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lawyer successfully defends him in court and the jury decides in
Clarence's favour. The publicity of the trial makes Clarence a famous and fashionable photographer. Mr Mulliner hears of Clarence's success and visits his studio, but finds Clarence listless and moody. Many beautiful women have had him take their picture and he is now tired of seeing beautiful women. In a traffic jam at the top of Whitehall, Clarence sees a girl in another cab. She does not have a conventionally attractive face. Clarence falls in love with her on sight, but soon the traffic jam clears and she disappears. Clarence is upset about losing her, which makes him seem like a more solemn, profound photographer and enhances his prestige further. The doors of Society open to anyone photographed by him. However, Clarence does not care about his fame and only wants to see the girl in the cab again.
315:
Frederick hesitates, but he remembers George's warning about Nurse Wilks's heart, so he obeys and goes into the cupboard. Shortly afterward, Jane is sent into the same cupboard for smoking a cigarette. After they argue more, Jane reveals that she ended their engagement because she knew
Frederick lied to her about having lunch with another woman. Frederick explains that he was buying the woman's Pekingese dog, which Jane had adored, as a surprise gift for Jane. He still has the dog, which is now in his flat. Jane is delighted. She already broke up with Dillingwater, since she did not love him and only got engaged to him to score off Frederick. They happily embrace. From outside the cupboard, Nurse Wilks asks if Frederick will be good now and kiss Jane. Frederick replies that he will do so, and also bravely faces Nurse Wilks's boiled eggs.
352:
Tooting East, who had
Clarence kidnapped. He has given up on having his own photograph taken by Clarence, but insists that Clarence take his daughter's photograph. Clarence breaks free and is also helped by Biggs's daughter, Gladys, who disapproves of her father kidnapping Clarence. Clarence is stunned to see that she is the girl from the cab. She had also seen Clarence in his cab and loves him. Clarence declares that he will take a photograph of her and her father, which makes the mayor sob with joy. Clarence happily retires from commercial photography. Clarence and Gladys's wedding is attended by many important people and they walk out of church under an arch of crossed tripods.
235:"), in order to plead with Angela to marry him even though he is not rich. She is unwilling to marry a poor poet and says she will marry Purvis. She tells the club's hall-porter to throw Lancelot out. Lancelot is dejected, but the stout man with horn-rimmed spectacles from before appears again and knows all about Lancelot's situation because he has read everything in Lancelot's expressive face. The man, Isadore Zinzinheimer, represents a motion picture company in Hollywood and wants to hire Lancelot as an actor since he registers emotion so well. Lancelot no longer loves Angela and happily agrees to go to Hollywood.
311:
the sake of her health, Frederick must agree to do whatever she wants him to, including eat boiled eggs, though
Frederick tries to protest. She has already been visited by George and the Oliphants, who were also looked after by Nurse Wilks as children. Frederick was recently engaged to Jane Oliphant but she ended the engagement without explanation and got engaged to a man named Dillingwater. Frederick arrives at Nurse Wilks's house in Bingley-on-Sea. She initially seems frail, but soon orders Frederick to take off his boots and makes him feel like a small child.
273:
hall-porter at the hotel he is staying at suggests he get a drink at a local establishment called Mike's Place. William, until now a teetotaler, follows the hall-porter's advice. He ends up drinking too much and gets thrown out after starting a fight. He falls asleep outside a boarding house for theatrical performers. When he wakes up, he looks inside and sees some unusually small men eating a meal. William, unaware that these men belong to a performing group called Murphy's
Midgets, believes he is hallucinating due to the alcohol.
227:
little money. While they are dancing, Lancelot says he wants to marry her. Angela admires
Lancelot's excellent dancing, but her father wants her to marry someone wealthy, so she is thinking of marrying Slingsby Purvis, of Purvis's Liquid Dinner Glue. Hooping to get a job from his uncle, Lancelot writes a poem praising Briggs's pickles for advertising. Lancelot goes to his uncle's Putney house and reads his poem to his uncle. The poem, titled "Darkling (A Threnody)", is extremely somber, and Briggs has his butler throw Lancelot out.
696:
277:
from the exposed hallway and is surprised that he is still in bed. He tells her he noticed the walls falling at night and went to sleep anyway. She calls him the bravest man in the world. She already ended her engagement to
Franklyn, who hastily fled when the earthquake started without stopping to help Myrtle. William and Myrtle get married, and name their first son John San Francisco Earthquake Mulliner.
