<p>G.J. <SPAN name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022"></SPAN></p>
<h1> T </h1>
<p>T, the twentieth letter of the English alphabet, was by the Greeks
absurdly called <i>tau</i>. In the alphabet whence ours comes it had the
form of the rude corkscrew of the period, and when it stood alone (which
was more than the Phoenicians could always do) signified <i>Tallegal</i>,
translated by the learned Dr. Brownrigg, "tanglefoot."</p>
<p>TABLE D'HOTE, n. A caterer's thrifty concession to the universal passion
for irresponsibility.</p>
<p>Old Paunchinello, freshly wed,<br/>
Took Madam P. to table,<br/>
And there deliriously fed<br/>
As fast as he was able.<br/>
<br/>
"I dote upon good grub," he cried,<br/>
Intent upon its throatage.<br/>
"Ah, yes," said the neglected bride,<br/>
"You're in your <i>table d'hotage</i>."<br/></p>
<p>Associated Poets</p>
<p>TAIL, n. The part of an animal's spine that has transcended its natural
limitations to set up an independent existence in a world of its own.
Excepting in its foetal state, Man is without a tail, a privation of which
he attests an hereditary and uneasy consciousness by the coat-skirt of the
male and the train of the female, and by a marked tendency to ornament
that part of his attire where the tail should be, and indubitably once
was. This tendency is most observable in the female of the species, in
whom the ancestral sense is strong and persistent. The tailed men
described by Lord Monboddo are now generally regarded as a product of an
imagination unusually susceptible to influences generated in the golden
age of our pithecan past.</p>
<p>TAKE, v.t. To acquire, frequently by force but preferably by stealth.</p>
<p>TALK, v.t. To commit an indiscretion without temptation, from an impulse
without purpose.</p>
<p>TARIFF, n. A scale of taxes on imports, designed to protect the domestic
producer against the greed of his consumer.</p>
<p>The Enemy of Human Souls<br/>
Sat grieving at the cost of coals;<br/>
For Hell had been annexed of late,<br/>
And was a sovereign Southern State.<br/>
<br/>
"It were no more than right," said he,<br/>
"That I should get my fuel free.<br/>
The duty, neither just nor wise,<br/>
Compels me to economize—<br/>
Whereby my broilers, every one,<br/>
Are execrably underdone.<br/>
What would they have?—although I yearn<br/>
To do them nicely to a turn,<br/>
I can't afford an honest heat.<br/>
This tariff makes even devils cheat!<br/>
I'm ruined, and my humble trade<br/>
All rascals may at will invade:<br/>
Beneath my nose the public press<br/>
Outdoes me in sulphureousness;<br/>
The bar ingeniously applies<br/>
To my undoing my own lies;<br/>
My medicines the doctors use<br/>
(Albeit vainly) to refuse<br/>
To me my fair and rightful prey<br/>
And keep their own in shape to pay;<br/>
The preachers by example teach<br/>
What, scorning to perform, I teach;<br/>
And statesmen, aping me, all make<br/>
More promises than they can break.<br/>
Against such competition I<br/>
Lift up a disregarded cry.<br/>
Since all ignore my just complaint,<br/>
By Hokey-Pokey! I'll turn saint!"<br/>
Now, the Republicans, who all<br/>
Are saints, began at once to bawl<br/>
Against <i>his</i> competition; so<br/>
There was a devil of a go!<br/>
They locked horns with him, tete-a-tete<br/>
In acrimonious debate,<br/>
Till Democrats, forlorn and lone,<br/>
Had hopes of coming by their own.<br/>
That evil to avert, in haste<br/>
The two belligerents embraced;<br/>
But since 'twere wicked to relax<br/>
A tittle of the Sacred Tax,<br/>
'Twas finally agreed to grant<br/>
The bold Insurgent-protestant<br/>
A bounty on each soul that fell<br/>
Into his ineffectual Hell.<br/></p>
<p>Edam Smith</p>
<p>TECHNICALITY, n. In an English court a man named Home was tried for
slander in having accused his neighbor of murder. His exact words were:
