Love Among the Chickens P. G. Wodehouse (ink ebook reader .txt) đ
- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
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âBut not enough, Garny old man. We arenât making our presence felt. England isnât ringing with our name. We sell a dozen eggs where we ought to be selling them by the hundred, carting them off in trucks for the London market and congesting the traffic. Harrodâs and Whiteleyâs and the rest of them are beginning to get on their hind legs and talk. Thatâs what theyâre doing. Devilish unpleasant theyâre making themselves. You see, laddie, thereâs no denying itâ âwe did touch them for the deuce of a lot of things on account, and they agreed to take it out in eggs. All theyâve done so far is to take it out in apologetic letters from Millie. Now, I donât suppose thereâs a woman alive who can write a better apologetic letter than her nibs, but, if youâre broad-minded and can face facts, you canât help seeing that the juiciest apologetic letter is not an egg. I mean to say, look at it from their point of view. Harrodâ âor Whiteleyâ âcomes into his store in the morning, rubbing his hands expectantly. âWell,â he says, âhow many eggs from Combe Regis today?â And instead of leading him off to a corner piled up with bursting crates, they show him a four-page letter telling him itâll all come right in the future. Iâve never run a store myself, but I should think that would jar a chap. Anyhow, the blighters seem to be getting tired of waiting.â
âThe last letter from Harrodâs was quite pathetic,â said Mrs. Ukridge sadly.
I had a vision of an eggless London. I seemed to see homes rendered desolate and lives embittered by the slump, and millionaires bidding against one another for the few rare specimens which Ukridge had actually managed to despatch to Brompton and Bayswater.
Ukridge, having induced himself to be broad-minded for five minutes, now began to slip back to his own personal point of view and became once more the man with a grievance. His fleeting sympathy with the wrongs of Mr. Harrod and Mr. Whiteley disappeared.
âWhat it all amounts to,â he said complainingly, âis that theyâre infernally unreasonable. Iâve done everything possible to meet them. Nothing could have been more manly and straightforward than my attitude. I told them in my last letter but three that I proposed to let them have the eggs on the Times instalment system, and they said I was frivolous. They said that to send thirteen eggs as payment for goods supplied to the value of ÂŁ25 1s. 8Âœd. was mere trifling. Trifling, Iâll trouble you! Thatâs the spirit in which they meet my suggestions. It was Harrod who did that. Iâve never met Harrod personally, but Iâd like to, just to ask him if thatâs his idea of cementing amiable business relations. He knows just as well as anyone else that without credit commerce has no elasticity. Itâs an elementary rule. Iâll bet heâd have been sick if chappies had refused to let him have tick when he was starting his store. Do you suppose Harrod, when he started in business, paid cash down on the nail for everything? Not a bit of it. He went about taking people by the coat-button and asking them to be good chaps and wait till Wednesday week. Trifling! Why, those thirteen eggs were absolutely all we had over after Mrs. Beale had taken what she wanted for the kitchen. As a matter of fact, if itâs anybodyâs fault, itâs Mrs. Bealeâs. That woman literally eats eggs.â
âThe habit is not confined to her,â I said.
âWell, what I mean to say is, she seems to bathe in them.â
âShe says she needs so many for puddings, dear,â said Mrs. Ukridge. âI spoke to her about it yesterday. And of course, we often have omelettes.â
âShe canât make omelettes without breaking eggs,â I urged.
âShe canât make them without breaking us, dammit,â said Ukridge. âOne or two more omelettes, and weâre done for. No fortune on earth could stand it. We mustnât have any more omelettes, Millie. We must economise. Millions of people get on all right without omelettes. I suppose there are families where, if you suddenly produced an omelette, the whole strength of the company would get up and cheer, led by father. Cancel the omelettes, old girl, from now onward.â
âYes, dear. Butâ ââ
âWell?â
âI donât think Mrs. Beale would like that very much, dear. She has been complaining a good deal about chicken at every meal. She says that the omelettes are the only things that give her a chance. She says there are always possibilities in an omelette.â
âIn short,â I said, âwhat you propose to do is deliberately to remove from this excellent ladyâs life the one remaining element of poetry. You mustnât do it. Give Mrs. Beale her omelettes, and letâs hope for a larger supply of eggs.â
âAnother thing,â said Ukridge. âIt isnât only that thereâs a shortage of eggs. That wouldnât matter so much if only we kept hatching out fresh squads of chickens. Iâm not saying the hens arenât doing their best. I take off my hat to the hens. As nice a hardworking lot as I ever want to meet, full of vigour and earnestness. Itâs that damned incubator thatâs letting us down all the time. The rotten thing wonât work. I donât know whatâs the matter with it. The long and the short of it is that it simply declines to incubate.â
âPerhaps itâs your dodge of letting down the temperature. You remember, you were telling me? I forget the details.â
âMy dear old boy,â he said earnestly, âthereâs nothing wrong with my figures. Itâs a mathematical certainty. Whatâs the good of mathematics if not to help you work out that sort of thing? No, thereâs something deuced wrong with the machine itself, and I shall probably make a complaint to the people I got it from. Where did we get the incubator, old girl?â
âHarrodâs, I think,
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