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<?xml version="1.0"?> <!DOCTYPE package PUBLIC "+//ISBN 0-9673008-1-9//DTD OEB 1.0 Package//EN" "http://openebook.org/dtds/oeb-1.0/oebdoc1.dtd"> <html> <head> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/x-oeb1-document; charset=utf-8" /> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="devil.css" /> <title>The Devil’s Dictionary: F</title> </head> <body lang="en-US"> <h1>F</h1> <p class="entry"><span class="def">fairy,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> A creature, variously fashioned and endowed, that formerly inhabited the meadows and forests. It was nocturnal in its habits, and somewhat addicted to dancing and the theft of children. The fairies are now believed by naturalist to be extinct, though a clergyman of the Church of England saw three near Colchester as lately as 1855, while passing through a park after dining with the lord of the manor. The sight greatly staggered him, and he was so affected that his account of it was incoherent. In the year 1807 a troop of fairies visited a wood near Aix and carried off the daughter of a peasant, who had been seen to enter it with a bundle of clothing. The son of a wealthy <i>bourgeois</i> disappeared about the same time, but afterward returned. He had seen the abduction been in pursuit of the fairies. Justinian Gaux, a writer of the fourteenth century, avers that so great is the fairies’ power of transformation that he saw one change itself into two opposing armies and fight a battle with great slaughter, and that the next day, after it had resumed its original shape and gone away, there were seven hundred bodies of the slain which the villagers had to bury. He does not say if any of the wounded recovered. In the time of Henry III, of England, a law was made which prescribed the death penalty for “Kyllynge, wowndynge, or mamynge” a fairy, and it was universally respected.</p> <p class="entry"><span class="def">faith,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> Belief without evidence in what is told by one who speaks without knowledge, of things without parallel.</p> <p id="famous" class="entry"><span class="def">famous,</span> <span class="pos">adj.</span> Conspicuously miserable.</p> <table align="center" border="0"> <tr> <td valign="top" align="left"> <p class="poetry">Done to a turn on the iron, behold<br /> Him who to be famous aspired.<br /> Content? Well, his grill has a plating of gold,<br /> And his twistings are greatly admired.</p> <p class="citeauth">Hassan Brubuddy.</p> </td> </tr> </table> <p class="entry"> </p> <p class="entry"><span class="def">fashion,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> A despot whom the wise ridicule and obey.</p> <table align="center" border="0"> <tr> <td valign="top" align="left"> <p class="poetry">A king there was who lost an eye<br /> In some excess of passion;<br /> And straight his courtiers all did try<br /> To follow the new fashion.<br /> Each dropped one eyelid when before<br /> The throne he ventured, thinking<br /> ‘Twould please the king. That monarch swore<br /> He’d slay them all for winking.<br /> What should they do? They were not hot<br /> To hazard such disaster;<br /> They dared not close an eye—dared not<br /> See better than their master.<br /> Seeing them lacrymose and glum,<br /> A leech consoled the weepers:<br /> He spread small rags with liquid gum<br /> And covered half their peepers.<br /> The court all wore the stuff, the flame<br /> Of royal anger dying.<br /> That’s how court-plaster got its name<br /> Unless I’m greatly lying.</p> <p class="citeauth">Naramy Oof.</p> </td> </tr> </table> <p class="entry"><span class="def">feast,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> A festival. A religious celebration usually signalized by gluttony and drunkenness, frequently in honor of some holy person distinguished for abstemiousness. In the Roman Catholic Church feasts are “movable” and “immovable,” but the celebrants are uniformly immovable until they are full. In their earliest development these entertainments took the form of feasts for the dead; such were held by the Greeks, under the name <i>Nemeseia</i>, by the Aztecs and Peruvians, as in modern times they are popular with the Chinese; though it is believed that the ancient dead, like the modern, were light eaters. Among the many feasts of the Romans was the <i>Novemdiale</i>, which was held, according to Livy, whenever stones fell from heaven.</p> <p class="entry"><span class="def">felon,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> A person of greater enterprise than discretion, who in embracing an opportunity has formed an unfortunate attachment.</p> <p class="entry"><span class="def">female,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> One of the opposing, or unfair, sex.