From 46439007cf417cbd9ac8049bb4122c890097a0fa Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "Charles.Forsyth" Date: Fri, 22 Dec 2006 20:52:35 +0000 Subject: 20060303-partial --- lib/ebooks/devils/H.html | 432 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 432 insertions(+) create mode 100644 lib/ebooks/devils/H.html (limited to 'lib/ebooks/devils/H.html') diff --git a/lib/ebooks/devils/H.html b/lib/ebooks/devils/H.html new file mode 100644 index 00000000..204f8039 --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/ebooks/devils/H.html @@ -0,0 +1,432 @@ + + + + + + +The Devil’s Dictionary: H + + + + +

H

+ + +

habeas corpus. A writ by which a man may be taken out of jail when confined for the wrong crime.

+ +

habit, n. A shackle for the free.

+ +

hades, n. The lower world; +the residence of departed spirits; the place where the dead live.

+ +

Among the ancients the idea of Hades was not synonymous with our Hell, many of the most +respectable men of antiquity residing there in a very comfortable kind of way. Indeed, +the Elysian Fields themselves were a part of Hades, though they have since been +removed to Paris. When the Jacobean version of the New Testament was in process +of evolution the pious and learned men engaged in the work insisted by a +majority vote on translating the Greek word “Aides” as “Hell”; but a +conscientious minority member secretly possessed himself of the record and +struck out the objectional word wherever he could find it. At the next meeting, +the Bishop of Salisbury, looking over the work, suddenly sprang to his feet and +said with considerable excitement: “Gentlemen, somebody has been razing ‘Hell’ +here!” Years afterward the good prelate’s death was made sweet by the +reflection that he had been the means (under Providence) of making an +important, serviceable and immortal addition to the phraseology of the English +tongue.

+ +

hag, n. An elderly lady whom you do not happen to like; sometimes called, also, a hen, or cat. Old +witches, sorceresses, etc., were called hags from the belief that their heads +were surrounded by a kind of baleful lumination or nimbus—hag being the popular +name of that peculiar electrical light sometimes observed in the hair. At one +time hag was not a word of reproach: Drayton speaks of a “beautiful hag, all +smiles,” much as Shakespeare said, “sweet wench.” It would not now be proper to +call your sweetheart a hag—that compliment is reserved for the use of her +grandchildren.

+ +

half, n. One of two equal parts into which a thing may be divided, or considered as divided. In +the fourteenth century a heated discussion arose among theologists and +philosophers as to whether Omniscience could part an object into three halves; +and the pious Father Aldrovinus publicly prayed in the cathedral at Rouen that +God would demonstrate the affirmative of the proposition in some signal and +unmistakable way, and particularly (if it should please Him) upon the body of +that hardy blasphemer, Manutius Procinus, who maintained the negative. Procinus, +however, was spared to die of the bite of a viper.

+ +

halo, n. Properly, a luminous ring encircling an astronomical body, but not infrequently +confounded with “aureola,” or “nimbus,” a somewhat similar phenomenon worn as a +head-dress by divinities and saints. The halo is a purely optical illusion, +produced by moisture in the air, in the manner of a rainbow; but the aureola is +conferred as a sign of superior sanctity, in the same way as a bishop’s mitre, +or the Pope’s tiara. In the painting of the Nativity, by Szedgkin, a pious artist +of Pesth, not only do the Virgin and the Child wear the nimbus, but an ass +nibbling hay from the sacred manger is similarly decorated and, to his lasting +honor be it said, appears to bear his unaccustomed dignity with a truly saintly +grace.

+ +

hand, n. A singular instrument worn at the end of the human arm and commonly thrust into +somebody’s pocket.

+ +

handkerchief, n. A small square of silk or linen, used in various ignoble offices about the face +and especially serviceable at funerals to conceal the lack of tears. The +handkerchief is of recent invention; our ancestors knew nothing of it and +intrusted its duties to the sleeve. Shakespeare’s introducing it into the play +of “Othello” is an anachronism: Desdemona dried her nose with her skirt, as Dr. +Mary Walker and other reformers have done with their coattails in our own +day—an evidence that revolutions sometimes go backward.

+ +

hangman, n. An officer of the law charged with duties of the highest dignity and utmost +gravity, and held in hereditary disesteem by a populace having a criminal +ancestry. In some of the American States his functions are now performed by an +electrician, as in New Jersey, where executions by electricity have recently +been ordered—the first instance known to this lexicographer of anybody +questioning the expediency of hanging Jerseymen.

+ +

happiness, n. An agreeable sensation arising from contemplating the misery of another.

+ +

harangue, n. A speech by an opponent, who is known as an harrangue- outang.

