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diff --git a/25933.txt b/25933.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..551dddc --- /dev/null +++ b/25933.txt @@ -0,0 +1,2337 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of English as She is Wrote, by Anonymous + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: English as She is Wrote + Showing Curious Ways in which the English Language may be + made to Convey Ideas or obscure them. + +Author: Anonymous + +Release Date: June 30, 2008 [EBook #25933] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENGLISH AS SHE IS WROTE *** + + + + +Produced by David Yingling, Dave Morgan, V. L. Simpson and +the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at +https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from scanned +images of public domain material from the Google Print +project.) + + + + + + _English + As She is Wrote_, + + SHOWING + + Curious ways in which the English + Language may be made to convey + Ideas or obscure them. + + _A Companion to "English as She is Spoke."_ + + + + _NEW YORK:_ + _D. Appleton & Co., 1, 3, & 5 Bond Street._ + + + COPYRIGHT BY + D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, + 1883. + + + + + _Contents._ + + Page + + I. How she is wrote by the Inaccurate 9 + II. By Advertisers and on Sign-boards 20 + III. For Epitaphs 28 + IV. By Correspondents 42 + V. By the Effusive 56 + VI. How she can be oddly wrote 71 + VII. By the Untutored 91 + + + + + _Prefatory._ + + +"Anybody," said an astute lawyer, addressing the jury to whom the +opposing counsel had reflected upon inaccuracies in the spelling of his +brief--"anybody can write English correctly, but surely a man may be +allowed to spell a word in two or three different ways if he likes!" +This was a claim for independence of action which so commended itself to +the jury that it won a verdict for his client. The same plea may be +considered in regard to the truly wonderful way in which the +mother-tongue is often written, by the educated sometimes as well as by +the uneducated. + +A man, it may be urged, has a right to spell as he chooses, and to +express his ideas, when he has any, as best he can; while, when he +suffers from a dearth of those rare articles, he has still more reason +to rejoice in liberty of choice in respect to the language he selects to +cover his poverty of thought. Hence there are doubtless good and +sufficient reasons for every specimen of "English as she is wrote," +which it is the object of this little book to rescue from oblivion, and +which have, one and all, been written with the sober conviction, upon +the part of the writers, that they accurately conveyed the meaning they +desired. Intentionally humorous efforts have been carefully excluded, +and the interest of the collection consists in the spontaneity of +expression and in the fact that it offers fair samples of the +possibilities which lie hidden in the orthography and construction of +our language. Let it be remembered, then, that _anybody_ can +write English as she "should be wrote," and hence that a certain meed of +admiration is due to those who, exercising their right of independent +action, succeed in making it at once original and racy, and in +conveying, without the least effort, meanings totally opposed to their +intention, affording thereby admirable examples of English as "she is +wrote" by thousands. + + + + +I. + +By the Inaccurate. + + +In the account of an inaugural ceremony it was asserted that "the +procession was very fine, and nearly two miles long, as was also the +report of Dr. Perry, the chaplain." + +A Western paper says: "A child was run over by a wagon three years old, +and cross-eyed, with pantalets on, which never spoke afterward." + +Here is some descriptive evidence of personal peculiarities: + + "A fellow was arrested with short hair." + + "I saw a man digging a well with a Roman nose." + + "A house was built by a mason of brown stone." + + "Wanted--A room by two gentlemen thirty feet long and twenty feet wide." + + "A man from Africa called to pay his compliments tall and + dark-complexioned." + + "I perceived that it had been scoured with half an eye." + +A sea-captain once asserted that his "vessel was beautifully painted +with a tall mast." + +In an account of travels we are assured that "a pearl was found by a +sailor in a shell." + +A bill presented to a farmer ran thus: "To hanging two barn doors and +myself, 4_s._ 6_d._" + +A store-keeper assures his customers that "the longest time and easiest +terms are given by any other house in the city." + +Here is a curious evidence of philanthropy: "A wealthy gentleman will +adopt a little boy with a small family." + +A parochial report states that "the town farm-house and almshouse have +been carried on the past year to our reasonable satisfaction, especially +the almshouse, at which there have been an unusual amount of sickness +and three deaths." + +A Kansas paper thus ends a marriage notice: "The couple left for the +East on the night train where they will reside." + +In the account of a shipwreck we find the following: "The captain swam +ashore. So did the chambermaid; she was insured for a large sum and +loaded with pig-iron." + +A notice at the entrance to a bridge asserts that "any person driving +over this bridge in a faster pace than a walk shall, if a white person +be fined five dollars, and if a negro receive twenty-five lashes, half +the penalty to be bestowed on the informer." + +The following notice appeared on the west end of a country +meeting-house: "Anybody sticking bills against this church will be +prosecuted according to law or any other nuisance." + +A gushing but ungrammatical editor says: "We have received a basket of +fine grapes from our friend ----, for which he will please accept our +compliments, some of which are nearly one inch in diameter." + +On the panel under the letter-receiver of the General Post-Office, +Dublin, these words are printed: "Post here letters too late for the +next mail." + +An Ohio farmer is said to have the following warning posted +conspicuously on his premises: "If any man's or woman's cows or oxen +gits in this here oats his or her tail will be cut off, as the case may +be." + +A lady desired to communicate by electricity to her husband in the city +the size of an illuminated text which she had promised for the +Sunday-school room. When the order reached him it read, "Unto us a child +is born, nine feet long by two feet wide." + +A farmer who wished to enter some of his live-stock at an agricultural +exhibition, in the innocence of his heart, but with more truth in his +words than he dreamed of, wrote to the committee, saying, "Enter me for +one jackass." + +An Irishman complained to his physician that "he stuffed him so much +with drugs that he was ill a long time after he got well." + +A correspondent of a New York paper described Mr. C.'s journey to +Washington to attend "the dying bedside of his mother." + +A dealer in engravings announced: "'Scotland Forever.' A Cavalry Charge +after Elizabeth Thompson Butler, just published." + +A Western paper says that "a fine new school-house has just been +finished in that town capable of accommodating three hundred students +four stories high." + +A coroner's verdict read thus: "The deceased came to his death by +excessive drinking, producing apoplexy in the minds of the jury." + +An old edition of Morse's geography declares that "Albany has four +hundred dwelling-houses and twenty-four hundred inhabitants, all +standing with their gable-ends to the street." + +A member of a school committee writes, "We have two school-rooms +sufficiently large to accommodate three hundred pupils, one above the +other." + +A Harrisburg paper, answering a correspondent on a question of +etiquette, says: "When a gentleman and lady are walking upon the street, +the lady should walk inside of the gentleman." + +A clergyman writes, "A young woman died in my neighborhood yesterday, +while I was preaching the gospel in a beastly state of intoxication." + +A certain friendly society, which was also a sort of mutual insurance +organization, had this among its printed notices to the members: "In the +event of your death, you are requested to bring your book, policy, and +certificate at once to Mr. ----, when your claims will have immediate +attention." + +A New York paper, describing a funeral in Jersey City, says: "At the +ferry four friends of the deceased took possession of the carriage and +followed the remains to Evergreen Cemetery, where they were quietly +interred in a new lot without service or ceremony." The devotion of the +friends of the deceased was certainly remarkable, but one can not help +wondering what became of the remains. + +A newspaper gives an account of a man who "was driving an old ox when he +became angry and kicked him, hitting his jawbone with such force as to +break his leg." "We have been fairly wild ever since we read the paper," +writes a contemporary, "to know who or which got angry at whom or what, +and if the ox kicked the man's jaw with such force as to break the ox's +leg, or how it is. Or did the man kick the ox in the jawbone with such +force as to break the ox's