Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Literature / Psmith

Go To

1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/psmith_and_mike_jackson_in_the_new_fold.jpg]]
2 [[caption-width-right:350:Psmith (left) and Jackson (right)]]
3
4->"One can date exactly the first moment when [Wodehouse] was touched by the sacred flame. It occurs halfway through ''Mike'' ... Psmith appears and the light is kindled which has burned with growing brilliancy for half a century."
5-->-- '''Creator/EvelynWaugh'''
6
7Psmith (the p is silent, as in psychic) features in four novels by Creator/PGWodehouse. A dandyish figure with a monocle, an elaborate way of speech, and a knack for navigating wild adventures and emerging unruffled, he was introduced as a supporting character to Mike Jackson, but took over the series to the extent that Mike is now invariably remembered as Psmith's supporting character. The adventures of Mike and Psmith bridge the school stories of Wodehouse's early writing and the elaborately-plotted comedies for which he is more generally known in series like ''Literature/BlandingsCastle''; in fact, the last Psmith novel is also one of the earliest of the Blandings series.
8
9Mike Jackson, schoolboy cricketing ace, was introduced in "Jackson Junior", serialised in ''The Captain'' magazine in 1907. A sequel the following year, "The Lost Lambs", sees Mike transferred by his father to a new school, where he meets and befriends Psmith, another recent arrival to the school under similar circumstances. These two serials were published in book form together as ''Mike'' in 1909, and separately as ''Mike at Wrykyn'' and ''Mike and Psmith'' in 1953. (The latter was also published separately as ''Enter Psmith'' in 1935.)
10
11The adventures of Mike and Psmith continue in ''Psmith in the City'' (1910; originally serialised in ''The Captain'' under the title "The New Fold", but by the time the book came out it was clear who the star was). Mike, having finished school but prevented by financial difficulties from proceeding to university, takes a job at the New Asiatic Bank, and finds that he once again has a fellow-sufferer in Psmith. After various adventures that demonstrate neither is cut out for the world of finance, Psmith finds a way for them both to attend Cambridge, and they resign just in time to avoid being fired.
12
13In ''Psmith, Journalist'' (serial, 1909; book, 1915), Psmith accompanies Mike to America, where Mike's cricket team is touring, and becomes side-tracked into a series of adventures involving gangsters, slum landlords, lost cats, crooked boxing, and an intrepid journalist reduced to working for a magazine called ''Cozy Moments''.
14
15In ''Leave It to Psmith'' (serial, 1923; book, with revised ending, 1923), Psmith's family fortunes suffer a serious reversal, leaving him facing the horrible prospect of having to get a real job. (Mike, newly-married and facing his own financial difficulties, appears early on to explain why he can't help, then disappears from the plot.) Salvation appears in the form of Freddie Threepwood, who is willing to pay Psmith for help with his latest contribution to Literature/BlandingsCastle's chronic ZanyScheme problem; HilarityEnsues -- and so, to Psmith's uncharacteristic befuddlement, does romance.
16
17Wodehouse later averred that the character of Psmith was inspired by an anecdote he had heard of Rupert D'Oyly Carte, the son of the producer of the [[Creator/GilbertandSullivan Gilbert and Sullivan]] operas, a bit of a dandy who reportedly, when one of his masters at Oxford inquired after his health, replied, "Sir, I grow thinnah and thinnah."[[note]]However, Rupert's daughter Bridget D'Oyly Carte believed that Wodehouse had confused her father with his brother Lucas, who had died in 1907 at the age of 34.[[/note]]
18
19
20Not to be confused with the character(s) [=PSmIth=] from ''ComicBook/BuckGodotZapGunForHire''.
21----
22!!This series provides examples of:
23
24* AerithAndBob: The final published title for Psmith's first appearance, ''Mike and Psmith''.
25* AffectionateParody: The sequence in ''Leave It to Psmith'' where Psmith applies for work and meets up with Freddie Threepwood is a spoof of the opening of ''Literature/BulldogDrummond''.
26* AttentionDeficitOohShiny: Psmith's dad has this problem, judging by the little we see of him in ''Psmith in the City''.
27* BigManOnCampus: Adair in ''Mike and Psmith'', through sheer fervor and force of personality.
28* TheBigRottenApple: The setting of ''Psmith, Journalist''.
