You are here
قراءة كتاب When a Man's Single A Tale of Literary Life
تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"
When a Man's Single A Tale of Literary Life
THE KIRRIEMUIR EDITION
OF THE WORKS OF
J. M. BARRIE
WHEN A MAN'S SINGLE
A Tale of Literary Life
BY J. M. BARRIE
HODDER AND STOUGHTON
LONDON NEW YORK TORONTO
1913
CONTENTS
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 |
CHAPTER I
ROB ANGUS IS NOT A FREE MAN
One still Saturday afternoon some years ago a child pulled herself through a small window into a kitchen in the kirk-wynd of Thrums. She came from the old graveyard, whose only outlet, when the parish church gate is locked, is the windows of the wynd houses that hoop it round. Squatting on a three-legged stool she gazed wistfully at a letter on the chimney-piece, and then, tripping to the door, looked up and down the wynd.
Snecky Hobart, the bellman, hobbled past, and, though Davy was only four years old, she knew that as he had put on his blue top-coat he expected the evening to be fine. Tammas McQuhatty, the farmer of T'nowhead, met him at the corner, and they came to a standstill to say, 'She's hard, Sneck,' and 'She is so, T'nowhead,' referring to the weather. Observing that they had stopped they moved on again.
Women and children and a few men squeezed through their windows into the kirkyard, the women to knit stockings on fallen tombstones, and the men to dander pleasantly from grave to grave reading the inscriptions. All the men were well up in years, for though, with the Auld Lichts, the Sabbath began to come on at six o'clock on Saturday evening, the young men were now washing themselves cautiously in tin basins before going into the square to talk about women.
The clatter of more than one loom could still have been heard by Davy had not her ears been too accustomed to the sound to notice it. In the adjoining house Bell Mealmaker was peppering her newly-washed floor with sand, while her lodger, Hender Robb, with a rusty razor in his hand, looked for his chin in a tiny glass that was peeling on the wall. Jinny Tosh had got her husband, Aundra Lunan, who always spoke of her as She, ready, so to speak, for church eighteen hours too soon, and Aundra sat stiffly at the fire, putting his feet on the ribs every minute, to draw them back with a scared look at Her as he remembered that he had on his blacks. In a bandbox beneath the bed was his silk hat, which had been knocked down to him at Jamie Ramsay's roup, and Jinny had already put his red handkerchief, which was also a pictorial history of Scotland, into a pocket of his coat-tails, with a corner hanging gracefully out. Her puckered lips signified that, however much her man might desire to do so, he was not to carry his handkerchief to church in his hat, where no one could see it. On working days Aundra held his own, but at six o'clock on Saturday nights he passed into Her hands.
Across the wynd, in which a few hens wandered, Pete Todd was supping in his shirt-sleeves. His blacks lay ready for