RABBLE, n. In a republic, those
who exercise a supreme authority tempered by fraudulent
elections. The rabble is like the sacred Simurgh,
of Arabian fable — omnipotent on condition
that it do nothing. (The word is Aristocratese, and
has no exact equivalent in our tongue, but means,
as nearly as may be, “soaring swine.”)
RACK, n. An argumentative implement
formerly much used in persuading devotees of a false
faith to embrace the living truth. As a call
to the unconverted the rack never had any particular
efficacy, and is now held in light popular esteem.
RANK, n. Relative elevation
in the scale of human worth.
He held at court a rank so high
That other noblemen asked why.
“Because,” ’twas answered,
“others lack
His skill to scratch the royal back.”
Aramis Jukes
RANSOM, n. The purchase of that
which neither belongs to the seller, nor can belong
to the buyer. The most unprofitable of investments.
RAPACITY, n. Providence without
industry. The thrift of power.
RAREBIT, n. A Welsh rabbit,
in the speech of the humorless, who point out that
it is not a rabbit. To whom it may be solemnly
explained that the comestible known as toad-in-a-hole
is really not a toad, and that riz-de-veau a la
financiere is not the smile of a calf prepared
after the recipe of a she banker.
RASCAL, n. A fool considered under another aspect.
RASCALITY, n. Stupidity militant.
The activity of a clouded intellect.
RASH, adj. Insensible to the value of our advice.
“Now lay your bet with mine, nor
let
These gamblers
take your cash.”
“Nay, this child makes no bet.”
“Great snakes!
How can you be
so rash?”
Bootle P. Gish
RATIONAL, adj. Devoid of all
delusions save those of observation, experience and
reflection.
RATTLESNAKE, n. Our prostrate
brother, Homo ventrambulans.
RAZOR, n. An instrument used
by the Caucasian to enhance his beauty, by the Mongolian
to make a guy of himself, and by the Afro-American
to affirm his worth.
REACH, n. The radius of action
of the human hand. The area within which it
is possible (and customary) to gratify directly the
propensity to provide.
This is a truth, as old as the hills,
That life and
experience teach:
The poor man suffers that keenest of ills,
An impediment
of his reach.
G.J.
READING, n. The general body
of what one reads. In our country it consists,
as a rule, of Indiana novels, short stories in “dialect”
and humor in slang.
We know by one’s reading
His learning and breeding;
By what draws his laughter
We know his Hereafter.
Read nothing, laugh never —
The Sphinx was less clever!
Jupiter Muke
RADICALISM, n. The conservatism
of to-morrow injected into the affairs of to-day.
RADIUM, n. A mineral that gives
off heat and stimulates the organ that a scientist
is a fool with.
RAILROAD, n. The chief of many
mechanical devices enabling us to get away from where
we are to where we are no better off. For this
purpose the railroad is held in highest favor by the
optimist, for it permits him to make the transit with
great expedition.
RAMSHACKLE, adj. Pertaining
to a certain order of architecture, otherwise known
as the Normal American. Most of the public buildings
of the United States are of the Ramshackle order, though
some of our earlier architects preferred the Ironic.
Recent additions to the White House in Washington
are Theo-Doric, the ecclesiastic order of the Dorians.
They are exceedingly fine and cost one hundred dollars
a brick.
REALISM, n. The art of depicting
nature as it is seen by toads. The charm suffusing
a landscape painted by a mole, or a story written by
a measuring-worm.
REALITY, n. The dream of a mad
philosopher. That which would remain in the
cupel if one should assay a phantom. The nucleus
of a vacuum.
REALLY, adv. Apparently.
REAR, n. In American military
matters, that exposed part of the army that is nearest
to Congress.
REASON, v.i. To weight probabilities
in the scales of desire.
REASON, n. Propensitate of prejudice.
REASONABLE, adj. Accessible to the infection
of our own opinions.
Hospitable to persuasion, dissuasion and evasion.
REBEL, n. A proponent of a new
misrule who has failed to establish it.
RECOLLECT, v. To recall with
additions something not previously known.
RECONCILIATION, n. A suspension
of hostilities. An armed truce for the purpose
of digging up the dead.
RECONSIDER, v. To seek a justification
for a decision already made.
RECOUNT, n. In American politics,
another throw of the dice, accorded to the player
against whom they are loaded.
RECREATION, n. A particular
kind of dejection to relieve a general fatigue.