29* BoardingSchool: The setting of ''Mike and Psmith''.
30* BuffySpeak: Not as much as in ''Literature/JeevesAndWooster'', but still visible.
31* BusCrash: [[spoiler:Psmith's dad dies at some point between the third and fourth books]].
32* BribeBackfire: Mr. Parker's attempt to suppress articles about the tenements in ''Psmith, Journalist''.
33* TheBully: [[SubvertedTrope Subverted]] with Stone and Robinson in ''Mike and Psmith''; they act like stereotypical bullies, but are quite friendly once one gets to know them.
34* TheCatCameBack: Psmith's method of revenging himself on Mr. Bickersdyke in ''Psmith in the City''.
35* CatchPhrase: Jellicoe in ''Mike and Psmith'': "You ''are'' a chap!" or "You ''are'' chaps!" (with reference to one or both of the title characters). There's also Psmith's "never confuse the unusual and the impossible", "[[BlatantLies I am a man of few words]]", and, in ''Psmith, Journalist'', "[[ItMakesSenseInContext Cosy Moments cannot be muzzled!]]"
36* ClassClown: Practically the entire fire brigade in ''Mike and Psmith''; most members join for the pure joy of getting on the headmaster's nerves.
37* ComicBookTime: While the first three books reflect the Edwardian setting they were published in, the third book, published in the 1920s, updates the setting without substantially aging Psmith (he remains and is referred to as a young man, despite the fact that he would be in his thirties by that time).
38* CommonalityConnection: Psmith and Mike initially bond over mutual loathing for Sedleigh, the boarding school to which both have been transferred.
39* ContrivedCoincidence: Quite a few in the last two books. For instance, in ''Psmith, Journalist'', a gunman gets Psmith into a taxi and takes him into the country so he can shoot him where no one will hear. The day is saved because [[spoiler:the taxi happens to break down exactly where one of Psmith's allies has been staying]].
40%%* ComedicSociopathy %% Zero Context - who does this refer to?
41* CorruptCorporateExecutive: The villain of ''Psmith, Journalist''.
42* {{Crossover}}: ''Leave It to Psmith'' takes place at Literature/BlandingsCastle.
43* DefeatMeansFriendship: After [[spoiler:Mike beats Adair]] in ''Mike and Psmith'', [[spoiler:he suddenly realizes that Adair's not such a bad guy after all, and they become fast friends]].
44* DistressedDude: Mike in the first two books; Psmith at at least one point in the third.
45* TheDitz: Jellicoe in ''Mike and Psmith''. In ''Psmith in the City'' Psmith eulogizes him as "perhaps the supremest of all the blitherers I have ever met".
46* ElSpanishO: In ''Psmith, Journalist'', this is how the office boy attempts to make himself understood by an Italian.
47-->Pugsy as interpreter was energetic but not wholly successful. He appeared to have a fixed idea that the Italian language was one easily mastered by the simple method of saying "da" instead of "the", and tacking on a final "a" to any word that seemed to him to need one.
48* EstablishingCharacterMoment: Mike's first encounter with Psmith, wherein Psmith tells him "the painful story" that led him to Sedleigh.
49* EveryManHasHisPrice: Psmith solves a lot of problems by simply bribing people.
50* {{Expy}}: When ''Psmith, Journalist'' was [[RecycledScript rehashed]] into the US version of ''The Prince and Betty'', Psmith himself appeared as an American named Rupert ''Smith''.
51* FateDrivesUsTogether: In ''Leave it to Psmith''.
52* FleetingPassionateHobbies: Psmith's dad in ''Psmith in the City''. As a matter of fact, [[AttentionDeficitOohShiny he can't really commit to anything]], to the point where Psmith is justifiably concerned about his own future (Mr. Smith has the power to set his son on whatever path he himself is currently interested in, which changes weekly). Psmith himself is only a slightly milder example, developing fleeting obsessions with things like running a newspaper.
53* FriendshipMoment: In ''Mike and Psmith'', Mike gets the blame for a prank he wasn't responsible for, and can't defend himself because it would mean admitting he was out of school at night; his usually diffident best friend Psmith owns up, even though he didn't do it either and it means probable expulsion.
