<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023"></SPAN></p>
<h1> U </h1>
<p>UBIQUITY, n. The gift or power of being in all places at one time, but not
in all places at all times, which is omnipresence, an attribute of God and
the luminiferous ether only. This important distinction between ubiquity
and omnipresence was not clear to the mediaeval Church and there was much
bloodshed about it. Certain Lutherans, who affirmed the presence
everywhere of Christ's body were known as Ubiquitarians. For this error
they were doubtless damned, for Christ's body is present only in the
eucharist, though that sacrament may be performed in more than one place
simultaneously. In recent times ubiquity has not always been understood—not
even by Sir Boyle Roche, for example, who held that a man cannot be in two
places at once unless he is a bird.</p>
<p>UGLINESS, n. A gift of the gods to certain women, entailing virtue without
humility.</p>
<p>ULTIMATUM, n. In diplomacy, a last demand before resorting to concessions.</p>
<p>Having received an ultimatum from Austria, the Turkish Ministry met to
consider it.</p>
<p>"O servant of the Prophet," said the Sheik of the Imperial Chibouk to the
Mamoosh of the Invincible Army, "how many unconquerable soldiers have we
in arms?"</p>
<p>"Upholder of the Faith," that dignitary replied after examining his
memoranda, "they are in numbers as the leaves of the forest!"</p>
<p>"And how many impenetrable battleships strike terror to the hearts of all
Christian swine?" he asked the Imaum of the Ever Victorious Navy.</p>
<p>"Uncle of the Full Moon," was the reply, "deign to know that they are as
the waves of the ocean, the sands of the desert and the stars of Heaven!"</p>
<p>For eight hours the broad brow of the Sheik of the Imperial Chibouk was
corrugated with evidences of deep thought: he was calculating the chances
of war. Then, "Sons of angels," he said, "the die is cast! I shall suggest
to the Ulema of the Imperial Ear that he advise inaction. In the name of
Allah, the council is adjourned."</p>
<p>UN-AMERICAN, adj. Wicked, intolerable, heathenish.</p>
<p>UNCTION, n. An oiling, or greasing. The rite of extreme unction consists
in touching with oil consecrated by a bishop several parts of the body of
one engaged in dying. Marbury relates that after the rite had been
administered to a certain wicked English nobleman it was discovered that
the oil had not been properly consecrated and no other could be obtained.
When informed of this the sick man said in anger: "Then I'll be damned if
I die!"</p>
<p>"My son," said the priest, "this is what we fear."</p>
<p>UNDERSTANDING, n. A cerebral secretion that enables one having it to know
a house from a horse by the roof on the house. Its nature and laws have
been exhaustively expounded by Locke, who rode a house, and Kant, who
lived in a horse.</p>
<p>His understanding was so keen<br/>
That all things which he'd felt, heard, seen,<br/>
He could interpret without fail<br/>
If he was in or out of jail.<br/>
He wrote at Inspiration's call<br/>
Deep disquisitions on them all,<br/>
Then, pent at last in an asylum,<br/>
Performed the service to compile 'em.<br/>
So great a writer, all men swore,<br/>
They never had not read before.<br/></p>
<p>Jorrock Wormley</p>
<p>UNITARIAN, n. One who denies the divinity of a Trinitarian.</p>
<p>UNIVERSALIST, n. One who forgoes the advantage of a Hell for persons of
another faith.</p>
<p>URBANITY, n. The kind of civility that urban observers ascribe to dwellers
in all cities but New York. Its commonest expression is heard in the
words, "I beg your pardon," and it is not consistent with disregard of the
rights of others.</p>
<p>The owner of a powder mill<br/>
Was musing on a distant hill—<br/>
Something his mind foreboded—<br/>