310:
Frederick
Mulliner's brother, Dr George Mulliner, wants Frederick to visit their old nanny, 85-year-old Nurse Wilks. Frederick is reluctant, remembering how she once shut him up in a cupboard for stealing jam. George remarks that she is still inclined to be autocratic. However, her heart is weak. For
272:
William
Mulliner loves Myrtle Banks, but she is impressed with the bravery of William's rival, Desmond Franklyn, who claims to have killed sharks and lions. She and Franklyn get engaged. William tries to argue that Franklyn is cruel to animals, but Myrtle is not swayed. William is disappointed, and a
264:
An
American gentleman visits the Angler's Rest. He speaks highly of California, where he is from. Mr Mulliner remarks that California is fine except for the earthquakes. The American asserts that California is perfect and free of earthquakes. Mr Mulliner argues the contrary, and says that his uncle,
226:
Mr Mulliner's nephew Lancelot Bassington Mulliner wants to be a poet, though Lancelot's maternal uncle Jeremiah Biggs, the proprietor of Briggs' Breakfast Pickles, wants him to work in the pickle business. Lancelot falls in love with Angela, the beautiful daughter of the Earl of Biddlecombe, who has
222:
A man at the Angler's Rest recounts how his dog won a prize after being mistakenly entered in a local cat show, and notes how mistakes can lead to unexpected good results. Mulliner is inspired to tell the following story, which he claims also shows that you can never tell what will happen in the end
347:
The mayor of Tooting East, Jno. Horatio Biggs, O.B.E., wants aspiring photographer Clarence Mulliner to take his photograph. However, the mayor is ugly and Clarence refuses to take his picture. Clarence makes Biggs leave his studio by prodding him with a tripod, for which Biggs sues him. Clarence's
351:
One night, he is visited by a man with a black mask who claims to be a British agent and asks Clarence to come with him to take a photograph of an important visiting dignitary. Clarence follows him but is kidnapped and tied up. The man in the mask was actually the secretary of Biggs, the Mayor of
276:
Back at his hotel, William goes to bed. He sees a part of the ceiling fall and hears shouts and crashes, but assumes he is still hallucinating. He falls asleep, and when he wakes up, he sees that the room has in fact largely fallen apart. Myrtle, who was staying at the same hotel, notices William
230:
Lancelot goes to Lord Biddlecombe's residence in Berkeley Square, and asks for Biddlecombe's consent to marry her daughter. Biddlecombe sells some things to Lancelot to make some money, then has his butler throw Lancelot out. A stout man with horn-rimmed spectacles tries to talk to Lancelot, but
314:
To Frederick's surprise, Jane Oliphant is at the house. Frederick and Jane argue with each other. Nurse Wilks tells Frederick to apologize to Jane and give her a kiss. He apologizes though he refuses to kiss her. Nurse Wilks orders him to go into the cupboard and stay there until he is good.
699:
22:
65:, who narrates all nine of the book's stories. The last story, "Honeysuckle Cottage", was not originally a Mr. Mulliner story; it was given a Mulliner frame for the book, and is the only one of the stories which is not explicitly narrated from the bar-parlour of the
306:
Mr Mulliner, just returned from visiting his old nanny, remarks that a nanny will always view a boy she looked after as a boy even after he becomes an adult. He tells the following story about his nephew, Frederick Mulliner.
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as Mr Mulliner, including "The Truth About George", "Mulliner's Buck-U-Uppo", "A Slice of Life", "The Bishop's Move", "Came the Dawn", and "Honeysuckle Cottage".
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Lancelot ignores him. Having been unsuccessful with Biggs and Biddlecombe, Lancelot heads to Angela's club, the Junior Lipstick Club (also mentioned in "
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269:. He tells the following story about his uncle's experience, despite the American insisting that what happened in 1906 was only a fire.
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466:"The Truth About George", "Mulliner's Buck-U-Uppo", and "Portrait of a Disciplinarian" were adapted for television in the series
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Mr Mulliner is inspired by a photograph in an illustrated weekly paper to tell the following tale about his cousin Clarence.
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439:, published by Barrie & Jenkins in June 1972 and issued in the US in 1974 by the Taplinger Publishing Company.
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416:"The Truth about George", "A Slice of Life", and "Mulliner's Buck-U-Uppo" were included in the 1932 collection
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and published in New York by Doubleday, Doran & Company. The same three stories were also included in
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435:, published in October 1935 by Herbert Jenkins Limited. They were also included in
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Multiple Mulliner stories were adapted for radio from 2002 and 2004 with
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and published by Ticknor & Fields, New York. It was printed in the
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McIlvaine (1990), pp. 150–151, D36.7–9, D36.26–27, D36.29, D36.31–32.