leg, and, if so, which leg? It's one of those +things which no man can find out, save only the man who kicked or was +being kicked, as the case may be." + +One of Sir Boyle Roche's invitations to an Irish nobleman was rather +equivocal. He wrote, "I hope, my lord, if you ever come within a mile of +my house you will stay there all night." + +A German tourist expresses himself in regard to his Scottish experiences +as follows: "A person angry says to-day that he was from the theatre +gallary spit upon. Very fine. I also was spit upon. Not on the dress but +into the eye strait it came with strong force while I look up angry to +the gallary. Befor I come to your country I worship the Scotland of my +books, my 'Waverly Novel,' you know, but now I dwell here since six +months, in all parts, the picture change. I now know of the bad smell, +the oath and curse of God's name, the wisky drink and the rudeness. You +have much money here, but you want what money can not buye--heart +cultivating that makes respect for gentle things. O! to be spit in the +eye in one half million of peopled town. Let me no longer be in this +cold country, where people push in the street, blow the noze with naked +finger, empty the dish at the house door, chooze the clergy from the +lower classes and then go with them to death for an ecclesiastical +theory which none of them can understand. I go home three days time." +There is more in this than grotesque English, however. It abounds with +good sense and penetration. + +The following is a pattern piece of modern style, sanctioned by an +English Board of Trade, and drawn up by an eminent authority: "Tickets +are nipped at the Barriers, and passengers admitted to the platforms +will have to be delivered up to the Company in event of the holders +subsequently retiring from the platforms without travelling, and cannot +be recognized for readmission." + +A college professor, describing the effect of the wind in some Western +forests, wrote, "In traveling along the road, I even sometimes found the +logs bound and twisted together to such an extent that a mule couldn't +climb over them, so I went round." + +A mayor in a university town issued the following proclamation: "Whereas +a Multiplicity of Dangers are often incurred by Damage of outrageous +Accidents by Fire, we whose names are undesigned have thought proper +that the Benefit of an Engine bought by us for the better extinguishing +of which by the Accidents of Almighty God may unto us happen to make a +Rate togather Benevolence for the better propagating such useful +Instruments." + + + + +II. + +By Advertisers and on Sign-boards. + + +Two young women want washing. + +Teeth extracted with great pains. + +Babies taken and finished in ten minutes by a country photographer. + +Wood and coal split. + +Wanted, a female who has a knowledge of fitting boots of a good moral +character. + +For sale, a handsome piano, the property of a young lady who is leaving +Scotland in a walnut case with turned legs. + +A large Spanish blue gentleman's cloak lost in the neighborhood of the +market. + +To be sold, a splendid gray horse, calculated for a charger, or would +carry a lady with a switch tail. + +Wanted, a young man to take charge of horses of a religious turn of +mind. + +A lady advertises her desire for a husband "with a Roman nose having +strong religious tendencies." + +Wanted, a young man to look after a horse of the Methodist persuasion. + +A chemist inquires, "Will the gentleman who left his stomach for +analysis please call and get it, together with the result?" + +Wanted, an accomplished poodle nurse. Wages, $5.00 a week. + +In the far West a man advertises for a woman "to wash, iron and milk one +or two cows." + +Lost a cameo brooch representing Venus and Adonis on the Drumcondra Road +about 10 o'clock on Tuesday evening. + +An advertiser, having made an advantageous purchase, offers for sale, on +very low terms, "six dozen of prime port wine, late the property of a +gentleman forty years of age, full of body, and with a high bouquet." + +A steamboat-captain, in advertising for an excursion, closes thus: +"Tickets, 25 cents; children half price, to be had at the captain's +office." + +Among carriages to be disposed of, mention is made of "a mail phaeton, +the property of a gentleman with a moveable head as good as new." + +An inducement to return property is offered as follows: "If the +gentleman who keeps the shoe store with a red head will return the +umbrella of a young lady with whalebone ribs and an iron handle to the +slate-roofed grocer's shop, he will hear of something to his advantage, +as the same is a gift of a deceased mother now no more with the name +engraved upon it." + +An English matrimonial advertisement reads as follows: "A young man +about 25 years of Age, in a very good trade, whose Father will make him +worth L1000, would willingly embrace a suitable MATCH. He has been +brought up a Dissenter with his Parents, and is a sober man." + +A landlady, innocent of grammatical knowledge, advertises that she has +"a fine, airy, well-furnished bedroom for a gentleman twelve feet +square"; another has "a cheap and desirable suit of rooms for a +respectable family in good repair"; still another has "a hall bedroom +for a single woman 8 x 12." + +A photographer's sign reads: "This style 3 pictures finished in fifteen +minutes while you wait for twenty-five cents beautifully colored." + +A cheap restaurant displays this sign: "Oyster pies open all night," and +"Coffee and cakes off the griddle." + +A baker displays the sign, "Family Baking Done Here." The sign would +look more appropriate if it were in front of some of our "cool and +well-ventilated" summer-resort hotels. + +The sign at Abraham Lowe's inn, Douglas, Isle of Man, is accompanied by +this quaint verse: + + "I'm Abraham Lowe, and half way up the hill, + If I were higher up wat's funnier still, + I should be Lowe. Come in and take your fill + Of porter, ale, wine, spirits what you will. + Step in, my friend, I pray no further go, + My prices, like myself, are always low." + +On a vacant lot back of Covington, Kentucky, is posted this sign: "No +plane base Boll on these Primaces." + +Notice in a Hoboken ferry-boat: "The seats in this cabin are reserved +for ladies. Gentlemen are requested not to occupy them until the ladies +are seated." + +A sign in a Pennsylvania town reads as follows: "John Smith, teacher of +cowtillions and other dances--grammar taut in the neatest manner--fresh +salt herrin on draft--likewise Goodfreys cordjial--rutes sassage and +other garden truck--N. B. bawl on friday nite--prayer meetin +chuesday--also salme singing by the quire." + +The following notice appeared on the fence of a vacant lot in Brooklyn: +"All persons are forbidden to throw ashes on this lot under penalty of +the law or any other garbage." + +A barber's sign in Buffalo, N.Y., has the following: "This is the place +for physiognomical hair-cutting and ecstatic shaving and shampooing." + +A San Francisco boot-black, of poetic aspirations, proclaims his +superior skill in the following lines, pasted over the door of his +establishment: + + "No day was e'er so bright, + So black was never a night, + As will your boots be, if you get + Them blacked right in here, you bet!" + +The following appears on a Welsh shoemaker's sign-board: "Pryce Dyas +Coblar, dealer in Bacco Shag and Pig Tail Bacon and Ginarbread, Eggs +laid by me, and very good Paradise in the summer, Gentlemen and Lady can +have good Tae and Crumpets and Straw berry with a scim milk, because I +can't get no cream. N. B. Shuse and Boots mended very well." + +An Irish inn exhibits the following in large type: + + "Within this hive we're all alive, + With whiskey sweet as honey; + If you are dry, step in and try, + But don't forget your money." + +An inn near London displays a board with the following inscription: + + "_Call_--Softly, + _Drink_ Moderately, + Pay _Honourably_; + Be good Company, + Part FRIENDLY, + Go HOME quietly. + Let those lines be no MAN'S sorrow, + Pay to DAY and i'll TRUST tomorrow." + + + + +III. + +For Epitaphs. + + +A terse account of an untimely end is given upon a stone in a Mexican +church-yard: + + "He was young, he was fair + But the Injuns raised his hair." + +The following may be read upon the tombstone of Lottie Merrill, the +young huntress of Wayne County, Pennsylvania: "Lottie Merrill lays hear +she dident know wot it wuz to be afeered but she has hed her last tussel +with the bars and theyve scooped her she was a good girl and she is now +in heaven. It took six big bars to get away with her. She was only 18 +years old." + +Upon the tomb of a boy who died of eating too much fruit, this quaint +epitaph conveys a moral: + + "_Currants_ have check'd the _current_ of my blood, + And _berries_ brought me to be _buried_ here; + _Pears_ have _par'd_ off my body's hardihood, + And _plums_ and _plumbers_ _spare_ not one so _spare_. + _Fain_ would I _feign_ my fall; so _fair_ a _fare_ + _Lessens_ not hate, yet 'tis a _lesson_ good. + _Gilt_ will not long hide _guilt_, such thin washed _ware_ + _Wears_ quickly, and its _rude_ touch soon is _rued_. + _Grave_ on my _grave_ some sentence _grave_ and terse, + That _lies_ not as it _lies_ upon my clay, + But in a gentle _strain_ of _unstrained_ verse, + _Prays_ all to pity a poor patty's _prey_, + _Rehearses_ I was fruitful to my _hearse_, + _Tells_ that my days are _told_, and soon I'm _toll'd_ away." + +In Glasgow Cathedral is an epitaph, which is engraved on the lid of a +very old sarcophagus, discovered in the crypt: + + "Our Life's a flying Shadow, God's the Pole, + The Index pointing at him is our Soul, + Death's the Horizon, when our Sun is set, + Which will through Chryst a Resurrection get." + +In a grave-yard at Montrose, in Scotland, this inscription may still be +seen: + + "Here lies the Body of + George Young + And of all his posterity for + fifty years backwards." + +This brief announcement may be read in Wrexham church-yard, Wales: + + "Here lies five babies and children dear + Three at Owestry and two here." + +In a church-yard near London the following may be deciphered: + + "Killed by an omnibus why not? + So quick a death a boon is + Let not his friends lament his lot + For mors omnibus communis." + +There is an unqualified Hibernianism in the following: + + "Here lies the remains of + Thomas Melstrom who died + in Philadelphia March 17th + Had he lived he would have + been buried here." + +A good deal of positive information is conveyed in this epitaph: + + "Here lies, cut down like unripe fruit + The wife of Deacon Amos Shute; + She died of drinking too much coffee, + Anny dominy eighteen forty." + +To the victim of an accident: + +"Here lies the body of James Hambrick which was accidentally shot in the +Pacas River by a young man with one of Colts large revolvers with no +stopper for the hand for to rest on. It was one of the old fashioned +sort, brass mounted and of such is the Kingdom of Heaven." + +William Curtis, who was famous for his bad grammar, may have composed +his own epitaph: + + "Here lies William Curtis + Our late Lord Mayor + Who has left this world, + And gone to that there." + +In a church-yard in London, evidently written by a Cockney: + + "Here lies John Ross. + Kicked by a Hoss." + +In Trinity church-yard, New York, this inscription may be read: + + "Val. ---- + Sidney Breese. + June 9 17--. + Made by himself. + Ha! Sidney, Sidney + Liest thou here? + I lye here + Till Times last Extremity." + +Upon a stone, under the Grocers' Arms, is this inscription, in memory of +Garrard, a tea-dealer: + + "Garret some called him + But that was too lye + His name is Garrard + Who now here doth lye + Weepe not for him + Since he is gone before + To heaven where Grocers + There are many more." + +The value of phonetic spelling is set forth in this terse memorial: + + "Here lies two brothers by misfortune surrounded + One died of his wounds, the other was drounded." + +Resignation and an eye to the main chance are combined in the following: + + "Beneath this stone, in hope of Zion + Doth lie the landlord of the Lion, + His son keeps in the business still + Resigned unto the heavenly Will." + +In a church-yard in Wiltshire, England: + + "Beneath this stone lies our dear child + Whos' gone away from we + For evermore into eternity; + When we do hope that we shall go to he + But him can never come back to we." + +On Mrs. Sarah Newman: + + "Pain was my portion + Physic was my food + Groans was my devotion + Drugs done me no good. + Christ was my physician + Knew what way was best + To ease me of my pain + He took my soul to rest." + +An inscription to four wives: + +"To the memory of my four wives, who all died within the space of ten +years, but more perteckler to the last Mrs. Sally Horne who has left me +and four dear children, she was a good, _sober_ and _clean_ soul and may +i soon go to her. + + "Dear wives if you and i shall all go to heaven, + The Lord be blest for then we shall be even. + + "William Joy Horne, Carpenter." + +On a dyer: + +"He died to live and lived to dye." + +On Mrs. Lee and her son: + + "In her life she did her best + Now I hope her soul's at rest. + Also her son Tom lies at her feet + He lived till he made both ends meet." + +At Edinburgh: + + "John Mc pherson + Was a wonderful person + He stood 6 ft 2 without his shoe + And he was slew. + At Waterloo." + +One John Round was lost at sea, and in the grave-yard of his native +place a stone was erected with the following couplet inscribed thereon: + + "Under this bed lies John Round + Who was lost at sea and never found." + +In an old church-yard in Ireland: + +"Here lies John Highley whose father and mother were drownded on their +passage to America. Had they lived they would have been buried here." + +In a church-yard in Ohio: + + "Under this sod + And under these trees + Lieth the Bod + Y of Solomon Pease. + He's not in this hole + But only his pod. + He shelled out his soul + And went up to his God." + +From a tombstone in Cornwall, England: + + "Father and mother and I + Lie buried here asunder; + Father and mother lie buried here, + And I lie buried yonder." + +On Eliza Newman: + + "Like a tender Rose Tree was my Spouse to me; + Her offspring Pluckt too long deprived of life was she. + _Three went before._ Her Life went with the Six + I stay with 3 Our sorrows for to mix + Till Christ our only hope, Our Joys doth fix." + +On a drummer, in an English church-yard: + + "Tom Clark was a drummer, who went to the war, + And was killed by a bullet, and his soul sent for; + There were no friends to mourn him, for his virtues were rare, + He died like a man, and like a Christian bear." + +On a stone near Appomattox Court-house, Virginia: + +"Robert C Wright was born June 26th 1772 Died July 2. 1815 by the blood +thrusty hand of John Sweeny Sr Who was massacred with the Nife then a +London Gun discharge a ball penetrate the Heart that give the immortal +wound." + +At Middletown, Connecticut, is the following: + + "This lovely, pleasant child-- + He was our only one, + Altho' we've buried three before-- + Two daughters and a son." + +The controlling power of rhyme is well illustrated in the subjoined, +from a tombstone in Manchester: + + "Here lies alas! more's the pity, + All that remains of Nicholas Newcity. + + "N. B.--His name was Newtown." + +Another instance of how rhyming difficulties may be overcome is as +follows: + + "Here lies the remains of Thomas Woodhen, + The most amiable of husbands and excellent of men. + + "N. B.--His real name was Woodcock, but it wouldn't + come in rhyme. _His Widow._" + +The subjoined contains a solemn warning: + + "My wife has left me, she's gone up on high, + She was thoughtful while dying, and said 'Tom, don't cry.' + She was a great beauty, so every one knows, + With Hebe like features and a fine Roman nose; + She played the piany, and was learning a ballad, + When she sickened and die-did from eating veal salad." + +Upon a tombstone in Pennsylvania: + + "Battle of Shiloh. + April 6 1862 + + John D L was born March 26 1839 in the town of West + Dresden State of New York where the wicked cease from + troubling and the weary are at rest." + +A tombstone in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, has these lines: + + "When you my friends are passing by, + And this inform you where I lie, + Remember you ere long must have, + Like me, a mansion in the grave, + Also 3 infants, 2 sons and a daughter." + + + + +IV. + +By Correspondents. + + +From a butcher at Berhampoor, India, to a customer: + +"To his Highness--Kid Esquire + +"The humble butcher, Nows Rouny, Restpectfully sheweth that for your +honor has sent a good beef, 1 rump and pleased to take it and pay day +labor of bearer coolly. As your obedient butcher shall ever pray." + +From a scholar in India to his master: + +"My dear Sir: I humbly beg to inform you pleas to give me leaf for one +week because I cannot walk with my feet, I am very uncomfortable. Give +my compliments to My Master. I pray to God for Everlasting life. I am +your humble Servant Shebart Lall." + +From an Indian school-boy: + +"Benevolent Sir: The wolf of sickness has laid hold on the flock of my +health." + +From an Indian clerk: + +"Sir. Being afflicted to the stomach and vomiteng I am sorry I cannot +attend to office today." + +From a Canadian lady to eligible gentleman: + +"Dear Mr. B. I, Mrs. Wigston wish you would call on my daughter Amelia. +She is very amusing and is a regular young flirt. She can sing like a +hunny bee and her papa can play on the fiddle nicely and we might have a +rare ho-down. Amelia is highely educated, she can dance like a +grasshopper looking for grub and she can meke beautiful bread, it tastes +just like hunny bees' bread and for pumpkin pies she can't be beat. In +fact she's ahead of all F girls and will make a good wife for any man. + + "Yours truly + "Mrs. Wigston. + + "Bring your brother." + +From a school-boy to the elder Booth: + + "West House School. Prospect N.Y. + "Dear Sur and Frend. + +"Heering that you was going to come to Uttica to perform in a play +called Hamlit I would like to say that us boys is gitting up a Exibition +for the benefit of diseased soldiers and their widows and orfans and +would like to engage you to do the leading part. I have talked it up +with the boys and we will do the squire thing by you and I am arterised +to make you the following