RECRUIT, n. A person distinguishable
from a civilian by his uniform and from a soldier
by his gait.
Fresh from the farm or factory or street,
His marching, in pursuit or in retreat,
Were an impressive
martial spectacle
Except for two impediments —
his feet.
Thompson Johnson
RECTOR, n. In the Church of
England, the Third Person of the parochial Trinity,
the Cruate and the Vicar being the other two.
REDEMPTION, n. Deliverance of
sinners from the penalty of their sin, through their
murder of the deity against whom they sinned.
The doctrine of Redemption is the fundamental mystery
of our holy religion, and whoso believeth in it shall
not perish, but have everlasting life in which to
try to understand it.
We must awake Man’s spirit from
his sin,
And take some
special measure for redeeming it;
Though hard indeed the task to get it
in
Among the angels
any way but teaming it,
Or purify it otherwise
than steaming it.
I’m awkward at Redemption —
a beginner:
My method is to crucify the sinner.
Golgo Brone
REDRESS, n. Reparation without
satisfaction.
Among the Anglo-Saxon a subject conceiving
himself wronged by the
king was permitted, on proving his injury, to beat
a brazen image of the royal offender with a switch
that was afterward applied to his own naked back.
The latter rite was performed by the public hangman,
and it assured moderation in the plaintiff’s
choice of a switch.
RED-SKIN, n. A North American
Indian, whose skin is not red — at least
not on the outside.
REDUNDANT, adj. Superfluous; needless; de
trop.
The Sultan said: “There’s
evidence abundant
To prove this unbelieving dog redundant.”
To whom the Grand Vizier, with mien impressive,
Replied: “His head, at least,
appears excessive.”
Habeeb Suleiman
Mr. Debs is a redundant citizen.
Theodore Roosevelt
REFERENDUM, n. A law for submission
of proposed legislation to a popular vote to learn
the nonsensus of public opinion.
REFLECTION, n. An action of
the mind whereby we obtain a clearer view of our relation
to the things of yesterday and are able to avoid the
perils that we shall not again encounter.
REFORM, v. A thing that mostly
satisfies reformers opposed to reformation.
REFUGE, n. Anything assuring
protection to one in peril. Moses and Joshua
provided six cities of refuge — Bezer, Golan,
Ramoth, Kadesh, Schekem and Hebron — to
which one who had taken life inadvertently could flee
when hunted by relatives of the deceased. This
admirable expedient supplied him with wholesome exercise
and enabled them to enjoy the pleasures of the chase;
whereby the soul of the dead man was appropriately
honored by observations akin to the funeral games of
early Greece.
REFUSAL, n. Denial of something
desired; as an elderly maiden’s hand in marriage,
to a rich and handsome suitor; a valuable franchise
to a rich corporation, by an alderman; absolution
to an impenitent king, by a priest, and so forth.
Refusals are graded in a descending scale of finality
thus: the refusal absolute, the refusal condition,
the refusal tentative and the refusal feminine.
The last is called by some casuists the refusal assentive.
REGALIA, n. Distinguishing insignia,
jewels and costume of such ancient and honorable orders
as Knights of Adam; Visionaries of Detectable Bosh;
the Ancient Order of Modern Troglodytes; the League
of Holy Humbug; the Golden Phalanx of Phalangers; the
Genteel Society of Expurgated Hoodlums; the Mystic
Alliances of Georgeous Regalians; Knights and Ladies
of the Yellow Dog; the Oriental Order of Sons of the
West; the Blatherhood of Insufferable Stuff; Warriors
of the Long Bow; Guardians of the Great Horn Spoon;
the Band of Brutes; the Impenitent Order of Wife-Beaters;
the Sublime Legion of Flamboyant Conspicuants; Worshipers
at the Electroplated Shrine; Shining Inaccessibles;
Fee-Faw-Fummers of the inimitable Grip; Jannissaries
of the Broad-Blown Peacock; Plumed Increscencies of
the Magic Temple; the Grand Cabal of Able-Bodied Sedentarians;
Associated Deities of the Butter Trade; the Garden
of Galoots; the Affectionate Fraternity of Men Similarly
Warted; the Flashing Astonishers; Ladies of Horror;
Cooperative Association for Breaking into the Spotlight;
Dukes of Eden; Disciples Militant of the Hidden Faith;
Knights-Champions of the Domestic Dog; the Holy Gregarians;
the Resolute Optimists; the Ancient Sodality of Inhospitable
Hogs; Associated Sovereigns of Mendacity; Dukes-Guardian
of the Mystic Cess-Pool; the Society for Prevention
of Prevalence; Kings of Drink; Polite Federation of
Gents-Consequential; the Mysterious Order of the Undecipherable
Scroll; Uniformed Rank of Lousy Cats; Monarchs of
Worth and Hunger; Sons of the South Star; Prelates
of the Tub-and-Sword.
