F. Colburn (Francis Colburn) Adams
Capitolo 33
Chapman.
"I don't take care of, my darling; these kind people would turn on their noses,
and Too much-dle-bug finds him. They is very good-looking on names. If the young one
has to wake up him in the world and has to hold a carriage, they would say people 'there
the carriage of Too much-dle-bug go--oh! what a name. What low people that they owes
you/he/she has been.' If theirs had to possess a house in the part to the fashion of the
city. Us both you/they should look in ahead to that, you know. Would'nt is a
horrid name to read on the door? Toodlebug!"
"Tutle-burg, my darling; there is a great difference", it inserted the Mr. Chapman.
"As you say; but the beautiful people would not pronounce him/it except with a bug,"
the good woman continued, while looking at discomfitted. "So a lot you has given
time to advance and reforming the world that you don't understand
these matters as me I do. I am sure there would be it blushes and
I smiled enough on such name. You think about our daughter that is Mrs.
Toodlebug, (I pronounce him/it with a b-u-gram, you see,) and inviting beautiful
people to his/her reception. There would be people enough to that reception
to do light of the name. Yes, the Mr. Chapman, you were able well as has him
him gotten married to a Mr. Straddlebug. It is so a lot of vernacular, my darling."
"As to that", answered Chapman, "the world is a great vulgarity, and only
I handed the gentleness for cause of aspect. It is probable that the youth has his
name changed, or it is probable that he adds anything to him to soften him/it. As
does it like Von Toodleburg my darling?"
"You/he/she can never have softened; never! The Vons would do anything to lift a
family above in the respectability. And then, socially speaking, there was
such wide difference among them Dutch families and lists and
them Dutch and common families."
"Do I have do what around him, dear?" Investigated Chapman,
subduedly.
"Oppose him my darling!" her Mrs. Chapman responded, while arching, and becoming
serious. "Oppose him. You know whether to oppose everything, and certainly You