"Sir Thomas Holt hath taken a cleaver and stricken his cook upon the head,
so that one side of the head fell upon one shoulder and the other side
upon the other shoulder." The defendant was acquitted by instruction of
the court, the learned judges holding that the words did not charge
murder, for they did not affirm the death of the cook, that being only an
inference.</p>
<p>TEDIUM, n. Ennui, the state or condition of one that is bored. Many
fanciful derivations of the word have been affirmed, but so high an
authority as Father Jape says that it comes from a very obvious source—the
first words of the ancient Latin hymn <i>Te Deum Laudamus</i>. In this
apparently natural derivation there is something that saddens.</p>
<p>TEETOTALER, n. One who abstains from strong drink, sometimes totally,
sometimes tolerably totally.</p>
<p>TELEPHONE, n. An invention of the devil which abrogates some of the
advantages of making a disagreeable person keep his distance.</p>
<p>TELESCOPE, n. A device having a relation to the eye similar to that of the
telephone to the ear, enabling distant objects to plague us with a
multitude of needless details. Luckily it is unprovided with a bell
summoning us to the sacrifice.</p>
<p>TENACITY, n. A certain quality of the human hand in its relation to the
coin of the realm. It attains its highest development in the hand of
authority and is considered a serviceable equipment for a career in
politics. The following illustrative lines were written of a Californian
gentleman in high political preferment, who has passed to his accounting:</p>
<p>Of such tenacity his grip<br/>
That nothing from his hand can slip.<br/>
Well-buttered eels you may o'erwhelm<br/>
In tubs of liquid slippery-elm<br/>
In vain—from his detaining pinch<br/>
They cannot struggle half an inch!<br/>
'Tis lucky that he so is planned<br/>
That breath he draws not with his hand,<br/>
For if he did, so great his greed<br/>
He'd draw his last with eager speed.<br/>
Nay, that were well, you say. Not so<br/>
He'd draw but never let it go!<br/></p>
<p>THEOSOPHY, n. An ancient faith having all the certitude of religion and
all the mystery of science. The modern Theosophist holds, with the
Buddhists, that we live an incalculable number of times on this earth, in
as many several bodies, because one life is not long enough for our
complete spiritual development; that is, a single lifetime does not
suffice for us to become as wise and good as we choose to wish to become.
To be absolutely wise and good—that is perfection; and the
Theosophist is so keen-sighted as to have observed that everything
desirous of improvement eventually attains perfection. Less competent
observers are disposed to except cats, which seem neither wiser nor better
than they were last year. The greatest and fattest of recent Theosophists
was the late Madame Blavatsky, who had no cat.</p>
<p>TIGHTS, n. An habiliment of the stage designed to reinforce the general
acclamation of the press agent with a particular publicity. Public
attention was once somewhat diverted from this garment to Miss Lillian
Russell's refusal to wear it, and many were the conjectures as to her
motive, the guess of Miss Pauline Hall showing a high order of ingenuity
and sustained reflection. It was Miss Hall's belief that nature had not
endowed Miss Russell with beautiful legs. This theory was impossible of
acceptance by the male understanding, but the conception of a faulty
female leg was of so prodigious originality as to rank among the most
brilliant feats of philosophical speculation! It is strange that in all
the controversy regarding Miss Russell's aversion to tights no one seems
to have thought to ascribe it to what was known among the ancients as
"modesty." The nature of that sentiment is now imperfectly understood, and
possibly incapable of exposition with the vocabulary that remains to us.
