Dahlia Travers (née Wooster) is a recurring fictional character in the Jeeves stories of English comic writer P. G. Wodehouse, being best known as Bertie Wooster's bonhomous, red-faced Aunt Dahlia. She is much beloved by her nephew, in contrast with her sister, Bertie's Aunt Agatha.
Proprietor of the weekly newspaper for women Milady's Boudoir, she is married to Tom Travers, mother of Angela Travers and Bonzo Travers, and employs the supremely gifted French chef Anatole at her country house, Brinkley Court.
Aside from Jeeves and Bertie Wooster, Aunt Dahlia appears in more Jeeves novels, and more Jeeves stories overall, than any other character. She makes an appearance in fourteen Jeeves stories, including seven novels and seven short stories. Only Aunt Agatha and Bingo Little appear in more Jeeves short stories (eight and ten, respectively).
Described as being built along the lines of Mae West, Aunt Dahlia is short and solid, with a reddish complexion.Cawthorne (2013), pp. 183-184. According to Bertie, her face takes on a purple tinge in moments of strong emotion.Wodehouse (2008) 1971, Much Obliged, Jeeves, chapter 10, p. 108. She wears tortoiseshell-rimmed spectacles for reading,Wodehouse (2008) 1971, Much Obliged, Jeeves, chapter 9, p. 87. and appears to style her hair carefully, as her hair is variously described as her "carefully fixed coiffure",Wodehouse (2008) 1934, Right Ho, Jeeves, chapter 17, p. 215. "her Marcel wave",Wodehouse (2008) 1938, The Code of the Woosters, chapter 1, p. 11. and "her perm".Wodehouse (2008) 1960, Jeeves in the Offing, chapter 12, p. 125.
Her most notable personal characteristic is her loud, carrying voice. Riding in her youth for years with such fox hunt packs as the Quorn Hunt and the Pytchley Hunt, she tends to address Bertie, over the phone or indoors, as if "shouting across ploughed fields in a high wind."Wodehouse (2008) 1954, Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit, chapter 8, p. 72. She sometimes uses hunting cries in regular speech, including "Yoicks!", "Tally ho!", "Gone away!", and "Hark forrard!".Wodehouse (2008) 1971, Much Obliged, Jeeves, chapter 11, p. 124. She once put her carrying voice to use at a village concert, in which she sang "Every Nice Girl Loves A Sailor" while wearing a sailor suit. Her performance was well received. As she tells Bertie, "I had them rolling in the aisles. Three encores, and so many bows that I got a crick in my back."Wodehouse (2008) 1974, Aunts Aren't Gentlemen, chapter 11, p. 93.
Dahlia employs the French chef Anatole, whose cooking is revered by many characters, especially her husband Tom and her nephew Bertie Wooster. Bertie is quick to accept an invitation to Brinkley Court for the chance to enjoy Anatole's cooking, and she uses the promise of his cooking to get Bertie to do various tasks for her.Garrison (1991), p. 222. Her butler is Seppings. Before Seppings, Aunt Dahlia employed a butler named Pomeroy, a noble fellow, and before him, Murgatroyd, who turned out to be a thief.Wodehouse (2008) 1938, The Code of the Woosters, chapters 5 and 14, pp. 118 and 264. Aunt Dahlia has a large, sleepy black cat called Augustus, or "Gus".Wodehouse (2008) 1971, Much Obliged, Jeeves, chapter 15, p. 169.
In "Clustering Round Young Bingo", Aunt Dahlia hires the incomparable chef Anatole. In "Jeeves and the Song of Songs", she wants Tuppy Glossop, who has broken his engagement to Angela Travers for the opera singer Cora Bellinger, to go back to Angela. In "The Spot of Art", she wants Bertie to accompany her on a cruise. In "The Love That Purifies", her son Bonzo competes against her nephew Thomas ("Thos"), Aunt Agatha's son, in a good conduct contest. In "The Ordeal of Young Tuppy", she again wants Tuppy Glossop, who has fallen for the athletic Miss Dalgleish, to return to Angela.
As a Governor of Market Snodsbury Grammar School, she asks Bertie in Right Ho, Jeeves to award prizes and give a speech at the school, though Bertie pushes this task onto Gussie Fink-Nottle, whom Aunt Dahlia always calls "Spink-Bottle". In the same novel, Dahlia lost the money to pay her magazine's printers at baccarat and has Bertie and Jeeves help her get more money from her husband. In The Code of the Woosters, she asks Bertie to sneer at a silver cow-creamer, and after Sir Watkyn Bassett unfairly obtains the object, she tasks Bertie with stealing the cow-creamer from Sir Watkyn. In Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit, she temporarily pawns her pearl necklace to buy a serial from Daphne Dolores Morehead to help sell the Milady's Boudoir to the newspaper magnate Mr. Trotter. In "Jeeves Makes an Omelette", a story that takes place before the sale of her magazine, she asks Bertie to steal a painting so she can get a story for her magazine.