RELIGION, n. A daughter of Hope and Fear, explaining
to Ignorance the
nature of the Unknowable.
“What is your religion my son?”
inquired the Archbishop of Rheims.
“Pardon, monseigneur,” replied
Rochebriant; “I am ashamed of it.”
“Then why do you not become an atheist?”
“Impossible! I should be ashamed
of atheism.”
“In that case, monsieur, you should
join the Protestants.”
RELIQUARY, n. A receptacle for
such sacred objects as pieces of the true cross, short-ribs
of the saints, the ears of Balaam’s ass, the
lung of the cock that called Peter to repentance and
so forth. Reliquaries are commonly of metal,
and provided with a lock to prevent the contents from
coming out and performing miracles at unseasonable
times. A feather from the wing of the Angel of
the Annunciation once escaped during a sermon in Saint
Peter’s and so tickled the noses of the congregation
that they woke and sneezed with great vehemence three
times each. It is related in the “Gesta
Sanctorum” that a sacristan in the Canterbury
cathedral surprised the head of Saint Dennis in the
library. Reprimanded by its stern custodian,
it explained that it was seeking a body of doctrine.
This unseemly levity so raged the diocesan that the
offender was publicly anathematized, thrown into the
Stour and replaced by another head of Saint Dennis,
brought from Rome.
RENOWN, n. A degree of distinction
between notoriety and fame — a little more
supportable than the one and a little more intolerable
than the other. Sometimes it is conferred by
an unfriendly and inconsiderate hand.
I touched the harp in every key,
But found no heeding
ear;
And then Ithuriel touched me
With a revealing
spear.
Not all my genius, great as ’tis,
Could urge me
out of night.
I felt the faint appulse of his,
And leapt into
the light!
W.J. Candleton
REPARATION, n. Satisfaction
that is made for a wrong and deducted from the satisfaction
felt in committing it.
REPARTEE, n. Prudent insult
in retort. Practiced by gentlemen with a constitutional
aversion to violence, but a strong disposition to
offend. In a war of words, the tactics of the
North American Indian.
REPENTANCE, n. The faithful
attendant and follower of Punishment. It is
usually manifest in a degree of reformation that is
not inconsistent with continuity of sin.
Desirous to avoid the pains of Hell,
You will repent and join the Church, Parnell?
How needless! — Nick will keep
you off the coals
And add you to the woes of other souls.
Jomater Abemy
REPLICA, n. A reproduction of
a work of art, by the artist that made the original.
It is so called to distinguish it from a “copy,”
which is made by another artist. When the two
are mae with equal skill the replica is the more valuable,
for it is supposed to be more beautiful than it looks.
REPORTER, n. A writer who guesses
his way to the truth and dispels it with a tempest
of words.
“More dear than all my bosom knows,
O thou
Whose ‘lips are sealed’ and
will not disavow!”
So sang the blithe reporter-man as grew
Beneath his hand the leg-long “interview.”
Barson Maith
REPOSE, v.i. To cease from troubling.
REPRESENTATIVE, n. In national
politics, a member of the Lower House in this world,
and without discernible hope of promotion in the next.
REPROBATION, n. In theology,
the state of a luckless mortal prenatally damned.
The doctrine of reprobation was taught by Calvin,
whose joy in it was somewhat marred by the sad sincerity
of his conviction that although some are foredoomed
to perdition, others are predestined to salvation.
REPUBLIC, n. A nation in which,
the thing governing and the thing governed being the
same, there is only a permitted authority to enforce
an optional obedience. In a republic, the foundation
of public order is the ever lessening habit of submission
inherited from ancestors who, being truly governed,
submitted because they had to. There are as many
kinds of republics as there are graduations between
the despotism whence they came and the anarchy whither
they lead.
REQUIEM, n. A mass for the dead
which the minor poets assure us the winds sing o’er
the graves of their favorites. Sometimes, by
way of providing a varied entertainment, they sing
a dirge.
RESIDENT, adj. Unable to leave.
RESIGN, v.t. To renounce an
honor for an advantage. To renounce an advantage
for a greater advantage.