</p> <table align="center" border="0"> <tr> <td valign="top" align="left"> <p class="poetry">The Maker, at Creation’s birth,<br /> With living things had stocked the earth.<br /> From elephants to bats and snails,<br /> They all were good, for all were males.<br /> But when the Devil came and saw<br /> He said: “By Thine eternal law<br /> Of growth, maturity, decay,<br /> These all must quickly pass away<br /> And leave untenanted the earth<br /> Unless Thou dost establish birth”—<br /> Then tucked his head beneath his wing<br /> To laugh—he had no sleeve—the thing<br /> With deviltry did so accord,<br /> That he’d suggested to the Lord.<br /> The Master pondered this advice,<br /> Then shook and threw the fateful dice<br /> Wherewith all matters here below<br /> Are ordered, and observed the throw;<br /> Then bent His head in awful state,<br /> Confirming the decree of Fate.<br /> From every part of earth anew<br /> The conscious dust consenting flew,<br /> While rivers from their courses rolled<br /> To make it plastic for the mould.<br /> Enough collected (but no more,<br /> For niggard Nature hoards her store)<br /> He kneaded it to flexible clay,<br /> While Nick unseen threw some away.<br /> And then the various forms He cast,<br /> Gross organs first and finer last;<br /> No one at once evolved, but all<br /> By even touches grew and small<br /> Degrees advanced, till, shade by shade,<br /> To match all living things He’d made<br /> Females, complete in all their parts<br /> Except (His clay gave out) thec hearts.<br /> “No matter,” Satan cried; “with speed<br /> I’ll fetch the very hearts they need”—<br /> So flew away and soon brought back<br /> The number needed, in a sack.<br /> That night earth range with sounds of strife—<br /> Ten million males each had a wife;<br /> That night sweet Peace her pinions spread<br /> O’er Hell—ten million devils dead!</p> <p class="citeauth">G. J.</p> </td> </tr> </table> <p class="entry"><span class="def">fib,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> A lie that has not cut its teeth. An habitual liar’s nearest approach to truth: the perigee of his eccentric orbit.</p> <table align="center" border="0"> <tr> <td valign="top" align="left"> <p class="poetry">When David said: “All men are liars,” Dave,<br /> Himself a liar, fibbed like any thief.<br /> Perhaps he thought to weaken disbelief<br /> By proof that even himself was not a slave<br /> To Truth; though I suspect the aged knave<br /> Had been of all her servitors the chief<br /> Had he but known a fig’s reluctant leaf<br /> Is more than e’er she wore on land or wave.<br /> No, David served not Naked Truth when he<br /> Struck that sledge-hammer blow at all his race;<br /> Nor did he hit the nail upon the head:<br /> For reason shows that it could never be,<br /> And the facts contradict him to his face.<br /> Men are not liars all, for some are dead.</p> <p class="citeauth">Bartle Quinker.</p> </td> </tr> </table> <p class="entry"><span class="def">fickleness,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> The iterated satiety of an enterprising affection.</p> <p class="entry"><span class="def">fiddle,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> An instrument to tickle human ears by friction of a horse’s tail on the entrails of a cat.</p> <p class="quote">To Rome said Nero: “If to smoke you turn I shall not cease to fiddle while you burn.” To Nero Rome replied: “Pray do your worst, ‘Tis my excuse that you were fiddling first.”—<i>Orm Pludge</i></p> <p class="entry"><span class="def">fidelity,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> A virtue peculiar to those who are about to be betrayed.</p> <p class="entry"><span class="def">finance,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> The art or science of managing revenues and resources for the best advantage of the manager. The pronunciation of this word with the i long and the accent on the first syllable is one of America’s most precious discoveries and possessions.</p> <p class="entry"><span class="def">flag,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> A colored rag borne above troops and hoisted on forts and ships. It appears to serve the same purpose as certain signs that one sees and vacant lots in London—“Rubbish may be shot here.”</p> <p class="entry"><span class="def">flesh,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> The Second Person of the secular Trinity.</p> <p class="entry"><span class="def">flop,</span> <span class="pos"> v.</span> Suddenly to change one’s opinions and go over to another party. The most notable flop on record was that of Saul of Tarsus, who has been severely criticised as a turn-coat by some of our partisan journals.