In Jeeves in the Offing, she hires Sir Roderick Glossop to pretend to be a butler at Brinkley Court so he can investigate the sanity of a man courting her goddaughter Phyllis Mills. In Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves, she tells Bertie about how Sir Watkyn Bassett bragged about obtaining a black amber statuette. In "Jeeves and the Greasy Bird", a story that takes place before the sale of Milady's Boudoir, the writer Blair Eggleston writes for the magazine, and Aunt Dahlia and Jeeves save Bertie from the underhanded theatrical agent Jas Waterbury. In Much Obliged, Jeeves, she provides her house as a base of operations for the candidacy of Harold "Ginger" Winship, and she wants the businessman L. P. Runkle to pay Tuppy money that she feels Runkle owes him.
She last appears in Aunts Aren't Gentlemen, in which she places a bet on a horse, and intends to ensure that her wager is successful with a plan that involves kidnapping a cat. Though Bertie thinks highly of his Aunt Dahlia, he decides that her moral code is not as strict as his. In any event, she wins her wager.
Bertie and Aunt Dahlia often call each other terms that others might find insulting in an endearing way, as when Bertie calls her "aged relative" and "old ancestor", and she calls him "young blot" and "abysmal chump".Wodehouse (2008) 1971, Much Obliged, Jeeves, chapter 2, pp. 16–19. Dahlia's telegram conversations with Bertie can display some rough love; for instance, in Right Ho, Jeeves, after Bertie dumped his prize-giving duty on an unsuspecting Gussie Fink-Nottle and sent him to Brinkley Court, she sent:
« Am taking legal advice to ascertain whether strangling an idiot nephew counts as murder. If it doesn't look out for yourself. Consider your conduct frozen limit. What do you mean by planting your loathsome friends on me like this? Do you think Brinkley Court is a leper colony or what is it? Who is this Spink-Bottle? Love. Travers. »Wodehouse (2008) 1934, Right Ho, Jeeves, chapter 6, p. 61.
And a few telegrams later, she sent:
« Well, all right. Something in what you say, I suppose. Consider you treacherous worm and contemptible, spineless cowardly custard, but have booked Spink-Bottle. Stay where you are, then, and I hope you get run over by an omnibus. Love. Travers. »Wodehouse (2008) 1934, Right Ho, Jeeves, chapter 6, p. 63.
Nevertheless, she genuinely cares for Bertie. Bertie acknowledges that her love for him is deep-rooted,Wodehouse (2008) 1938, The Code of the Woosters, chapter 5, p. 120. and at the end of The Code of the Woosters, she is willing to give up her valuable chef Anatole in order to help Bertie, which profoundly moves him.Wodehouse (2008) 1938, The Code of the Woosters, chapter 14, p. 273.
Aunt Dahlia is also on good terms with Bertie's valet Jeeves. Though at first she doubts his abilities, she quickly learns to appreciate his skill for solving problems.Wodehouse (2008) 1925, Carry On, Jeeves, chapter 9, pp. 228 and 251. She thinks that Jeeves has a great deal of influence over Bertie's life, as she is certain that Jeeves will decide Bertie's fate in a number of ways in "The Spot of Art". Notably, she wants Jeeves to vet an article about men's dress trousers for Milady's Boudoir in The Code of the Woosters,Wodehouse (2008) 1938, The Code of the Woosters, chapter 1, p. 18. she and Jeeves plan together how to extricate Bertie from trouble without discussing it with Bertie in "Jeeves and the Greasy Bird", and Jeeves serves as substitute butler for her at Brinkley Court when Bertie is not there in Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves.
Aunt Dahlia or her Milady's Boudoir are mentioned in several stories, including:
Britain's oldest weekly women's magazine. In the story Clustering Round Young Bingo, the office of Milady's Boudoir is described as being located in " one of those rummy streets in the Covent Garden neighbourhood", the same part of London as The Lady, which between 1885 and 2019 was headquartered in Bedford Street, Covent Garden.
Milady's Boudoir (and not " Madame's Nightshirt", as Dahlia's husband Tom Travers insists on calling it) never sold well and only stayed in business because Tom Travers reluctantly paid the bills.Ring & Jaggard (1999), p. 173.
Aunt Dahlia ran the paper for three (according to Bertie)Wodehouse (2008) 1954, Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit, chapter 5, p. 45. Bertie says she has been running her paper "for about three years". or four (according to Dahlia and Bertie)Wodehouse (2008) 1960, Jeeves in the Offing, chapter 17, p. 170. Dahlia says "For four years I was, if you remember, the proprietor and editress of a weekly paper for women" and Bertie states "It had recently been sold to a mug up Liverpool way, and I have never seen Uncle Tom look chirpier than when the deal went through, he for those four years having had to foot the bills". years before selling the magazine to Mr Trotter of Liverpool in Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit. In the following novel Jeeves in the Offing, the magazine "had recently been sold to a mug up Liverpool way", and Dahlia mentions that there was a short story in each issue, adding that "in seventy per cent of those short stories the hero won the heroine's heart by saving her dog or her cat or whatever foul animal she happened to possess."
Adaptations
See also
Notes
External links
|
|