’Twas rumored Leonard Wood had signed
A true renunciation
Of title, rank and every kind
Of military station
—
Each honorable
station.
By his example fired — inclined
To noble emulation,
The country humbly was resigned
To Leonard’s
resignation —
His Christian
resignation.
Politian Greame
RESOLUTE, adj. Obstinate in a course that we
approve.
RESPECTABILITY, n. The offspring
of a liaison between a bald head and a bank
account.
RESPIRATOR, n. An apparatus
fitted over the nose and mouth of an inhabitant of
London, whereby to filter the visible universe in its
passage to the lungs.
RESPITE, n. A suspension of
hostilities against a sentenced assassin, to enable
the Executive to determine whether the murder may not
have been done by the prosecuting attorney.
Any break in the continuity of a disagreeable expectation.
Altgeld upon his incandescent bed
Lay, an attendant demon at his head.
“O cruel cook, pray grant me some
relief —
Some respite from the roast, however brief.”
“Remember how on earth I pardoned
all
Your friends in Illinois when held in
thrall.”
“Unhappy soul! for that alone you
squirm
O’er fire unquenched, a never-dying
worm.
“Yet, for I pity your uneasy state,
Your doom I’ll mollify and pains
abate.
“Naught, for a season, shall your
comfort mar,
Not even the memory of who you are.”
Throughout eternal space dread silence
fell;
Heaven trembled as Compassion entered
Hell.
“As long, sweet demon, let my respite
be
As, governing down here, I’d respite
thee.”
“As long, poor soul, as any of the
pack
You thrust from jail consumed in getting
back.”
A genial chill affected Altgeld’s
hide
While they were turning him on t’other
side.
Joel Spate Woop
RESPLENDENT, adj. Like a simple
American citizen beduking himself in his lodge, or
affirming his consequence in the Scheme of Things as
an elemental unit of a parade.
The Knights of
Dominion were so resplendent in their velvet-
and-gold that their masters would hardly
have known them.
“Chronicles of the Classes”
RESPOND, v.i. To make answer,
or disclose otherwise a consciousness of having inspired
an interest in what Herbert Spencer calls “external
coexistences,” as Satan “squat like a toad”
at the ear of Eve, responded to the touch of the angel’s
spear. To respond in damages is to contribute
to the maintenance of the plaintiff’s attorney
and, incidentally, to the gratification of the plaintiff.
RESPONSIBILITY, n. A detachable
burden easily shifted to the shoulders of God, Fate,
Fortune, Luck or one’s neighbor. In the
days of astrology it was customary to unload it upon
a star.
Alas, things ain’t what we should
see
If Eve had let that apple be;
And many a feller which had ought
To set with monarchses of thought,
Or play some rosy little game
With battle-chaps on fields of fame,
Is downed by his unlucky star
And hollers: “Peanuts! —
here you are!”
“The Sturdy Beggar”
RESTITUTIONS, n. The founding
or endowing of universities and public libraries by
gift or bequest.
RESTITUTOR, n. Benefactor; philanthropist.
RETALIATION, n. The natural rock upon which
is reared the Temple of
Law.
RETRIBUTION, n. A rain of fire-and-brimstone
that falls alike upon the just and such of the unjust
as have not procured shelter by evicting them.
In the lines following, addressed to an
Emperor in exile by Father
Gassalasca Jape, the reverend poet appears to hint
his sense of the improduence of turning about to face
Retribution when it is talking exercise:
What, what! Dom Pedro, you desire
to go
Back to Brazil
to end your days in quiet?
Why, what assurance have you ’twould
be so?
’Tis not
so long since you were in a riot,
And your dear
subjects showed a will to fly at
Your throat and shake you like a rat.
You know
That empires are ungrateful; are you certain
Republics are less handy to get hurt in?
REVEILLE, n. A signal to sleeping
soldiers to dream of battlefields no more, but get
up and have their blue noses counted. In the
American army it is ingeniously called “rev-e-lee,”
and to that pronunciation our countrymen have pledged
their lives, their misfortunes and their sacred dishonor.
REVELATION, n. A famous book
in which St. John the Divine concealed all that he
knew. The revealing is done by the commentators,
who know nothing.
REVERENCE, n. The spiritual
attitude of a man to a god and a dog to a man.
REVIEW, v.t.
To set your wisdom (holding not a doubt
of it,
Although in truth
there’s neither bone nor skin to it)
At work upon a book, and so read out of
it
The qualities
that you have first read into it.
