My Lady Nicotine (A Study In Smoke)

My Lady Nicotine (A Study In Smoke)

by J. M. Barrie
My Lady Nicotine (A Study In Smoke)

My Lady Nicotine (A Study In Smoke)

by J. M. Barrie

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Overview

"I was a mere bachelor, drifting toward what I now see to be a tragic middle age. I had become so accustomed to smoke issuing from my mouth that I felt incomplete without it; indeed, the time came when I could refrain from smoking if doing nothing else, but hardly during the hours of toil. To lay aside my pipe was to find myself soon afterward wandering restlessly round my table. No blind beggar was ever more abjectly led by his dog, or more loath to cut the string."

 - Excerpted from "My Lady Nicotine. A Study in Smoke"


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781605017655
Publisher: MobileReference
Publication date: 01/01/2010
Series: Mobi Classics
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 3 MB

Read an Excerpt


CHAPTER II MY FIRST CIGAR It was not in my chambers, but three hundred miles further north that I learned to smoke. I think I may say with confidence that a first cigar was never smoked in such circumstances before. At that time I was a schoolboy, living with my brother who was a man. People mistook our relations, and thought I was his son. They would ask me how my father was, and when he heard of this he scowled at me. Even to this day I look so young that people who remember me as a boy, now think I must be that boy's younger brother. I shall tell presently of a strange mistake of this kind, but at present I am thinking of the evening when my brother's eldest daughter was born perhaps the most trying evening he and I ever passed together. So far as I knew the affair was very sudden, and I felt sorry for my brother as well as for myself. We sat together in the study, he on an armchair drawn near the fire and I on the couch. I cannot say now at what time I began to have an inklingthat there was something wrong. It came upon me gradually and made me very uncomfortable, though of course I did not show this. I heard people going up and down stairs, but I was not at that time naturally suspicious. Comparatively early in the evening I felt that my brother had something on his mind. As a rule, when we were left together, he yawned or drummed with his fingers on the arm of his chair to show that he did not feel uncomfortable, or I made a pretence of being at ease by playing with the dog or saying that the room was close. Then one of us would rise, remark that he had left his book in the dining-room, and go away to look for it, taking care not to come back till the other had gone. In thiscrafty way we helped each other. On that occasion, however, he did not adopt any of the...

Table of Contents

Chapter I.Matrimony and Smoking Compared9
Chapter II.My First Cigar19
Chapter III.The Arcadia Mixture26
Chapter IV.My Pipes35
Chapter V.My Tobacco-Pouch45
Chapter VI.My Smoking-Table51
Chapter VII.Gilray58
Chapter VIII.Marrion66
Chapter IX.Jimmy75
Chapter X.Scrymgrour82
Chapter XI.His Wife's Cioars90
Chapter XII.Gilray's Flower-Pot97
Chapter XIII.The Orandest Scene in History105
Chapter XIV.My Brother Henry117
Chapter XV.House-Doat "Arcadia"124
Chapter XVI.The Arcadia Mixture Again132
Chapter XVII.The Romance of a Pipe Cleaner140
Chapter XVIII.What Could He Do?149
Chapter XIX.Primus156
Chapter XX.Primus to His Uncle164
Chapter XXI.English-Grown Tobacco173
Chapter XXII.How Hhroes Smoke182
Chapter XXIII.The Ghost of Chkistmas Eve189
Chapter XXIV.Not the Arcadia196
Chapter XXV.A Face That Haunted Marriot203
Chapter XXVI.Arcadlans at Bay210
Chapter XXVII.Jimmy's Drnam217
Chapter XXVIII.Gilray's Dream224
Chapter XXIX.Pettigr Ew's Dream231
Chapter XXX.The Murder in the Inn238
Chapter XXI.The Perils of not Smoking243
Chapter XXXII.My Last Pipe251
Chapter XXXIII.When my Wife is Asleep and All the House is Still259
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