Short Fiction by P. G. Wodehouse (me reader .txt) ๐
Description
P. G. Wodehouse was an incredibly prolific writer who sold short stories to publications around the world throughout his career. The settings of his stories range from the casinos of Monte Carlo to the dance halls of New York, often taking detours into rural English life, where we follow his wide variety of distinctive characters and their trials, tribulations and follies.
The stories in this volume consist of most of what is available in U.S. public domain, with the exception of some stories which were never anthologized, and stories that are collected in themed volumes (Jeeves Stories, Ukridge Stories, and School Stories). They are ordered by the date they first appeared in magazine form.
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- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
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Goodness knows I tried. But everything I did turned out wrong. There seemed to be a fate about it. One morning, for example, I was trotting round the house early, and I met a fellow I could have sworn was a burglar. He wasnโt one of the family, and he wasnโt one of the servants, and he was hanging round the house in a most suspicious way. I chased him up a tree, and it wasnโt till the family came down to breakfast, two hours later, that I found that he was a guest who had arrived overnight, and had come out early to enjoy the freshness of the morning and the sun shining on the lake, he being that sort of man. That didnโt help me much.
Next, I got in wrong with the boss, Peterโs father. I donโt know why. I met him out in the park with another man, both carrying bundles of sticks and looking very serious and earnest. Just as I reached him, the boss lifted one of the sticks and hit a small white ball with it. He had never seemed to want to play with me before, and I took it as a great compliment. I raced after the ball, which he had hit quite a long way, picked it up in my mouth, and brought it back to him. I laid it at his feet, and smiled up at him.
โHit it again,โ I said.
He wasnโt pleased at all. He said all sorts of things and tried to kick me, and that night, when he thought I was not listening, I heard him telling his wife that I was a pest and would have to be got rid of. That made me think.
And then I put the lid on it. With the best intentions in the world I got myself into such a mess that I thought the end had come.
It happened one afternoon in the drawing-room. There were visitors that dayโ โwomen; and women seem fatal to me. I was in the background, trying not to be seen, for, though I had been brought in by Peter, the family never liked my coming into the drawing-room. I was hoping for a piece of cake and not paying much attention to the conversation, which was all about somebody called Toto, whom I had not met. Peterโs mother said Toto was a sweet little darling, he was; and one of the visitors said Toto had not been at all himself that day and she was quite worried. And a good lot more about how all that Toto would ever take for dinner was a little white meat of chicken, chopped up fine. It was not very interesting, and I had allowed my attention to wander.
And just then, peeping round the corner of my chair to see if there were any signs of cake, what should I see but a great beastly brute of a rat. It was standing right beside the visitor, drinking milk out of a saucer, if you please!
I may have my faults, but procrastination in the presence of rats is not one of them. I didnโt hesitate for a second. Here was my chance. If there is one thing women hate, it is a rat. Mother always used to say, โIf you want to succeed in life, please the women. They are the real bosses. The men donโt count.โ By eliminating this rodent I should earn the gratitude and esteem of Peterโs mother, and, if I did that, it did not matter what Peterโs father thought of me.
I sprang.
The rat hadnโt a chance to get away. I was right on to him. I got hold of his neck, gave him a couple of shakes, and chucked him across the room. Then I ran across to finish him off.
Just as I reached him, he sat up and barked at me. I was never so taken aback in my life. I pulled up short and stared at him.
โIโm sure I beg your pardon, sir,โ I said apologetically. โI thought you were a rat.โ
And then everything broke loose. Somebody got me by the collar, somebody else hit me on the head with a parasol, and somebody else kicked me in the ribs. Everybody talked and shouted at the same time.
โPoor darling Toto!โ cried the visitor, snatching up the little animal. โDid the great savage brute try to murder you!โ
โSo absolutely unprovoked!โ
โHe just flew at the poor little thing!โ
It was no good my trying to explain. Any dog in my place would have made the same mistake. The creature was a toy-dog of one of those extraordinary breedsโ โa prize-winner and champion, and so on, of course, and worth his weight in gold. I would have done better to bite the visitor than Toto. That much I gathered from the general run of the conversation, and then, having discovered that the door was shut, I edged under the sofa. I was embarrassed.
โThat settles it!โ said Peterโs mother. โThe dog is not safe. He must be shot.โ
Peter gave a yell at this, but for once he didnโt swing the voting an inch.
โBe quiet, Peter,โ said his mother. โIt is not safe for you to have such a dog. He may be mad.โ
Women are very unreasonable.
Toto, of course, wouldnโt say a word to explain how the mistake arose. He was sitting on the visitorโs lap, shrieking about what he would have done to me if they hadnโt separated us.
Somebody felt cautiously under the sofa. I recognized the shoes of Weeks, the butler. I suppose they had rung for him to come and take me, and I could see that he wasnโt half liking it. I was sorry for Weeks, who was a friend of mine, so I licked his hand, and that seemed to cheer him up a whole lot.
โI have him now, madam,โ I heard him say.
โTake him to the stables
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