When from the cloudless sky there fell<br/>
A deviled human kidney! Well,<br/>
The man's mill had exploded.<br/>
His hat he lifted from his head;<br/>
"I beg your pardon, sir," he said;<br/>
"I didn't know 'twas loaded."<br/></p>
<p>Swatkin</p>
<p>USAGE, n. The First Person of the literary Trinity, the Second and Third
being Custom and Conventionality. Imbued with a decent reverence for this
Holy Triad an industrious writer may hope to produce books that will live
as long as the fashion.</p>
<p>UXORIOUSNESS, n. A perverted affection that has strayed to one's own wife.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024"></SPAN></p>
<h1> V </h1>
<p>VALOR, n. A soldierly compound of vanity, duty and the gambler's hope.</p>
<p>"Why have you halted?" roared the commander of a division and Chickamauga,
who had ordered a charge; "move forward, sir, at once."</p>
<p>"General," said the commander of the delinquent brigade, "I am persuaded
that any further display of valor by my troops will bring them into
collision with the enemy."</p>
<p>VANITY, n. The tribute of a fool to the worth of the nearest ass.</p>
<p>They say that hens do cackle loudest when<br/>
There's nothing vital in the eggs they've laid;<br/>
And there are hens, professing to have made<br/>
A study of mankind, who say that men<br/>
Whose business 'tis to drive the tongue or pen<br/>
Make the most clamorous fanfaronade<br/>
O'er their most worthless work; and I'm afraid<br/>
They're not entirely different from the hen.<br/>
Lo! the drum-major in his coat of gold,<br/>
His blazing breeches and high-towering cap—<br/>
Imperiously pompous, grandly bold,<br/>
Grim, resolute, an awe-inspiring chap!<br/>
Who'd think this gorgeous creature's only virtue<br/>
Is that in battle he will never hurt you?<br/></p>
<p>Hannibal Hunsiker</p>
<p>VIRTUES, n.pl. Certain abstentions.</p>
<p>VITUPERATION, n. Saite, as understood by dunces and all such as suffer
from an impediment in their wit.</p>
<p>VOTE, n. The instrument and symbol of a freeman's power to make a fool of
himself and a wreck of his country.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025"></SPAN></p>
<h1> W </h1>
<p>W (double U) has, of all the letters in our alphabet, the only cumbrous
name, the names of the others being monosyllabic. This advantage of the
Roman alphabet over the Grecian is the more valued after audibly spelling
out some simple Greek word, like <i>epixoriambikos</i>. Still, it is now
thought by the learned that other agencies than the difference of the two
alphabets may have been concerned in the decline of "the glory that was
Greece" and the rise of "the grandeur that was Rome." There can be no
doubt, however, that by simplifying the name of W (calling it "wow," for
example) our civilization could be, if not promoted, at least better
endured.</p>
<p>WALL STREET, n. A symbol for sin for every devil to rebuke. That Wall
Street is a den of thieves is a belief that serves every unsuccessful
thief in place of a hope in Heaven. Even the great and good Andrew
Carnegie has made his profession of faith in the matter.</p>
<p>Carnegie the dauntless has uttered his call<br/>
To battle: "The brokers are parasites all!"<br/>
Carnegie, Carnegie, you'll never prevail;<br/>
Keep the wind of your slogan to belly your sail,<br/>
Go back to your isle of perpetual brume,<br/>
Silence your pibroch, doff tartan and plume:<br/>
Ben Lomond is calling his son from the fray—<br/>
Fly, fly from the region of Wall Street away!<br/>
While still you're possessed of a single baubee<br/>
(I wish it were pledged to endowment of me)<br/>
'Twere wise to retreat from the wars of finance<br/>
Lest its value decline ere your credit advance.<br/>
For a man 'twixt a king of finance and the sea,<br/>
Carnegie, Carnegie, your tongue is too free!<br/></p>
<p>Anonymus Bink</p>