offer. We will come doun after you with a good +conveyance and will give you at the rate of 10 dollars a day and board +and shall want you one week. If you think it necessary you can have one +or two of our best women actors to come up with you but we can't pay +them over three dollars a day and feed. You can have some fun at a +hunting deer and foxes around Flamburgs and Ed Wilkisun's. Pleas let me +know as soon as you can. + + "Yours truly James Sweet. + +"If you come callating to hunt get Frank Meyer's hound she is a good +one." + +We subjoin several letters received by a New York publishing house: + + "---- La, Nov 18, 188-. + +"Dear Sir. I have seated my self down to pen you a few lines in reguards +off your high degrode Tex Books Sir I wish you would forward to me in +the next Mail a Cataloudge off all of your Edgucational old and latest +publish books in Market I stand in need off a good set of books and when +I receive your Cataloudge I will send on immeadily and get a Selecticed +outfit of your books. By so doing you will oblidge yours & Etc." + +"dear Sr I saw A smawl list of yours embraces standard works in every +department of study and for every grade of classes from the _primary_ +school to the _university_ I desire to have correspondence with you and +as I taught school for threw 3 seson in the ninth district of Fuentress +County tennessee and i quit eimet with Cooper and our country need +instruction and except we get the implement for instruction we may all +ways espect ignorant. turn over. Mr I want you to send educational list +of your standard works and also A copy Book that I may instruct my +studentes more correctly and I profer to take Agents if hit is not +contrary to law if your work can sold with out paing tax or lison + +"and A blige youres truley Joel E Atkinson school teacher 9 deistrict +Fuentress co Logan Finch Chareles Atkinson J Hall e school directers in +my distrectes." + +"Dear Sir I want you to send me a catalogue the Emblem book and tell me +what it will cost I think I can Sell as Many as Fifteen be sure and give +the Price that is what they want to know Dear Sir I Received your Copy +Oct 9th 1881 if you charge Any thing for composeing them letters write +to me and I will pay will Send it by Mail in one cent stamps you need +not to think I want to swinle you out of one cent I will do Every thing +I say I will do So if you will write and give the Price of the Emblem +and the love writer and chart and key of the Spenserion cystem and they +like I will get up a subscription and send the Money for them +immediately Dear Sir tell me what is the Emblem of a red rose and white +rose of a boca." + +"Dear Sir: + +"Wilt please send me a description of your outfit of Books and give me +one or two iedies abought the catalogue price of your English, Latin +Greek brench and stanish Italian Hebrew and Siyuriak books to my +address. I has issued out orders bot comisition &c--my trustee tell me +that only two D V z and in New York at the time it Feby. the 15 my No of +books is twenty five and I desire one complet Example of your best books +if you can Conven'y furnish my needs wright at once I will be more an +obliged to you. Looking by every mail for your returns Soon, so please +your truly servant. + + "I am dear Sir: + "My name in Full + "* * * *." + +"Dear Sir: + +"Understanding that You possess some Influence among the Bord of +Directors of your fine books and for useful learning for Schools I beg +to Solicit your interest for Me I want to Purchase Some Usful Books and +Messrs please send me one of your Cataloges you well obligde me Much in +so doing, & Far my Friends I Will tell You I have a great many of +Relitives who would wish to Purchase some book if could be bought from +you below Price My Frend you must excuse my Hasty note for the Small +time Was at Hand and all so my Frend you must excuse my Led Pensel. +Wright my soon Frend I will close and will shew you that you will be +remembered by Sirs Your Obedient & Fathful Servants ----." + +"Sir: I now write to you to ask you information on book lines Sir. i +have seen some of your books and the suited me very much on Edjucational +and Sir i did suspect to start To Teach School in the Same Ward And i +Wanted to get a fenel Resortment of of Books and i Wanted To get My +books from you and i Wanted Like to know how you Would Reply me them And +i hope when you Riseived this Letter that you Would Write Wright away At +once And give me the full Address how to send for These Books And i Want +to Know Wethe I give you the Wright Address Sir your Friend ---- Would +like To Read A Letter from under your Hand And i Want you To please To +give me your Address of All kines of Books that yu have i Exspect to +start School soon & i had much Applications By pupils that Lives A. +Rounds in the Sections Where i Lives ses ef i gets the Books they Would +Buy them from me i hope that you Would Wright As Soon as Posable And Let +me know so that i Can Write Again And please To Send me some of your +paper so that i Can Read them to the people so Them Can Believe that i +did wrote here When you Write please To Direct your Letter to ---- so i +hope you Will Write Soon And please fail not To Send me some of your +Papers And Direct me how To Get Money to you When i Send for Books fail +not To Direct your Letter to ---- Post-office. So i have no more to +Write i Will Close & Remain + + "Your Truly Friend." + "M---- Ala. + +"Oct 13th 1881. Dear Sir Dear Friend you will please Send me one line of +capitals letters one line of the small letters and Show me the space how +far up and how far down and write & tell me what the chart and frey with +cost, the chart of the Standard System is the one I want. there is Eight +men I have shewn your copy you sent to me they say they intend to have +one chart a piece Dear Sir I have been talking with Several young Men +about love writers I want you to compose three letters consisting of +love and poetry write one as though you loved her and want to marry her. +one as though she had Slighted you. the Next one as you think best +Compose them and Send them to me and I will shew them to the Boys I am +satisfied they will be sure to by." + +Letter to an editor: + +"Dear Sir--: + +"The hystoric apple that tossed about and struck Sir Isaac Newton landed +finally, in revealing its inner nature its hidden meaning, not only as a +consolation but also of universal utility in all scientific branges: + +"Or out of the simbols of the ancient World, up to the real discoveries +of the present time proceeded the solution of the relation of the +Eternal time, motion, and distance. Which set forte the discovery of the +generational cosmological Parents of this planet, are discovered that +these can be seen by all mankind. + + "Resp." + +Letter received by a cotton-broker: + + "Flat Town Dec. 30th + +"Messrs. + "J---- W---- & Co + + "Sir. Gentlemen. + +"The shipments from this out the balance of the season will be for more +on the count. last year was a short crop and two weeks erly than this +season and people sold rite strate a long here last season and the +biggest and best farmers this season are holding looking forward to +Biger prices I have gathered 80 bales and 15 or 16 more in the field yet +to pick so you see when I make my estimate in this county they are a +power of cotton on the fields yet to pick and a grate eel in houses not +gined up yet, gust act as if those deals were your own shood you close +them out gust credit my account with the profitts but dont close them +out until you think it has tuch bottom then I want you to by me the same +amount but don't by till you think it the rite time and then shood you +see a proffit in it Turn it loose without ever consulting me if it +clears up cold we will have Kilan frost but it can't hurt here for the +crop is made. + + "I remain yours very truly." + +Another letter to a cotton-broker: + +"Messrs. W---- W---- & Co. + +"Sir Gents + +"I have gust got in form the West and find your letter stating that corn +had touched bottom which I do think myself it has, but it has avanced so +much now I don't noe that it wood pay me much either way now. had I bin +at home I shood of closed out and of Bout the same amount was my Idee. +we are from ten days to fully two weeks backwards with our crops owing +to our wet weather but that donte say they won't be as much made as was +last year while we are backward there are more fertilizers yoused than +ware last year and more Acreage our country is in a better condision to +make a crop and I expect the west ginerally that way at the same time I +am only one neighbourhood. pleas let me hear from you more fully on the +matter hoping to hear from you soon I remain + + "yours verry truly + + "I will act according to your council." + +A Georgia merchant received a short time since the following order from +a customer: + +"Mr. B----, please send me $1 worth of coffy and $1 worth of shoogar, +some small nales. My wife had a baby last nite, also two padlocks and a +monkey rench." + + + + +V. + +By the Effusive. + + +Professor Huxley is credited with the assertion that the primrose is "a +corollifloral dicotyledonous exogen, with a monopetalous corolla and a +central