![]() ![]() His friend, Chubby, is about to marry Pauline Stoker, who had a difficult relationship with Bertram a few years ago. ![]() That's when trouble starts to knock at Bertram's door. After losing his loyal companion, Jeeves, and being evicted from his apartment, both due to his constant – and terrible – ukulele playing, Bertram accepts his friend's invitation to spend a few months in one of his luxury chalets. Bertram, a typical wealthy aristocrat who never worked in his life, finds himself in trouble in “Thank You, Jeeves”. Jeeves is the stereotype of a British butler, always loyal and far cleverer than his patron, Bertram. ![]() In “Thank You, Jeeves”, the humorist starts a series whose main goal is to ironize the decaying British aristocracy. Wodehouse is considered one of the greatest British humorists of the twentieth century. ![]()
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