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Index of the Project Gutenberg Works of James Matthew Barrie

Chapter 27: DEAR BRUTUS
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About This Book

A compiled index catalogs the author's published output by listing titles across plays, novels, stories, and essays, and provides detailed tables of contents for many volumes. Entries include chapter headings, sectional divisions, illustration notes, and volume organization to help readers locate individual works and episodes. The compilation groups related items, highlights recurring editions and illustrations, and functions as a navigational guide to the author's collected writings rather than a critical analysis.

THE LITTLE WHITE BIRD

OR ADVENTURES IN KENSINGTON GARDENS

By J.M. Barrie





CONTENTS

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






THE ADMIRABLE CRICHTON

From The Plays Of J. M. Barrie

A COMEDY

By J. M. Barrie



CONTENTS

ACT I. AT LOAM HOUSE, MAYFAIR
ACT II. THE ISLAND
ACT III.    THE HAPPY HOME
ACT IV. THE OTHER ISLAND






DEAR BRUTUS

By J. M. Barrie



CONTENTS

ACT I
ACT II
ACT III






WHAT EVERY WOMAN KNOWS

By James M. Barrie



CONTENTS

ACT I
ACT II
ACT III
ACT IV






AULD LICHT IDYLLS

CONTENTS

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

ILLUSTRATIONS

J. M. BARRIE . . . . . . . . . Frontispiece
Sabbath at T'nowhead






ECHOES OF THE WAR

By J. M. Barrie

CONTENTS

THE OLD LADY SHOWS HER MEDALS
THE NEW WORD
BARBARA'S WEDDING
A WELL-REMEMBERED VOICE






TOMMY AND GRIZEL

By J. M. Barrie

Illustrated By Bernard Partridge

CONTENTS

PART I

I. HOW TOMMY FOUND A WAY
II. THE SEARCH FOR THE TREASURE
III. SANDYS ON WOMAN
IV. GRIZEL OF THE CROOKED SMILE
V. THE TOMMY MYTH
VI. GHOSTS THAT HAUNT THE DEN
VII. THE BEGINNING OF THE DUEL
VIII. WHAT GRIZEL'S EYES SAID
IX. GALLANT BEHAVIOUR OF T. SANDYS
X. GAVINIA ON THE TRACK
XI. THE TEA-PARTY
XII. IN WHICH A COMEDIAN CHALLENGES TRAGEDY TO BOWLS
XIII. LITTLE WELLS OF GLADNESS
XIV. ELSPETH
XV. BY PROSEN WATER
XVI. "HOW COULD YOU HURT YOUR GRIZEL SO!"
XVII. HOW TOMMY SAVED THE FLAG

PART II

XVIII. THE GIRL SHE HAD BEEN
XIX. OF THE CHANGE IN THOMAS
XX. A LOVE-LETTER
XXI. THE ATTEMPT TO CARRY ELSPETH BY NUMBERS
XXII. GRIZEL'S GLORIOUS HOUR
XXIII. TOMMY LOSES GRIZEL
XXIV. THE MONSTER
XXV. MR. T. SANDYS HAS RETURNED TO TOWN
XXVI. GRIZEL ALL ALONE
XXVII. GRIZEL'S JOURNEY
XXVIII. TWO OF THEM
XXIX. THE RED LIGHT
XXX. THE LITTLE GODS DESERT HIM
XXXI. "THE MAN WITH THE GREETIN' EYES"
XXXII. TOMMY'S BEST WORK
XXXIII. THE LITTLE GODS RETURN WITH A LADY
XXXIV. A WAY IS FOUND FOR TOMMY
XXXV. THE PERFECT LOVER

ILLUSTRATIONS

PART I

And clung to it, his teeth set.
"She is standing behind that tree looking at us."
She did not look up, she waited.

PART II

"I sit still by his arm-chair and tell him what is happening to his Grizel."
They told Aaron something.
"But my friends still call me Mrs. Jerry," she said softly.
"I woke up," she said.
He heard their seductive voices, they danced around him in numbers.






MY LADY NICOTINE

A STUDY IN SMOKE

By J. M. Barrie

Illustrated By M. B. Prendergast



CONTENTS

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
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

