Notable Residents - P G Wodehouse in emsworth
P G Wodehouse 1981-1961 Born in
Aged five, he was sent to
After two years, during which time he
freelanced for various outlets, he left to write
stories for the expanding popular magazine market.
His first book, The Pothunters, having been
published in 1902 (by A&C Black), he was offered
regular feelance work by The Globe magazine
in the
Living in a
“This surprising move from
“The life of Emsworth House was highly
congenial. In later life, Wodehouse often stayed at
Emsworth House, usually on his way to one of his
habitual
“The most notable [allusion] appears in Mike (1909),
when the eponymous hero is asked about his
pre-Wrykyn schooling: ‘A prep school in Hampshire,’
said Mike. ‘King-Hall’s at a place called Emsworth.’ “He
[Wodehouse] always described Emsworth as an ideal
place to work. In the new year (1904), Wodehouse
arranged to rent a house called Threepwood,
adjoining Emsworth House and its games fields. This
ugly, redbrick, Victorian seaside dwelling became an
essential part of his life from 1904 to 1914.
“The house was kept by Lillian ‘Lily’ Barnett,
with whom he would made a close, lifelong
friendship, and to whom he expressed, with rare
candour, the intense happiness he always felt about
Emsworth generally. His new prosperity also meant
that he could now fulfil his long-held ambition: a
trip to the
“The decision to visit
His earliest novels had
been school tales: The
Pothunters (1902), A Prefect’s Uncle (1903), Tales
of St Austin’s (1903), The Gold Bat (1904), William
Tell Told Again (1905), Head of Kay’s (1905). Love
Among the Chickens (published by George Newnes,
1906) was his first adult novel.
While Wodehouse is today
remembered as a peerless comic novelist, in the
early 20th century he was also a leading
lyricist for musical shows in
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LINK: The P G Wodehouse Society (UK)