- The Reverent Wooing of Archibald
"The Reverent Wooing of Archibald" is a
short story by British comic writerP. G. Wodehouse , being a part of theMr Mulliner series and related to theDrones Club series. It features Archibald Mulliner , the sock collector who can mimic a hen laying an egg, and his love Aurelia Cammarleigh . Its was first published in the August 1928 issue of UK literary magazine "Strand", and first appeared in the U.S. in the September 1928 issue of "Cosmopolitan". It was collected in the 1929 book "Mr Mulliner Speaking ". A TV adaptation was aired onBBC One 's "Comedy Playhouse " in 1974.Overview
"The Reverent Wooing of Archibald" is the first of three Archibald-and-Aurelia short stories told by
Mr Mulliner , about his nephewArchibald Mulliner and his love forAurelia Cammarleigh . The two next are "Archibald and the Masses" and "The Code of the Mulliners", both collected in "Young Men in Spats " (1936)"The Reverent Wooing of Archibald" has been adapted on TV by
BBC One for the sitcom anthology "Comedy Playhouse ", as an homonymous 30 minutes episode, aired 9 July 1974Cite web
author = Lewisohn, Mark
date = 2003
title = "BBC.co.uk Guide to Comedy: The Reverent Wooing Of Archibald"
work = Radio Times Guide to Television Comedy
url = http://www.bbc.co.uk/comedy/guide/articles/r/reverentwooingof_1299002630.shtml
archiveurl = http://webcitation.org/query?date=2007-08-13&url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/comedy/guide/articles/r/reverentwooingof_1299002630.shtml
archivedate = 2007-08-13.Plot summary
As it nears closing-time at the
Angler's Rest , several drinkers discuss changing trends in modern society, especially concerning the proportions and personality of young women. Four men, identified by their drinks – a Gin-and-Ginger-Ale, a Draught Stout, a Small Bass, and a Double-Whisky-and-Splash – conclude that the reason for the disappearance of the "dignified, queenly type of girl" cannot be discovered or understood.Mr Mulliner , drinking a hotScotch and lemon, interrupts to disagree with his companions, conjecturing that, because young men had such fear of proposing to queenly women, their disappearance was Nature's method of ensuring that they continued to propagage. He had become convinced that this was the case upon observing the behavior of his nephewArchibald Mulliner when he was in love withAurelia Cammarleigh .Archibald first saw Miss Cammarleigh from out the window of the
Drones Club and, though he immediately fell in love, he was careful to mask his feelings when enquiring of a fellow Drone,Algy Wymondham-Wymondham , whether he knew her. Algy does, and informs Archibald of her name as well as her family circumstances: she lives in Park Street with a "potty" aunt, who believes thatFrancis Bacon wrote the plays attributed toWilliam Shakespeare .Archibald departs to buy socks and contemplate whether Aurelia would be attracted to him. He concludes that his primary talent, a masterful impression of a hen laying an egg, is insufficient; indeed, he becomes convinced that she would be put off by such a vulgar display. Consequently, when he first meets her at Ascot several weeks thereafter, he denies vehemently the ability to do the impression.
References
; Sources consulted
* Cite web
author = Kuzmenko, Michel (The Russian Wodehouse Society)
date =2007-07-25 revision
title = "Wodehouse books: Mr. Mulliner Speaking"
work = Bibliography
url = http://wodehouse.ru/41.htm
archiveurl = http://webcitation.org/query?date=2007-08-13&url=http://wodehouse.ru/41.htm
archivedate = 2007-08-13 – Years, covers, characters.
* Cite web
author = Reggie
date =2007-07-08 revision
title = "Wodehouse Stories: The Reverent Wooing of Archibald"
work = Blandings, a Companion to the Works of P. G. Wodehouse
url = http://www.blandings.org.uk/short/Reverent_Wooing.htm
archiveurl = http://webcitation.org/query?date=2007-08-13&url=http://www.blandings.org.uk/short/Reverent_Wooing.htm
archivedate = 2007-08-13 – Plot, notes, quotes.
* Cite book
author = Wodehouse, P. G.
year = 1929
chapter = The Reverent Wooing of Archibald
title = Mr Mulliner Speaking
location = New York
publisher = The Overlook Press
pages = page 9–30
id = ISBN 1-58567-659-4; Endnotes
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