442:"The Romance of a Bulb-Squeezer" was included in the 1981 collection
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All the stories, except "Honeysuckle Cottage", were illustrated by
46:. The short stories were originally published in magazines, mainly
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Wodehouse dedicated the book "To the Earl of Oxford and Asquith" (
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McIlvaine, Eileen; Sherby, Louise S.; Heineman, James H. (1990).
21:
38:. First published in the United Kingdom on 27 September 1927 by
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428:, published in October 1960 by Simon and Schuster, New York.
318:
634:
P. G. Wodehouse: A Comprehensive Bibliography and Checklist
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McIlvaine (1990), p. 185, D133.127–129, D131–134, D136–137.
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61:
The collection introduces the irrepressible pub raconteur
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499:(1933) – Two other collections of Mulliner stories
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503:Complete list of Wodehouse's Mr. Mulliner stories
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168:
223:and that it is always darkest before the dawn.
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42:, and in the United States on 2 March 1928 by
16:1927 short story collection by P. G. Wodehouse
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677:An omnibus collection of Mr. Mulliner stories
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603:"BBC Genome (Mr Mulliner episode listings)"
2397:Short story collections by P. G. Wodehouse
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1758:The Eighteen-Carat Kid and Other Stories
431:All of the stories were included in the
248:, 9 April 1927 (as "It Was Only a Fire")
20:
2412:Novels and short stories set in taverns
2384:
2355:Jeeves and Wooster in Perfect Nonsense
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523:
385:
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34:is a collection of short stories by
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636:. New York: James H. Heineman Inc.
583:McIlvaine (1990), pp. 125–126, B23.
565:McIlvaine (1990), pp. 120–121, B12.
520:
13:
574:McIlvaine (1990), pp. 115–116, B5.
556:McIlvaine (1990), pp. 113–114, B2.
265:William Mulliner, experienced the
14:
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529:McIlvaine (1990), pp. 53–54, A38.
740:
694:
592:McIlvaine (1990), p. 153, D46.1.
319:"The Romance of a Bulb-Squeezer"
233:The Reverent Wooing of Archibald
1675:Blandings Castle and Elsewhere
1543:Pearls, Girls and Monty Bodkin
789:Blandings Castle and Elsewhere
595:
586:
577:
568:
559:
550:
541:
532:
461:
281:"Portrait of a Disciplinarian"
1:
1786:Tales of Wrykyn and Elsewhere
656:The Russian Wodehouse Society
267:1906 San Francisco earthquake
2392:1927 short story collections
1751:The Swoop! and Other Stories
1438:Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit
1354:Uncle Fred in the Springtime
7:
854:The Fiery Wooing of Mordred
817:The Rise of Minna Nordstrom
704:public domain audiobook at
482:
426:The Most of P. G. Wodehouse
75:
10:
2428:
1591:The Man with Two Left Feet
2331:
2304:
2245:
2010:
2003:
1971:
1932:
1795:
1737:The Uncollected Wodehouse
1726:
1566:
1065:
1009:
976:
847:The Code of the Mulliners
780:
748:
437:The World of Mr. Mulliner
2083:The Clicking of Cuthbert
1696:Eggs, Beans and Crumpets
1689:Lord Emsworth and Others
1612:The Clicking of Cuthbert
1515:Do Butlers Burgle Banks?
1347:The Code of the Woosters
879:Eggs, Beans and Crumpets
863:Lord Emsworth and Others
840:Archibald and the Masses
141:"Mulliner's Buck-U-Uppo"
81:"The Truth about George"
1853:The Girl Behind the Gun
1605:Indiscretions of Archie
1487:Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves
1326:The Luck of the Bodkins
1228:The Adventures of Sally
1109:Love Among the Chickens
1095:William Tell Told Again
749:Short story collections
2407:Doubleday, Doran books
2262:The World of Wodehouse
2131:The Passionate Plumber
2075:A Gentleman of Leisure
2019:A Gentleman of Leisure
1557:Aunts Aren't Gentlemen
1522:A Pelican at Blandings
1144:A Gentleman of Leisure
886:Anselm Gets His Chance
810:The Juice of an Orange
509:References and sources
239:"The Story of William"
163:Mulliner's Buck-U-Uppo
107:The Truth about George
26:
2402:Herbert Jenkins books
2195:Thunder and Lightning
1619:The Inimitable Jeeves
1577:Tales of St. Austin's
1123:Not George Washington
490:Mr. Mulliner Speaking
418:Nothing But Wodehouse
364:Saturday Evening Post
356:"Honeysuckle Cottage"
24:
2363:A Damsel in Distress
2254:The World of Wooster
2219:The Girl on the Boat
2187:A Damsel in Distress
2091:The Golden Butterfly
2051:The Prince and Betty
2035:A Damsel in Distress
1941:The Play's the Thing
1916:The Three Musketeers
1654:Mr Mulliner Speaking
1536:Much Obliged, Jeeves
1501:Galahad at Blandings
1480:Service with a Smile
1466:Jeeves in the Offing
1221:The Girl on the Boat
1200:A Damsel in Distress
1158:The Prince and Betty
764:Mr Mulliner Speaking
2270:Wodehouse Playhouse
2203:Her Cardboard Lover
2179:Step Lively, Jeeves
2107:The Cardboard Lover
1980:Bring On the Girls!
