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the experience of reading in Britain, from 1450 to 1945...

Reading Experience Database UK Historical image of readers
 
 
 
 

Listings for Author:  

J. M. Barrie

  

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J. M. Barrie : What Every Woman Knows

Meeting held at Hillsborough :- 14. 9. 37.

Reginald H. Robson in the Chair.


1. Minutes of last read & approved

2. Charles Stansfield then introduced the momentous question of the evening. Was the Book Club to end its existence? He had felt for some time that it was moribund. [...]


He referred to E. B. Castle who shared his concern and to a letter which he believed had been written to the Secretary by E. B. Castle.

3. The Secretary then read this; it supported the opinions expressed by C. E. Stansfield.


4. The subject was then discussed informally.


[...]

9. We then turned to the work of Barrie. Howard Smith gave us a chat – he would not call it a paper – on the plays he had seen.


[...]

A considerable part of “What every woman knows” was then read in which a number of people took part.

Charles Stansfield appropriately gave a reading from My Lady Nicotine.

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Members of the XII Book Club     Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : My Lady Nicotine

Meeting held at Hillsborough :- 14. 9. 37.

Reginald H. Robson in the Chair.


1. Minutes of last read & approved

2. Charles Stansfield then introduced the momentous question of the evening. Was the Book Club to end its existence? He had felt for some time that it was moribund. [...]


He referred to E. B. Castle who shared his concern and to a letter which he believed had been written to the Secretary by E. B. Castle.

3. The Secretary then read this; it supported the opinions expressed by C. E. Stansfield.


4. The subject was then discussed informally.


[...]

9. We then turned to the work of Barrie. Howard Smith gave us a chat – he would not call it a paper – on the plays he had seen.


[...]

A considerable part of “What every woman knows” was then read in which a number of people took part.

Charles Stansfield appropriately gave a reading from My Lady Nicotine.

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Charles E. Stansfield      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : [Letter to Mrs. Scott]

1. Apologies for absence were received from Margaret and A. Bruce Dilks, Alice and Arnold Joselin, Sylvanus A. Reynolds, Kenneth F. Nicholson, Francis H. Knight.

[...]

3. The subject chosen was letters, and during the evening we heard a most interesting variety of letters, the matter varying from good & energetic advice to a brother-in-law by Abraham Lincoln, to the butcher of our dreams; from Zola’s account of the Dreyfus case to the amazing all-round ability to destroy of Leonardo da Vinci. Charming letters to children were read, and various letters to the public; and yet through all this variety, links were found connecting one set of letters with the next.

In the first section of the meeting the following were read:- Letters by Leonardo da Vinci read by K. Waschauer, by Abraham Lincoln read by F. E. Pollard, and a humorous selection read by Edith B. and Howard R. Smith.

4. We adjourned for refreshments.

5. The minutes of the last meeting were then read and signed.

[...]

7. The business being completed, we had a further selection of letters Zola’s letters on the Dreyus case [read by] Howard R. Smith[.] Letters written to children [read by] Muriel Stevens[.] Captain Scott’s last letters [read by] Elsie D. Harrod[.] J. M. Barrie’s letter to Mrs. Scott [read by] Rosamund Wallis[.] Letters of Gertrude Bell [read by] Mary Stansfield[.]

8. The meeting ended with general thankfulness that we had not to spend the coming night as Gertrude Bell had done on the mountains.'

Century:      Reader/Listener/Group: Rosamund Wallis      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : A Window in Thrums

'Meeting held at 67 Eastern Avenue, 28th. Nov. 1945.
A. Austin Miller in the chair.

1. The minutes of the last meeting were read & signed.

[...]

3. While we were discussing possible books for the coming year, the Treasurer was dispatched to fetch from his home the Club account books in order that we might be able to review our finances. He was later able to assure us that we have a balance in hand of about £7.

[...]

