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Updated: June 29, 2025
I speaks as the Gran' Worthy Sublime an' Mighty Past High Master uv the Brother'ood an' Sister'ood uv Hanimated Freaks, an' I says hit vont' do! Our rights an' liberties is not thus to be er is they, Billy?" "Sor, they air not. They " "Vell, then, Billy, you shall come before the Brother'ood an' say so. You shall say it this werry mornin' vith your best langwidge.
The Doc won't mind, bein' as she turned it down." "Where is Dr. Martin gone, Billy? He needs a cup of tea; he's been up all night. He must be feeling tough." "Judgin' by his langwidge I should surmise yes," said Billy judicially. "Would you get him, Billy, and bring him here?" "Get him? S'pose I could. But as to bringin' him here, I'd prefer wild cats myself.
Is he worse?" she demanded, abruptly. "That's fer you t' find out. I ain't no doctor. He got on the fight, a while back, an' took t' throwin' things an' usin' langwidge. He can't git out uh bed, thank the Lord, or we'd be takin' t' the hills by now." "Then somebody has it to answer for. He was all right when I left him, two hours ago, with not a sign of fever. Has the Countess been pestering him?"
"'It's the tiger! ses Bill Chambers, and afore you could wink a'most he was inside the house, 'aving first upset Smith and a pot o' beer in the doorway. "Before he could get up, Smith 'ad to wait till we was all in. His langwidge was awful for a man as 'ad a license to lose, and everybody shouting 'Tiger! as they trod on 'im didn't ease 'is mind.
"Ca' cannier and be a wee thing quieter in your langwidge. There's a wheen leddies comin' up the burn." It was too late. Before Lewis understood the purport of the speech Lady Manorwater and her party were at the folds, and as he made one final effort with the refractory needle a voice in his ear said: "Please let me do that, Mr. Haystoun. I've often done it before."
That night after we'd got the supper things red up, Bill sez; "Now I don't want no one to punish this dog but me, till he gets his edication. I don't care a bean for a trick dog; all I expect him to learn is jest English an' a part o' the sign langwidge, so as he'll be pleasant company an' useful in an emergency. I'll pay for any property he destroys, but please don't punish him."
John Big Moose was easy with white folks, an' look the way he could spill langwidge. 'Most as good as we all." The others silently agreed to this, thinking what a great advantage it would be to John Big Moose in the Eastern college to talk as well as they did. "Our Injun boy could talk as well as John Big Moose, if he was usin' his own speech, an' wanted to," continued Bill.
"I 'opes she understands Carnish," he added to himself, "for 'tis the only langwidge I'm fluent in." "Beautiful sir," she replied in answer to his thoughts, "we sea-folk can understand all languages, for we visit the coast of every land, and all the tribes of the world sail over our kingdom, and oft-times come down through the waters to our home. The greatest kindness you can do me is to go away.
You wouldn't ha' used sich choice an' dainty langwidge 'fore you went away. Your speech has growed more c'rrect, more elegant, same as your dress." "My dress, Gid? What's the matter with my dress?" "Oh, yes," pursued Gideon.
He had stopped beside two Kaskaskia warriors in scarlet blankets who stood at the corner, watching with silent contempt the antics of the French inhabitants. Now and again one or the other gave a grunt and wrapped his blanket more tightly about him. "Umrrhh!" said Terence. "Faith, I talk that langwidge mesilf when I have throuble."
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