A Gentleman of Leisure by P. G. Wodehouse (english books to improve english .TXT) đ
Description
After inheriting a fortune, and just back to New York from a cruise on which he spotted an intriguing young woman, Jimmy Pitt is drifting. So after seeing a blockbuster play about a gentleman thief, heâs ready to bet his friends at the Strollersâ Club that he could pull off a burglary himself. That night he makes friends with a real-life âBowery Boyâ thief, who helps him break into a corrupt police captainâs house, and everyone gets way more than they bargained for. Later, the action moves to the Earl of Dreeverâs castle in England. There, the misunderstandings, threats, cheating, and confusion only multiply, requiring all of Jimmyâs wits and daring to clear up.
In this short novel, P. G. Wodehouse takes on many of the themes his fans will recognize from his Jeeves and Wooster books: the ridiculous upper class, the frequent need to hide oneâs suspicious origins (while uncovering those of others), and the importance of amateur theatricals, dressing for dinner, champagne, and true love.
First published in 1910, A Gentleman of Leisure has also appeared in several other versions, under the titles The Gem Collector and The Intrusion of Jimmy. It was also adapted into a Broadway play that starred Douglas Fairbanks Sr., and silent movie versions followed in 1915 and 1923. This Standard Ebook is based on the edition published in 1921 by Herbert Jenkins Ltd.
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- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
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âYes?â said Jimmy.
âWell, dis guy, he gets to de door and opens it, and Iâm just gettinâ ready for one sudden boist of speed when dere jumps out from de room on de odder side de passageâ âyou know de roomâ âanodder guy, anâ gets de rapid strangleholt on de foist mug. Say, wouldnât dat make youse glad you hadnât gone to de circus? Honest, it was better dan Coney Island.â
âGo on. What happened then?â
âDay falls to scrappinâ good and hard. Dey couldnât see me, anâ I couldnât see dem, but I could hear dem bumpinâ about and slugginâ each odder to beat de band. And by and by one of de mugs puts de odder mug to de bad, so dat he goes down and takes de count; and den I hears a click. And I know what dat is. Itâs one of de gazebos has put de irons on de odder gazebo.â
âCall them A and B,â suggested Jimmy.
âDen I hears himâ âde foist mugâ âstrike a light, âcos itâs dark dere âcos of de storm, anâ den he says, âGot youse, have I?â he says. âIâve had my eye on you, tâinkinâ youse was up to sometâing of dis kind. Iâve bin watchinâ youse!â I knew de voice. Itâs dat mug what calls himself Sir Tummasâs vally. And de odderâ ââ
Jimmy burst into a roar of laughter.
âDonât, Spike! This is more than man was meant to stand. Do you mean to tell me that it is my bright, brainy, persevering friend Galer who has been handcuffed and locked in the coal cellar?â
âSure, datâs right,â he said.
âItâs a judgment,â said Jimmy delightedlyâ ââthatâs what it is. No man has a right to be such a consummate ass as Galer. It isnât decent.â
There had been moments when McEachernâs faithful employee had filled Jimmy with an odd sort of fury, a kind of hurt pride, almost to the extent of making him wish that he really could have been the desperado McEachern fancied him. Never in his life before had he sat still under a challenge, and this espionage had been one. Behind the clumsy watcher he had seen always the self-satisfied figure of McEachern. If there had been anything subtle about the man from Dodsonâs he could have forgiven him; but there was not. Years of practice had left Spike with a sort of sixth sense as regarded representatives of the law. He could pierce the most cunning disguise. But in the case of Galer even Jimmy could detect the detective.
âGo on,â he said.
Spike proceeded.
âWell, de odder mug, de one down and out on de floor wit de irons onâ ââ
âGaler, in fact,â said Jimmy. âHandsome, dashing Galer!â
âSure. Well, heâs too busy catchinâ up wit his breatâ to shoot it back swift, but after heâs bin doinâ de deep-breathinâ stunt for a while he says, âYou mutt,â he says, âyouse is to de bad. Youâre made a break, you have. Datâs right. Surest tâing you know.â He puts it different, but datâs what he means. âIâm a sleut,â he says. âTake dese tâings off!ââ âmeaninâ de irons. Does de odder mug, de vally gazebo, give him de glad eye? Not soâs you could notice it. He gives him de merry ha-ha. He says dat datâs de woist tale datâs ever bin handed to him. âTell it to Sweeney!â he says. âI knows youse. You woims yourself into de house as a guest, when youse is really after de loidyâs jools.â At dese crool woids de odder mug, Galer, gits hot under de collar. âIâm a sure ânough sleut,â he says. âI blows into dis house at de special request of Mr. McEachern, de American gent.â De odder mug hands him de lemon again. âTell it to de King of Denmark,â he says. âDis cops de limit. Youse has enough gall for ten strong men,â he says. âShow me to Mr. McEachern,â says Galer. âHeâllâ âcrouch,â is dat it?â
âVouch?â suggested Jimmy. âMeaning give the glad hand to.â
âDatâs rightâ âvouch. I wondered what he meant at de time. âHeâll vouch for me,â he says. Dat puts him all right, he tâinks; but no, heâs still in Dutch, âcos de vally mug says, âNix on dat! I ainât goinâ to chase around de house wit youse, lookinâ for Mr. McEachern. Itâs youse for de coal-cellar, me man, anâ weâll see what youse has to say when I makes me report to Sir Tummas.â âWell, datâs to de good,â says Galer. âTell Sir Tummas. Iâll explain to him.â âNot me!â says de vally. âSir Tummas has a hard eveningâs woik before him, jollyinâ along de swells whatâs cominâ to see dis stoige-piece deyâre actinâ. I ainât goinâ to worry him till heâs good and ready. To de coal-cellar for yours! Gâwan!â and off dey goes! And I gets busy again, swipes de jools, and chases meself here.â
âHave you ever heard of poetic justice, Spike?â he asked. âThis is it. But in this hour of mirth and good will we must not forgetâ ââ
Spike interrupted.
Beaming with honest pleasure at the enthusiastic reception of his narrative, he proceeded to point out the morals that were to be deduced therefrom.
âSo youse see, boss,â he said, âitâs all to de merry. When dey rubbers for de jools and finds dem gone, deyâll tâink dis Galer guy swiped dem. Dey wonât tâink of us.â
Jimmy looked at him gravely.
âOf course,â said he. âWhat a reasoner you are, Spike! Galer was just opening the door from the outside, by your account, when the valet-man sprang at him. Naturally theyâll think that he took the jewels, especially as they wonât find them on him. A man who can open a locked safe through a closed door is just the sort of fellow who would be able to get rid of the swag neatly while rolling about the floor with the valet. His not having the jewels will make the case all the blacker against him. And what will make them still more certain that he is the thief is that he
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