</p> <p class="entry"><span class="def">fly-speck,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> The prototype of punctuation. It is observed by Garvinus that the systems of punctuation in use by the various literary nations depended originally upon the social habits and general diet of the flies infesting the several countries. These creatures, which have always been distinguished for a neighborly and companionable familiarity with authors, liberally or niggardly embellish the manuscripts in process of growth under the pen, according to their bodily habit, bringing out the sense of the work by a species of interpretation superior to, and independent of, the writer’s powers. The “old masters” of literature—that is to say, the early writers whose work is so esteemed by later scribes and critics in the same language—never punctuated at all, but worked right along free-handed, without that abruption of the thought which comes from the use of points. (We observe the same thing in children to-day, whose usage in this particular is a striking and beautiful instance of the law that the infancy of individuals reproduces the methods and stages of development characterizing the infancy of races.) In the work of these primitive scribes all the punctuation is found, by the modern investigator with his optical instruments and chemical tests, to have been inserted by the writers’ ingenious and serviceable collaborator, the common house-fly—<i>Musca maledicta</i>. In transcribing these ancient MSS, for the purpose of either making the work their own or preserving what they naturally regard as divine revelations, later writers reverently and accurately copy whatever marks they find upon the papyrus or parchment, to the unspeakable enhancement of the lucidity of the thought and value of the work. Writers contemporary with the copyists naturally avail themselves of the obvious advantages of these marks in their own work, and with such assistance as the flies of their own household may be willing to grant, frequently rival and sometimes surpass the older compositions, in respect at least of punctuation, which is no small glory. Fully to understand the important services that flies perform to literature it is only necessary to lay a page of some popular novelist alongside a saucer of cream-and-molasses in a sunny room and observe “how the wit brightens and the style refines” in accurate proportion to the duration of exposure.</p> <p class="entry"><span class="def">folly,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> That “gift and faculty divine” whose creative and controlling energy inspires Man’s mind, guides his actions and adorns his life.</p> <table align="center" border="0"> <tr> <td valign="top" align="left"> <p class="poetry">Folly! although Erasmus praised thee once<br /> In a thick volume, and all authors known,<br /> If not thy glory yet thy power have shown,<br /> Deign to take homage from thy son who hunts<br /> Through all thy maze his brothers, fool and dunce,<br /> To mend their lives and to sustain his own,<br /> However feebly be his arrows thrown,<br /> Howe’er each hide the flying weapons blunts.<br /> All-Father Folly! be it mine to raise,<br /> With lusty lung, here on his western strand<br /> With all thine offspring thronged from every land,<br /> Thyself inspiring me, the song of praise.<br /> And if too weak, I’ll hire, to help me bawl,<br /> Dick Watson Gilder, gravest of us all.</p> <p class="citeauth">Aramis Loto Frope.</p> </td> </tr> </table> <p id="fool" class="entry"><span class="def">fool,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> A person who pervades the domain of intellectual speculation and diffuses himself through the channels of moral activity. He is omnific, omniform, omnipercipient, omniscience, omnipotent. He it was who invented letters, printing, the railroad, the steamboat, the telegraph, the platitude and the circle of the sciences. He created patriotism and taught the nations war—founded theology, philosophy, law, medicine and Chicago. He established monarchical and republican government. He is from everlasting to everlasting—such as creation’s dawn beheld he fooleth now. In the morning of time he sang upon primitive hills, and in the noonday of existence headed the procession of being. His grandmotherly hand was warmly tucked-in the set sun of civilization, and in the twilight he prepares Man’s evening meal of milk-and-morality and turns down the covers of the universal grave. And after the rest of us shall have retired for the night of eternal oblivion he will sit up to write a history of human civilization.</p> <p class="entry"><span class="def">force,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span></p> <table align="center" border="0"> <tr> <td valign="top" align="left"> <p class="poetry">“Force is but might,” the teacher said—<br /> “That definition’s just.”<br /> The boy said naught but through instead,<br /> Remembering his pounded head:<br /> “Force is not might but must!”</p> </td> </tr> </table> <p class="entry"><span class="def">forefinger,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> The finger commonly used in pointing out two malefactors.