placenta." + +A reporter with a large imagination, writing about the decoration of a +church at a fashionable wedding in this city, said that "the church was +ensconced in flowers." + +A scientific writer defines sneezing as "a phenomenon provoked either by +an excitation brought to bear on the nasal membrane or by a sudden shock +of the sun's rays on the membranes of the eye. This peripheral +irritation is transmitted by the trifacial nerve to the Gasserian +ganglion, whence it passes by a commissure to an agglomeration of +globules in the medulla oblongata or in the protuberance; from this +point, by a series of numerous reflex and complicated acts, it is +transformed by the mediation of the spinal cord into a centrifugal +excitation which radiates outward by means of the spinal nerves to the +expiratory muscles." + +The school committee in Massachusetts recommend exercises in English +composition in these terms: + +"Next to the pleasure that pervades the corridors of the soul when it is +entranced by the whiling witchery that presides over it consequent upon +the almost divine productions of Mozart, Haydn, and Handel, whether +these are executed by magician concert parts in deep and highly matured +melody from artistic modulated intonations of the finely cultured human +voice, or played by some fairy-fingered musician upon the trembling +strings of the harp or piano, comes the charming delight we experience +from the mastery of English prose, and the spell-binding wizards of song +who by their art of divination through their magic wand, the pen, have +transformed scenes hitherto unknown and made them as immortal as those +spots of the Orient and mountain haunts of the gods, whether of sunny +Italy or of tuneful, heroic Greece." + +A farmer's daughter expresses herself in the following terms: + +"Dear Miss: + +"The energy of the race prompts me to assure you that my request is +forbidden, the idea of which I awkwardly nourished, notwithstanding my +propensity to reserve. Mr. T will be there--Let me with confidence +assure you that him and brothers will be very happy to meet you and +brothers. Us girls cannot go, for reasons. The attention of cows claims +our assistance this evening. + + "Unalterably yours." + +The following is probably the longest sentence ever written, containing, +as it does, eight hundred words: + +"I propose, then, to give your readers some description of this old yet +still strange and wild country, that has been settled for three hundred +years, and is not yet inhabited--a land of shifting sand and deep mud--a +land of noble rivers that rise in swamps and consist merely of chains of +shallow lakes, some of them twenty miles long and two miles across, and +only twelve feet deep--of wide, sandy plains, covered with +solemn-sounding pines--of spots so barren that nothing can be made to +grow upon them, and yet with a soil so fertile that if you tickle it +with a hoe, it will laugh out an abundant harvest of sugar, cotton, and +fruit--a land of oranges, lemons, pomegranates, pineapples, figs, and +bananas; whose rivers teem with fish, its forests with game, and its +very air with fowl; where everything will grow except apples and wheat; +where everything can be found except ice; yet where the people, with a +productive soil, a mild climate and beautiful nature, affording every +table luxury, live on corn-grist, sweet potatoes, and molasses; where +men possessing forty thousand head of cattle never saw a glass of milk +in their lives, using the imported article when used at all, and then +calling it consecrated milk; where the very effort to milk a cow would +probably scare her to death, as well as frighten a whole neighborhood by +the unheard of phenomenon; where cabbages grow on the tops of trees, and +you may dig bread out of the ground; where, below the frost-line, the +castor-oil plant becomes a large tree of several years' growth, and a +pumpkin or bean-vine will take root from its trailing branches, and thus +spread and live year after year; where cattle do not know what hay is, +and refuse it when offered, so that the purchase of a yoke of oxen is +not considered valid if the animals will not eat in a stable; and where +in the mild winter, when the land grass is dried up, horses and cattle +may be seen wading and swimming in the ponds and streams, plunging their +heads under water grasses and moss; where many lakes have holes in the +bottom and underground communication, so that they will sometimes shrink +away to a mere cupful, leaving many square miles of surface uncovered, +and then again fill up from below and spread out over their former area; +where some of them have outlets in the ocean far from shore, bursting up +a perpetual spring of fresh water in the very midst of the briny +saltness of the sea; where in times of low water, during a long +exhaustive dry season, men have gone under ground in one of these +subterranean rivers, from lake to lake, a distance of eight miles; where +the ground will sometimes sink and the cavity fill with water, until +tall trees, that had stood and sunk upright, will have their topmost +branches deeply covered; where rivers will disappear in the earth and +rise again, thus forming natural bridges, some of them a mile in +breadth; where, instead of spring, summer, autumn, and winter, there are +two seasons only--eight months summer, and four months warm weather; +where the winter is the dry season, and the summer almost a daily rain; +where, in order to take a walk, you first wade through a light sand +ankle deep and then get into a mud-puddle, and some of these mud-puddles +cover a whole county; where no clay is found fit for brick-making, and +people build houses without chimneys; where to make a living is so easy +a task, that every one possesses the laziness of ten ordinary men, every +one you wish to employ in labor says he is tired and would seem to have +been born so; where ague would prevail if the people would take the +trouble to shake; where a large orange-tree will bear several thousand +oranges--leaves, buds, blossom, half-grown and full-grown fruit, all at +once--and every twenty-five feet square of sand will sustain such a +tree; where, in many parts, cold weather is an impossibility, and +perpetual verdure reigns; where the Everglades are found, covering many +large counties with water from one to six feet deep, with a bottom, mud +covered, yet underneath solid and firm, from which grasses grow up to +the surface--a sea of green, and with islands large and small scattered +over the surface, covered with live oaks and dense vegetation; where +alligators, or gators as they are called in Florida parlance, possess +undoubted aboriginal rights of citizenship, and mosquitoes pay constant +visits and are instructive and even penetrating in their attention to +strangers." + +An Irish paper contained this account of Mrs. Siddons's appearance: + +"On Sunday, Mrs. Siddons, about whom all the world has been talking, +exposed her beautiful, adamantine, soft, and lovely person, for the +first time at Smock Alley Theatre in the bewitching, melting, and all +tearful character of Isabella. From the repeated panegyrics of the +impartial London newspapers, we were taught to expect the sight of a +heavenly angel, but how were we supernaturally surprised into almost +awful joy at beholding a mortal goddess! The house was crowded with +hundreds more than it could hold, with thousands of admiring spectators +who went away without a sight. This extraordinary phenomenon of tragic +excellence! this star of Melpomene! this comet of the stage! this sun of +the firmament of the Muses! this moon of blank verse! this queen and +princess of tears! this Donellan of the poisoned dagger! this empress of +pistol and dagger! this chaos of Shakespeare! this world of weeping +clouds! this Juno commanding aspects! this Terpsichore of the curtains +and scenes! this Proserpine of fire and excitement! this Katterfelto of +wonders! exceeded expectation, went beyond belief and soared above all +the natural powers of description! She was nature itself! She was the +most exquisite work of art! She was the very daisy, primrose, tuberose, +sweet brier, furze blossom, gilliflower, wall flower, cauliflower, +auricula, and rosemary! In short, she was the bouquet of Parnassus! When +expectations were so high, it was thought she would be injured by her +appearance, but it was the audience who were injured: several fainted +before the curtain drew up! When she came to the scene of parting with +her wedding ring, ah! what a sight was there! the very fiddlers in the +orchestra, albeit unused to melting mood, blubbered like hungry children +crying for their bread and butter! and when the bell rang for music +between the acts the tears ran from the bassoon players' eyes in such +plentiful showers that they choked the finger stops, and making a spout +of the instrument poured in such torrents on the first fiddler's book +that not seeing the overture was in two sharps, the leader of the band +played it in one flat. But the sobs and sighs of the groaning audience +and the noise of corks drawn from smelling bottles prevented the +mistakes between sharps and flats being heard. One hundred