<p>WAR, n. A by-product of the arts of peace. The most menacing political
condition is a period of international amity. The student of history who
has not been taught to expect the unexpected may justly boast himself
inaccessible to the light. "In time of peace prepare for war" has a deeper
meaning than is commonly discerned; it means, not merely that all things
earthly have an end—that change is the one immutable and eternal law—but
that the soil of peace is thickly sown with the seeds of war and
singularly suited to their germination and growth. It was when Kubla Khan
had decreed his "stately pleasure dome"—when, that is to say, there
were peace and fat feasting in Xanadu—that he</p>
<p>heard from afar<br/>
Ancestral voices prophesying war.<br/></p>
<p>One of the greatest of poets, Coleridge was one of the wisest of men, and
it was not for nothing that he read us this parable. Let us have a little
less of "hands across the sea," and a little more of that elemental
distrust that is the security of nations. War loves to come like a thief
in the night; professions of eternal amity provide the night.</p>
<p>WASHINGTONIAN, n. A Potomac tribesman who exchanged the privilege of
governing himself for the advantage of good government. In justice to him
it should be said that he did not want to.</p>
<p>They took away his vote and gave instead<br/>
The right, when he had earned, to <i>eat</i> his bread.<br/>
In vain—he clamors for his "boss," pour soul,<br/>
To come again and part him from his roll.<br/></p>
<p>Offenbach Stutz</p>
<p>WEAKNESSES, n.pl. Certain primal powers of Tyrant Woman wherewith she
holds dominion over the male of her species, binding him to the service of
her will and paralyzing his rebellious energies.</p>
<p>WEATHER, n. The climate of the hour. A permanent topic of conversation
among persons whom it does not interest, but who have inherited the
tendency to chatter about it from naked arboreal ancestors whom it keenly
concerned. The setting up official weather bureaus and their maintenance
in mendacity prove that even governments are accessible to suasion by the
rude forefathers of the jungle.</p>
<p>Once I dipt into the future far as human eye could see,<br/>
And I saw the Chief Forecaster, dead as any one can be—<br/>
Dead and damned and shut in Hades as a liar from his birth,<br/>
With a record of unreason seldom paralleled on earth.<br/>
While I looked he reared him solemnly, that incandescent youth,<br/>
From the coals that he'd preferred to the advantages of truth.<br/>
He cast his eyes about him and above him; then he wrote<br/>
On a slab of thin asbestos what I venture here to quote—<br/>
For I read it in the rose-light of the everlasting glow:<br/>
"Cloudy; variable winds, with local showers; cooler; snow."<br/></p>
<p>Halcyon Jones</p>
<p>WEDDING, n. A ceremony at which two persons undertake to become one, one
undertakes to become nothing, and nothing undertakes to become
supportable.</p>
<p>WEREWOLF, n. A wolf that was once, or is sometimes, a man. All werewolves
are of evil disposition, having assumed a bestial form to gratify a
beastial appetite, but some, transformed by sorcery, are as humane and is
consistent with an acquired taste for human flesh.</p>
<p>Some Bavarian peasants having caught a wolf one evening, tied it to a post
by the tail and went to bed. The next morning nothing was there! Greatly
perplexed, they consulted the local priest, who told them that their
captive was undoubtedly a werewolf and had resumed its human for during
the night. "The next time that you take a wolf," the good man said, "see
that you chain it by the leg, and in the morning you will find a
Lutheran."</p>
<p>WHANGDEPOOTENAWAH, n. In the Ojibwa tongue, disaster; an unexpected
affliction that strikes hard.</p>
