<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>TOMMY AND GRIZEL</h1>
<h4>BY</h4>
<h2>J. M. BARRIE</h2>
<h4>ILLUSTRATED BY BERNARD PARTRIDGE</h4>
<h5>1900, 1912</h5>
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<SPAN name="CONTENTS"></SPAN><h2>CONTENTS</h2>
<br/>
<h4>PART I</h4>
<b>CHAPTER</b><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_I"><b>I. HOW TOMMY FOUND A WAY</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_II"><b>II. THE SEARCH FOR THE TREASURE</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_III"><b>III. SANDYS ON WOMAN</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_IV"><b>IV. GRIZEL OF THE CROOKED SMILE</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_V"><b>V. THE TOMMY MYTH</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VI"><b>VI. GHOSTS THAT HAUNT THE DEN</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VII"><b>VII. THE BEGINNING OF THE DUEL</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_VIII"><b>VIII. WHAT GRIZEL'S EYES SAID</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_IX"><b>IX. GALLANT BEHAVIOUR OF T. SANDYS</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_X"><b>X. GAVINIA ON THE TRACK</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XI"><b>XI. THE TEA-PARTY</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XII"><b>XII. IN WHICH A COMEDIAN CHALLENGES TRAGEDY TO BOWLS</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XIII"><b>XIII. LITTLE WELLS OF GLADNESS</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XIV"><b>XIV. ELSPETH</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XV"><b>XV. BY PROSEN WATER</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XVI"><b>XVI. "HOW COULD YOU HURT YOUR GRIZEL SO!"</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XVII"><b>XVII. HOW TOMMY SAVED THE FLAG</b></SPAN><br/>
<br/>
<h4>PART II</h4>
<b>CHAPTER</b><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XVIII"><b>XVIII. THE GIRL SHE HAD BEEN</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XIX"><b>XIX. OF THE CHANGE IN THOMAS</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XX"><b>XX. A LOVE-LETTER</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXI"><b>XXI. THE ATTEMPT TO CARRY ELSPETH BY NUMBERS</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXII"><b>XXII. GRIZEL'S GLORIOUS HOUR</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXIII"><b>XXIII. TOMMY LOSES GRIZEL</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXIV"><b>XXIV. THE MONSTER</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXV"><b>XXV. MR. T. SANDYS HAS RETURNED TO TOWN</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXVI"><b>XXVI. GRIZEL ALL ALONE</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXVII"><b>XXVII. GRIZEL'S JOURNEY</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII"><b>XXVIII. TWO OF THEM</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXIX"><b>XXIX. THE RED LIGHT</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXX"><b>XXX. THE LITTLE GODS DESERT HIM</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXXI"><b>XXXI. "THE MAN WITH THE GREETIN' EYES"</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXXII"><b>XXXII. TOMMY'S BEST WORK</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXXIII"><b>XXXIII. THE LITTLE GODS RETURN WITH A LADY</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXXIV"><b>XXXIV. A WAY IS FOUND FOR TOMMY</b></SPAN><br/>
<SPAN href="#CHAPTER_XXXV"><b>XXXV. THE PERFECT LOVER</b></SPAN><br/>
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<SPAN name="TOMMY_AND_GRIZEL"></SPAN><h1>TOMMY AND GRIZEL</h1>
<h1>PART I</h1>
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<SPAN name="CHAPTER_I"></SPAN><h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
<h3>HOW TOMMY FOUND A WAY</h3>
<br/>
<p>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 before his work is done, as was the great man's way—shall
we begin with him, or with Tommy, who has just arrived in London,
carrying his little box and leading a lady by the hand? It was Pym, as
we are about to see, who in the beginning held Tommy up to the public
gaze, Pym who first noticed his remarkable indifference to female
society, Pym who gave him——But alack! does no one remember Pym for
himself? Is the king of the <i>Penny Number</i> already no more than a
button that once upon a time kept Tommy's person together? And we are
at the night when they first met! Let us hasten into Marylebone before
little Tommy arrives and Pym is swallowed like an oyster.</p>
<p>This is the house, 22 Little Owlet Street, Marylebone, but which were
his rooms it is less easy to determine, for he was a lodger who
flitted placidly from floor to floor according to the state of his
finances, carrying his apparel and other belongings in one great
armful, and spilling by the way. On this particular evening he was on
the second floor front, which had a fireplace in the corner, furniture
all his landlady's and mostly horsehair, little to suggest his calling
save a noble saucerful of ink, and nothing to draw attention from Pym,
who lolled, gross and massive, on a sofa, one leg over the back of it,
the other drooping, his arms extended, and his pipe, which he could
find nowhere, thrust between the buttons of his waistcoat, an
agreeable pipe-rack. He wore a yellow dressing-gown, or could scarcely
be said to wear it, for such of it as was not round his neck he had
converted into a cushion for his head, which is perhaps the part of
him we should have turned to first It was a big round head, the
plentiful gray hair in tangles, possibly because in Pym's last
flitting the comb had dropped over the banisters; the features were
ugly and beyond life-size, yet the forehead had altered little except
in colour since the day when he was near being made a fellow of his
college; there was sensitiveness left in the thick nose, humour in the
eyes, though they so often watered; the face had gone to flabbiness at
last, but not without some lines and dents, as if the head had
resisted the body for a space before the whole man rolled contentedly
downhill.</p>
<p>He had no beard. "Young man, let your beard grow." Those who have
forgotten all else about Pym may recall him in these words. They were
his one counsel to literary aspirants, who, according as they took it,
are now bearded and prosperous or shaven and on the rates. To shave
costs threepence, another threepence for loss of time—nearly ten
pounds a year, three hundred pounds since Pym's chin first bristled.