54* HoldingHands: Psmith makes a lot of references to himself and other people (mostly Mike) doing things "hand in hand". It appears to merely be Psmith-speak for "together".
55* GolfClubbing: When Psmith is told he has to subdue an insane Baxter, he makes sure to bring Freddie Threepwood's golf club (however, since it turns out Baxter has collapsed on the ground, all he does is poke him with it).
56* IntrepidReporter:
57** Billy Windsor in ''Psmith, Journalist''.
58** Psmith also takes a stint as one of these, as indicated by the title.
59* KindheartedCatLover: Gang leader Bat Jarvis in ''Psmith, Journalist''.
60* KingIncognito: Psmith tells the head waiter of a restaurant that Billy is this in ''Psmith, Journalist'', thus saving him from being kicked out.
61* KnightOfCerebus: ''Psmith, Journalist'' is full of them.
62* LonelyTogether: The reason Mike and Psmith become friends in the first place.
63* LovableJock: Mike. He's far better at cricket than schoolwork, but he's a nice chap all the same.
64* MeetCute: Psmith and Eve in ''Leave It to Psmith''; he sees her caught in the rain, and chivalrously offers her an umbrella -- having first had to find an enterprising solution to the problem of not owning an umbrella to offer.
65* MobWar: In ''Psmith, Journalist''.
66* NervesOfSteel: Psmith.
67* TheNicknamer: Bristow in ''Psmith in the City'', who calls Psmith "Smithy" and Mike "Mr. Cricketer". Also Psmith himself, to a certain extent; he's fond of making up names for strangers or people whose first name he doesn't know.
68* NonIndicativeName: ''Psmith, Journalist'' gives us two; a scathing exposé journal called "Cosy Moments" (it was a family magazine before Psmith took it over) and the slummy set of unlivable tenements which make up "Pleasant Street".
69* NotMyDriver: In ''Psmith, Journalist'', Psmith is caught by the bad guys when he hails a cab on an urgent errand; the cab driver is one of the enemy, and the errand itself turns out to have been a fraud designed to inspire Psmith to incautiously hail a cab at that particular moment.
70* OddCouple: Mike and Psmith. Unlike most examples, they get along quite well.
71* OldFashionedRowboatDate: Psmith and Eve in ''Leave It to Psmith''.
72* OneGenderSchool: Sedleigh, Wrykyn and the rest.
73* OneSteveLimit: At the beginning of the series, Psmith gives his first name as Rupert, but in ''Leave It to Psmith'' he's become a Ronald, probably because the Blandings series already contained a Rupert Baxter. (Psmith technically has a prior claim to the forename, but as he's Psmith to all and sundry he was less attached to it.)
74* OOCIsSeriousBusiness: In ''Mike and Psmith'', it's pointed out that Psmith ''always'' walks at a leisurely pace; when he starts running, something is most definitely afoot.
75* OutlawCouple: [[spoiler:Ed Cootes and Liz Peavey]] in ''Leave it to Psmith''.
76* PassThePopcorn:
77** In ''Psmith, Journalist'', Psmith and Billy climb onto a roof to fend off the gangsters who are attacking them. The resulting scene draws a crowd of spectators, mostly FightingIrish, who perch on the roof of a house nearby to watch the show.
78** This is Psmith's attitude toward humanity in general.
79* PlaceboEurekaMoment: Most likely the reason that Psmith finds Mike's intelligence so invaluable.
80* PluckyGirl: Eve Halliday.
81* PoliceAreUseless: New York's police force in ''Psmith, Journalist''.
82* PoorCommunicationKills: In ''Leave It To Psmith'', Ada Clarkson tells Eve Halliday that mutual friend Cynthia McTodd's husband has run away on her. While this is true, Cynthia failed to mention (or Ms. Clarkson failed to hear) that this was about the sixth time Mr. McTodd had "run away never to be seen again" and that Cynthia had no doubt that he would return to her in a few weeks' time at worst. Had Eve been aware of this particular detail, a great deal of unnecessary trouble between herself and Psmith might have been avoided.
83%% * ProperLady: Phyllis to Eve's SpiritedYoungLady.
84* ProperlyParanoid: Freddie Threepwood in ''Leave it to Psmith.'' [[spoiler:Turns out one of the maids really is a professional spy assigned to keep an eye out for thieves]].