1744:Sunset at Blandings
1640:The Heart of a Goof
1550:Bachelors Anonymous
1417:Barmy in Wonderland
781:Other short stories
652:"Meet Mr. Mulliner"
469:Wodehouse Playhouse
386:Publication history
380:Honeysuckle Cottage
290:, 24 September 1927
169:"The Bishop's Move"
49:The Strand Magazine
2278:Jeeves and Wooster
2171:Thank You, Jeeves!
2099:The Small Bachelor
2067:Their Mutual Child
1955:Leave It to Psmith
1948:Good Morning, Bill
1804:The Beauty of Bath
1682:Young Men in Spats
1473:Ice in the Bedroom
1375:Joy in the Morning
1256:The Small Bachelor
1242:Bill the Conqueror
1235:Leave It to Psmith
1207:The Coming of Bill
1172:Psmith, Journalist
1151:Psmith in the City
902:The Right Approach
833:Young Men in Spats
458:in February 1988.
452:Northwest Airlines
444:Wodehouse On Crime
150:, 4 September 1926
27:
25:First edition (UK)
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1661:Very Good, Jeeves
1508:Company for Henry
1403:The Mating Season
1368:Money in the Bank
1312:Thank You, Jeeves
1263:Money for Nothing
1214:Jill the Reckless
1165:The Little Nugget
1116:The White Feather
1102:The Head of Kay's
1081:A Prefect's Uncle
936:
935:
925:George and Alfred
686:Meet Mr. Mulliner
643:978-0-87008-125-5
477:Richard Griffiths
367:, 24 January 1925
191:The Bishop's Move
113:"A Slice of Life"
31:Meet Mr. Mulliner
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2147:Summer Lightning
2008:
2007:
1888:The Beauty Prize
1881:The Cabaret Girl
1846:Oh, Lady! Lady!!
1832:The Riviera Girl
1825:Leave It to Jane
1710:A Few Quick Ones
1647:Meet Mr Mulliner
1633:Carry On, Jeeves
1584:The Man Upstairs
1529:The Girl in Blue
1410:The Old Reliable
1340:Summer Moonshine
1319:Right Ho, Jeeves
1270:Summer Lightning
1022:Blandings Castle
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895:A Few Quick Ones
757:Meet Mr Mulliner
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701:Meet Mr Mulliner
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690:Internet Archive
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185:, September 1927
178:, 20 August 1927
44:Doubleday, Doran
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1987:Performing Flea
1972:Autobiographies
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1962:Come On, Jeeves
1928:
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1703:Nothing Serious
1668:Mulliner Nights
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1452:Something Fishy
1431:Ring for Jeeves
1424:Pigs Have Wings
1179:Something Fresh
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796:Monkey Business
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392:Charles Crombie
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374:, February 1925
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335:, 12 March 1927
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197:"Came the Dawn"
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157:, November 1926
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135:A Slice of Life
129:, 7 August 1926
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40:Herbert Jenkins
36:P. G. Wodehouse
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2073:
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2041:
2033:
2027:Uneasy Money
2025:
2017:
1994:Over Seventy
1992:
1985:
1978:
1960:
1953:
1946:
1939:
1921:
1914:
1907:
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1867:Oh, My Dear!