With his beard he could have bought an annuity or a cottage in the
country, he could have had a wife and children, and driven his
dog-cart, and been made a church-warden. All gone, all shaved, and for
what? When he asked this question he would move his hand across his
chin with a sigh, and so, bravely to the barber's.</p>
<p>Pym was at present suffering from an ailment that had spread him out
on that sofa again and again—acute disinclination to work.</p>
<p>Meanwhile all the world was waiting for his new tale; so the
publishers, two little round men, have told him. They have blustered,
they have fawned, they have asked each other out to talk it over
behind the door.</p>
<p>Has he any idea of what the story is to be about?</p>
<p>He has no idea.</p>
<p>Then at least, Pym—excellent Pym—sit down and dip, and let us see
what will happen.</p>
<p>He declined to do even that. While all the world waited, this was
Pym's ultimatum:</p>
<p>"I shall begin the damned thing at eight o'clock."</p>
<p>Outside, the fog kept changing at intervals from black to white, as
lazily from white to black (the monster blinking); there was not a
sound from the street save of pedestrians tapping with their sticks on
the pavement as they moved forward warily, afraid of an embrace with
the unknown; it might have been a city of blind beggars, one of them a
boy.</p>
<p>At eight o'clock Pym rose with a groan and sat down in his
stocking-soles to write his delicious tale. He was now alone. But
though his legs were wound round his waste-paper basket, and he dipped
often and loudly in the saucer, like one ringing at the door of Fancy,
he could not get the idea that would set him going. He was still
dipping for inspiration when T. Sandys, who had been told to find the
second floor for himself, knocked at the door, and entered, quaking.</p>
<p>"I remember it vividly," Pym used to say when questioned in the after
years about this his first sight of Tommy, "and I hesitate to decide
which impressed me more, the richness of his voice, so remarkable in a
boy of sixteen, or his serene countenance, with its noble forehead,
behind which nothing base could lurk."</p>
<p>Pym, Pym! it is such as you that makes the writing of biography
difficult. The richness of Tommy's voice could not have struck you,
for at that time it was a somewhat squeaky voice; and as for the noble
forehead behind which nothing base could lurk, how could you say that,
Pym, you who had a noble forehead yourself?</p>
<p>No; all that Pym saw was a pasty-faced boy sixteen years old, and of
an appearance mysteriously plain; hair light brown, and waving
defiance to the brush; nothing startling about him but the expression
of his face, which was almost fearsomely solemn and apparently
unchangeable. He wore his Sunday blacks, of which the trousers might
with advantage have borrowed from the sleeves; and he was so nervous
that he had to wet his lips before he could speak. He had left the
door ajar for a private reason; but Pym, misunderstanding, thought he
did it to fly the more readily if anything was flung at him, and so
concluded that he must be a printer's devil. Pym had a voice that
shook his mantelpiece ornaments; he was all on the same scale as his
ink-pot. "Your Christian name, boy?" he roared hopefully, for it was
thus he sometimes got the idea that started him.</p>
<p>"Thomas," replied the boy.</p>
<p>Pym gave him a look of disgust "You may go," he said. But when he
looked up presently, Thomas was still there. He was not only there,
but whistling—a short, encouraging whistle that seemed to be directed
at the door. He stopped quickly when Pym looked up, but during the
remainder of the interview he emitted this whistle at intervals,
always with that anxious glance at his friend the door; and its
strained joviality was in odd contrast with his solemn face, like a
cheery tune played on the church organ.</p>
<p>"Begone!" cried Pym.</p>
<p>"My full name," explained Tommy, who was speaking the English
correctly, but with a Scots accent, "is Thomas Sandys. And fine you
know who that is," he added, exasperated by Pym's indifference. "I'm
the T. Sandys that answered your advertisement."</p>
<p>Pym knew who he was now. "You young ruffian," he gasped, "I never