ILLUSTRATIONS

Half-Title i
Frontispiece iv
Title-Page v
Headpiece to Table of Contents vii
Tailpiece to Table of Contents viii
Headpiece to List of Illustrations ix
Tailpiece to List of Illustrations xiii
Headpiece to Chap. I. 1
"As well as a spring bonnet and a nice dress" 6
"There are the Japanese fans on the wall" 7
Tailpiece Chap. I. "My wife puts her hand on my shoulder" 10
Headpiece Chap. II. 11
"At last he jumped up" 14
Box of cigars 15
Tailpiece Chap. II. "I firmly lighted my first cigar" 17
Headpiece Chap. III. "Jimmy pins a notice on his door" 18
"We are only to be distinguished by our pipes" 20
The Arcadia Mixture 21
Tailpiece Chap. III. 26
Headpiece Chap. IV. "Oh, see what I have done" 27
"I fell in love with two little meerschaums" 33
Pipes and pouch 36
Tailpiece Chap. IV. 37
Headpiece Chap. V. "They ... made tongs of their knitting-needles to lift it" 38
"I ... cast my old pouch out at the window" 40, 41
"It never quite recovered from its night in the rain" 43
Tailpiece Chap. V. 44
Headpiece Chap VI. "My Smoking-Table" 45
"Sometimes I had knocked it over accidentally" 48
Tailpiece Chap. VI. 51
Headpiece Chap. VII. "We met first in the Merediths' house-boat" 52
"He 'strode away blowing great clouds into the air,'" 57
Tailpiece Chap. VII. "The Arcadia had him for its own" 59
Headpiece Chap. VIII. "I let him talk on" 60
Pipes and jar of spills 62, 63
Tray of pipes and cigars 64
"I would ... light him to his sleeping-chamber with a spill" 68
Tailpiece Chap. VIII. 69
Headpiece Chap. IX. "The stem was a long cherry-wood" 70
"In time ... the Arcadia Mixture made him more and more like the rest of us" 71
"A score of smaller letters were tumbling about my feet" 74
Tailpiece Chap. IX. "Mothers' pets" 77
Headpiece Chap. X. "Scrymgeour was an artist" 78
"With shadowy reptiles crawling across the panels" 81
"Scrymgeour sprang like an acrobat into a Japanese dressing-gown" 84
Tailpiece Chap. X. 86
Headpiece Chap. XI. "His wife's cigars" 87
"A packet of Celebros alighted on my head" 88
"I told her the cigars were excellent" 90
Tailpiece Chap. XI. 93
Headpiece Chap. XII. "Gilray's flower-pot" 94
"Then Arcadians would drop in" 97
"I wrote to him" 99
Tailpiece Chap. XII. "The can nearly fell from my hand" 102
Headpiece Chap. XIII. 103
"Raleigh ... introduced tobacco into this country" 105
The Arcadia Mixture 111
"Ned Alleyn goes from tavern to tavern picking out his men" 113
Tailpiece Chap. XIII. 115
Headpiece Chap. XIV. "I was testing some new Cabanas" 116
"A few weeks later some one tapped me on the shoulder" 118
"Naturally in the circumstances you did not want to talk about Henry" 120
Tailpiece Chap. XIV. 123
Headpiece Chap. XV. "House-boat Arcadia" 124
"I caught my straw hat disappearing on the wings of the wind" 126
"It was the boy come back with the vegetables" 129
Tailpiece Chap. XV. "There was a row all round, which resulted in our division into five parties" 132
Headpiece Chap. XVI. "The Arcadia Mixture again" 133
"On the open window ... stood a round tin of tobacco" 135
"A pipe of the Mixture" 138
"The lady was making pretty faces with a cigarette in her mouth" 139
Tailpiece Chap. XVI. 142
Headpiece Chap. XVII. "He was in love again" 143
"I heard him walking up and down the deck" 145
Tailpiece Chap. XVII. "He took the wire off me and used it to clean his pipe" 150
Headpiece Chap. XVIII. "I had walked from Spondinig to Franzenshohe" 151
"On the middle of the plank she had turned to kiss her hand" 152
"Then she burst into tears" 157
Tailpiece Chap. XVIII. "A wall has risen up between us" 158
Headpiece Chap. XIX. "Primus" 159
"Many tall hats struck, to topple in the dust" 161
"Running after sheep, from which ladies were flying" 163
"I should like to write you a line" 165
Tailpiece Chap. XIX. "I am, respected sir, your diligent pupil" 167
Headpiece Chap. XX. 168
"Reading Primus's letters" 171
Tailpiece Chap. XX. 176
Headpiece Chap. XXI. "English-grown tobacco" 177
"I smoked my third cigar very slowly" 182
Tailpiece Chap. XXI. 185
Headpiece Chap. XXII. "How heroes smoke" 186
"Once, indeed, we do see Strathmore smoking a good cigar" 189
"A half-smoked cigar" 190
"The tall, scornful gentleman who leans lazily against the door" 192
Tailpiece Chap. XXII. 193
Headpiece Chap. XXIII. 194
"The ghost of Christmas eve" 195
"My pipe" 199
"My brier, which I found beneath my pillow" 200
Tailpiece Chap. XXIII. 201
Headpiece Chap. XXIV. "But the pipes were old friends" 202
"It had the paper in its mouth" 205
Tailpiece Chap. XXIV. "I was pleased that I had lost" 208
Headpiece Chap. XXV. "A face that haunted Marriot" 209
"There was the French girl at Algiers" 212
Tailpiece Chap. XXV. 215
Headpiece Chap. XXVI. "Arcadians at bay" 216
Pipes and tobacco-jar 220
Tailpiece Chap. XXVI. "Jimmy began as follows" 222
Headpiece Chap. XXVII. "Jimmy's dream" 223
Pipes 226
"Council for defence calls attention to the prisoner's high and unblemished character" 229
Tailpiece Chap. XXVII. 230
Headpiece Chap. XXVIII. 231
"These indefatigable amateurs began to dance a minuet" 235
A friendly favor 237
Tailpiece Chap. XXVIII. 238
Headpiece Chap. XXIX. "Pettigrew's dream" 239
"He went round the morning-room" 241
"His wife ... filled his pipe for him" 243
"Mrs. Pettigrew sent one of the children to the study" 244
Tailpiece Chap. XXIX. "I awarded the tin of Arcadia to Pettigrew" 246
Headpiece Chap. XXX. "Sometimes I think it is all a dream" 247
Tailpiece Chap. XXX. 251
Headpiece Chap. XXXI. "They thought I had weakly yielded" 252
"They went one night in a body to Pettigrew's" 254
Tailpiece Chap. XXXI. 259
Headpiece Chap. XXXII. 260
"Then we began to smoke" 262
"I conjured up the face of a lady" 265
"Not even Scrymgeour knew what my pouch had been to me" 267
Tailpiece Chap. XXXII. 268
Headpiece Chap. XXXIII. "When my wife is asleep and all the house is still" 269
"The man through the wall" 272
Pipes 275
Tailpiece Chap. XXXIII. 276






THE NOVELS, TALES AND SKETCHES OF J. M. BARRIE