | 111 | 
| The Captain of the School, | 121 | 
| Thoughtful Boys Make Thoughtful Men, | 131 | 
| It, | 145 | 
| To the Influenza, | 153 | 
| Four-in-Hand Novelists, | 161 | 
| Rules on Carving, | 173 | 
| On Running After a Hat, | 179 | 
 
 
 
| CHAPTER I | ROB ANGUS IS NOT A FREE MAN | 1 | 
| CHAPTER II | ROB BECOMES FREE | 17 | 
| CHAPTER III | ROB GOES OUT INTO THE WORLD | 27 | 
| CHAPTER IV | 'THE SCORN OF SCORNS' | 43 | 
| CHAPTER V | ROB MARCHES TO HIS FATE | 62 | 
| CHAPTER VI | THE ONE WOMAN | 80 | 
| CHAPTER VII | THE GRAND PASSION? | 99 | 
| CHAPTER VIII | IN FLEET STREET | 113 | 
| CHAPTER IX | MR. NOBLE SIMMS | 129 | 
| CHAPTER X | THE WIGWAM | 139 | 
| CHAPTER XI | ROB IS STRUCK DOWN | 156 | 
| CHAPTER XII | THE STUPID SEX | 169 | 
| CHAPTER XIII | THE HOUSE-BOAT 'TAWNY OWL' | 183 | 
| CHAPTER XIV | MARY OF THE STONY HEART | 195 | 
| CHAPTER XV | COLONEL ABINGER TAKES COMMAND | 210 | 
| CHAPTER XVI | THE BARBER OF ROTTEN ROW | 222 | 
| CHAPTER XVII | ROB PULLS HIMSELF TOGETHER | 234 | 
| CHAPTER XVIII | THE AUDACITY OF ROB ANGUS | 245 | 
| CHAPTER XIX | THE VERDICT OF THRUMS | 254 | 
 
 
| SENTIMENTAL TOMMY | |
| CHAPTER I | TOMMY CONTRIVES TO KEEP ONE OUT | 
| CHAPTER II | BUT THE OTHER GETS IN | 
| CHAPTER III | SHOWING HOW TOMMY WAS SUDDENLY TRANSFORMED INTO A YOUNG GENTLEMAN | 
| CHAPTER IV | THE END OF AN IDYLL | 
| CHAPTER V | THE GIRL WITH TWO MOTHERS | 
| CHAPTER VI | THE ENCHANTED STREET | 
| CHAPTER VII | COMIC OVERTURE TO A TRAGEDY | 
| CHAPTER VIII | THE BOY WITH TWO MOTHERS | 
| CHAPTER IX | AULD LANG SYNE | 
| CHAPTER X | THE FAVORITE OF THE LADIES | 
| CHAPTER XI | AARON LATTA | 
| CHAPTER XII | A CHILD'S TRAGEDY | 
| CHAPTER XIII | SHOWS HOW TOMMY TOOK CARE OF ELSPETH | 
| CHAPTER XIV | THE HANKY SCHOOL | 
| CHAPTER XV | THE MAN WHO NEVER CAME | 
| CHAPTER XVI | THE PAINTED LADY | 
| CHAPTER XVII | IN WHICH TOMMY SOLVES THE WOMAN PROBLEM | 
| CHAPTER XVIII | THE MUCKLEY | 
| CHAPTER XIX | CORP IS BROUGHT TO HEEL—GRIZEL DEFIANT | 
| CHAPTER XX | THE SHADOW OF SIR WALTER | 
| CHAPTER XXI | THE LAST JACOBITE RISING | 
| CHAPTER XXII | THE SIEGE OF THRUMS | 
| CHAPTER XXIII | GRIZEL PAYS THREE VISITS | 
| CHAPTER XXIV | A ROMANCE OF TWO OLD MAIDS AND A STOUT BACHELOR | 
| CHAPTER XXV | A PENNY PASS-BOOK | 
| CHAPTER XXVI | TOMMY REPENTS, AND IS NONE THE WORSE FOR IT | 
| CHAPTER XXVII | THE LONGER CATECHISM | 
| CHAPTER XXVIII | BUT IT SHOULD HAVE BEEN MISS KITTY | 
| CHAPTER XXIX | TOMMY THE SCHOLAR | 
| CHAPTER XXX | END OF THE JACOBITE RISING | 
| CHAPTER XXXI | A LETTER TO GOD | 
| CHAPTER XXXII | AN ELOPEMENT | 
| CHAPTER XXXIII | THERE IS SOME ONE TO LOVE GRIZEL AT LAST | 
| CHAPTER XXXIV | WHO TOLD TOMMY TO SPEAK | 
| CHAPTER XXXV | THE BRANDING OF TOMMY | 
| CHAPTER XXXVI | OF FOUR MINISTERS WHO AFTERWARDS BOASTED THAT THEY HAD KNOWN TOMMY | 
| CHAPTER XXXVII | THE END OF A BOYHOOD |