dreamt that you would come!"</p>
<p>"I have your letter engaging me in my pocket," said Tommy, boldly, and
he laid it on the table. Pym surveyed it and him in comic dismay,
then with a sudden thought produced nearly a dozen letters from a
drawer, and dumped them down beside the other. It was now his turn to
look triumphant and Tommy aghast.</p>
<p>Pym's letters were all addressed from the Dubb of Prosen Farm, near
Thrums, N.B., to different advertisers, care of a London agency, and
were Tommy's answers to the "wants" in a London newspaper which had
found its way to the far North. "X Y Z" was in need of a chemist's
assistant, and from his earliest years, said one of the letters,
chemistry had been the study of studies for T. Sandys. He was glad to
read, was T. Sandys, that one who did not object to long hours would
be preferred, for it seemed to him that those who objected to long
hours did not really love their work, their heart was not in it, and
only where the heart is can the treasure be found.</p>
<p>"123" had a vacancy for a page-boy, "Glasgow Man" for a photographer;
page-boy must not be over fourteen, photographer must not be under
twenty. "I am a little over fourteen, but I look less," wrote T.
Sandys to "123"; "I am a little under twenty," he wrote to "Glasgow
Man," "but I look more." His heart was in the work.</p>
<p>To be a political organizer! If "H and H," who advertised for one,
only knew how eagerly the undersigned desired to devote his life to
political organizing!</p>
<p>In answer to "Scholastic's" advertisement for janitor in a boys'
school, T. Sandys begged to submit his name for consideration.</p>
<p>Undoubtedly the noblest letter was the one applying for the
secretaryship of a charitable society, salary to begin at once, but
the candidate selected must deposit one hundred pounds. The
application was noble in its offer to make the work a labour of love,
and almost nobler in its argument that the hundred pounds was
unnecessary.</p>
<p>"Rex" had a vacancy in his drapery department. T. Sandys had made a
unique study of drapery.</p>
<p>Lastly, "Anon" wanted an amanuensis. "Salary," said "Anon," who seemed
to be a humourist, "salary large but uncertain." He added with equal
candour: "Drudgery great, but to an intelligent man the pickings may
be considerable." Pickings! Is there a finer word in the language? T.
Sandys had felt that he was particularly good at pickings. But
amanuensis? The thing was unknown to him; no one on the farm could
tell him what it was. But never mind; his heart was in it.</p>
<p>All this correspondence had produced one reply, the letter on which
Tommy's hand still rested. It was a brief note, signed "O.P. Pym," and
engaging Mr. Sandys on his own recommendation, "if he really felt
quite certain that his heart (treasure included) was in the work." So
far good, Tommy had thought when he received this answer, but there
was nothing in it to indicate the nature of the work, nothing to show
whether O.P. Pym was "Scholastic," or "123," or "Rex," or any other
advertiser in particular. Stop, there was a postscript: "I need not go
into details about your duties, as you assure me you are so well
acquainted with them, but before you join me please send (in writing)
a full statement of what you think they are."</p>
<p>There were delicate reasons why Mr. Sandys could not do that, but oh,
he was anxious to be done with farm labour, so he decided to pack and
risk it. The letter said plainly that he was engaged; what for he must
find out slyly when he came to London. So he had put his letter firmly
on Pym's table; but it was a staggerer to find that gentleman in
possession of the others.</p>
<p>One of these was Pym's by right; the remainder were a humourous gift
from the agent who was accustomed to sift the correspondence of his
clients. Pym had chuckled over them, and written a reply that he
flattered himself would stump the boy; then he had unexpectedly come
into funds (he found a forgotten check while searching his old pockets
for tobacco-crumbs), and in that glory T. Sandys escaped his memory.
Result, that they were now face to face.</p>
<p>A tiny red spot, not noticeable before, now appeared in Tommy's eyes.
It was never there except when he was determined to have his way. Pym,
my friend, yes, and everyone of you who is destined to challenge
Tommy, 'ware that red light!</p>
<p>"Well, which am I?" demanded Pym, almost amused, Tommy was so
obviously in a struggle with the problem.</p>
<p>The saucer and the blank pages told nothing. "Whichever you are," the
boy answered heavily, "it's not herding nor foddering cattle, and so
long as it's not that, I'll put my heart in it, and where the heart
is, there the treasure—"</p>
<p>He suddenly remembered that his host must be acquainted with the
sentiment.</p>
<p>Easy-going Pym laughed, then said irritably, "Of what use could a mere
boy be to me?"</p>
<p>"Then it's not the page-boy!" exclaimed Tommy, thankfully.</p>
<p>"Perhaps I am 'Scholastic,'" suggested Pym.</p>
<p>"No," said Tommy, after a long study of his face.</p>
<p>Pym followed this reasoning, and said touchily, "Many a schoolmaster
has a red face."</p>
<p>"Not that kind of redness," explained Tommy, without delicacy.</p>
<p>"I am 'H and H,'" said Pym.</p>
<p>"You forget you wrote to me as one person," replied Tommy. "So I
did. That was because I am the chemist; and I must ask you, Thomas,
for your certificate."</p>
<p>Tommy believed him this time, and Pym triumphantly poured himself a
glass of whisky, spilling some of it on his dressing-gown.</p>
<p>"Not you," said Tommy, quickly; "a chemist has a steady hand."</p>
<p>"Confound you!" cried Pym, "what sort of a boy is this?"</p>
<p>"If you had been the draper you would have wiped the drink off your
gown," continued Tommy, thoughtfully, "and if you had been 'Glasgow
Man' you would have sucked it off, and if you had been the charitable
society you wouldn't swear in company." He flung out his hand. "I'll
tell you who you are," he said sternly, "you're 'Anon.'"</p>
<p>Under this broadside Pym succumbed. He sat down feebly. "Right," he
said, with a humourous groan, "and I shall tell you who you are. I am
afraid you are my amanuensis!"</p>
<p>Tommy immediately whistled, a louder and more glorious note than
before.</p>
<p>"Don't be so cocky," cried Pym, in sudden rebellion. "You are only my
amanuensis if you can tell me what that is. If you can't—out you go!"</p>
<p>He had him at last! Not he!</p>
<p>"An amanuensis," said Tommy, calmly, "is one who writes to dictation.
Am I to bring in my box? It's at the door."</p>
<p>This made Pym sit down again. "You didn't know what an amanuensis was
when you answered my advertisement," he said.</p>
<p>"As soon as I got to London," Tommy answered, "I went into a
bookseller's shop, pretending I wanted to buy a dictionary, and I
looked the word up."</p>
<p>"Bring in your box," Pym said, with a groan.</p>
<p>But it was now Tommy's turn to hesitate. "Have you noticed," he asked
awkwardly, "that I sometimes whistle?"</p>
<p>"Don't tell me," said Pym, "that you have a dog out there."</p>
<p>"It's not a dog," Tommy replied cautiously.</p>
<p>Pym had resumed his seat at the table and was once more toying with
his pen. "Open the door," he commanded, "and let me see what you have
brought with you."</p>
<p>Tommy obeyed gingerly, and then Pym gaped, for what the open door
revealed to him was a tiny roped box with a girl of twelve sitting on
it. She was dressed in some dull-coloured wincey, and looked cold and
patient and lonely, and as she saw the big man staring at her she
struggled in alarm to her feet, and could scarce stand on them. Tommy
was looking apprehensively from her to Pym.</p>
<p>"Good God, boy!" roared Pym, "are you married?"</p>
<p>"No," cried Tommy, in agony, "she's my sister, and we're orphans, and
did you think I could have the heart to leave Elspeth behind?" He took
her stoutly by the hand.</p>
<p>"And he never will marry," said little Elspeth, almost fiercely; "will
you, Tommy?"</p>
<p>"Never!" said Tommy, patting her and glaring at Pym.</p>
<p>But Pym would not have it. "Married!" he shouted. "Magnificent!" And
he dipped exultantly, for he had got his idea at last. Forgetting even
that he had an amanuensis, he wrote on and on and on.</p>
<p>"He smells o' drink," Elspeth whispered.</p>
<p>"All the better," replied Tommy, cheerily. "Make yourself at home,
Elspeth; he's the kind I can manage. Was there ever a kind I couldna
manage?" he whispered, top-heavy with conceit.</p>
<p>"There was Grizel," Elspeth said, rather thoughtlessly; and then
Tommy frowned.</p>
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