J. M. Barrie Quote

I should like to say that I left off smoking because I considered it a mean form of slavery, to be condemned for moral as well as physical reasons; but though I see the folly of smoking clearly now, I was blind to it for some months after I had smoked my last pipe. I gave up my most delightful solace, as I regarded it, for no other reason than that the lady who was willing to fling herself away on me said that I must choose between it and her.


My Lady Nicotine: Margaret Ogilvy (ed. 1896)


I should like to say that I left off smoking because I considered it a mean form of slavery, to be condemned for moral as well as physical reasons;...

I should like to say that I left off smoking because I considered it a mean form of slavery, to be condemned for moral as well as physical reasons;...

I should like to say that I left off smoking because I considered it a mean form of slavery, to be condemned for moral as well as physical reasons;...

I should like to say that I left off smoking because I considered it a mean form of slavery, to be condemned for moral as well as physical reasons;...