</p> <p class="entry"><span class="def">foreordination,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> This looks like an easy word to define, but when I consider that pious and learned theologians have spent long lives in explaining it, and written libraries to explain their explanations; when I remember the nations have been divided and bloody battles caused by the difference between foreordination and predestination, and that millions of treasure have been expended in the effort to prove and disprove its compatibility with freedom of the will and the efficacy of prayer, praise, and a religious life,𔃐recalling these awful facts in the history of the word, I stand appalled before the mighty problem of its signification, abase my spiritual eyes, fearing to contemplate its portentous magnitude, reverently uncover and humbly refer it to His Eminence Cardinal Gibbons and His Grace Bishop Potter.</p> <p class="entry"><span class="def">forgetfulness,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> A gift of God bestowed upon doctors in compensation for their destitution of conscience.</p> <p class="entry"><span class="def">fork,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> An instrument used chiefly for the purpose of putting dead animals into the mouth. Formerly the knife was employed for this purpose, and by many worthy persons is still thought to have many advantages over the other tool, which, however, they do not altogether reject, but use to assist in charging the knife. The immunity of these persons from swift and awful death is one of the most striking proofs of God’s mercy to those that hate Him.</p> <p class="entry"><span class="def">forma pauperis.</span> <span class="pos"> [Latin]</span> In the character of a poor person—a method by which a litigant without money for lawyers is considerately permitted to lose his case.</p> <table align="center" border="0"> <tr> <td valign="top" align="left"> <p class="poetry">When Adam long ago in Cupid’s awful court<br /> (For Cupid ruled ere Adam was invented)<br /> Sued for Eve’s favor, says an ancient law report,<br /> He stood and pleaded unhabilimented.<br /> “You sue <i>in forma pauperis</i>, I see,” Eve cried;<br /> “Actions can’t here be that way prosecuted.”<br /> So all poor Adam’s motions coldly were denied:<br /> He went away—as he had come—nonsuited.</p> <p class="citeauth">G. J.</p> </td> </tr> </table> <p class="entry"><span class="def">Frankalmoigne,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> The tenure by which a religious corporation holds lands on condition of praying for the soul of the donor. In mediaeval times many of the wealthiest fraternities obtained their estates in this simple and cheap manner, and once when Henry VIII of England sent an officer to confiscate certain vast possessions which a fraternity of monks held by frankalmoigne, “What!” said the Prior, “would you master stay our benefactor’s soul in Purgatory?” “Ay,” said the officer, coldly, “an ye will not pray him thence for naught he must e’en roast.” “But look you, my son,” persisted the good man, “this act hath rank as robbery of God!” “Nay, nay, good father, my master the king doth but deliver him from the manifold temptations of too great wealth.”</p> <p class="entry"><span class="def">freebooter,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> A conqueror in a small way of business, whose annexations lack of the sanctifying merit of magnitude.</p> <p class="entry"><span class="def">freedom,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> Exemption from the stress of authority in a beggarly half dozen of restraint’s infinite multitude of methods. A political condition that every nation supposes itself to enjoy in virtual monopoly. Liberty. The distinction between freedom and liberty is not accurately known; naturalists have never been able to find a living specimen of either.</p> <table align="center" border="0"> <tr> <td valign="top" align="left"> <p class="poetry">Freedom, as every schoolboy knows,<br /> Once shrieked as Kosciusko fell;<br /> On every wind, indeed, that blows<br /> I hear her yell.<br /> She screams whenever monarchs meet,<br /> And parliaments as well,<br /> To bind the chains about her feet<br /> And toll her knell.<br /> And when the sovereign people cast<br /> The votes they cannot spell,<br /> Upon the pestilential blast<br /> Her clamors swell.<br /> For all to whom the power’s given<br /> To sway or to compel,<br /> Among themselves apportion Heaven<br /> And give her Hell.</p> <p class="citeauth">Blary O’Gary.