Early this morning I opened a window in my school-house in the glen
of Quharity, awakened by the shivering of a starving sparrow against
the frosted glass. As the snowy sash creaked in my hand, he made off
to the waterspout that suspends its "tangles" of ice over a gaping
tank, and, rebou ...
Long ago, in the days when our caged blackbirds never saw a king's
soldier without whistling impudently, "Come ower the water to
Charlie," a minister of Thrums was to be married, but something
happened, and he remained a bachelor. Then, when he was old, he
passed in our square the lady wh ...
Sometimes the little boy who calls me father brings me an
invitation from his mother: "I shall be so pleased if you will
come and see me," and I always reply in some such words as these:
"Dear madam, I decline." And if David asks why I decline, I
explain that it is because I have no desi ...
O.P. Pym, the colossal Pym, that vast and rolling figure, who never
knew what he was to write about until he dipped grandly, an author in
such demand that on the foggy evening which starts our story his
publishers have had his boots removed lest he slip thoughtlessly round
the corner befo ...
For two years it had been notorious in the square that Sam'l Dickie
was thinking of courting T'nowhead's Bell, and that if Little Sanders
Elshioner (which is the Thrums pronunciation of Alexander Alexander)
went in for her, he might prove a formidable rival. Sam'l was a weaver
in the tene ...
Frequently I have to ask myself in the street for the name of the man
I bowed to just now, and then, before I can answer, the wind of the
first corner blows him from my memory. I have a theory, however, that
those puzzling faces, which pass before I can see who cut the coat,
all belong to ...
About the Author
Scottish journalist, playwright, and children's book writer. Barrie
became world famous with his play and story about Peter Pan (1904), the
boy who lived in Never Land, had a war with Captain Hook, and would not
grow up. The first name of Peter Pan was almost certainly taken from
Peter Llewellyn Davies (1897-1960), one of the several Davies brothers
that Barrie knew.
"When the first baby laughed for the first time, the laugh broke
into a thousand pieces and they all went skipping about, and that
was the beginning of fairies." (from Peter Pan)
James Matthew Barrie was born in the Lowland village of Kirriemuir, in
Forfashire. His father, David Barrie was a handloom weaver, and mother,
Margaret Ogilvy, the daughter of a stonemason. They had ten children,
Barrie was the ninth. Jamie, as he was called, heard tales of pirates
from his mother, who read her children R.L. Stevenson's adventure
stories in the evenings. When Barrie was seven, his brother David died
in a skating accident. David had been the mother's favorite child, and
she fell into depression. Barrie tried to gain her affection by dressing
up in the dead boy's clothes. The obsessive relationship that grew
between mother and son was to mark the whole of his life. After her
death Barrie published in 1896 an adoring biography of his mother.
At the age of 13, Barrie left his home village. At school he became
interested in theatre and devoured works by such authors as Jules Verne,
Mayne Reid, and James Fenimore Cooper. His classmates Barrie observed
like an outsider, they were tall, interested in girls, while he remained
small and apparently he never had a girl friend. Barrie studied at
Dumfries Academy at the University of Edinburgh, receiving his M.A. in
1882. After working as a journalist for the Nottingham Journal, he
moved in 1885 with empty pockets to London as a freelance writer. He
sold his writings, mostly humorous, to fashionable magazine, such as
The Pall Mall Gazette. In his mystery novel, Better Dead (1888),
Barrie made jokes of well-known people. Barrie knew such great figures
of literature as G.B. Shaw, who did not like his pipe smoking, and H.G.
Wells, and could surprise them with his remarks. Once he said to Wells:
"It is all very well to be able to write books, but can you waggle your
ears?" When a friend noticed that he ordered Brussels sprouts every day,
he explained: "I cannot resists ordering them. The words are so lovely
to say." With his friends, Jerome K. Jerome, Arthur Conan Doyle, P.G.
Wodehouse and others, Barrie founded a cricket club, called
Allahakbarries. Doyle was the only member who could actually play
cricket. During World War I Barrie made a western film with his literary
friends, starring Shaw, William Archer, G.K. Chesterton, etc.
In 1888 Barie gained his first fame with Auld Licht Idylls, sketches of
Scottish life. Critics praised its originality. His melodramatic novel,
The Little Minister (1891), became a huge success, and was filmed later
three times. After its dramatization Barrie wrote mostly for the
theater. In 1894 he married Mary Ansell, who had appeared in his play
Walker, London. According to Janet Dunbar's biography (1970), Barrie was
impotent. "Boys can't love", was Barrie's explanation to her.
