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instantly moved, and feels he has wronged Jeeves. Jeeves adds that a second incident occurred during the night: while in Bertie's bed, Sir
Roderick's hot water bottle was pierced by Tuppy, who thought Bertie was in the bed. As a joke, Bobbie had suggested this idea to Tuppy, after she had suggested the idea to Bertie. Bertie is stunned by Bobbie's betrayal, and does not love her anymore. To avoid Sir Roderick and Aunt Agatha, Jeeves suggests that Bertie go to Monte Carlo, since Jeeves already booked accommodations there and forgot to cancel them. Bertie agrees.
481:'festives'. Please print this as two words 'festive s.', – 'festive' one word, 's' another. Bertie occasionally clips his words, so that when he means 'festive season' he says 'festive s.' This is quite clear, isn't it? 'Festive' one word, 's' another?" And so the book has come out with the thing printed as 'festives'. I see now that I didn't make it clear enough.
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occupant of the bed, who, to Bertie's surprise, is not Tuppy, but Sir
Roderick Glossop. Angry, Sir Roderick tells Bertie that he and Tuppy had changed rooms. He had asked Jeeves to tell this to Bertie. Bertie feels betrayed by Jeeves. His bed ruined, Sir Roderick leaves to sleep in Bertie's bed instead. Defeated, Bertie sleeps on an armchair.
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At
Skeldings Hall, Bertie encounters Lady Wickham, her daughter Bobbie Wickham, and Sir Roderick Glossop, who is surprisingly cordial to Bertie. Bertie sees that Jeeves is upset about missing Monte Carlo, and explains his three reasons for coming to Skeldings: first, there is more Yule-tide spirit in
253:
Bertie wakes to see Jeeves standing with tea. Jeeves greets him, "Merry
Christmas, sir!". When asked, Jeeves confesses he knew about Tuppy's room change, but had allowed Bertie's plan to proceed in order to ruin any chance of Glossop approving a marriage between his daughter and Bertie. Bertie is
233:
while he is asleep. Jeeves objects, but Bertie insists that Jeeves prepare the stick and needle. Jeeves informs Bertie where Tuppy sleeps. At half-past two on
Christmas morning, Bertie sneaks into Tuppy's room and punctures the hot water bottle. Then the door loudly falls shut, which wakes the
297:"It seemed to me that even at Christmas-time, with all the peace on earth and goodwill towards men that there is knocking about at that season, a reunion with this bloke was likely to be tough going": refers to "Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men" in
304:"my view was that it practically amounted to the lion lying down with the lamb": refers to "The wolf also shall dwell with the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the kid; and the calf and the young lion and the fatling together; and a little child shall lead them" in
376:"I shook off the mists of sleep": refers to "A glorious voice sounds through the night, And chides the darkness into light: The mists of sleep are driv'n afar, And Christ shines forth the Morning Star" in the traditional hymn "A Glorious Voice Sounds Through The Night".
221:
swimming pool; third, Bertie is in love with Bobbie. Jeeves says that Bobbie, though a charming young lady, is too volatile and frivolous for Bertie. Jeeves also believes that Bobbie's vivid red hair is a dangerous sign. Bertie dismisses Jeeves's concerns.
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Lady
Wickham has invited Bertie to her home, Skeldings Hall, for Christmas. Bertie and Jeeves had originally planned to go to Monte Carlo, but Bertie takes up Lady Wickham's invitation, which disappoints Jeeves. Bertie's
520:
The episode does not take place during
Christmas. Instead, Bertie tries to impress Bobbie during the annual Drones Club golf tournament, where Bertie faces off against Barmy Fotheringay-Phipps, who uses an illegal golf
362:"she was suggesting the ripest, fruitiest, brainiest scheme for bringing young Tuppy's grey hairs in sorrow to the grave": refers to "then shall ye bring down my grey hairs with sorrow to the grave" in
524:
In the episode there is no mention of the Drones Club pool incident, and Bertie does not want to get revenge on Tuppy; instead, he wants revenge on Barmy for defeating him with an illegal golf club.