1865:
1860:Kissing Time
1858:
1851:
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1816:
1809:
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1777:
1770:
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1727:Posthumously
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1708:
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1445:French Leave
1443:
1436:
1429:
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1401:
1394:
1389:Spring Fever
1387:
1380:
1373:
1366:
1359:
1352:
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1338:
1333:Laughing Gas
1331:
1324:
1317:
1310:
1303:
1296:
1291:Doctor Sally
1289:
1282:
1275:
1268:
1261:
1254:
1247:
1240:
1233:
1226:
1219:
1212:
1205:
1198:
1191:
1186:Uneasy Money
1184:
1177:
1170:
1163:
1156:
1149:
1142:
1135:
1128:
1121:
1114:
1107:
1100:
1093:
1088:The Gold Bat
1086:
1079:
1072:
1037:Mr. Mulliner
981:Bibliography
916:
909:Big Business
893:
877:
861:
831:
787:
769:
762:
756:
755:
742:Mr. Mulliner
700:
659:. Retrieved
655:
633:
611:. Retrieved
606:
597:
588:
579:
570:
561:
552:
543:
534:
494:
488:
474:
467:
465:
455:
448:D. R. Bensen
446:, edited by
443:
441:
436:
432:
430:
425:
420:, edited by
417:
415:
408:
403:
395:
389:
377:
371:
362:
350:
346:
343:
332:
328:, March 1927
325:
313:
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305:
294:
287:
275:
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188:
182:
175:
160:
154:
147:
132:
126:
119:
104:
96:
87:
70:public house
63:Mr. Mulliner
60:
53:
47:
30:
29:
28:
18:
2350:(1975/1996)
2004:Adaptations
1772:Plum Stones
1569:collections
1567:Short story
1047:Drones Club
493:(1929) and
472:(1974–78).
462:Adaptations
213:, July 1927
92:, July 1926
58:in the US.
2386:Categories
2246:Television
1130:The Swoop!
1032:Uncle Fred
991:Characters
803:The Nodder
613:3 December
607:BBC Genome
514:References
422:Ogden Nash
255:, May 1927
2346:By Jeeves
2324:(1985–92)
2321:Blandings
2316:(1973–81)
2297:(2013–14)
2294:Blandings
2281:(1990–93)
2273:(1975–78)
2265:(1967–68)
2257:(1965–67)
2227:By Jeeves
1902:Show Boat
1839:Miss 1917
1382:Full Moon
1298:Hot Water
1277:Big Money
996:Locations
456:Northwest
454:magazine
398:, and by
2115:Oh, Kay!
1895:Oh, Kay!
1818:Oh, Boy!
1796:Musicals
1717:Plum Pie
918:Plum Pie
706:LibriVox
483:See also
76:Contents
2344:(later
1909:Rosalie
1626:Ukridge
1052:Ukridge
626:Sources
404:Liberty
394:in the
333:Liberty
288:Liberty
246:Liberty
204:Liberty
176:Liberty
148:Liberty
127:Liberty
98:Liberty
55:Liberty
2366:(2015)
2358:(2013)
2340:Jeeves
2289:(1995)
2238:(2004)
2230:(2001)
2222:(1961)
2214:(1956)
2206:(1942)
2198:(1938)
2190:(1937)
2182:(1937)
2174:(1936)
2166:(1936)
2158:(1936)
2150:(1933)
2142:(1933)
2134:(1932)
2126:(1932)
2118:(1928)
2110:(1927)
2102:(1927)
2094:(1926)
2086:(1924)
2078:(1923)
2070:(1920)
2062:(1920)
2054:(1919)
2046:(1919)
2038:(1919)
2030:(1918)
2022:(1915)
1066:Novels
1027:Psmith
1017:Jeeves
1010:Series
661:4 July
640:
396:Strand
372:Strand
326:Strand
295:Strand
253:Strand
211:Strand
183:Strand
155:Strand
120:Strand
89:Strand
2332:Stage
2305:Radio
1933:Plays
1874:Sally
1001:Songs
609:. BBC
378:See "
189:See "
161:See "
133:See "
105:See "
2011:Film
1137:Mike
663:2005
638:ISBN
615:2019
370:UK:
361:US:
340:Plot
331:US:
324:UK:
302:Plot
293:UK:
286:US:
260:Plot
251:UK:
244:US:
218:Plot
209:UK:
202:US:
181:UK:
174:US:
153:UK:
146:US:
125:US:
118:UK:
95:US:
86:UK:
679:at
413:).
402:in
382:".
193:".
165:".
137:".
109:".
2388::
654:.
605:.
522:^
406:.
72:.
2348:)
962:e
955:t
948:v
927:"
923:"
911:"
907:"
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900:"
888:"
884:"
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868:"
856:"
852:"
849:"
845:"
842:"
838:"
826:"
822:"
819:"
815:"
812:"
808:"
805:"
801:"
798:"
794:"
734:e
727:t
720:v
665:.
646:.
617:.
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.