<p>Should you ask me whence this laughter,<br/>
Whence this audible big-smiling,<br/>
With its labial extension,<br/>
With its maxillar distortion<br/>
And its diaphragmic rhythmus<br/>
Like the billowing of an ocean,<br/>
Like the shaking of a carpet,<br/>
I should answer, I should tell you:<br/>
From the great deeps of the spirit,<br/>
From the unplummeted abysmus<br/>
Of the soul this laughter welleth<br/>
As the fountain, the gug-guggle,<br/>
Like the river from the canon [sic],<br/>
To entoken and give warning<br/>
That my present mood is sunny.<br/>
Should you ask me further question—<br/>
Why the great deeps of the spirit,<br/>
Why the unplummeted abysmus<br/>
Of the soule extrudes this laughter,<br/>
This all audible big-smiling,<br/>
I should answer, I should tell you<br/>
With a white heart, tumpitumpy,<br/>
With a true tongue, honest Injun:<br/>
William Bryan, he has Caught It,<br/>
Caught the Whangdepootenawah!<br/>
<br/>
Is't the sandhill crane, the shankank,<br/>
Standing in the marsh, the kneedeep,<br/>
Standing silent in the kneedeep<br/>
With his wing-tips crossed behind him<br/>
And his neck close-reefed before him,<br/>
With his bill, his william, buried<br/>
In the down upon his bosom,<br/>
With his head retracted inly,<br/>
While his shoulders overlook it?<br/>
Does the sandhill crane, the shankank,<br/>
Shiver grayly in the north wind,<br/>
Wishing he had died when little,<br/>
As the sparrow, the chipchip, does?<br/>
No 'tis not the Shankank standing,<br/>
Standing in the gray and dismal<br/>
Marsh, the gray and dismal kneedeep.<br/>
No, 'tis peerless William Bryan<br/>
Realizing that he's Caught It,<br/>
Caught the Whangdepootenawah!<br/></p>
<p>WHEAT, n. A cereal from which a tolerably good whisky can with some
difficulty be made, and which is used also for bread. The French are said
to eat more bread <i>per capita</i> of population than any other people,
which is natural, for only they know how to make the stuff palatable.</p>
<p>WHITE, adj. and n. Black.</p>
<p>WIDOW, n. A pathetic figure that the Christian world has agreed to take
humorously, although Christ's tenderness towards widows was one of the
most marked features of his character.</p>
<p>WINE, n. Fermented grape-juice known to the Women's Christian Union as
"liquor," sometimes as "rum." Wine, madam, is God's next best gift to man.</p>
<p>WIT, n. The salt with which the American humorist spoils his intellectual
cookery by leaving it out.</p>
<p>WITCH, n. (1) Any ugly and repulsive old woman, in a wicked league with
the devil. (2) A beautiful and attractive young woman, in wickedness a
league beyond the devil.</p>
<p>WITTICISM, n. A sharp and clever remark, usually quoted, and seldom noted;
what the Philistine is pleased to call a "joke."</p>
<p>WOMAN, n.</p>
<p>An animal usually living in the vicinity of Man, and having a<br/>
rudimentary susceptibility to domestication. It is credited by<br/>
many of the elder zoologists with a certain vestigial docility<br/>
acquired in a former state of seclusion, but naturalists of the<br/>
postsusananthony period, having no knowledge of the seclusion,<br/>
deny the virtue and declare that such as creation's dawn beheld,<br/>
it roareth now. The species is the most widely distributed of all<br/>
beasts of prey, infesting all habitable parts of the globe, from<br/>
Greeland's spicy mountains to India's moral strand. The popular<br/>
name (wolfman) is incorrect, for the creature is of the cat kind.<br/>
The woman is lithe and graceful in its movement, especially the<br/>
American variety (<i>felis pugnans</i>), is omnivorous and can be<br/>
taught not to talk.<br/></p>
<p>Balthasar Pober</p>
<p>WORMS'-MEAT, n. The finished product of which we are the raw material. The
contents of the Taj Mahal, the Tombeau Napoleon and the Granitarium.