7. X = 0 by John Drinkwater was read with the following cast: —
Pronax — F. E. Pollard
Salvius — A B Dilks
Ilus — T. Hopkins
Capys — Austin Miller
Stage directions, passing sentinels & noises off — Hilda Hopkins

We then had three readings each of a national character. For the first of these representing England Dora Langford read from “Nicholas Married” a sequel to Nicholas Nickleby of doubtful authorship. Both the age of the book and its illustrations were extremely interesting. Scotland was represented by an extract from ‘A Window in Thrums’ by J. M. Barrie read by Muriel Stevens. And Wales by readings by Stella Hopkins from “An Englishman looks at Wales by R. W. Thompson”
[signed as a true record by] C.J. Langford [on 10 January 1946, at the club meeting held at 44 Hamilton Rd.: see Minute Book, p. 48.]'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Muriel Stevens      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : My Lady Nicotine

'Meeting held at Oakdene, Northcourt Avenue 7.iv.41 S. A. Reynolds in the chair.
1. The minutes of the last meeting were read and signed.
[...]
4. It was a very great pleasure to us that Janet Rawlings’ short stay in Reading should coincide with a book-club meeting, & her reading from “My Lady Nicotine” was much enjoyed. It should be mentioned that the passage was not selected by the reader, but by Mr. Pollard. For in an entertaining forward Janet explained that being in doubt as to what to read she took her troubles to F. E. Pollard, as she so often does – with what happy result in this case at least we were able to judge for ourselves.
[...]
[Signed as a true record by] A. G. Joselin 5 May 1941'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Janet Rawlings      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : The Little White Bird

'Meeting held at Oakdene, Northcourt Avenue 7.iv.41 S. A. Reynolds in the chair.
1. The minutes of the last meeting were read and signed.
[...]
5. Alice Joselin made some comments on “Peter Pan” which were followed by a reading by Mary Stansfield from “The Little White Bird”., an early book which contains the episode of Peter Pan. In view of the very evident enjoyment with which we devoted the whole of our last meeting to childrens literature, it was strange that so many condemned Peter Pan as too grown up for children and too mawkish for adults. In fact, as she finished the reading, Mary Stansfield pronounced it “Utter Twaddle”.
[...]
[Signed as a true record by] A. G. Joselin 5 May 1941'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Mary S. Stansfield      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : The Admirable Crichton

'Meeting held at Oakdene, Northcourt Avenue 7.iv.41 S. A. Reynolds in the chair.
1. The minutes of the last meeting were read and signed.
[...]
6. After an interval for refreshment we came to “The Admirable Crichton” probably Barries best play. Knox Taylor briefly outlined the story and then the last Act was read with the following cast:
Agatha – Isabel Taylor
Ernest – F. E. Pollard
Catherine – Mary Reynolds
Lord Loam – S. A. Reynolds
Crichton – A. B. Dilks
Lady Mary – Margaret Dilks
Lord Brocklehurst – Arnold Joselin
Lady Brocklehurst – Muriel Stevens
Treherne – H. R. Smith
Tweeny – Violet Clough
Howard Smith recalled that this was the third time the Book Club had selected to read from this play and on each occasion he had been cast as the cricketing parson. F. E. Pollard hoped that it would not be his lot to play the Hon. Ernest Wooley again, but it was generally felt that he had been excellently cast in view of the stage direction “he is a match for any old lady”.
[...]
[Signed as a true record by] A. G. Joselin 5 May 1941'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Isabel Taylor      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : The Admirable Crichton

'Meeting held at Oakdene, Northcourt Avenue 7.iv.41 S. A. Reynolds in the chair.
1. The minutes of the last meeting were read and signed.
[...]
6. After an interval for refreshment we came to “The Admirable Crichton” probably Barries best play. Knox Taylor briefly outlined the story and then the last Act was read with the following cast:
Agatha – Isabel Taylor
Ernest – F. E. Pollard
Catherine – Mary Reynolds
Lord Loam – S. A. Reynolds
Crichton – A. B. Dilks
Lady Mary – Margaret Dilks
Lord Brocklehurst – Arnold Joselin
Lady Brocklehurst – Muriel Stevens
Treherne – H. R. Smith
Tweeny – Violet Clough
Howard Smith recalled that this was the third time the Book Club had selected to read from this play and on each occasion he had been cast as the cricketing parson. F. E. Pollard hoped that it would not be his lot to play the Hon. Ernest Wooley again, but it was generally felt that he had been excellently cast in view of the stage direction “he is a match for any old lady”.
[...]
[Signed as a true record by] A. G. Joselin 5 May 1941'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Francis E. Pollard      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : The Admirable Crichton