REVOLUTION, n. In politics,
an abrupt change in the form of misgovernment.
Specifically, in American history, the substitution
of the rule of an Administration for that of a Ministry,
whereby the welfare and happiness of the people were
advanced a full half-inch. Revolutions are usually
accompanied by a considerable effusion of blood, but
are accounted worth it — this appraisement
being made by beneficiaries whose blood had not the
mischance to be shed. The French revolution
is of incalculable value to the Socialist of to-day;
when he pulls the string actuating its bones its gestures
are inexpressibly terrifying to gory tyrants suspected
of fomenting law and order.
RHADOMANCER, n. One who uses
a divining-rod in prospecting for precious metals
in the pocket of a fool.
RIBALDRY, n. Censorious language
by another concerning oneself.
RIBROASTER, n. Censorious language
by oneself concerning another. The word is of
classical refinement, and is even said to have been
used in a fable by Georgius Coadjutor, one of the most
fastidious writers of the fifteenth century —
commonly, indeed, regarded as the founder of the Fastidiotic
School.
RICE-WATER, n. A mystic beverage
secretly used by our most popular novelists and poets
to regulate the imagination and narcotize the conscience.
It is said to be rich in both obtundite and lethargine,
and is brewed in a midnight fog by a fat which of the
Dismal Swamp.
RICH, adj. Holding in trust
and subject to an accounting the property of the indolent,
the incompetent, the unthrifty, the envious and the
luckless. That is the view that prevails in the
underworld, where the Brotherhood of Man finds its
most logical development and candid advocacy.
To denizens of the midworld the word means good and
wise.
RICHES, n.
A gift from Heaven
signifying, “This is my beloved son, in
whom I am well pleased.”
John D. Rockefeller
The reward of
toil and virtue.
J.P. Morgan
The sayings of
many in the hands of one.
Eugene Debs
To these excellent definitions the
inspired lexicographer feels that he can add nothing
of value.
RIDICULE, n. Words designed
to show that the person of whom they are uttered is
devoid of the dignity of character distinguishing him
who utters them. It may be graphic, mimetic
or merely rident. Shaftesbury is quoted as having
pronounced it the test of truth — a ridiculous
assertion, for many a solemn fallacy has undergone
centuries of ridicule with no abatement of its popular
acceptance. What, for example, has been more
valorously derided than the doctrine of Infant Respectability?
RIGHT, n. Legitimate authority
to be, to do or to have; as the right to be a king,
the right to do one’s neighbor, the right to
have measles, and the like. The first of these
rights was once universally believed to be derived
directly from the will of God; and this is still sometimes
affirmed in partibus infidelium outside the
enlightened realms of Democracy; as the well known
lines of Sir Abednego Bink, following:
By what right,
then, do royal rulers rule?
Whose
is the sanction of their state and pow’r?
He surely were
as stubborn as a mule
Who,
God unwilling, could maintain an hour
His uninvited session on the throne, or
air
His pride securely in the Presidential
chair.
Whatever is is
so by Right Divine;
Whate’er
occurs, God wills it so. Good land!
It were a wondrous
thing if His design
A
fool could baffle or a rogue withstand!
If so, then God, I say (intending no offence)
Is guilty of contributory negligence.
RIGHTEOUSNESS, n. A sturdy virtue
that was once found among the Pantidoodles inhabiting
the lower part of the peninsula of Oque. Some
feeble attempts were made by returned missionaries
to introduce it into several European countries, but
it appears to have been imperfectly expounded.
An example of this faulty exposition is found in
the only extant sermon of the pious Bishop Rowley,
a characteristic passage from which is here given:
“Now righteousness
consisteth not merely in a holy state of
mind, nor yet in performance of religious
rites and obedience to
the letter of the law. It is not
enough that one be pious and
just: one must see to it that others
also are in the same state;
and to this end compulsion is a proper
means. Forasmuch as my
injustice may work ill to another, so
by his injustice may evil be
wrought upon still another, the which
it is as manifestly my duty
to estop as to forestall mine own tort.
Wherefore if I would be
righteous I am bound to restrain my neighbor,
by force if needful,
in all those injurious enterprises from
which, through a better
disposition and by the help of Heaven,
I do myself restrain.”
RIME, n. Agreeing sounds in
the terminals of verse, mostly bad. The verses
themselves, as distinguished from prose, mostly dull.