Worms'-meat is usually outlasted by the structure that houses it, but
"this too must pass away." Probably the silliest work in which a human
being can engage is construction of a tomb for himself. The solemn purpose
cannot dignify, but only accentuates by contrast the foreknown futility.</p>
<p>Ambitious fool! so mad to be a show!<br/>
How profitless the labor you bestow<br/>
Upon a dwelling whose magnificence<br/>
The tenant neither can admire nor know.<br/>
<br/>
Build deep, build high, build massive as you can,<br/>
The wanton grass-roots will defeat the plan<br/>
By shouldering asunder all the stones<br/>
In what to you would be a moment's span.<br/>
<br/>
Time to the dead so all unreckoned flies<br/>
That when your marble is all dust, arise,<br/>
If wakened, stretch your limbs and yawn—<br/>
You'll think you scarcely can have closed your eyes.<br/>
<br/>
What though of all man's works your tomb alone<br/>
Should stand till Time himself be overthrown?<br/>
Would it advantage you to dwell therein<br/>
Forever as a stain upon a stone?<br/></p>
<p>Joel Huck</p>
<p>WORSHIP, n. Homo Creator's testimony to the sound construction and fine
finish of Deus Creatus. A popular form of abjection, having an element of
pride.</p>
<p>WRATH, n. Anger of a superior quality and degree, appropriate to exalted
characters and momentous occasions; as, "the wrath of God," "the day of
wrath," etc. Amongst the ancients the wrath of kings was deemed sacred,
for it could usually command the agency of some god for its fit
manifestation, as could also that of a priest. The Greeks before Troy were
so harried by Apollo that they jumped out of the frying-pan of the wrath
of Cryses into the fire of the wrath of Achilles, though Agamemnon, the
sole offender, was neither fried nor roasted. A similar noted immunity was
that of David when he incurred the wrath of Yahveh by numbering his
people, seventy thousand of whom paid the penalty with their lives. God is
now Love, and a director of the census performs his work without
apprehension of disaster.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026"></SPAN></p>
<h1> X </h1>
<p>X in our alphabet being a needless letter has an added invincibility to
the attacks of the spelling reformers, and like them, will doubtless last
as long as the language. X is the sacred symbol of ten dollars, and in
such words as Xmas, Xn, etc., stands for Christ, not, as is popular
supposed, because it represents a cross, but because the corresponding
letter in the Greek alphabet is the initial of his name —<i>Xristos</i>.
If it represented a cross it would stand for St. Andrew, who "testified"
upon one of that shape. In the algebra of psychology x stands for Woman's
mind. Words beginning with X are Grecian and will not be defined in this
standard English dictionary.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027"></SPAN></p>
<h1> Y </h1>
<p>YANKEE, n. In Europe, an American. In the Northern States of our Union, a
New Englander. In the Southern States the word is unknown. (See DAMNYANK.)</p>
<p>YEAR, n. A period of three hundred and sixty-five disappointments.</p>
<p>YESTERDAY, n. The infancy of youth, the youth of manhood, the entire past
of age.</p>
<p>But yesterday I should have thought me blest<br/>
To stand high-pinnacled upon the peak<br/>
Of middle life and look adown the bleak<br/>
And unfamiliar foreslope to the West,<br/>
Where solemn shadows all the land invest<br/>
And stilly voices, half-remembered, speak<br/>
Unfinished prophecy, and witch-fires freak<br/>
The haunted twilight of the Dark of Rest.<br/>
Yea, yesterday my soul was all aflame<br/>
To stay the shadow on the dial's face<br/>
At manhood's noonmark! Now, in God His name<br/>
I chide aloud the little interspace<br/>
Disparting me from Certitude, and fain<br/>
Would know the dream and vision ne'er again.<br/></p>
<p>Baruch Arnegriff</p>
<p>It is said that in his last illness the poet Arnegriff was attended at
different times by seven doctors.</p>
<p>YOKE, n. An implement, madam, to whose Latin name, <i>jugum</i>, we owe
one of the most illuminating words in our language—a word that
defines the matrimonial situation with precision, point and poignancy. A
thousand apologies for withholding it.</p>
<p>YOUTH, n. The Period of Possibility, when Archimedes finds a fulcrum,
Cassandra has a following and seven cities compete for the honor of
endowing a living Homer.</p>
<p>Youth is the true Saturnian Reign, the Golden Age on earth<br/>
again, when figs are grown on thistles, and pigs betailed with<br/>
whistles and, wearing silken bristles, live ever in clover, and<br/>
cows fly over, delivering milk at every door, and Justice never<br/>
is heard to snore, and every assassin is made a ghost and,<br/>
howling, is cast into Baltimost!<br/></p>
<p>Polydore Smith</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028"></SPAN></p>
<h1> Z </h1>
<p>ZANY, n. A popular character in old Italian plays, who imitated with
ludicrous incompetence the <i>buffone</i>, or clown, and was therefore the
ape of an ape; for the clown himself imitated the serious characters of
the play. The zany was progenitor to the specialist in humor, as we to-day
have the unhappiness to know him. In the zany we see an example of
creation; in the humorist, of transmission. Another excellent specimen of
the modern zany is the curate, who apes the rector, who apes the bishop,
who apes the archbishop, who apes the devil.</p>
<p>ZANZIBARI, n. An inhabitant of the Sultanate of Zanzibar, off the eastern
coast of Africa. The Zanzibaris, a warlike people, are best known in this
country through a threatening diplomatic incident that occurred a few
years ago. The American consul at the capital occupied a dwelling that
faced the sea, with a sandy beach between. Greatly to the scandal of this
official's family, and against repeated remonstrances of the official
himself, the people of the city persisted in using the beach for bathing.
