قراءة كتاب Talkers: With Illustrations
تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"
cannot be tamed, why attempt the task?” The answer to this is: a little evil is better than a big one; and a tongue partially tamed is better than a tongue altogether wild. Therefore, while the author has no expectation of taming any man’s tongue altogether, he has the hope of taming a great many a little, and, in the aggregate, of doing something towards elevating the talking civilization of the nineteenth century.
“Will you have a little tongue?” asked a lady of a gentleman one day at the dinner-table. “I will, ma’am, if it is cured,” was the answer. Alas! tongue will be at immense discount in the world if it is not received until it is “cured.” One must be content to take it as near “cured” as it can be obtained. Not only must there be mutual efforts to cure one another’s, but each must try to cure his own.
And now, reader, the author asks you to peruse his book, and to make the best use you can of it; and he suggests, when you have done this, be careful that you do not so talk about it as to illustrate some one or more of the characters within it.
J. B.
November, 1877.
CONTENTS.
page | |||
I. | THE MONOPOLIST | 1 | |
II. | THE FALSE HUMOURIST | 18 | |
III. | THE FLATTERER | 22 | |
IV. | THE BRAWLER | 35 | |
V. | THE MISCHIEF-MAKER | 38 | |
VI. | THE PLEONAST | 55 | |
VII. | THE SELF-DISPARAGER | 62 | |
VIII. | THE COMMON SWEARER | 71 | |
IX. | THE AFFECTED | 85 | |
X. | THE STULTILOQUIST | 94 | |
XI. | THE SLANDERER | 101 | |
XII. | THE VALETUDINARIAN | 111 | |
XIII. | THE WHISPERER | 119 | |
XIV. | THE HYPERBOLIST | 124 | |
XV. | THE INQUISITIVE | 133 | |
XVI. | THE PEDANT | 142 | |
XVII. | THE DETRACTOR |