and nine +ladies fainted! forty-six went into fits! and ninety-five had strong +hysterics. The world will scarcely credit the truth when they are told +that fourteen children, five old men, one hundred tailors, and six +common councilmen were actually drowned in the inundation of tears that +flowed from the galleries, the slips, and the boxes, to increase the +briny pond in the pit. The water was three feet deep. An Act of +Parliament will certainly be passed against her playing any more!" + +Few poems have been more generally admired or paraphrased in the various +tongues of earth than that commencing with the lines-- + + "Mary had a little lamb, + Its fleece was white as snow, + And everywhere that Mary went + This lamb was sure to go." + +The story is current at the national capital that Mr. Evarts, when +Secretary of State, on one occasion, in a jocular crowd of his friends, +was desired to condense into prose these immortal verses. Urgently +solicited, Mr. Evarts yielded, and wrote as follows: + +"Mary, a female, judged to be of the race of man, whose family name is +unknown, whether of native or foreign birth, of lofty or lowly lineage, +and whose appearance, manners, and mental cultivation are involved in +the most profound mystery, which probably will never be fully +ascertained unless through the most profound researches of an historian +admirably trained in his profession, who shall devote the ablest efforts +of his life to the investigation of the subject, uninfluenced by either +passion or prejudice, and having only in view the sacred truth, at the +same time being utterly regardless of the plaudits or censures of the +world, we are informed by one who, it has been stated, at one time while +living in that part of the United States of America known as +Massachusetts, whose fishermen have frequently been involved in +difficulties with the authorities of her Majesty Queen Victoria, Queen +of Great Britain and Empress of the Indies, whose domains extended over +a large share of the habitable globe, thereby endangering the peace +which should so happily exist between nations of the same blood and +language, had an infant sheep, of which there are many millions of +various stocks and qualities now in our country, constantly adding +wealth and prosperity to our republic, and enabling us to be entirely +independent of all other nations for our supply of wool, now ample for +the use of factories already busily employed, and for those which ere +long will be constructed in all parts of our land, working both by water +and steam power, and in whatever direction the said Mary traveled, this +animal, whose fleece was snow-white, even as the lofty mountain-regions +in the silent solitudes of eternal winter, as the ethereal vapors which +oft float over an autumnal sky, 'darkly, deeply, beautifully blue' or as +the lacteal fluid covered with masses of delicate froth, found in the +buckets of the rosy dairymaid, whether meandering through the meadows in +midsummer, gathering the luscious strawberry, strolling in the woodland +paths in search of wild flowers, visiting the church with her uncles, +cousins, and aunts, to listen to the inspired words which come from the +lips of the minister of the sanctuary, or when retiring to her blissful +couch to seek rest and enjoy sweet repose after the cares and labors of +the day; in fact, 'everywhere that Mary went' this youthful sheep, +influenced doubtless by that affection which is oft so conspicuously +manifested by the lower animals in their association with human beings, +was ever observed to accompany her." + + + + +VI. + +How she can be Oddly Wrote. + + +The following amusing rhyme clipped from an old paper shows to advantage +some of the peculiarities of the English language: + + SALLY SALTER. + + Sally Salter, she was a young teacher, that taught, + And her friend Charley Church was a preacher, who praught; + Though his friends all declared him a screecher, who scraught. + + His heart, when he saw her, kept sinking, and sunk, + And his eyes, meeting hers, kept winking, and wunk; + While she, in her turn, fell to thinking, and thunk. + + He hastened to woo her, and sweetly he wooed, + For his love for her grew--to a mountain it grewed, + And what he was longing to do, then he doed. + + In secret he wanted to speak, and he spoke: + To seek with his lips what his heart had long soke; + So he managed to let the truth leak, and it loke. + + He asked her to ride to the church and they rode; + They so sweetly did glide, that they both thought they glode, + And they came to the place to be tied, and were tode. + + Then "Homeward," he said, "let us drive," and they drove, + As soon as they wished to arrive they arrove; + For whatever he couldn't contrive she controve. + + The kiss he was dying to steal, then he stole, + At the feet where he wanted to kneel, there he knole, + And he said, "I feel better than ever I fole." + + So they to each other kept clinging, and clung, + While Time his swift circuit was winging, and wung; + And this was the thing he was bringing, and brung: + + The man Sally wanted to catch, and had caught-- + That she wanted from others to snatch, and had snaught, + Was the one that she now liked to scratch, and she scraught. + + And Charley's warm love began freezing and froze, + While he took to teasing, and cruelly tose + The girl he had wished to be squeezing and squoze. + + "Wretch!" he cried, when she threatened to leave him, and left, + "How could you deceive me, as you have deceft?" + And she answered, "I promised to cleave, and I've cleft!" + +PLODDING CHANGES.--Some of our plodding readers may like to peruse the +following curious variations of the well-known line from Gray's "Elegy," +"The ploughman homeward plods his weary way": + +The weary ploughman homeward plods his way. + +The weary ploughman plods his homeward way. + +The homeward ploughman plods his weary way. + +The homeward ploughman, weary, plods his way. + +The homeward, weary, ploughman plods his way. + +The weary, homeward ploughman plods his way. + +Homeward the weary ploughman plods his way. + +Homeward, weary, the ploughman plods his way. + +Homeward the ploughman plods his weary way. + +Homeward the ploughman, weary, plods his way. + +Weary, the homeward ploughman plods his way. + +Weary, homeward the ploughman plods his way. + +Weary, the ploughman plods his homeward way. + +The ploughman plods his homeward, weary way. + +The ploughman plods his weary homeward way. + +The ploughman homeward, weary, plods his way. + +The ploughman, weary, homeward plods his way. + +The ploughman, weary, plods his homeward way. + + "My Madeline! My Madeline! + Mark my melodious midnight moans; + Much may my melting music mean, + My modulated monotones. + + "My mandolin's mild minstrelsy, + My mental music magazine, + My mouth, my mind, my memory, + Must mingling murmur, 'Madeline.' + + "Muster 'mid midnight masquerades, + Mark Moorish maidens', matrons' mien, + 'Mongst Murcia's most majestic maids, + Match me my matchless Madeline. + + "Mankind's malevolence may make + Much melancholy music mine; + Many my motives may mistake, + My modest merits much malign. + + "My Madeline's most mirthful mood + Much mollifies my mind's machine; + My mournfulness' magnitude + Melts--makes me merry, Madeline! + + "Match-making mas may machinate, + Manoeuvring misses me misween; + Mere money may make many mate, + My magic motto's--'Madeline!' + + "Melt, most mellifluous melody, + 'Midst Murcia's misty mounts marine, + Meet me by moonlight--marry me, + Madonna mia!--Madeline." + +It is well known that the letter _e_ is used more than any other letter +in the English alphabet. Each of the following verses contains every +letter of the alphabet except the letter _e_: + + "A jovial swain should not complain + Of any buxom fair + Who mocks his pain and thinks it gain + To quiz his awkward air. + + "Quixotic boys who look for joys, + Quixotic hazards run; + A lass annoys with trivial toys, + Opposing man for fun. + + "A jovial swain may rack his brain, + And tax his fancy's might; + To quiz is vain, for 'tis most plain + That what I say is right" + + _Northampton_ (_England_) _Courier._ + +Here is the result of a rhyming punster's efforts: + + "A pretty deer is dear to me, + A hare with downy hair, + A hart I love with all my heart, + But barely bear a bear. + + "'Tis plain that no one takes a plane + To pare a pair of pears, + Although a rake may take a rake + To tear away the tares. + + "Sol's rays raise thyme, time raises all, + And through the whole holes wears. + A scribe in writing right may write + To write and still be wrong; + For write and rite are neither right, + And don't to right belong. + + "Robertson is not Robert's son, + Nor did he rob Burt's son, + Yet Robert's sun is Robin's sun, + And everybody's sun. + + "Beer often brings a bier to man, + Coughing a coffin brings, + And too much ale will make us ail, + As well as other things. + + "The person lies who says he lies + When he is not reclining; + And when consumptive folks decline, + They all decline declining. + + "Quails do not quail before a storm. + A bow will bow before it; + We cannot rein the rain at all, + No earthly power reigns o'er