'Meeting held at Oakdene, Northcourt Avenue 7.iv.41 S. A. Reynolds in the chair.
1. The minutes of the last meeting were read and signed.
[...]
6. After an interval for refreshment we came to “The Admirable Crichton” probably Barries best play. Knox Taylor briefly outlined the story and then the last Act was read with the following cast:
Agatha – Isabel Taylor
Ernest – F. E. Pollard
Catherine – Mary Reynolds
Lord Loam – S. A. Reynolds
Crichton – A. B. Dilks
Lady Mary – Margaret Dilks
Lord Brocklehurst – Arnold Joselin
Lady Brocklehurst – Muriel Stevens
Treherne – H. R. Smith
Tweeny – Violet Clough
Howard Smith recalled that this was the third time the Book Club had selected to read from this play and on each occasion he had been cast as the cricketing parson. F. E. Pollard hoped that it would not be his lot to play the Hon. Ernest Wooley again, but it was generally felt that he had been excellently cast in view of the stage direction “he is a match for any old lady”.
[...]
[Signed as a true record by] A. G. Joselin 5 May 1941'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Florence E. Reynolds      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : The Admirable Crichton

'Meeting held at Oakdene, Northcourt Avenue 7.iv.41 S. A. Reynolds in the chair.
1. The minutes of the last meeting were read and signed.
[...]
6. After an interval for refreshment we came to “The Admirable Crichton” probably Barries best play. Knox Taylor briefly outlined the story and then the last Act was read with the following cast:
Agatha – Isabel Taylor
Ernest – F. E. Pollard
Catherine – Mary Reynolds
Lord Loam – S. A. Reynolds
Crichton – A. B. Dilks
Lady Mary – Margaret Dilks
Lord Brocklehurst – Arnold Joselin
Lady Brocklehurst – Muriel Stevens
Treherne – H. R. Smith
Tweeny – Violet Clough
Howard Smith recalled that this was the third time the Book Club had selected to read from this play and on each occasion he had been cast as the cricketing parson. F. E. Pollard hoped that it would not be his lot to play the Hon. Ernest Wooley again, but it was generally felt that he had been excellently cast in view of the stage direction “he is a match for any old lady”.
[...]
[Signed as a true record by] A. G. Joselin 5 May 1941'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Sylvanus A. Reynolds      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : The Admirable Crichton

'Meeting held at Oakdene, Northcourt Avenue 7.iv.41 S. A. Reynolds in the chair.
1. The minutes of the last meeting were read and signed.
[...]
6. After an interval for refreshment we came to “The Admirable Crichton” probably Barries best play. Knox Taylor briefly outlined the story and then the last Act was read with the following cast:
Agatha – Isabel Taylor
Ernest – F. E. Pollard
Catherine – Mary Reynolds
Lord Loam – S. A. Reynolds
Crichton – A. B. Dilks
Lady Mary – Margaret Dilks
Lord Brocklehurst – Arnold Joselin
Lady Brocklehurst – Muriel Stevens
Treherne – H. R. Smith
Tweeny – Violet Clough
Howard Smith recalled that this was the third time the Book Club had selected to read from this play and on each occasion he had been cast as the cricketing parson. F. E. Pollard hoped that it would not be his lot to play the Hon. Ernest Wooley again, but it was generally felt that he had been excellently cast in view of the stage direction “he is a match for any old lady”.
[...]
[Signed as a true record by] A. G. Joselin 5 May 1941'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Bruce Dilks      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : The Admirable Crichton

'Meeting held at Oakdene, Northcourt Avenue 7.iv.41 S. A. Reynolds in the chair.
1. The minutes of the last meeting were read and signed.
[...]
6. After an interval for refreshment we came to “The Admirable Crichton” probably Barries best play. Knox Taylor briefly outlined the story and then the last Act was read with the following cast:
Agatha – Isabel Taylor
Ernest – F. E. Pollard
Catherine – Mary Reynolds
Lord Loam – S. A. Reynolds
Crichton – A. B. Dilks
Lady Mary – Margaret Dilks
Lord Brocklehurst – Arnold Joselin
Lady Brocklehurst – Muriel Stevens
Treherne – H. R. Smith
Tweeny – Violet Clough
Howard Smith recalled that this was the third time the Book Club had selected to read from this play and on each occasion he had been cast as the cricketing parson. F. E. Pollard hoped that it would not be his lot to play the Hon. Ernest Wooley again, but it was generally felt that he had been excellently cast in view of the stage direction “he is a match for any old lady”.
[...]
[Signed as a true record by] A. G. Joselin 5 May 1941'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Margaret Dilks      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : The Admirable Crichton