</p> </td> </tr> </table> <p class="entry"><span class="def">Freemasons,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> An order with secret rites, grotesque ceremonies and fantastic costumes, which, originating in the reign of Charles II, among working artisans of London, has been joined successively by the dead of past centuries in unbroken retrogression until now it embraces all the generations of man on the hither side of Adam and is drumming up distinguished recruits among the pre-Creational inhabitants of Chaos and Formless Void. The order was founded at different times by Charlemagne, Julius Caesar, Cyrus, Solomon, Zoroaster, Confucious, Thothmes, and Buddha. Its emblems and symbols have been found in the Catacombs of Paris and Rome, on the stones of the Parthenon and the Chinese Great Wall, among the temples of Karnak and Palmyra and in the Egyptian Pyramids—always by a Freemason.</p> <p class="entry"><span class="def">friendless,</span> <span class="pos"> adj.</span> Having no favors to bestow. Destitute of fortune. Addicted to utterance of truth and common sense. </p> <p class="entry"><span class="def">friendship,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> A ship big enough to carry two in fair weather, but only one in foul.</p> <table align="center" border="0"> <tr> <td valign="top" align="left"> <p class="poetry">The sea was calm and the sky was blue;<br /> Merrily, merrily sailed we two.<br /> (High barometer maketh glad.)<br /> On the tipsy ship, with a dreadful shout,<br /> The tempest descended and we fell out.<br /> (O the walking is nasty bad!)</p> <p class="citeauth">Armit Huff Bettle.</p> </td> </tr> </table> <p class="entry"><span class="def">frog,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> A reptile with edible legs. The first mention of frogs in profane literature is in Homer’s narrative of the war between them and the mice. Skeptical persons have doubted Homer’s authorship of the work, but the learned, ingenious and industrious Dr. Schliemann has set the question forever at rest by uncovering the bones of the slain frogs. One of the forms of moral suasion by which Pharaoh was besought to favor the Israelities was a plague of frogs, but Pharaoh, who liked them <i>fricasees</i>, remarked, with truly oriental stoicism, that he could stand it as long as the frogs and the Jews could; so the programme was changed. The frog is a diligent songster, having a good voice but no ear. The libretto of his favorite opera, as written by Aristophanes, is brief, simple and effective—“brekekex-koax”; the music is apparently by that eminent composer, Richard Wagner. Horses have a frog in each hoof—a thoughtful provision of nature, enabling them to shine in a hurdle race.</p> <p class="entry"><span class="def">frying-pan,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> One part of the penal apparatus employed in that punitive institution, a woman’s kitchen. The frying-pan was invented by Calvin, and by him used in cooking span-long infants that had died without baptism; and observing one day the horrible torment of a tramp who had incautiously pulled a fried babe from the waste-dump and devoured it, it occurred to the great divine to rob death of its terrors by introducing the frying-pan into every household in Geneva. Thence it spread to all corners of the world, and has been of invaluable assistance in the propagation of his sombre faith. The following lines (said to be from the pen of his Grace Bishop Potter) seem to imply that the usefulness of this utensil is not limited to this world; but as the consequences of its employment in this life reach over into the life to come, so also itself may be found on the other side, rewarding its devotees:</p> <table align="center" border="0"> <tr> <td valign="top" align="left"> <p class="poetry">Old Nick was summoned to the skies.<br /> Said Peter: “Your intentions<br /> Are good, but you lack enterprise<br /> Concerning new inventions.<br /> “Now, broiling in an ancient plan<br /> Of torment, but I hear it<br /> Reported that the frying-pan<br /> Sears best the wicked spirit.<br /> “Go get one—fill it up with fat—<br /> Fry sinners brown and good in’t.”<br /> “I know a trick worth two o’ that,”<br /> Said Nick—“I’ll cook their food in’t.”</p> <p class="citeauth"> </p> </td> </tr> </table> <p id="funeral" class="entry"><span class="def">funeral,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> A pageant whereby we attest our respect for the dead by enriching the undertaker, and strengthen our grief by an expenditure that deepens our groans and doubles our tears.</p> <table align="center" border="0"> <tr> <td valign="top" align="left"> <p class="poetry">The savage dies—they sacrifice a horse<br /> To bear to happy hunting-grounds the corse.<br /> Our friends expire—we make the money fly<br /> In hope their souls will chase it to the sky.</p> <p class="citeauth">Jex Wopley.</p> </td> </tr> </table> <p class="entry"><span class="def">future,</span> <span class="pos"> n.</span> That period of time in which our affairs prosper, our friends are true and our happiness is assured.</p> </body> </html>