Tommy and Grizel by J. M. (James Matthew) Barrie
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page 7 of 473 (01%)
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downhill.
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. Pym was at present suffering from an ailment that had spread him out on that sofa again and again--acute disinclination to work. 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. Has he any idea of what the story is to be about? He has no idea. Then at least, Pym--excellent Pym--sit down and dip, and let us see what will happen. He declined to do even that. While all the world waited, this was |
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