'Meeting held at Oakdene, Northcourt Avenue 7.iv.41 S. A. Reynolds in the chair.
1. The minutes of the last meeting were read and signed.
[...]
6. After an interval for refreshment we came to “The Admirable Crichton” probably Barries best play. Knox Taylor briefly outlined the story and then the last Act was read with the following cast:
Agatha – Isabel Taylor
Ernest – F. E. Pollard
Catherine – Mary Reynolds
Lord Loam – S. A. Reynolds
Crichton – A. B. Dilks
Lady Mary – Margaret Dilks
Lord Brocklehurst – Arnold Joselin
Lady Brocklehurst – Muriel Stevens
Treherne – H. R. Smith
Tweeny – Violet Clough
Howard Smith recalled that this was the third time the Book Club had selected to read from this play and on each occasion he had been cast as the cricketing parson. F. E. Pollard hoped that it would not be his lot to play the Hon. Ernest Wooley again, but it was generally felt that he had been excellently cast in view of the stage direction “he is a match for any old lady”.
[...]
[Signed as a true record by] A. G. Joselin 5 May 1941'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Arnold Joselin      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : The Admirable Crichton

'Meeting held at Oakdene, Northcourt Avenue 7.iv.41 S. A. Reynolds in the chair.
1. The minutes of the last meeting were read and signed.
[...]
6. After an interval for refreshment we came to “The Admirable Crichton” probably Barries best play. Knox Taylor briefly outlined the story and then the last Act was read with the following cast:
Agatha – Isabel Taylor
Ernest – F. E. Pollard
Catherine – Mary Reynolds
Lord Loam – S. A. Reynolds
Crichton – A. B. Dilks
Lady Mary – Margaret Dilks
Lord Brocklehurst – Arnold Joselin
Lady Brocklehurst – Muriel Stevens
Treherne – H. R. Smith
Tweeny – Violet Clough
Howard Smith recalled that this was the third time the Book Club had selected to read from this play and on each occasion he had been cast as the cricketing parson. F. E. Pollard hoped that it would not be his lot to play the Hon. Ernest Wooley again, but it was generally felt that he had been excellently cast in view of the stage direction “he is a match for any old lady”.
[...]
[Signed as a true record by] A. G. Joselin 5 May 1941'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Muriel Stevens      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : The Admirable Crichton

'Meeting held at Oakdene, Northcourt Avenue 7.iv.41 S. A. Reynolds in the chair.
1. The minutes of the last meeting were read and signed.
[...]
6. After an interval for refreshment we came to “The Admirable Crichton” probably Barries best play. Knox Taylor briefly outlined the story and then the last Act was read with the following cast:
Agatha – Isabel Taylor
Ernest – F. E. Pollard
Catherine – Mary Reynolds
Lord Loam – S. A. Reynolds
Crichton – A. B. Dilks
Lady Mary – Margaret Dilks
Lord Brocklehurst – Arnold Joselin
Lady Brocklehurst – Muriel Stevens
Treherne – H. R. Smith
Tweeny – Violet Clough
Howard Smith recalled that this was the third time the Book Club had selected to read from this play and on each occasion he had been cast as the cricketing parson. F. E. Pollard hoped that it would not be his lot to play the Hon. Ernest Wooley again, but it was generally felt that he had been excellently cast in view of the stage direction “he is a match for any old lady”.
[...]
[Signed as a true record by] A. G. Joselin 5 May 1941'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Howard Smith      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : The Admirable Crichton

'Meeting held at Oakdene, Northcourt Avenue 7.iv.41 S. A. Reynolds in the chair.
1. The minutes of the last meeting were read and signed.
[...]
6. After an interval for refreshment we came to “The Admirable Crichton” probably Barries best play. Knox Taylor briefly outlined the story and then the last Act was read with the following cast:
Agatha – Isabel Taylor
Ernest – F. E. Pollard
Catherine – Mary Reynolds
Lord Loam – S. A. Reynolds
Crichton – A. B. Dilks
Lady Mary – Margaret Dilks
Lord Brocklehurst – Arnold Joselin
Lady Brocklehurst – Muriel Stevens
Treherne – H. R. Smith
Tweeny – Violet Clough
Howard Smith recalled that this was the third time the Book Club had selected to read from this play and on each occasion he had been cast as the cricketing parson. F. E. Pollard hoped that it would not be his lot to play the Hon. Ernest Wooley again, but it was generally felt that he had been excellently cast in view of the stage direction “he is a match for any old lady”.
[...]
[Signed as a true record by] A. G. Joselin 5 May 1941'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Violet Clough      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : Sentimental Tommy