Usually (and wickedly) spelled “rhyme.”
RIMER, n. A poet regarded with
indifference or disesteem.
The rimer quenches his unheeded fires,
The sound surceases and the sense expires.
Then the domestic dog, to east and west,
Expounds the passions burning in his breast.
The rising moon o’er that enchanted
land
Pauses to hear and yearns to understand.
Mowbray Myles
RIOT, n. A popular entertainment
given to the military by innocent bystanders.
R.I.P. A careless abbreviation
of requiescat in pace, attesting to indolent
goodwill to the dead. According to the learned
Dr. Drigge, however, the letters originally meant
nothing more than reductus in pulvis.
RITE, n. A religious or semi-religious
ceremony fixed by law, precept or custom, with the
essential oil of sincerity carefully squeezed out
of it.
RITUALISM, n. A Dutch Garden
of God where He may walk in rectilinear freedom, keeping
off the grass.
ROAD, n. A strip of land along
which one may pass from where it is too tiresome to
be to where it is futile to go.
All roads, howsoe’er they diverge,
lead to Rome,
Whence, thank the good Lord, at least
one leads back home.
Borey the Bald
ROBBER, n. A candid man of affairs.
It is related of Voltaire that one night
he and some traveling
companion lodged at a wayside inn. The surroundings
were suggestive, and after supper they agreed to tell
robber stories in turn. “Once there was
a Farmer-General of the Revenues.” Saying
nothing more, he was encouraged to continue.
“That,” he said, “is the story.”
ROMANCE, n. Fiction that owes
no allegiance to the God of Things as They Are.
In the novel the writer’s thought is tethered
to probability, as a domestic horse to the hitching-post,
but in romance it ranges at will over the entire region
of the imagination — free, lawless, immune
to bit and rein. Your novelist is a poor creature,
as Carlyle might say — a mere reporter.
He may invent his characters and plot, but he must
not imagine anything taking place that might not occur,
albeit his entire narrative is candidly a lie.
Why he imposes this hard condition on himself, and
“drags at each remove a lengthening chain”
of his own forging he can explain in ten thick volumes
without illuminating by so much as a candle’s
ray the black profound of his own ignorance of the
matter. There are great novels, for great writers
have “laid waste their powers” to write
them, but it remains true that far and away the most
fascinating fiction that we have is “The Thousand
and One Nights.”
ROPE, n. An obsolescent appliance
for reminding assassins that they too are mortal.
It is put about the neck and remains in place one’s
whole life long. It has been largely superseded
by a more complex electrical device worn upon another
part of the person; and this is rapidly giving place
to an apparatus known as the preachment.
ROSTRUM, n. In Latin, the beak
of a bird or the prow of a ship. In America,
a place from which a candidate for office energetically
expounds the wisdom, virtue and power of the rabble.
ROUNDHEAD, n. A member of the
Parliamentarian party in the English civil war —
so called from his habit of wearing his hair short,
whereas his enemy, the Cavalier, wore his long.
There were other points of difference between them,
but the fashion in hair was the fundamental cause
of quarrel. The Cavaliers were royalists because
the king, an indolent fellow, found it more convenient
to let his hair grow than to wash his neck.
This the Roundheads, who were mostly barbers and soap-boilers,
deemed an injury to trade, and the royal neck was
therefore the object of their particular indignation.
Descendants of the belligerents now wear their hair
all alike, but the fires of animosity enkindled in
that ancient strife smoulder to this day beneath the
snows of British civility.
RUBBISH, n. Worthless matter,
such as the religions, philosophies, literatures,
arts and sciences of the tribes infesting the regions
lying due south from Boreaplas.
RUIN, v. To destroy. Specifically,
to destroy a maid’s belief in the virtue of
maids.
RUM, n. Generically, fiery liquors
that produce madness in total abstainers.
RUMOR, n. A favorite weapon
of the assassins of character.
Sharp, irresistible by mail or shield,
By guard unparried
as by flight unstayed,
O serviceable Rumor, let me wield
Against my enemy
no other blade.
His be the terror of a foe unseen,
His the inutile
hand upon the hilt,
And mine the deadly tongue, long, slender,
keen,
Hinting a rumor
of some ancient guilt.
So shall I slay the wretch without a blow,
Spare me to celebrate his overthrow,
And nurse my valor for another foe.
Joel Buxter
RUSSIAN, n. A person with a Caucasian body and
a Mongolian soul. A
Tartar Emetic.