it. + + "The dyer dyes awhile, then dies-- + To dye he's always trying; + Until upon his dying bed + He thinks no more of dyeing. + + "A son of Mars mars many a son, + All Deys must have their days; + And every knight should pray each night + To him who weighs his ways. + + "'Tis meet that man should mete out meat + To feed one's fortune's sun; + The fair should fare on love alone, + Else one cannot be won. + + "Alas, a lass is sometimes false; + Of faults a maid is made; + Her waist is but a barren waste-- + Though stayed she is not staid. + + "The springs shoot forth each spring and shoots + Shoot forward one and all; + Though summer kills the flowers, it leaves + The leaves to fall in fall. + + "I would a story here commence, + But you might think it stale; + So we'll suppose that we have reached + The tail end of our tale." + +And here is a zoological romance, by C. F. Adams, inspired by an unusual +flow of animal spirits: + + No sweeter girl ewe ever gnu + Than Betty Martin's daughter Sue. + + With sable hare, small tapir waist, + And lips you'd gopher miles to taste; + + Bright, lambent eyes, like the gazelle, + Sheep pertly brought to bear so well; + + Ape pretty lass it was avowed, + Of whom her marmot to be proud. + + Deer girl! I loved her as my life, + And vowed to heifer for my wife. + + Alas! A sailor on the sly, + Had cast on her his wether eye. + + He said my love for her was bosh, + And my affection I musquash. + + He'd dog her footsteps everywhere, + Anteater in the easy-chair; + + He'd setter round, this sailor chap, + And pointer out upon the map + + Where once a pirate cruiser boar + Him captive to a foreign shore. + + The cruel captain far outdid + The yaks and crimes of Robert Kid. + + He oft would whale Jack with the cat, + And say, "My buck, doe you like that? + + "What makes you stag around so, say? + The catamounts to something, hey?" + + Then he would seal it with an oath, + And say: "You are a lazy sloth! + + "I'll starve you down, my sailor fine, + Until for beef and porcupine!" + + And, fairly horse with fiendish laughter, + Would say, "Henceforth, mind what giraffe ter!" + + In short, the many risks he ran + Might well a llama braver man; + + Then he was wrecked and castor shore + While feebly clinging to anoa; + + Hyena cleft among the rocks + He crept, _sans_ shoes and minus ox. + + And when he fain would go to bed, + He had to lion leaves instead. + + Then Sue would say, with troubled face, + "How koodoo live in such a place?" + + And straightway into tears would melt, + And say, "How badger must have felt!" + + While he, the brute, woodchuck her chin, + And say, "Aye-aye, my lass!" and grin. + + Excuse these steers.... It's over now; + There's naught like grief the hart can cow. + + Jackass'd her to be his, and she-- + She gave Jackal, and jilted me. + + And now, alas! the little minks + Is bound to him with Hymen's lynx. + + --_Detroit Free Press._ + +While upon the subject of puns, we might quote the following, clipped +from the "Graphic": + +"On being consulted about it Spikes says that Uncle Sam aunticipates the +transfer of the Indian Bureau to some mother department, and if this +should father improve the condition of the children of the forest, in +sondry ways, by cousin them to be more comfortable, it would be a niece +arrangement and daughter be made." We are inclined, in nephew instances, +to agree with the gramma, but not the spelling. + +The "Graphic" is also responsible for the following English stanza +transformed into Russian, said to have been found in a room after it had +been vacated by Alexis while in this country. It is introduced as an +example of how "she can be oddly wrote": + + "Owata jollitimiv ad + Sinci tooklevov mioldad! + Owata merricoviv bin-- + Ivespenta nawful pilovtin! + Damsorri tolevami now, + But landigoshenjingo vow, + Thetur kishwar mustavastop + Gotele graphitoff topop." + +The following clever paraphrase of the old rhythmic story of "Jack's +House" is a good illustration of the scope and flexibility of our +language, and suggests the fact that tautological errors of writing need +seldom be committed. + + Behold the mansion reared by daedal Jack. + + See the malt stored in many a plethoric sack, + In the proud cirque of Ivan's bivouac. + + Mark how the Rat's felonious fangs invade + The golden stores in John's pavilion laid. + + Anon, with velvet foot and Tarquin strides, + Subtle Grimalkin to his quarry glides-- + Grimalkin grim, that slew the fierce _rodent_ + Whose tooth insidious Johann's sackcloth rent. + + Lo! now the deep-mouthed canine foe's assault, + That vexed the avenger of the stolen malt, + Stored in the hallowed precincts of that hall + That rose complete at Jack's creative call. + + Here stalks the impetuous Cow with crumpled horn, + Whereon the exacerbating hound was torn, + Who bayed the feline slaughter-beast that slew + The Rat predaceous, whose keen fangs ran through + The textile fibers that involved the grain + That lay in Hans' inviolate domain. + + Here walks forlorn the Damsel, crowned with rue, + Lactiferous spoils from vaccine dugs, who drew + Of that corniculate beast whose tortuous horn + Tossed to the clouds, in fierce vindictive scorn, + The harrowing hound, whose braggart bark and stir + Arched the lithe spine and reared the indignant fur + Of Puss, that with verminicidal claw + Struck the weird Rat, in whose insatiate maw + Lay reeking malt, that erst in Ivan's courts we saw + Robed in senescent garb that seems in sooth + Too long a prey to Chronos' iron tooth. + + Behold the man whose amorous lips incline, + Full with young Eros' osculative sign, + To the lorn maiden whose lact-albic hands, + Drew albu-lactic wealth from lacteal glands + Of that immortal bovine, by whose horn + Distort, to realm ethereal was borne + The beast catulean, vexer of that sly + Ulysses quadrupedal, who made die + The old mordacious Rat, that dared devour + Antecedaneous Ale, in John's domestic bower. + + Lo, here, with hirsute honors doffed, succinct + Of saponaceous locks, the Priest who linked + In Hymen's golden bands the torn unthrift, + Whose means exiguous stared from many a rift, + Even as he kissed the virgin all forlorn, + Who milked the cow with implicated horn, + Who in fine wrath the canine torturer skied, + That dared to vex the insidious muricide, + Who let the auroral effluence through the pelt + Of the sly Rat that robbed the palace Jack had built. + + The loud cantankerous Shanghai comes at last, + Whose shouts arouse the shorn ecclesiast, + Who sealed the vows of Hymen's sacrament, + To him who robed in garments indigent, + Exosculates the damsel lachrymose, + The emulgator of that horned brute morose, + That tossed the dog, that worried the cat, that kilt + The Rat that ate the malt, that lay in the house that Jack built. + + + + +VII. + +By the Untutored. + + +Care should be taken in writing for the young, or they may get a wholly +different meaning from the language than that intended. The Bishop of +Hereford was examining a school-class one day, and, among other things, +asked what an average was. Several boys pleaded ignorance, but one at +last replied, "It is what a hen lays on." This answer puzzled the bishop +not a little; but the boy persisted in it, stating that he had read it +in his little book of facts. He was then told to bring the little book, +and, on doing so, he pointed triumphantly to a paragraph commencing, +"The domestic hen lays _on an average_ fifty eggs each year." + +If English is "wrote" as she is often "spoke" by the ignorant and +careless, she would bear little resemblance to the original Queen's +English. A listener wrote out a short conversation heard the other day +between two pupils of a high-school, and here is the phonetic result: + +"Warejergo lasnight?" + +"Hadder skate." + +"Jerfind th'ice hard'n'good?" + +"Yes, hard'nough." + +"Jer goerlone?" + +"No; Bill'n Joe wenterlong." + +"Howlate jerstay?" + +"Pastate." + +"Lemmeknow wenyergoagin, woncher? I wantergo'n'show yer howterskate." + +"H'm, ficoodn't skate better'n you I'd sell-out'n'quit." + +"Well, we'll tryeranc'n'seefyercan." + +Here, as they took different streets, their conversation ceased. + +A writer in the "School-boy Magazine" has gathered together the +following dictionary words as defined by certain small people: + +Bed-time--Shut eye time. + +Dust--Mud with the juice squeezed out. + +Fan--A thing to brush warm off with. + +Fins--A fish's wings. + +Ice--Water that staid out in the cold and went to sleep. + +Monkey--A very small boy with a tail. + +Nest-Egg--The egg that the old hen measures by, to make new ones. + +Pig--A hog's little boy. + +Salt--What makes your potato taste bad when you don't put any on. + +Snoring--Letting off sleep. + +Stars--The moon's eggs. + +Wakefulness--Eyes all the time coming unbuttoned. + +The following specimens from scholars' examinations in making sentences +to illustrate the definitions of words, found in their small +dictionaries, will have a familiar sound to some of our readers: + +Frantic = Wild: I picked a bouquet of frantic flowers. + +Retorted = Returned: We retorted home at six o'clock. + +Summoned = Called: I summoned to see Mary last week. + +Athletic = Strong: The vinegar