One day a woman came down to the edge of the water and was stooping to
remove her attire (a pair of sandals) when the consul, incensed beyond
restraint, fired a charge of bird-shot into the most conspicuous part of
her person. Unfortunately for the existing <i>entente cordiale</i> between
two great nations, she was the Sultana.</p>
<p>ZEAL, n. A certain nervous disorder afflicting the young and
inexperienced. A passion that goeth before a sprawl.</p>
<p>When Zeal sought Gratitude for his reward<br/>
He went away exclaiming: "O my Lord!"<br/>
"What do you want?" the Lord asked, bending down.<br/>
"An ointment for my cracked and bleeding crown."<br/></p>
<p>Jum Coople</p>
<p>ZENITH, n. The point in the heavens directly overhead to a man standing or
a growing cabbage. A man in bed or a cabbage in the pot is not considered
as having a zenith, though from this view of the matter there was once a
considerably dissent among the learned, some holding that the posture of
the body was immaterial. These were called Horizontalists, their
opponents, Verticalists. The Horizontalist heresy was finally extinguished
by Xanobus, the philosopher-king of Abara, a zealous Verticalist. Entering
an assembly of philosophers who were debating the matter, he cast a
severed human head at the feet of his opponents and asked them to
determine its zenith, explaining that its body was hanging by the heels
outside. Observing that it was the head of their leader, the
Horizontalists hastened to profess themselves converted to whatever
opinion the Crown might be pleased to hold, and Horizontalism took its
place among <i>fides defuncti</i>.</p>
<p>ZEUS, n. The chief of Grecian gods, adored by the Romans as Jupiter and by
the modern Americans as God, Gold, Mob and Dog. Some explorers who have
touched upon the shores of America, and one who professes to have
penetrated a considerable distance to the interior, have thought that
these four names stand for as many distinct deities, but in his monumental
work on Surviving Faiths, Frumpp insists that the natives are monotheists,
each having no other god than himself, whom he worships under many sacred
names.</p>
<p>ZIGZAG, v.t. To move forward uncertainly, from side to side, as one
carrying the white man's burden. (From <i>zed</i>, <i>z</i>, and <i>jag</i>,
an Icelandic word of unknown meaning.)</p>
<p>He zedjagged so uncomen wyde<br/>
Thet non coude pas on eyder syde;<br/>
So, to com saufly thruh, I been<br/>
Constreynet for to doodge betwene.<br/></p>
<p>Munwele</p>
<p>ZOOLOGY, n. The science and history of the animal kingdom, including its
king, the House Fly (<i>Musca maledicta</i>). The father of Zoology was
Aristotle, as is universally conceded, but the name of its mother has not
come down to us. Two of the science's most illustrious expounders were
Buffon and Oliver Goldsmith, from both of whom we learn (<i>L'Histoire
generale des animaux</i> and <i>A History of Animated Nature</i>) that the
domestic cow sheds its horn every two years.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />