Right Ho, Jeeves by P. G. Wodehouse (love letters to the dead TXT) ๐
Description
Right Ho, Jeeves is the second novel to feature P. G. Wodehouseโs popular Bertie Wooster and Jeeves characters. Bertie, a member of the English upper class and one of the โidle rich,โ tries his best to arrange relationships between two pairs of his friends. Though he means well, Bertieโs bumbling attempts wind up doing more harm than good (as usual), leaving it to his valet, Jeeves, to see if he can sort things out.
A smooth, easy, and often hilarious read, Right Ho, Jeeves is an excellent example of why Bertie Wooster and Jeeves have become such iconic literary figures.
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- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
Read book online ยซRight Ho, Jeeves by P. G. Wodehouse (love letters to the dead TXT) ๐ยป. Author - P. G. Wodehouse
While I stood musing thus, Aunt Dahlia, in her practical way, was coming straight to the point:
โWhatโs all this?โ
Anatole did a sort of Swedish exercise, starting at the base of the spine, carrying on through the shoulder-blades and finishing up among the back hair.
Then he told her.
In the chats I have had with this wonder man, I have always found his English fluent, but a bit on the mixed side. If you remember, he was with Mrs. Bingo Little for a time before coming to Brinkley, and no doubt he picked up a good deal from Bingo. Before that, he had been a couple of years with an American family at Nice and had studied under their chauffeur, one of the Maloneys of Brooklyn. So, what with Bingo and what with Maloney, he is, as I say, fluent but a bit mixed.
He spoke, in part, as follows:
โHot dog! You ask me what is it? Listen. Make some attention a little. Me, I have hit the hay, but I do not sleep so good, and presently I wake and up I look, and there is one who make faces against me through the dashed window. Is that a pretty affair? Is that convenient? If you think I like it, you jolly well mistake yourself. I am so mad as a wet hen. And why not? I am somebody, isnโt it? This is a bedroom, what-what, not a house for some apes? Then for what do blighters sit on my window so cool as a few cucumbers, making some faces?โ
โQuite,โ I said. Dashed reasonable, was my verdict.
He threw another look up at Gussie, and did Exercise 2โ โthe one where you clutch the moustache, give it a tug and then start catching flies.
โWait yet a little. I am not finish. I say I see this type on my window, making a few faces. But what then? Does he buzz off when I shout a cry, and leave me peaceable? Not on your life. He remain planted there, not giving any damns, and sit regarding me like a cat watching a duck. He make faces against me and again he make faces against me, and the more I command that he should get to hell out of here, the more he do not get to hell out of here. He cry something towards me, and I demand what is his desire, but he do not explain. Oh, no, that arrives never. He does but shrug his head. What damn silliness! Is this amusing for me? You think I like it? I am not content with such folly. I think the poor muttโs loony. Je me fiche de ce type infect. Cโest idiot de faire comme รงa lโoiseau.โ โโ โฆ Allez-vous-en, louffier.โ โโ โฆ Tell the boob to go away. He is mad as some March hatters.โ
I must say I thought he was making out a jolly good case, and evidently Aunt Dahlia felt the same. She laid a quivering hand on his shoulder.
โI will, Monsieur Anatole, I will,โ she said, and I couldnโt have believed that robust voice capable of sinking to such an absolute coo. More like a turtle dove calling to its mate than anything else. โItโs quite all right.โ
She had said the wrong thing. He did Exercise 3.
โAll right? Nom dโun nom dโun nom! The hell you say itโs all right! Of what use to pull stuff like that? Wait one half-moment. Not yet quite so quick, my old sport. It is by no means all right. See yet again a little. It is some very different dishes of fish. I can take a few smooths with a rough, it is true, but I do not find it agreeable when one play larks against me on my windows. That cannot do. A nice thing, no. I am a serious man. I do not wish a few larks on my windows. I enjoy larks on my windows worse as any. It is very little all right. If such rannygazoo is to arrive, I do not remain any longer in this house no more. I buzz off and do not stay planted.โ
Sinister words, I had to admit, and I was not surprised that Aunt Dahlia, hearing them, should have uttered a cry like the wail of a master of hounds seeing a fox shot. Anatole had begun to wave his fists again at Gussie, and she now joined him. Seppings, who was puffing respectfully in the background, didnโt actually wave his fists, but he gave Gussie a pretty austere look. It was plain to the thoughtful observer that this Fink-Nottle, in getting on to that skylight, had done a mistaken thing. He couldnโt have been more unpopular in the home of G. G. Simmons.
โGo away, you crazy loon!โ cried Aunt Dahlia, in that ringing voice of hers which had once caused nervous members of the Quorn to lose stirrups and take tosses from the saddle.
Gussieโs reply was to waggle his eyebrows. I could read the message he was trying to convey.
โI think he means,โ I saidโ โreasonable old Bertram, always trying to throw oil on the troubled wโsโ โโthat if he does he will fall down the side of the house and break his neck.โ
โWell, why not?โ said Aunt Dahlia.
I could see her point, of course, but it seemed to me that there might be a nearer solution. This skylight happened to be the only window in the house which Uncle Tom had not festooned with his bally bars. I suppose he
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