The Little Minister was a popular stage production in 1897 both in
England and in the Unites States, where Barrie began his collaboration
with the impresario Charles Frohman and his star Maude Adams. Two of
Barrie's best plays, Quality Street, about two sisters who start a
school "for genteel children", and The Admirable Crichton, in which a
butler saves a family after a shipwreck, were produced in London in
1902, and also later filmed. In the same year, Peter Pan appeared by
name in Barrie's adult novel The Little White Bird. It was a
first-person narrative about a wealthy bachelor clubman's attachment to
a little boy, David. Taking this boy for walks in Kensington Gardens,
the narrator tells him of Peter Pan, who can be found in the Gardens at
night. Peter Pan was produced for the stage in 1904 but the play had
to wait several years for a definitive printed version and it did not
appear as a narrative story until 1911. The book was titled Peter and
Wendy. In the novel's epilogue Peter visits a grown-up Wendy.
"Every time a child says 'I don't believe in fairies' there is a
little fairy somewhere that falls down dead." (from Peter Pan)
Peter Pan evolved gradually from the stories that Barrie told to
Sylvia Llewelyn Davies's five young sons. She was the daughter of the
novelist George du Maurier, and a motherly figure, with whom Barrie
formed a long friendship. Arthur, her husband, was not happy about
Barrie's invasion of the family. In 1909 Mary Barrie began an affair
with the writer Gilbert Cannan and Barrie's marriage ended. When Sylvia
Llwelyn Davies and her husband died, Barrie was the unofficial guardian
of their sons, but in reality he was perhaps more a sixth child than an
adoptive father. George, one of the sons, died in World War I, Michael
drowned himself with his boy friend in Oxford. Michael's death was a
deep blow to Barrie. Peter, who become a publisher, committed suicide in
1960.
Peter Pan was first performed at the Duke of York's Theatre,
London, in 1904. The fantastic world of Peter Pan had previously
been presented in Barrie's The Little White Bird (1902). "All
children, except one, grow up. They soon know that they will grow
up, and the way Wendy knew this." The story begins in the Bloomsbury
flat of the Darlings, which is visited by Peter Pan. He is a boy who
has run away from his home to avoid growing up. Like his attendant
fairy Tinker Bell, he can fly and teaches the skill to the three
Darling children. Wendy Darling with her brothers accompany Peter
Pan to Never Land where he lives with the Lost Boys, protected by a
tribe of Red Indians. Wendy becomes mother to the boys. When Peter
is away, she is captured with all her 'family' by the pirate Captain
Hook. They are saved from the walk on the plank by Peter's bravery.
Hook is eaten by his nemesis, the crocodile who had swallowed a
ticking clock. Peter takes Wendy and her brothers back home but he
declines an offer of adoption from Mrs. Darling. Wendy promises
visit him every year to do the spring cleaning. - Barrie himself was
considered by Freudians a suitable target for analysis. Peter Pan
has also been seen as an Oedipal tale. Barrie himself had stopped
growing when he reached five feet in height, he suffered from
migraines and rarely smiled. Wendy, Peter's girl friend, borrowed
her name from Barrie - it was his nickname. W.E. Henley's daughter
Margaret called Barrie Friendly-Wendy. The portrait of Wendy owes
much to Barrie's mother, and orphaned "little mother" who had to
raise her younger brother.
Barrie wrote two more fantasy plays. Dear Brutus (1917) described a
group of people who enter a magic wood where they are transformed into
the people they might have become had they made different choices. Mary
Rose (1920) was a story of a mother, who is searching for her lost
child. Eventually she becomes a ghost. What Every Woman Knows (1908)
portrayed a determined woman, Maggie, whose husband eventually realizes
that he owes his success to her. "It's sort of bloom on a woman. If you
have it, you don't need to have anything else, and if you don't have it,
it doesn't much matter what else you have. Some woman, the few, have
charm for all; and most have charm for one. But some have charm for
none." (from What Every Woman Knows, 1908) In 1913 Barrie became a
baronet and in 1922 he received the Order of Merit. Barrie's penthouse
at Adelphi Terrace was visited by ministers, duchesses, movie stars,
such as Charlie Chaplin, and a number of admirers, whom he occasionally
helped with money or advises. Even at his old age, Barrie could play
enthusiastically Captain Hook and Peter Pan with the son of his
secretary, Lady Cynthia Asquith. Barrie was elected lord rector of St.
Andrew's University and in 1930 chancellor of Edinburgh University.
Barrie died on June 3, 1937.
Author biographies courtesy of Author's Calendar. Used with permission.