'Meeting held at Oakdene, Northcourt Avenue 7.iv.41 S. A. Reynolds in the chair.
1. The minutes of the last meeting were read and signed.
[...]
7. Dr. [Dorothea] Taylor read from “Sentimental Tommy” – a pathetic story, but salted with humour, the pathos becomes palatable.
8. Knox Taylor read from Barrie’s famous rectorial address delivered at St. Andrews University in May 1922 on the subject of “Courage”.
9. Muriel Stevens read from “The Little Minister” Barrie’s first long novel which was published in 1891. This book introduced, not without unmixed success, extraneous elements into the familiar life of Thrums, including the winsome heroine Babbie, but proved the author’s considerable gift of romance.
10. The first Act of “A Kiss for Cinderella” was read by: Arnold Joselin as the Policeman
Bruce Dilks as Mr. Bodie
Alice Joselin as Cindarella
with Margaret Dilks reading the introduction & stage directions. In this play we realize how near is the authors genius to that of Hans Anderson on the one hand, and of Dickens on the other. Like Hans Anderson he mixes the everyday world with Fairyland, & like Dickens he entices us to that borderland of laughter where we suddenly find ourselves in tears. But Barrie is at once jester and tender- hearted moralist and there is a special kind of broken-hearted fun which is quite his own.

[Signed as a true record by] A. G. Joselin 5 May 1941'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Dorothea Taylor      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : Courage [University of St Andrews Rectoral address]

'Meeting held at Oakdene, Northcourt Avenue 7.iv.41 S. A. Reynolds in the chair.
1. The minutes of the last meeting were read and signed.
[...]
7. Dr. [Dorothea] Taylor read from “Sentimental Tommy” – a pathetic story, but salted with humour, the pathos becomes palatable.
8. Knox Taylor read from Barrie’s famous rectorial address delivered at St. Andrews University in May 1922 on the subject of “Courage”.
9. Muriel Stevens read from “The Little Minister” Barrie’s first long novel which was published in 1891. This book introduced, not without unmixed success, extraneous elements into the familiar life of Thrums, including the winsome heroine Babbie, but proved the author’s considerable gift of romance.
10. The first Act of “A Kiss for Cinderella” was read by: Arnold Joselin as the Policeman
Bruce Dilks as Mr. Bodie
Alice Joselin as Cindarella
with Margaret Dilks reading the introduction & stage directions. In this play we realize how near is the authors genius to that of Hans Anderson on the one hand, and of Dickens on the other. Like Hans Anderson he mixes the everyday world with Fairyland, & like Dickens he entices us to that borderland of laughter where we suddenly find ourselves in tears. But Barrie is at once jester and tender- hearted moralist and there is a special kind of broken-hearted fun which is quite his own.

[Signed as a true record by] A. G. Joselin 5 May 1941'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Knox Taylor      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : The Little Minister

'Meeting held at Oakdene, Northcourt Avenue 7.iv.41 S. A. Reynolds in the chair.
1. The minutes of the last meeting were read and signed.
[...]
7. Dr. [Dorothea] Taylor read from “Sentimental Tommy” – a pathetic story, but salted with humour, the pathos becomes palatable.
8. Knox Taylor read from Barrie’s famous rectorial address delivered at St. Andrews University in May 1922 on the subject of “Courage”.
9. Muriel Stevens read from “The Little Minister” Barrie’s first long novel which was published in 1891. This book introduced, not without unmixed success, extraneous elements into the familiar life of Thrums, including the winsome heroine Babbie, but proved the author’s considerable gift of romance.
10. The first Act of “A Kiss for Cinderella” was read by: Arnold Joselin as the Policeman
Bruce Dilks as Mr. Bodie
Alice Joselin as Cindarella
with Margaret Dilks reading the introduction & stage directions. In this play we realize how near is the authors genius to that of Hans Anderson on the one hand, and of Dickens on the other. Like Hans Anderson he mixes the everyday world with Fairyland, & like Dickens he entices us to that borderland of laughter where we suddenly find ourselves in tears. But Barrie is at once jester and tender- hearted moralist and there is a special kind of broken-hearted fun which is quite his own.