was too athletic to be used. + +Poignant = Sharp: My knife is very poignant. + +Ordinances = Rules: We learned the ordinances for finding the greatest +common divisor. + +Turbid = Muddy: The road was so turbid that we stuck fast in the mud. + +Tandem = One behind another: The scholars sit tandem in school. + +Akimbo = With a crook: I saw a dog with an akimbo in his tail. + +Atonement = Satisfaction: There is no atonement in boat-riding in a cold +day. + +Composure = Calmness: The composure of the day was remarkable. + +We have the authority of the late Dr. Hart as to the genuineness of the +following extracts, taken from the papers of a class seeking admission +into a high-school, to which had been given a list of words for their +meanings and applications: + +Fabulous--Full of threads: Silk is fabulous. + +Accession--The act of eating a great deal: John got very sick after +dinner by accession. + +Atonement--A small insect: Queen Mab was pulled by atonements. + +Develop--To swallow up: God sent a whale to develop Jonah. + +Circumference--Distance through the middle: Distance around the middle +of the outside. + +Mobility--Belonging to the people: The mobility of St. Louis has greatly +increased. + +Adequate--A land animal: An elephant is an adequate. + +Gregarious--Pertaining to idols: The Sandwich-Islanders are gregarious. + +Fluctuation--Coming in great numbers: There was a great fluctuation of +immigrants. + +Alternate--Not ternate. + +Intrinsic--Not trinsic: weak, feeble: He was a very intrinsic old man. + +Subservient--One opposed to the upholding of servants. + + + +Don't: + +_A Manual of Mistakes and Improprieties +more or less prevalent +in Conduct and Speech._ + +"I'll view the manners of the town."--_Comedy of Errors._ + +_By CENSOR._ + +Square 16mo. Parchment paper. Price, 30 cents. + + + +English as She is Spoke; + +_Or, A Jest in Sober Earnest._ + +Compiled from the celebrated "_New Guide of Conversation +in Portuguese and English_." + + +"Excruciatingly funny."--_London World._ + +"Every one who loves a laugh should either buy, beg, borrow, +or--we had almost said steal--the book."--_London Fun._ + + +Square 16mo. Parchment-paper cover. Price, 30 cents. + + + +_Write and Speak Correctly._ + + +The Orthoepist: + + A Pronouncing Manual, containing about Three Thousand + Five Hundred Words, including a considerable Number of + the Names of Foreign Authors, Artists, etc., that are + often mispronounced. By ALFRED AYRES. Fourteenth + edition. 18mo, cloth, extra. Price, $1.00. + + "It gives us pleasure to say that we think the author in + the treatment of this very difficult and intricate + subject, English pronunciation, gives proof of not only + an unusual degree of orthoepical knowledge, but also, + for the most part, of rare judgment and + taste."--JOSEPH THOMAS, LL. D., in _Literary + World_. + + + +The Verbalist: + + A Manual devoted to Brief Discussions of the Right and + the Wrong Use of Words, and to some other Matters of + Interest to those who would Speak and Write with + Propriety, including a Treatise on Punctuation. By + ALFRED AYRES, author of "The Orthoepist." Ninth + edition. 18mo, cloth, extra. Price, $1.00. + + "We remain shackled by timidity till we have learned to + speak with propriety."--JOHNSON. + + + +Errors in the Use of English. + + +By the late WILLIAM B. HODGSON, LL. D., + + Professor of Political Economy in the University of + Edinburgh. American revised edition. 12mo, cloth. Price, + $1.50. + + "The most comprehensive and useful of the many books + designed to promote correctness in English composition + by furnishing examples of inaccuracy, is the volume + compiled by the late William B. Hodgson, under the title + of 'Errors in the Use of English.' The American edition + of this treatise, now published by the Appletons, has + been revised, and in many respects materially improved, + by Francis A. Teall, who seldom differs from the author + without advancing satisfactory reasons for his opinion. + The capital merits of this work are that it is founded + on actual blunders, verified by chapter and verse + reference, and that the breaches of good use to which + exception is taken have been committed, not by slipshod, + uneducated writers, of whom nothing better could be + expected, but by persons distinguished for more than + ordinary carefulness in respect to style."--_New York + Sun._ + + + + "_'Bachelor Bluff' is bright, witty, keen, deep, sober, + philosophical, amusing, instructive, philanthropic--in + short, what is not 'Bachelor Bluff'?_" + + +NEW CHEAP SUMMER EDITION, IN PARCHMENT PAPER. + + +Bachelor Bluff: + + _His Opinions, Sentiments, and + Disputations._ By OLIVER B. BUNCE. + + "Mr. Bunce is a writer of uncommon freshness and + power.... Those who have read his brief but carefully + written studies will value at their true worth the + genuine critical insight and fine literary qualities + which characterize his work."--_Christian Union._ + + "We do not recall any volume of popular essays published + of late years which contains so much good writing, and + so many fine and original comments on topics of current + interest. Mr. Oracle Bluff is a self-opinionated, + genial, whole-souled fellow.... His talk is terse, + epigrammatic, full of quotable proverbs and isolated + bits of wisdom."--_Boston Traveller._ + + "It is a book which, while professedly aiming to amuse, + and affording a very rare and delightful fund of + amusement, insinuates into the crevices of the + reflective mind thoughts and sentiments that are sure to + fructify and perpetuate themselves."--_Eclectic + Magazine._ + +New cheap edition. 16mo, parchment paper. Price, 50 cents. + + + +Hygiene for Girls. + +By IRENAEUS P. DAVIS, M. D. + +18mo, cloth. Price, $1.25. + + "Many a woman whose childhood was bright with promise + endures an after-life of misery because, through a false + delicacy, she remained ignorant of her physical nature + and requirements, although on all other subjects she may + be well-informed; and so at length she goes to her grave + mourning the hard fate that has made existence a burden, + and perhaps wondering to what end she was born, when a + little knowledge at the proper time would have shown her + how to easily avoid those evils that have made her life + a wretched failure."--_From Introduction._ + + "A very useful book, for parents who have daughters is + 'Hygiene for Girls,' by Irenaeus P. Davis, M.D., + published by D. Appleton & Co. And it is just the book + for an intelligent, well-instructed girl to read with + care. It is not a text-book, nor does it bristle with + technical terms. But it tells in simple language just + what girls should do and not to do to preserve the + health and strength, to realize the joys, and prepare + for the duties of a woman's lot. It is written with a + delicacy, too, which a mother could hardly surpass in + talking with her daughter."--_Christian at Work._ + + + + PRICE, $1,25 A VOL.] [IN TWELVE VOLS. + + THE + _Parchment Shakspere._ + + NEW EDITION OF SHAKSPERE'S WORKS, + Bound in parchment, uncut, gilt top. + + + New York: + D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, + 1, 3, AND 5 BOND STREET. + + This edition is being printed with new type, cast + expressly for the work, on laid linen paper, and in a + form and style which give it peculiar elegance. The text + is mainly that of DELIUS, the chief difference + consisting in a more sparing use of punctuation than + that employed by the well-known German editor. Wherever + a variant reading is adopted, some good and recognized + SHAKSPEREAN critic has been followed. In no case is a + new rendering of the text proposed; nor has it been + thought necessary to distract the reader's attention by + notes or comments. + + + "_There is, perhaps no edition in which the works of + Shakspere can be read in such luxury of type, and quiet + distinction of form, as this._"--PALL MALL GAZETTE. + + + +The English Grammar _of William Cobbett_. + +Carefully revised and annotated by + +ALFRED AYRES, + +_Author of "The Orthoepist," "The Verbalist," etc._ + + + "The only amusing grammar in the world."--HENRY LYTTON + BULWER. + + "Interesting as a story-book."--HAZLITT. + + "I know it well, and have read it with great + admiration."--RICHARD GRANT WHITE. + + "Cobbett's Grammar is probably the most readable grammar + ever written. For the purposes of self-education it is + unrivaled."--_From the Preface._ + + Mr. Ayres makes a feature of the fact that WHO and WHICH + _are properly the_ CO-ORDINATING _relative pronouns_, + and that THAT _is properly the_ RESTRICTIVE _relative + pronoun_. + + The Grammar has an Index covering no less than eight + pages. + + + Uniform with "The Orthoepist" and "The Verbalist." + 18mo, cloth. Price, $1.00. + + + +New York: D. APPLETON & CO., 1, 3, & 5 Bond Street. + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of English as She is Wrote, by Anonymous + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENGLISH AS SHE IS WROTE *** + +***** This file should be named 25933.txt or 25933.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/2/5/9/3/25933/ + +Produced by David Yingling, Dave Morgan, V. L. 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