+ +

harbor, n. A place where ships taking shelter from stores are exposed to the fury of the customs.

+ +

harmonists, n. A sect of Protestants, now extinct, who came from Europe in the beginning of the +last century and were distinguished for the bitterness of their internal controversies and dissensions.

+ +

hash, x. There is no definition for this word—nobody knows what hash is.

+ +

hatchet, n. A young axe, known among Indians as a Thomashawk.

+ +
+

“O bury the hatchet, irascible Red,

+

For peace is a blessing,” the White Man said.

+

The Savage concurred, and that weapon interred, With imposing rites, in the White Man’s head.

+

John Lukkus

+
+ +

hatred, n. A sentiment appropriate to the occasion of another’s superiority.

+ +

head-money, n. A capitation tax, or poll-tax.

+ +
+

In ancient times there lived a king

+

Whose tax-collectors could not wring

+

From all his subjects gold enough

+

To make the royal way less rough.

+

For pleasure’s highway, like the dames

+

Whose premises adjoin it, claims

+

Perpetual repairing. So

+

The tax-collectors in a row

+

Appeared before the throne to pray

+

Their master to devise some way

+

To swell the revenue. “So great,”

+

Said they, “are the demands of state

+

A tithe of all that we collect

+

Will scarcely meet them. Pray reflect:

+

How, if one-tenth we must resign,

+

Can we exist on t’other nine?”

+

The monarch asked them in reply:

+

“Has it occurred to you to try

+

The advantage of economy?”

+

“It has,” the spokesman said: “we sold

+

All of our gray garrotes of gold;

+

With plated-ware we now compress

+

The necks of those whom we assess.

+

Plain iron forceps we employ

+

To mitigate the miser’s joy

+

Who hoards, with greed that never tires,

+

That which your Majesty requires.”

+

Deep lines of thought were seen to plow

+

Their way across the royal brow.

+

“Your state is desperate, no question;

+

Pray favor me with a suggestion.”

+

“O King of Men,” the spokesman said,

+

“If you’ll impose upon each head

+

A tax, the augmented revenue

+

We’ll cheerfully divide with you.”

+

As flashes of the sun illume

+

The parted storm-cloud’s sullen gloom,

+

The king smiled grimly. “I decree

+

That it be so—and, not to be

+

In generosity outdone,

+

Declare you, each and every one,

+

Exempted from the operation

+

Of this new law of capitation.

+

But lest the people censure me

+

Because they’re bound and you are free,

+

‘Twere well some clever scheme were laid

+

By you this poll-tax to evade.

+

I’ll leave you now while you confer

+

With my most trusted minister.”

+

The monarch from the throne-room walked

+

And straightway in among them stalked

+

A silent man, with brow concealed,

+

Bare-armed—his gleaming axe revealed!

+

G. J.

+
+ +

hearse, n. Death’s baby-carriage.

+ +

heart, n. An automatic, muscular blood-pump. Figuratively, this useful organ is said to be +the esat of emotions and sentiments—a very pretty fancy which, however, is +nothing but a survival of a once universal belief. It is now known that the +sentiments and emotions reside in the stomach, being evolved from food by +chemical action of the gastric fluid. The exact process by which a beefsteak +becomes a feeling—tender or not, according to the age of the animal from which +it was cut; the successive stages of elaboration through which a caviar +sandwich is transmuted to a quaint fancy and reappears as a pungent epigram; +the marvelous functional methods of converting a hard-boiled egg into religious +contrition, or a cream-puff into a sigh of sensibility—these things have been +patiently ascertained by M. Pasteur, and by him expounded with convincing +lucidity. (See, also, my monograph, The Essential Identity of the Spiritual +Affections and Certain Intestinal Gases Freed in Digestion—4to, 687 pp.) In +a scientific work entitled, I believe, Delectatio +Demonorum (John Camden Hotton, London, 1873) this view of the +sentiments receives a striking illustration; and for further light consult +Professor Dam’s famous treatise on Love as a +Product of Alimentary Maceration.

+ +

heat, n.

+ +
+

Heat, says Professor Tyndall, is a mode

+

Of motion, but I know now how he’s proving

+

His point; but this I know—hot words bestowed

+

With skill will set the human fist a-moving, And where it stops the stars burn free and wild. Crede expertum—I have seen them, child.

+

Gorton Swope

+
+ +

heathen, n. A benighted creature who has the folly to worship something that he can see and +feel. According to Professor Howison, of the California State University, +Hebrews are heathens.

+ +
+

“The Hebrews are heathens!” says Howison. He’s

+

A Christian philosopher. I’m

+

A scurril agnostical chap, if you please,

+

Addicted too much to the crime

+

Of religious discussion in my rhyme.