290:"Honoria … had a laugh like waves breaking on a stern and rock-bound coast": refers to "The breaking waves dashed high on a stern and rock-bound coast" in "The Landing of the Pilgrim Fathers", by
266:"As Shakespeare says, if you’re going to do a thing you might just as well pop right at it and get it over": refers to "If it were done when 'tis done, then 'twere well it were done quickly" in
527:
In the original story Jeeves was not informed in advance of Tuppy's intentions to use a darning needle and stick like Bertie; in the episode, Barmy asks Jeeves for a darning needle and stick.
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355:"bringing myself out wreathed in blushes": refers to "Dimly gleaming Dian's horn Sinketh westward faintly fair, Soon will haste the opal morn Wreathed in blushes debonair" in "Serenades" by
379:"It was only by summoning up all the old bull-dog courage of the Woosters": refers to "Now, England, now thy bull-dog courage show" in "The Battle of Fontenoy": a historical poem, by
369:"one would occasionally heave a jug of water over another bloke during the night-watches": refers to "When I remember thee upon my bed, and meditate on thee in the night watches" in
342:"And then I found that this fiend in human shape had looped it back against the rail": refers to "Oh! that fiend in human shape, next to her, knew human—female—nature well" in
493:. "Festives" appears in the 2008 Arrow Books (British) edition: "'We have here a communication from Lady Wickham. She has written inviting me to Skeldings for the festives.'"
239:"You mean to say that, after she had put me up to the scheme of puncturing Tuppy's hot-water bottle, she went away and tipped Tuppy off to puncturing mine?"
859:
477:
In one place I had written 'festive s.', meaning 'festive season', & they printed it 'festives'. So I wrote on the margin of the galley as follows: – "
262:
Wodehouse invariably has Bertie
Wooster using – or misusing – many literary and Biblical allusions. In this short story, Bertie makes these references:
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393:"had let me rush upon my doom": perhaps refers to "O then like those, who clench their nerves to rush Upon their dissolution" in "Love and Duty" by
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Skeldings; second, Bertie wants to get revenge on Tuppy
Glossop, Sir Roderick's nephew, because Tuppy once tricked him into falling into the
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335:"I have it in for that man of wrath": refers to "A man of wrath stirs up strife, and a man given to anger causes much transgression" in
324:
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The story's title is sometimes written as "Jeeves and the Yule-Tide Spirit" or "Jeeves and the
Yuletide Spirit". It was illustrated by
311:"And now that there has been a change of programme the iron has entered into your soul": refers to "The iron entered into his soul" in
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for playing a trick on him, and Bobbie suggests a scheme involving a long stick, a darning needle, and a hot water bottle.
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516:", the second episode of the first series, which first aired on 29 April 1990. There are some changes in plot, including:
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Bertie Wooster's tendency to abbreviate words caused confusion with printers when this story was printed in
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in the United States that same month. The story was also included as the third story in the 1930 collection
279:"Makes him realise that life is stern and life is earnest": refers to "Life is real! Life is earnest!" in "
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Later, Bertie tells Jeeves that Bobbie proposed a clever scheme for his revenge. Bertie will tie a large
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will also be there, and Aunt Agatha has convinced him to give Bertie another chance to demonstrate that
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There is no mention of Monte Carlo in the episode; instead, Jeeves disapproves of Bertie's
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Sir Roderick Glossop does not appear in the episode. He is replaced by a Romanian couple.
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calls and tells Bertie to behave himself at Skeldings, since Lady Wickham is her friend.
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to the end of a long stick, then sneak into Tuppy's room at night and puncture Tuppy's
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Full text of "Jeeves and the Yule-Tide Spirit" at HathiTrust Digital Library
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188:, though Jeeves has misgivings about her. Bertie wants to get revenge on
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241:"Precisely, sir. She is a young lady with a keen sense of humour, sir."
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McIlvaine, Eileen; Sherby, Louise S.; Heineman, James H. (1990).