[Signed as a true record by] A. G. Joselin 5 May 1941'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Muriel Stevens      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : A Kiss for Cinderella

'Meeting held at Oakdene, Northcourt Avenue 7.iv.41 S. A. Reynolds in the chair.
1. The minutes of the last meeting were read and signed.
[...]
7. Dr. [Dorothea] Taylor read from “Sentimental Tommy” – a pathetic story, but salted with humour, the pathos becomes palatable.
8. Knox Taylor read from Barrie’s famous rectorial address delivered at St. Andrews University in May 1922 on the subject of “Courage”.
9. Muriel Stevens read from “The Little Minister” Barrie’s first long novel which was published in 1891. This book introduced, not without unmixed success, extraneous elements into the familiar life of Thrums, including the winsome heroine Babbie, but proved the author’s considerable gift of romance.
10. The first Act of “A Kiss for Cinderella” was read by: Arnold Joselin as the Policeman
Bruce Dilks as Mr. Bodie
Alice Joselin as Cindarella
with Margaret Dilks reading the introduction & stage directions. In this play we realize how near is the authors genius to that of Hans Anderson on the one hand, and of Dickens on the other. Like Hans Anderson he mixes the everyday world with Fairyland, & like Dickens he entices us to that borderland of laughter where we suddenly find ourselves in tears. But Barrie is at once jester and tender- hearted moralist and there is a special kind of broken-hearted fun which is quite his own.

[Signed as a true record by] A. G. Joselin 5 May 1941'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Arnold Joselin      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : A Kiss for Cinderella

'Meeting held at Oakdene, Northcourt Avenue 7.iv.41 S. A. Reynolds in the chair.
1. The minutes of the last meeting were read and signed.
[...]
7. Dr. [Dorothea] Taylor read from “Sentimental Tommy” – a pathetic story, but salted with humour, the pathos becomes palatable.
8. Knox Taylor read from Barrie’s famous rectorial address delivered at St. Andrews University in May 1922 on the subject of “Courage”.
9. Muriel Stevens read from “The Little Minister” Barrie’s first long novel which was published in 1891. This book introduced, not without unmixed success, extraneous elements into the familiar life of Thrums, including the winsome heroine Babbie, but proved the author’s considerable gift of romance.
10. The first Act of “A Kiss for Cinderella” was read by: Arnold Joselin as the Policeman
Bruce Dilks as Mr. Bodie
Alice Joselin as Cindarella
with Margaret Dilks reading the introduction & stage directions. In this play we realize how near is the authors genius to that of Hans Anderson on the one hand, and of Dickens on the other. Like Hans Anderson he mixes the everyday world with Fairyland, & like Dickens he entices us to that borderland of laughter where we suddenly find ourselves in tears. But Barrie is at once jester and tender- hearted moralist and there is a special kind of broken-hearted fun which is quite his own.

[Signed as a true record by] A. G. Joselin 5 May 1941'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Bruce Dilks      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : A Kiss for Cinderella

'Meeting held at Oakdene, Northcourt Avenue 7.iv.41 S. A. Reynolds in the chair.
1. The minutes of the last meeting were read and signed.
[...]
7. Dr. [Dorothea] Taylor read from “Sentimental Tommy” – a pathetic story, but salted with humour, the pathos becomes palatable.
8. Knox Taylor read from Barrie’s famous rectorial address delivered at St. Andrews University in May 1922 on the subject of “Courage”.
9. Muriel Stevens read from “The Little Minister” Barrie’s first long novel which was published in 1891. This book introduced, not without unmixed success, extraneous elements into the familiar life of Thrums, including the winsome heroine Babbie, but proved the author’s considerable gift of romance.
10. The first Act of “A Kiss for Cinderella” was read by: Arnold Joselin as the Policeman
Bruce Dilks as Mr. Bodie
Alice Joselin as Cindarella
with Margaret Dilks reading the introduction & stage directions. In this play we realize how near is the authors genius to that of Hans Anderson on the one hand, and of Dickens on the other. Like Hans Anderson he mixes the everyday world with Fairyland, & like Dickens he entices us to that borderland of laughter where we suddenly find ourselves in tears. But Barrie is at once jester and tender- hearted moralist and there is a special kind of broken-hearted fun which is quite his own.