The study of lost arts has, however, been recently revived and some of the
arts themselves recovered. This is an epoch of <i>renaissances</i>, and
there is ground for hope that the primitive "blush" may be dragged from
its hiding-place amongst the tombs of antiquity and hissed on to the
stage.</p>
<p>TOMB, n. The House of Indifference. Tombs are now by common consent
invested with a certain sanctity, but when they have been long tenanted it
is considered no sin to break them open and rifle them, the famous
Egyptologist, Dr. Huggyns, explaining that a tomb may be innocently
"glened" as soon as its occupant is done "smellynge," the soul being then
all exhaled. This reasonable view is now generally accepted by
archaeologists, whereby the noble science of Curiosity has been greatly
dignified.</p>
<p>TOPE, v. To tipple, booze, swill, soak, guzzle, lush, bib, or swig. In the
individual, toping is regarded with disesteem, but toping nations are in
the forefront of civilization and power. When pitted against the
hard-drinking Christians the abstemious Mahometans go down like grass
before the scythe. In India one hundred thousand beef-eating and
brandy-and-soda guzzling Britons hold in subjection two hundred and fifty
million vegetarian abstainers of the same Aryan race. With what an easy
grace the whisky-loving American pushed the temperate Spaniard out of his
possessions! From the time when the Berserkers ravaged all the coasts of
western Europe and lay drunk in every conquered port it has been the same
way: everywhere the nations that drink too much are observed to fight
rather well and not too righteously. Wherefore the estimable old ladies
who abolished the canteen from the American army may justly boast of
having materially augmented the nation's military power.</p>
<p>TORTOISE, n. A creature thoughtfully created to supply occasion for the
following lines by the illustrious Ambat Delaso:</p>
<p>TO MY PET TORTOISE</p>
<p>My friend, you are not graceful—not at all;<br/>
Your gait's between a stagger and a sprawl.<br/>
<br/>
Nor are you beautiful: your head's a snake's<br/>
To look at, and I do not doubt it aches.<br/>
<br/>
As to your feet, they'd make an angel weep.<br/>
'Tis true you take them in whene'er you sleep.<br/>
<br/>
No, you're not pretty, but you have, I own,<br/>
A certain firmness—mostly you're [sic] backbone.<br/>
<br/>
Firmness and strength (you have a giant's thews)<br/>
Are virtues that the great know how to use—<br/>
<br/>
I wish that they did not; yet, on the whole,<br/>
You lack—excuse my mentioning it—Soul.<br/>
<br/>
So, to be candid, unreserved and true,<br/>
I'd rather you were I than I were you.<br/>
<br/>
Perhaps, however, in a time to be,<br/>
When Man's extinct, a better world may see<br/>
<br/>
Your progeny in power and control,<br/>
Due to the genesis and growth of Soul.<br/>
<br/>
So I salute you as a reptile grand<br/>
Predestined to regenerate the land.<br/>
<br/>
Father of Possibilities, O deign<br/>
To accept the homage of a dying reign!<br/>
<br/>
In the far region of the unforeknown<br/>
I dream a tortoise upon every throne.<br/>
<br/>
I see an Emperor his head withdraw<br/>
Into his carapace for fear of Law;<br/>
<br/>
A King who carries something else than fat,<br/>
Howe'er acceptably he carries that;<br/>
<br/>
A President not strenuously bent<br/>
On punishment of audible dissent—<br/>
<br/>
Who never shot (it were a vain attack)<br/>
An armed or unarmed tortoise in the back;<br/>
<br/>
Subject and citizens that feel no need<br/>
To make the March of Mind a wild stampede;<br/>
<br/>
All progress slow, contemplative, sedate,<br/>
And "Take your time" the word, in Church and State.<br/>
<br/>
O Tortoise, 'tis a happy, happy dream,<br/>
My glorious testudinous regime!<br/>
<br/>
I wish in Eden you'd brought this about<br/>
By slouching in and chasing Adam out.<br/></p>
<p>TREE, n. A tall vegetable intended by nature to serve as a penal
apparatus, though through a miscarriage of justice most trees bear only a
negligible fruit, or none at all. When naturally fruited, the tree is a
beneficient agency of civilization and an important factor in public
morals. In the stern West and the sensitive South its fruit (white and
black respectively) though not eaten, is agreeable to the public taste
and, though not exported, profitable to the general welfare. That the
legitimate relation of the tree to justice was no discovery of Judge Lynch
(who, indeed, conceded it no primacy over the lamp-post and the
bridge-girder) is made plain by the following passage from Morryster, who
antedated him by two centuries:</p>
<p>While in yt londe I was carried to see ye Ghogo tree, whereof<br/>
I had hearde moch talk; but sayynge yt I saw naught remarkabyll in<br/>
it, ye hed manne of ye villayge where it grewe made answer as<br/>
followeth:<br/>
"Ye tree is not nowe in fruite, but in his seasonne you shall<br/>
see dependynge fr. his braunches all soch as have affroynted ye<br/>
King his Majesty."<br/>
And I was furder tolde yt ye worde "Ghogo" sygnifyeth in yr<br/>
