Indiscretions of Archie by P. G. Wodehouse (novels to read for beginners .TXT) ๐
Description
Indiscretions of Archie is a comic novel adapted from a set of short stories serialized in the Strand magazine between March 1920 and February 1921 in the United Kingdom and between May 1920 and February 1921 in Cosmopolitan in the United States. The novel was first published in the United Kingdom on February 14, 1921 by Herbert Jenkins and in the United States on July 15, 1921 by George H. Doran.
The eponymous Archie is Archibald Moffam, a gaffe-prone but affable Englishman who has found himself living in New York City after the end of the First World War, in which he had served with distinction. After a whirlwind romance Archie marries Lucille, the daughter of wealthy hotel owner and art collector Daniel Brewster. Many of the ensuing events revolve around Archieโs attempts to win favor with his new father-in-law.
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- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
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The train rattled on. Once or twice, when it stopped, the girl seemed undecided whether to leave or remain. She half rose, then sank back again. Finally she walked resolutely out of the car, and Archie, following, found himself in a part of New York strange to him. The inhabitants of this district appeared to eke out a precarious existence, not by taking in one anotherโs washing, but by selling one another secondhand clothes.
Archie glanced at his watch. He had lunched early, but so crowded with emotions had been the period following lunch that he was surprised to find that the hour was only just two. The discovery was a pleasant one. With a full hour before the scheduled start of the game, much might be achieved. He hurried after the girl, and came up with her just as she turned the corner into one of those forlorn New York side streets which are populated chiefly by children, cats, desultory loafers, and empty meat-tins.
The girl stopped and turned. Archie smiled a winning smile.
โI say, my dear sweet creature!โ he said. โI say, my dear old thing, one moment!โ
โIs that so?โ said the Girl Friend.
โI beg your pardon?โ
โIs that so?โ
Archie began to feel certain tremors. Her eyes were gleaming, and her determined mouth had become a perfectly straight line of scarlet. It was going to be difficult to be chatty to this girl. She was going to be a hard audience. Would mere words be able to touch her heart? The thought suggested itself that, properly speaking, one would need to use a pickaxe.
โIf you could spare me a couple of minutes of your valuable timeโ โโ
โSay!โ The lady drew herself up menacingly. โYou tie a can to yourself and disappear! Fade away, or Iโll call a cop!โ
Archie was horrified at this misinterpretation of his motives. One or two children, playing close at hand, and a loafer who was trying to keep the wall from falling down, seemed pleased. Theirs was a colourless existence and to the rare purple moments which had enlivened it in the past the calling of a cop had been the unfailing preliminary. The loafer nudged a fellow-loafer, sunning himself against the same wall. The children, abandoning the meat-tin round which their game had centred, drew closer.
โMy dear old soul!โ said Archie. โYou donโt understand!โ
โDonโt I! I know your sort, you trailing arbutus!โ
โNo, no! My dear old thing, believe me! I wouldnโt dream!โ
โAre you going or arenโt you?โ
Eleven more children joined the ring of spectators. The loafers stared silently, like awakened crocodiles.
โBut, I say, listen! I only wantedโ โโ
At this point another voice spoke.
โSay!โ
The word โSay!โ more almost than any word in the American language, is capable of a variety of shades of expression. It can be genial, it can be jovial, it can be appealing. It can also be truculent. The โSay!โ which at this juncture smote upon Archieโs eardrum with a suddenness which made him leap in the air was truculent; and the two loafers and twenty-seven children who now formed the audience were well satisfied with the dramatic development of the performance. To their experienced ears the word had the right ring.
Archie spun round. At his elbow stood a long, strongly-built young man in a grey suit.
โWell!โ said the young man, nastily. And he extended a large, freckled face toward Archieโs. It seemed to the latter, as he backed against the wall, that the young manโs neck must be composed of india rubber. It appeared to be growing longer every moment. His face, besides being freckled, was a dull brick-red in colour; his lips curled back in an unpleasant snarl, showing a gold tooth; and beside him, swaying in an ominous sort of way, hung two clenched red hands about the size of two young legs of mutton. Archie eyed him with a growing apprehension. There are moments in life when, passing idly on our way, we see a strange face, look into strange eyes, and with a sudden glow of human warmth say to ourselves, โWe have found a friend!โ This was not one of those moments. The only person Archie had ever seen in his life who looked less friendly was the sergeant-major who had trained him in the early days of the war, before he had got his commission.
โIโve had my eye on you!โ said the young man.
He still had his eye on him. It was a hot, gimlet-like eye, and it pierced the recesses of Archieโs soul. He backed a little farther against the wall.
Archie was frankly disturbed. He was no poltroon, and had proved the fact on many occasions during the days when the entire German army seemed to be picking on him personally, but he hated and shrank from anything in the nature of a bally public scene.
โWhat,โ enquired the young man, still bearing the burden of the conversation, and shifting his left hand a little farther behind his back, โdo you mean by following this young lady?โ
Archie was glad he had asked him. This was precisely what he wanted to explain.
โMy dear old ladโ โโ he began.
In spite of the fact that he had asked a question and presumably desired a reply, the sound of Archieโs voice seemed to be more than the young man could endure. It deprived him of the last vestige of restraint. With a rasping snarl he brought his left fist round in a sweeping semicircle in the direction of Archieโs head.
Archie was no novice in the art of self-defence. Since his early days at school he had learned much from leather-faced professors of the science. He had been watching
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