+

Though Hebrew and Howison cannot agree

+

On a modus vivendi—not they!—

+

Yet Heaven has had the designing of me,

+

And I haven’t been reared in a way

+

To joy in the thick of the fray.

+

For this of my creed is the soul and the gist,

+

And the truth of it I aver:

+

Who differs from me in his faith is an ‘ist,

+

And ‘ite, an ‘ie, or an ‘er—

+

And I’m down upon him or her!

+

Let Howison urge with perfunctory chin

+

Toleration—that’s all very well,

+

But a roast is “nuts” to his nostril thin,

+

And he’s running—I know by the smell—

+

A secret and personal Hell!

+

Bissell Gip

+
+ +

heaven, n. A place where the wicked cease from troubling you with talk of their personal affairs, +and the good listen with attention while you expound your own.

+ +

hebrew, n. A male Jew, as distinguished from the Shebrew, an altogether superior creation.

+ +

helpmate, n. A wife, or bitter half.

+ +
+

“Now, why is yer wife called a helpmate, Pat?”

+

Says the priest. “Since the time ‘o yer wooin’ She’s niver [sic] assisted in what ye were at—

+

For it’s naught ye are ever doin’.”

+

“That’s true of yer Riverence [sic],” Patrick replies,

+

And no sign of contrition envices;

+

“But, bedad, it’s a fact which the word implies,

+

For she helps to mate the expinses [sic]!”

+

Marley Wottel

+
+ +

hemp, n. A plant from whose fibrous bark is made an article of neckwear which is frequently put +on after public speaking in the open air and prevents the wearer from taking cold.

+ +

hermit, n. A person whose vices and follies are not sociable.

+ +

hers, pron. His.

+ +

hibernate, v.i. To pass the winter season in domestic seclusion. There have been many singular +popular notions about the hibernation of various animals. Many believe that the +bear hibernates during the whole winter and subsists by mechanically sucking +its paws. It is admitted that it comes out of its retirement in the spring so +lean that it had to try twice before it can cast a shadow. Three or four centuries +ago, in England, no fact was better attested than that swallows passed the +winter months in the mud at the bottom of their brooks, clinging together in +globular masses. They have apparently been compelled to give up the custom and +account of the foulness of the brooks. Sotus Ecobius discovered in Central Asia +a whole nation of people who hibernate. By some investigators, the fasting of +Lent is supposed to have been originally a modified form of hibernation, to +which the Church gave a religious significance; but this view was strenuously +opposed by that eminent authority, Bishop Kip, who did not wish any honors +denied to the memory of the Founder of his family.

+ +

hippogriff, n. An animal (now extinct) which was half horse and half griffin. The griffin was +itself a compound creature, half lion and half eagle. The hippogriff was +actually, therefore, a one-quarter eagle, which is two dollars and fifty cents +in gold. The study of zoology is full of surprises.

+ +

historian, n. A broad-gauge gossip.

+ +

history, n. An account mostly false, of events mostly unimportant, which are brought about by +rulers mostly knaves, and soldiers mostly fools.

+ +
+

Of Roman history, great Niebuhr’s shown

+

‘Tis nine-tenths lying.
+Faith, I wish ‘twere known, Ere we accept great Niebuhr as a guide,
+Wherein he blundered and how much he lied.

+

Salder Bupp

+
+ +

hog, n. A bird remarkable for the catholicity of its appetite and serving to illustrate that +of ours. Among the Mahometans and Jews, the hog is not in favor as an article +of diet, but is respected for the delicacy and the melody of its voice. It is +chiefly as a songster that the fowl is esteemed; the cage of him in full chorus +has been known to draw tears from two persons at once. The scientific name of +this dicky-bird is Porcus Rockefelleri. +Mr. Rockefeller did not discover the hog, but it is considered his by right of +resemblance.

+ +

homoeopathist, n. The humorist of the medical profession.

+ +

homoeopathy, n. A school of medicine midway between Allopathy and Christian Science. To the last +both the others are distinctly inferior, for Christian Science will cure +imaginary diseases, and they can not.

+ +

homicide, n. The slaying of one human being by another. There are four kinds of homocide: felonious, +excusable, justifiable, and praiseworthy, but it makes no great difference to +the person slain whether he fell by one kind or another—the classification is +for advantage of the lawyers.

+ +

homiletics, n. The science of adapting sermons to the spiritual needs, capacities and conditions +of the congregation.

+ +
+

So skilled the parson was in homiletics

+

That all his normal purges and emetics

+

To medicine the spirit were compounded

+

With a most just discrimination founded

+

Upon a rigorous examination

+

Of tongue and pulse and heart and respiration.