tong ye same as "rapscal" in our owne.<br/></p>
<p><i>Trauvells in ye Easte</i></p>
<p>TRIAL, n. A formal inquiry designed to prove and put upon record the
blameless characters of judges, advocates and jurors. In order to effect
this purpose it is necessary to supply a contrast in the person of one who
is called the defendant, the prisoner, or the accused. If the contrast is
made sufficiently clear this person is made to undergo such an affliction
as will give the virtuous gentlemen a comfortable sense of their immunity,
added to that of their worth. In our day the accused is usually a human
being, or a socialist, but in mediaeval times, animals, fishes, reptiles
and insects were brought to trial. A beast that had taken human life, or
practiced sorcery, was duly arrested, tried and, if condemned, put to
death by the public executioner. Insects ravaging grain fields, orchards
or vineyards were cited to appeal by counsel before a civil tribunal, and
after testimony, argument and condemnation, if they continued <i>in
contumaciam</i> the matter was taken to a high ecclesiastical court, where
they were solemnly excommunicated and anathematized. In a street of
Toledo, some pigs that had wickedly run between the viceroy's legs,
upsetting him, were arrested on a warrant, tried and punished. In Naples
and ass was condemned to be burned at the stake, but the sentence appears
not to have been executed. D'Addosio relates from the court records many
trials of pigs, bulls, horses, cocks, dogs, goats, etc., greatly, it is
believed, to the betterment of their conduct and morals. In 1451 a suit
was brought against the leeches infesting some ponds about Berne, and the
Bishop of Lausanne, instructed by the faculty of Heidelberg University,
directed that some of "the aquatic worms" be brought before the local
magistracy. This was done and the leeches, both present and absent, were
ordered to leave the places that they had infested within three days on
pain of incurring "the malediction of God." In the voluminous records of
this <i>cause celebre</i> nothing is found to show whether the offenders
braved the punishment, or departed forthwith out of that inhospitable
jurisdiction.</p>
<p>TRICHINOSIS, n. The pig's reply to proponents of porcophagy.</p>
<p>Moses Mendlessohn having fallen ill sent for a Christian physician, who at
once diagnosed the philosopher's disorder as trichinosis, but tactfully
gave it another name. "You need an immediate change of diet," he said;
"you must eat six ounces of pork every other day."</p>
<p>"Pork?" shrieked the patient—"pork? Nothing shall induce me to touch
it!"</p>
<p>"Do you mean that?" the doctor gravely asked.</p>
<p>"I swear it!"</p>
<p>"Good!—then I will undertake to cure you."</p>
<p>TRINITY, n. In the multiplex theism of certain Christian churches, three
entirely distinct deities consistent with only one. Subordinate deities of
the polytheistic faith, such as devils and angels, are not dowered with
the power of combination, and must urge individually their claims to
adoration and propitiation. The Trinity is one of the most sublime
mysteries of our holy religion. In rejecting it because it is
incomprehensible, Unitarians betray their inadequate sense of theological
fundamentals. In religion we believe only what we do not understand,
except in the instance of an intelligible doctrine that contradicts an
incomprehensible one. In that case we believe the former as a part of the
latter.</p>
<p>TROGLODYTE, n. Specifically, a cave-dweller of the paleolithic period,
after the Tree and before the Flat. A famous community of troglodytes
dwelt with David in the Cave of Adullam. The colony consisted of "every
one that was in distress, and every one that was in debt, and every one
that was discontented"—in brief, all the Socialists of Judah.</p>
<p>TRUCE, n. Friendship.</p>
<p>TRUTH, n. An ingenious compound of desirability and appearance. Discovery
of truth is the sole purpose of philosophy, which is the most ancient
occupation of the human mind and has a fair prospect of existing with
increasing activity to the end of time.</p>
<p>TRUTHFUL, adj. Dumb and illiterate.</p>
<p>TRUST, n. In American politics, a large corporation composed in greater
part of thrifty working men, widows of small means, orphans in the care of
guardians and the courts, with many similar malefactors and public
enemies.</p>
<p>TURKEY, n. A large bird whose flesh when eaten on certain religious
anniversaries has the peculiar property of attesting piety and gratitude.
Incidentally, it is pretty good eating.</p>
<p>TWICE, adv. Once too often.</p>
<p>TYPE, n. Pestilent bits of metal suspected of destroying civilization and
enlightenment, despite their obvious agency in this incomparable
dictionary.</p>
<p>TZETZE (or TSETSE) FLY, n. An African insect (<i>Glossina morsitans</i>)
whose bite is commonly regarded as nature's most efficacious remedy for
insomnia, though some patients prefer that of the American novelist (<i>Mendax
interminabilis</i>).</p>
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