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In the story, Bertie has fallen in love with the mischievous
774:
P. G. Wodehouse: A Comprehensive Bibliography and Checklist
550:
in front of an invited theatre audience was first aired on
546:
A reading of "Jeeves and the Yule-tide Spirit" by actor
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McIlvaine (1990), p. 151, E36.33, and p. 185, E133.138.
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McIlvaine (1990), pp. 113–114, B2a, and p. 118, B8a.
485:"Festives" was used for the 1930 British edition of
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652:Wodehouse, P. G. (2013). Ratcliffe, Sophie (ed.).
248:— Bertie and Jeeves discuss Bobbie's betrayal
1095:Works originally published in The Strand Magazine
633:McIlvaine (1990), p. 120, B11a, and p. 124, B19a.
473:of the book, stating in his letter to Bennett:
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169:in the United Kingdom in December 1927, and in
716:"Jeeves Live: Jeeves and the Yule-tide Spirit"
431:The story was included in the 1932 collection
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447:, published 1978, also featured the story.
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846:
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691:"Jeeves and Wooster Series 1, Episode 2"
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452:The Fireside Treasury of Modern Humor
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894:The Inferiority Complex of Old Sippy
680:Wodehouse (2008) , chapter 3, p. 63.
597:Wodehouse (2008) , chapter 3, p. 82.
588:Wodehouse (2008) , chapter 3, p. 85.
465:. Wodehouse wrote in August 1930 to
243:I sat there, you might say stunned.
124:The Inferiority Complex of Old Sippy
776:. New York: James H. Heineman Inc.
751:A Brief Guide to Jeeves and Wooster
441:Selected Stories by P. G. Wodehouse
155:, and features the young gentleman
654:P. G. Wodehouse: A Life in Letters
469:about a mistake he noticed in the
18:Short story by P. G. Wodehouse
14:
24:"Jeeves and the Yule-tide Spirit"
1090:Short stories by P. G. Wodehouse
615:McIlvaine (1990), p. 159, D61.2.
506:This story was adapted into the
422:. It appeared in the periodical
325:Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
129:
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901:Jeeves and the Yule-tide Spirit
258:Literary and Biblical allusions
149:Jeeves and the Yule-tide Spirit
943:Jeeves and the Old School Chum
798:(Reprinted ed.). London:
642:McIlvaine (1990), p. 196, E77.
1:
929:Jeeves and the Kid Clementina
887:Jeeves and the Impending Doom
458:in 1963, included the story.
435:, and in the 1949 collection
163:. The story was published in
1035:Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit
908:Jeeves and the Song of Songs
558:series on 17 December 2017.
136:Jeeves and the Song of Songs
915:Episode of the Dog McIntosh
834:and the stories it includes
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658:W. W. Norton & Company
292:Elizabeth Barrett Browning
285:Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
211:he is not mentally unsound
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957:The Ordeal of Young Tuppy
950:Indian Summer of an Uncle
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443:, published in 1958, and
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1007:The Code of the Woosters
755:Constable & Robinson
579:Cawthorne (2013), p. 74.
186:Roberta "Bobbie" Wickham
1049:Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves
272:, Act I, scene vii, by
1063:Aunts Aren't Gentlemen
936:The Love That Purifies
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350:Baroness Emmuska Orczy
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151:" is a short story by
972:The Inimitable Jeeves
514:Tuppy and the Terrier
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437:The Best of Wodehouse
433:Nothing But Wodehouse
381:William Joseph Corbet
345:The Scarlet Pimpernel
1056:Much Obliged, Jeeves
1042:Jeeves in the Offing
695:British Comedy Guide
660:. pp. 207–208.
395:Alfred Lord Tennyson
207:Sir Roderick Glossop
402:Publication history
357:Samuel Minturn Peck
274:William Shakespeare
166:The Strand Magazine
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1014:Joy in the Morning
509:Jeeves and Wooster
456:Simon and Schuster
439:. The collections
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1021:The Mating Season
993:Thank You, Jeeves
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1079:Categories
753:. London:
700:5 November
562:References
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502:Television
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512:episode "
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542:Radio
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