85* PsmithPsyndrome: The TropeNamer. Even though the P is silent, Psmith can tell when someone pronounces his name without it.
86%%* RealisticDictionIsUnrealistic %% ZCE
87* TheRival: Adair to Mike in ''Mike and Psmith''.
88* RunawayFiance: [[spoiler:Phyllis Keeble ran away from the man her family wanted her to marry and eloped with Mike]].
89* SelfMadeMan: Adair in ''Mike and Psmith'' is the BoardingSchool equivalent. And as soon as he gets a job in ''Psmith in the City'', Psmith himself starts to parody the type, dubbing himself "[[MundaneMadeAwesome Psmith the Worker]]."
90* SeriousBusiness: UsefulNotes/{{Cricket}}. Also, [[MundaneMadeAwesome anything Psmith has taken it into his head to talk about]].
91* ShoutOut: Plenty, mostly from Psmith, who frequently references poetry, song and Myth/ClassicalMythology in his speech.
92* {{Sidekick}}: Psmith to Mike (at first), Mike to Psmith (later on).
93* SleepCute: The end of ''Psmith, Journalist''.
94* SmokyGentlemensClub: Psmith is a member of ''six'' thanks to his father--[[spoiler:and that's after some of them drop him when he loses his money]]--though he doesn't spend a lot of time in most of them. Two in particular are featured: the Senior Conservative Club, mostly the preserve of older men like his father and his boss in ''Psmith in the City'', and the Drones Club, whose other members include [[Literature/BlandingsCastle Freddie Threepwood]], [[Literature/JeevesAndWooster Bertie Wooster]], and most of Wodehouse's other foolish young heroes.
95* SpiritedYoungLady: Eve in ''Leave it to Psmith''.
96* SpotlightStealingTitle: The first edition of ''Mike and Psmith'' was called ''Enter Psmith''.
97* StalkingIsLove: Psmith's attentions to Eve in ''Leave it to Psmith'' approach this territory.
98%%* StandingBetweenTheEnemies %% ZCE - who does it, to which enemies?
99* StatingTheSimpleSolution: In a scene in ''Mike and Psmith'', Psmith decides to handle some dormitory invaders by employing Napoleon's strategic tactics...which he quickly expands to include Mike's suggested solution of tripping them up with string.
100--> "Napoleon would have done that, too."
101* StealthInsult: In ''Psmith, Journalist'', Psmith, upon meeting the dreadful humor writer B. Henderson Asher, comments that his column has "[[SuckinessIsPainful frequently reconciled me to the toothache]]".
102* StiffUpperLip: Psmith takes this to FearlessFool-level extremes.
103* StraightManAndWiseGuy: Mike and Psmith, respectively.
104* SuspectIsHatless: Literally, when Mike is seen, but not identified, on the grounds after-hours in ''Mike and Psmith''.
105* SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute: ''Psmith, Journalist'' [[PutOnABus puts Mike on a cricket tour]]; his usual role is filled by American reporter Billy Windsor.
106%%* ThinkNothingOfIt %% ZCE
107* ThoseTwoGuys: Stone and Robinson, "[[{{Swashbuckler}} that swashbuckling pair]]", in ''Mike and Psmith''.
108%%* TitleDrop: In ''Leave It to Psmith.'' %% ZCE - when is the title dropped, and is it an example of using the title drop to highlight an important moment?
109* UmbrellaOfTogetherness: A variant used as a MeetCute--Psmith runs outside with a [[spoiler:stolen]] umbrella and hands it to Eve.
110* VitriolicBestBuds: Mike and Psmith have their moments of this.
111--> '''Psmith:''' ...I am the [[BuffySpeak thingummy of what's-it's-name]].
112--> '''Mike:''' You look it.
113* WackyParentSeriousChild: Despite his oddities, Psmith has far more dignity and ''gravitas'' than the flighty elder Smith.
114* TheWatson: Mike, and Billy in ''Psmith, Journalist''.
115* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: In ''Leave it to Psmith'', [[spoiler:[[JanitorImpersonationInfiltration one of the maids turns out to have been a detective hired by Baxter]]]]. It's never brought up again.
116* WritingLines: Mike has had to do this a ''lot''.
117* ZanyScheme: Psmith is king of this.

Top