+

Then, having diagnosed each one’s condition,

+

His scriptural specifics this physician

+

Administered—his pills so efficacious

+

And pukes of disposition so vivacious

+

That souls afflicted with ten kinds of Adam
+Were convalescent ere they knew they had ‘em.
+But Slander’s tongue—itself all coated—uttered
+Her bilious mind and scandalously muttered
+That in the case of patients having money
+The pills were sugar and the pukes were honey.

+

Biography of Bishop Potter

+
+ +

honorable, adj. Afflicted with an impediment in one’s reach. In legislative bodies it is customary to +mention all members as honorable; as, “the honorable gentleman is a scurvy cur.”

+ +

hope, n. Desire and expectation rolled into one.

+ +
+

Delicious Hope! when naught to man it left—

+

Of fortune destitute, of friends bereft;

+

When even his dog deserts him, and his goat +With tranquil disaffection chews his coat +While yet it hangs upon his back; then thou, +The star far-flaming on thine angel brow, +Descendest, radiant, from the skies to hint +The promise of a clerkship in the Mint.

+

Fogarty Weffing

+
+ +

hospitality, n. The virtue which induces us to feed and lodge certain persons who are not in need +of food and lodging.

+ +

hostility, n. A peculiarly sharp and specially applied sense of the earth’s overpopulation. Hostility +is classified as active and passive; as (respectively) the feeling of a woman +for her female friends, and that which she entertains for all the rest of her sex.

+ +

Houri, n. A comely female inhabiting the Mohammedan Paradise to make things cheery for the good +Mussulman, whose belief in her existence marks a noble discontent with his +earthly spouse, whom he denies a soul. By that good lady the Houris are said to +be held in deficient esteem.

+ +

house, n. A hollow edifice erected for the habitation of man, rat, mouse, beelte, cockroach, fly, +mosquito, flea, bacillus and microbe. House +of Correction, a place of reward for political and personal service, +and for the detention of offenders and appropriations. House of God, a building with a steeple +and a mortgage on it. House-dog, +a pestilent beast kept on domestic premises to insult persons passing by and +appal the hardy visitor. House-maid, +a youngerly person of the opposing sex employed to be variously disagreeable +and ingeniously unclean in the station in which it has pleased God to place her.

+ +

houseless, adj. Having paid all taxes on household goods.

+ +

hovel, n. The fruit of a flower called the Palace.

+ +
+

Twaddle had a hovel,

+

Twiddle had a palace;

+

Twaddle said: “I’ll grovel

+

Or he’ll think I bear him malice”—

+

A sentiment as novel

+

As a castor on a chalice.

+

Down upon the middle

+

Of his legs fell Twaddle

+

And astonished Mr. Twiddle,

+

Who began to lift his noddle.

+

Feed upon the fiddle—

+

Faddle flummery, unswaddle

+

A new-born self-sufficiency and think himself a [mockery.]

+

G. J.

+
+ +

humanity, n. The human race, collectively, exclusive of the anthropoid poets.

+ +

humorist, n. A plague that would have softened down the hoar austerity of Pharaoh’s heart and +persuaded him to dismiss Israel with his best wishes, cat-quick.

+ +
+

Lo! the poor humorist, whose tortured mind

+

See jokes in crowds, though still to gloom inclined—

+

Whose simple appetite, untaught to stray, His brains, renewed by night, consumes by day.

+

He thinks, admitted to an equal sty,

+

A graceful hog would bear his company.

+

Alexander Poke

+
+ +

hurricane, n. An atmospheric demonstration once very common but now generally abandoned for the +tornado and cyclone. The hurricane is still in popular use in the West Indies +and is preferred by certain old-fashioned sea-captains. It is also used in the +construction of the upper decks of steamboats, but generally speaking, the +hurricane’s usefulness has outlasted it.

+ +

hurry, n. The dispatch of bunglers.

+ +

husband, n. One who, having dined, is charged with the care of the plate.

+ +

hybrid, n. A pooled issue.

+ +

hydra, n. A kind of animal that the ancients catalogued under many heads.

+ +

hyena, n. A beast held in reverence by some oriental nations from its habit of frequenting at +night the burial-places of the dead. But the medical student does that.

+ +

hypochondriasis, n. Depression of one’s own spirits.

+ +
+

Some heaps of trash upon a vacant lot
+Where long the village rubbish had been shot
+Displayed a sign among the stuff and stumps—
+“Hypochondriasis.” It meant The Dumps.

+

Bogul S. Purvy

+
+ +

hypocrite, n. One who, profession virtues that he does not respect secures the advantage of +seeming to be what he depises.

+ + + + \ No newline at end of file -- cgit v1.2.3