P. G. Wodehouse

The Greatest Works of P. G. Wodehouse


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he could sit on a fence, watching a worm and wondering what on earth it was up to, for hours at a stretch.

      He had his scheme of life worked out to a fine point. About once a month he would take three days writing a few poems; the other three hundred and twenty-nine days of the year he rested. I didn't know there was enough money in poetry to support a chappie, even in the way in which Rocky lived; but it seems that, if you stick to exhortations to young men to lead the strenuous life and don't shove in any rhymes, American editors fight for the stuff. Rocky showed me one of his things once. It began:

      Be!

       Be!

       The past is dead.

       To-morrow is not born.

       Be to-day!

       To-day!

       Be with every nerve,

       With every muscle,

       With every drop of your red blood!

       Be!

      It was printed opposite the frontispiece of a magazine with a sort of scroll round it, and a picture in the middle of a fairly-nude chappie, with bulging muscles, giving the rising sun the glad eye. Rocky said they gave him a hundred dollars for it, and he stayed in bed till four in the afternoon for over a month.

      As regarded the future he was pretty solid, owing to the fact that he had a moneyed aunt tucked away somewhere in Illinois; and, as he had been named Rockmetteller after her, and was her only nephew, his position was pretty sound. He told me that when he did come into the money he meant to do no work at all, except perhaps an occasional poem recommending the young man with life opening out before him, with all its splendid possibilities, to light a pipe and shove his feet upon the mantelpiece.

      And this was the man who was prodding me in the ribs in the grey dawn!

      "Read this, Bertie!" I could just see that he was waving a letter or something equally foul in my face. "Wake up and read this!"

      I can't read before I've had my morning tea and a cigarette. I groped for the bell.

      Jeeves came in looking as fresh as a dewy violet. It's a mystery to me how he does it.

      "Tea, Jeeves."

      "Very good, sir."

      He flowed silently out of the room—he always gives you the impression of being some liquid substance when he moves; and I found that Rocky was surging round with his beastly letter again.

      "What is it?" I said. "What on earth's the matter?"

      "Read it!"

      "I can't. I haven't had my tea."

      "Well, listen then."

      "Who's it from?"

      "My aunt."

      At this point I fell asleep again. I woke to hear him saying:

      "So what on earth am I to do?"

      Jeeves trickled in with the tray, like some silent stream meandering over its mossy bed; and I saw daylight.

      "Read it again, Rocky, old top," I said. "I want Jeeves to hear it. Mr. Todd's aunt has written him a rather rummy letter, Jeeves, and we want your advice."

      "Very good, sir."

      He stood in the middle of the room, registering devotion to the cause, and Rocky started again:

      "MY DEAR ROCKMETTELLER.—I have been thinking things over for a long while, and I have come to the conclusion that I have been very thoughtless to wait so long before doing what I have made up my mind to do now."

      "What do you make of that, Jeeves?"

      "It seems a little obscure at present, sir, but no doubt it becomes cleared at a later point in the communication."

      "It becomes as clear as mud!" said Rocky.

      "Proceed, old scout," I said, champing my bread and butter.

      "You know how all my life I have longed to visit New York and see for myself the wonderful gay life of which I have read so much. I fear that now it will be impossible for me to fulfil my dream. I am old and worn out. I seem to have no strength left in me."

      "Sad, Jeeves, what?"

      "Extremely, sir."

      "Sad nothing!" said Rocky. "It's sheer laziness. I went to see her last Christmas and she was bursting with health. Her doctor told me himself that there was nothing wrong with her whatever. But she will insist that she's a hopeless invalid, so he has to agree with her. She's got a fixed idea that the trip to New York would kill her; so, though it's been her ambition all her life to come here, she stays where she is."

      "Rather like the chappie whose heart was 'in the Highlands a-chasing of the deer,' Jeeves?"

      "The cases are in some respects parallel, sir."

      "Carry on, Rocky, dear boy."

      "So I have decided that, if I cannot enjoy all the marvels of the city myself, I can at least enjoy them through you. I suddenly thought of this yesterday after reading a beautiful poem in the Sunday paper about a young man who had longed all his life for a certain thing and won it in the end only when he was too old to enjoy it. It was very sad, and it touched me."

      "A thing," interpolated Rocky bitterly, "that I've not been able to do in ten years."

      "As you know, you will have my money when I am gone; but until now I have never been able to see my way to giving you an allowance. I have now decided to do so—on one condition. I have written to a firm of lawyers in New York, giving them instructions to pay you quite a substantial sum each month. My one condition is that you live in New York and enjoy yourself as I have always wished to do. I want you to be my representative, to spend this money for me as I should do myself. I want you to plunge into the gay, prismatic life of New York. I want you to be the life and soul of brilliant supper parties.

      "Above all, I want you—indeed, I insist on this—to write me letters at least once a week giving me a full description of all you are doing and all that is going on in the city, so that I may enjoy at second-hand what my wretched health prevents my enjoying for myself. Remember that I shall expect full details, and that no detail is too trivial to interest.—Your affectionate Aunt,

      "ISABEL ROCKMETTELLER."

      "What about it?" said Rocky.

      "What about it?" I said.

      "Yes. What on earth am I going to do?"

      It was only then that I really got on to the extremely rummy attitude of the chappie, in view of the fact that a quite unexpected mess of the right stuff had suddenly descended on him from a blue sky. To my mind it was an occasion for the beaming smile and the joyous whoop; yet here the man was, looking and talking as if Fate had swung on his solar plexus. It amazed me.

      "Aren't you bucked?" I said.

      "Bucked!"

      "If I were in your place I should be frightfully braced. I consider this pretty soft for you."

      He gave a kind of yelp, stared at me for a moment, and then began to talk of New York in a way that reminded me of Jimmy Mundy, the reformer chappie. Jimmy had just come to New York on a hit-the-trail campaign, and I had popped in at the Garden a couple of days before, for half an hour or so, to hear him. He had certainly told New York some pretty straight things about itself, having apparently taken a dislike to the place, but, by Jove, you know, dear old Rocky made him look like a publicity agent for the old metrop.!

      "Pretty soft!" he cried. "To have to come and live in New York! To have to leave my little cottage and take a stuffy, smelly, over-heated hole of an apartment in this Heaven-forsaken, festering Gehenna. To have to mix night after night with a mob who think that life is a sort of St. Vitus's dance, and imagine that they're having a good time because they're making enough noise for six and drinking too much for ten. I loathe New York, Bertie. I wouldn't come near the place if I hadn't got to see editors occasionally. There's a blight on it. It's got