[Signed as a true record by] A. G. Joselin 5 May 1941'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Alice Joselin      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : A Kiss for Cinderella

'Meeting held at Oakdene, Northcourt Avenue 7.iv.41 S. A. Reynolds in the chair.
1. The minutes of the last meeting were read and signed.
[...]
7. Dr. [Dorothea] Taylor read from “Sentimental Tommy” – a pathetic story, but salted with humour, the pathos becomes palatable.
8. Knox Taylor read from Barrie’s famous rectorial address delivered at St. Andrews University in May 1922 on the subject of “Courage”.
9. Muriel Stevens read from “The Little Minister” Barrie’s first long novel which was published in 1891. This book introduced, not without unmixed success, extraneous elements into the familiar life of Thrums, including the winsome heroine Babbie, but proved the author’s considerable gift of romance.
10. The first Act of “A Kiss for Cinderella” was read by: Arnold Joselin as the Policeman
Bruce Dilks as Mr. Bodie
Alice Joselin as Cindarella
with Margaret Dilks reading the introduction & stage directions. In this play we realize how near is the authors genius to that of Hans Anderson on the one hand, and of Dickens on the other. Like Hans Anderson he mixes the everyday world with Fairyland, & like Dickens he entices us to that borderland of laughter where we suddenly find ourselves in tears. But Barrie is at once jester and tender- hearted moralist and there is a special kind of broken-hearted fun which is quite his own.

[Signed as a true record by] A. G. Joselin 5 May 1941'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Margaret Dilks      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : My Lady Nicotine

'Meeting held at Oakdene, Northcourt Avenue 7.iv.41 S. A. Reynolds in the chair.
1. The minutes of the last meeting were read and signed.
[...]
4. It was a very great pleasure to us that Janet Rawlings’ short stay in Reading should coincide with a book-club meeting, & her reading from “My Lady Nicotine” was much enjoyed. It should be mentioned that the passage was not selected by the reader, but by Mr. Pollard. For in an entertaining forward Janet explained that being in doubt as to what to read she took her troubles to F. E. Pollard, as she so often does – with what happy result in this case at least we were able to judge for ourselves.
[...]
[Signed as a true record by] A. G. Joselin 5 May 1941'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Francis E. Pollard      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : My Lady Nicotine

'Meeting held at Oakdene, Northcourt Avenue 7.iv.41
S. A. Reynolds in the chair.

1. The minutes of the last meeting were read and signed.

[...]

[Signed as a true record by] A. G. Joselin
5 May 1941'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Francis E. Pollard      Print: Book

  

J. M. Barrie : A Window in Thrums

'Meeting held at 22 Cintra Avenue: 17. IV 40. F. E. Pollard in the chair
1. Minutes of last read & approved.
[...]
5. As an introduction to our subject of Modern English Humourists, R. H. Robson read a passage analysing the nature of Humour. Discussion followed on the distinction, if any, between wit & humour, & various alleged examples were forthcoming.
6. A. B. Dilks read from Grossmith’s Diary of a Nobody; many entries appealed to members as characteristic of themselves or their friends.
7. In the regretted absence of C. E. Stansfield, F. E. Pollard read T. Thompson’s Blitzkrieg, from the Manchester Guardian, in what purported to be the Lancashire dialect.
8 Howard R. Smith read from A. A. Milne: the reader shared fully in the mirth of the hearers.
9. M. Dilks gave us a passage from Macdonnell’s ‘England, their England’, which must have been salutary for any suffering from insular complacency.
10. Rosamund Wallis’ contribution was from P. G. Wodehouse’s ‘Carry on, Jeeves’; certain methods of being off with the old love & on with the new were characteristically indicated by the writer, effectively rendered by the reader, & clearly appreciated by the company.
11. R. H. Robson’s Saki story supplied further satire on English standards – in this case of music, & the services likely to secure a title.
12. The chapter from Barrie’s ‘Window in Thrums’, read by F. E. Pollard, told how Gavin Birse did his best to be off with the old love, but failed.
13. The idea of a Barrie evening was mooted.
[signed as a true record:] M. Stevens
18-7-40'

Century: 1900-1945     Reader/Listener/Group: Francis E. Pollard      Print: Book

  

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