Page:Treasure Island (1909).djvu/22

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CRITICAL OPINIONS

One of the best tributes ever paid to Stevenson is by his brother novelist, J. M. Barrie. In Margaret Ogilvy, the subject and heroine of which is his mother, Mr. Barrie tells of her pretense that she does not think Stevenson's books are as good as those of her son; of her smuggling Stevenson's stories under her apron and into her room that she may not be seen reading them; and of how they "agreed upon a compromise; she was to read the enticing thing just to convince herself of its inferiority." Thenceforward she read Stevenson assiduously. The account goes on:

"But how enamored she was of Treasure Island, and how faithful she tried to be to me all the time she was reading it! I had to put my hands over her eyes to let her know that I had entered the room, and even then she might try to read between my fingers, coming to herself presently, however, to say, 'It's a haver of a book.'[1]

"'Those pirate stories are so uninteresting,' I would reply without fear, for she was too engrossed to see through me. 'Do you think you will finish this one?'

"'I may as well go on with it since I have begun it,' my mother says, so slyly that my sister and I shake our heads at each other to imply, 'Was there ever such a woman!'

"'There are none of those one-legged scoundrels in my books,' I say.

"'Better without them,' she replies promptly.

"'I wonder, mother, what it is about the man that so infatuates the public?'

"'He takes no hold of me,' she insists. 'I would a hantle[2] rather read your books.'

"'I offer obligingly to bring one of them to her, and now she looks at me suspiciously. 'You surely believe I like yours best,'

  1. A foolish book.
  2. A good deal.

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