Plot
Bertie bought a large china vase with crimson dragons and various animals on it for his flat. Jeeves disapproves of it. Bertie goes to see his friend Oliver "Sippy" Sipperley at the office of ''The Mayfair Gazette'', where Sippy is now the editor. Sippy is afraid to confess his love to the poet Gwendolen Moon. He believes he is spiritually inferior to her because, one year prior, he spent thirty days in jail for punching a policeman on Boat Race night. An authoritative man arrives, and he tells Sippy that he has brought another article for Sippy's paper. Sippy meekly obeys him. The man leaves, and Sippy, agitated, tells Bertie that the man is Waterbury, head master of Sippy's old school. Sippy was intimidated by Waterbury as a child, so he is still too afraid of him to reject his articles, even though they are dull and not appropriate for Sippy's light society paper. Bertie tells Jeeves that Sippy has anStyle
Early on in the series, Bertie starts showing concern about using the right words and sometimes searches for the right word to use. Starting in the late Jeeves short stories, Jeeves begins to fill in the word that Bertie is searching for, as when Bertie talks with Jeeves in "The Inferiority Complex of Old Sippy":"The whole trouble being, Jeeves, that he has got one of those things that fellows do get—it's on the tip of my tongue."This device allows Jeeves to teach Bertie or remind him of words and concepts which Bertie can use later in comic ways. For example, the notion of a pal of Bertie's having a "complex" recurs after this story, such as when Bertie says in the first chapter of '' Right Ho, Jeeves'' that Gussie Fink-Nottle, who studies newts, has "a strong newt complex". The term "newt complex" is Bertie's comedic departure from "inferiority complex".Thompson (1992), pp. 283–284. According to Kristin Thompson, Wodehouse uses cues to suggest offstage manipulations performed by Jeeves that Bertie is not aware of. For instance, Jeeves may make an enigmatic statement or do something unusual which is not explained later. In "The Inferiority Complex of Old Sippy", Jeeves brings Bertie's tea five minutes late, which is unusually negligent for Jeeves. Jeeves says he is late because he was dusting Bertie's new vase, but Thompson writes that the reader can infer that Jeeves was actually busy planning Sippy's "accident" with the vase, and adds, "Everything emphasizes this strange five-minute delay, yet there is no reference back to it. That fact alone should lead us to conclude that Jeeves was up to something. One effect of this scene is to point up how early Jeeves conceives his plan–and hence how he succeeds without luck or coincidence." Similarly, in the story's last scene, it is not explained why Jeeves should have come along with Sippy when he could have waited for Bertie at the flat. According to Thompson, "Presumably he wants to tell Bertie the story of the vase before Bertie actually sees the fragments. In that way his convoluted explanation could confuse and impress Bertie as much as possible before he revealed the last bit of information–that the vase is broken."
"An inferiority complex, sir?"
"Exactly, an inferiority complex."
Publication history
The story was illustrated byAdaptations
The story was adapted for an episode of '' The World of Wooster''. The episode, titled "Jeeves and the Inferiority Complex of Old Sippy", was the sixth episode of the first series. It was originally broadcast in the UK on 4 July 1965. This story was not adapted into any '' Jeeves and Wooster'' episode.References
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