The Spelling Match

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The Spelling-Match (1921)
by Tudor Jenks

Extracted from St. Nicholas magazine, 1921, pp. 44-48. Accompanying illustrations by Harold Sicher may be added later.

3302871The Spelling-Match1921Tudor Jenks


THE SPELLING-MATCH

By Tudor Jenks

I KNOW what I'll do," said the Green Goblin, to his friend the Will-o'-the-Wisp. "I'll give a spelling-match."

"With prizes?" asked the Will-o'-the-Wisp.

"Why, of course. One will be the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, another will be a wishing-cap, and the third will be—"

"Shoes of invisibility," suggested the Will-o'-the-Wisp.

"No," the Green Goblin objected. "If you won those, you'd disappear, and then where would you be?"

"But that would make no difference," answered the Will-o'-the-Wisp; "for no one can find me when they see me; and so if they can't see me, they can't find me any better than if they could see me—could they?"

"Now you're mixing me up," said the Green Goblin, "and I want to go on with my spelling-match. The third prize will be a wishing-ring. And the fourth prize—I don't think I'll have more than three prizes. Maybe we won't have more than three prize-winners. Come on over to the White Owl's tree, and we'll have the Town Crier give out the notices."

So they flitted over to the tree and found the Town Crier, who for a fee of four four-leafed clovers gave out the notice at the trysting-places of Fairyland, telling all the residents that on the first of April there would be a Great Spelling-Match at the Grotto of the Green Goblin, admission free, with prizes for the three best spellers.

When the day came, the grotto was filled with an excited throng. There was the King and the Queen, the Princess, and the Lord High Chancellor. There was the old Witch, the Wizard, the Enchanter, and the youngest son of the Woodcutter. There were the Knight, the Squire, the Giant, the Dwarf, the Sultan, the Genie, the Pirate, the Bandit, the Schoolmaster, and the Teacher of Dancing.

The Will-o'-the-Wisp was not there, because the match was held at ten o'clock a.m., and the Will-o'-the-Wisp is out only at night. But the Green Goblin was so much interested in his other guests that he forgot the Will-o'-the-Wisp entirely.

When all were gathered, the refreshments were served by some small elves dressed in the Green Goblin's green livery. Everything was most delicious. There were syllabubs, pistachio nuts, greengages, philopœnas, nougatines, nectar and ambrosia, vitamines, doughnuts, and a lot of things with French and Italian names that were most delightful and melted in the mouth before you had time to taste them—together with bonbons and frozen sweets.

But since the Giant went early to the refreshment room, there was not much left for the other guests, and all were glad when the Green Goblin declared it was time for the spelling-match.

So next they all counted out with "Eena, mena, mona, mi," until their places in the spelling-line were fixed, and then they were arranged in the following order:

First came the Giant, then came the Dwarf and the Enchanter, the King, the Chancellor, the Woodcutter's Son, the Wizard, the Knight, the Princess. After her was the Squire, then the Queen, the Pirate, the Genie, the Schoolmaster, the Teacher of Dancing, the Bandit, and last came the Sultan and the old Witch.

Before the line stood the Green Goblin, holding in his paw the list of hard words, ready to give them out as soon as the signal was given. Then an elf blew three blasts on a trumpet-flower, and the match began.

"The first word," announced the Green Goblin, "is for you, Mr. Giant. So you may spell jackstraws."

The Giant looked puzzled, and blushed so red that a soft pink glow filled the grotto.

"I never heard of such a word as that," he mumbled, "and I'll sit down. I can spell mastodon, and mammoth, and pyramid, and glacier, and sierra—but jackstraws I never heard of!" And he sat down.

"Next," said the Green Goblin.

"Jackstraws is easy," said the Dwarf, with a chuckle; and he spelled it correctly, turned a somersault, and waited for the next.

"Diminutive," said the Green Goblin.

"That," said the Dwarf, uneasily, "is a word no one ever used in my presence. What does it mean?"

"It means very little," said the Green Goblin.

"No matter how little," the Dwarf replied; "let me know what it means."

Here the Bandit burst out laughing, and the Dwarf lost his temper.

"I'm not here to be laughed at," he cried; and leaving his place in the line, he went out from the grotto without saying good-by.

"Next!" said the Green Goblin.

"D-i, di; m-i-n, min; di-min; u-u; diminu; t-i-v-e: diminutive!" said the Enchanter.

"Wrong!" cried the King, waving his scepter.

"No, it's right," said the Green Goblin.

"How dare you contradict me?" demanded the King. "Are you not my subject?"

"Not on this subject," answered the Green Goblin.

"Don't be foolish, my dear," broke in the Queen, "or I'll take you home. You promised me you'd behave if I took you—"

"So I did," the King admitted, and he begged pardon very handsomely, for the Queen was very severe with him on certain subjects.

"It's lucky for you that the Enchanter was right," said the Green Goblin; "and now I'll give you an easy one. You can spell commutation."

"There's no such word," said the King.

"It's the name of a railway ticket," said the Green Goblin, very politely.

"I know nothing of railway tickets," the King replied. "I travel by special train. The Chancellor arranges all that for me. No doubt he can spell it. Try him. I think I'll resign," and he went out of the line and sat down in a corner, taking off his crown to rest his head, for the crown was very heavy in hot weather.

The Chancellor spelled commutation, but said that when he used the word it meant letting a man out of prison earlier than he ought to come out because he had behaved better than was expected when he was put in.

"Very well," said the Green Goblin, "I'll give you another word. Try this one: ichor. It means—"

"You needn't tell me," said the Chancellor. "I see you are—"

"Wrong!" the Green Goblin cried.

"Not at all," the Chancellor insisted. "I only said, 'I see you are'—"

"But it isn't spelled i-c-u-r," the Green Goblin insisted, "and so you have missed your turn!"

"You don't understand me," the Chancellor persisted. "I was only about to remark, 'I see you are familiar with mythology.'"

"That may be," spoke up the Woodcutter's Son, "but this is a spelling-match, not a debating club. You said 'i-c-u-r,' and the Green Goblin says that isn't right. The word is 'ichor.'"

"Well, spell it," the Green Goblin went on, for it was getting late, and he didn't like to have the match last too long, for he was going to the movies later in the afternoon.

"I can't spell it," the Woodcutter's Son answered cheerfully; "and I don't believe the Green Goblin can spell it either, unless he has it written down before him."

"Certainly I can," replied the Green Goblin, and putting the list behind his back he spelled it out: "I-c-h-o-r."

"But you couldn't have spelled it if you hadn't seen it," the Woodcutter's Son persisted.

"I will admit cheerfully," the Green Goblin rejoined with a smile, "that I can't spell a word that I never heard of. So let's go on with the match. Who's next?"

"I come next," remarked the Wizard boldly.

"The next word is, misspelled," the Green Goblin announced.

"Then it doesn't count," the Wizard objected. "You can't expect me to spell a word that is misspelled. If I spell it right, then I'm wrong. If I misspell it, then I'm not right. So it isn't fair. I think this match is a swindle, and I'm going home!"

"Next!" was the only comment made by the Green Goblin, and the very courteous Knight raised the visor of his helm and rightly spelled misspelled, and then observed that he thought Wizards were more familiar with spells than this Wizard had shown himself.

It was the Princess's turn next. The Green Goblin greatly admired this beautiful and noble young lady, and so did most of the guests. Consequently, he was sorry to see that the next word was rather hard to spell. But duty is duty, and the Green Goblin gave the word in its proper order:

"Your Royal Highness will now condescend to spell for us the word, psychical."

"Will you kindly repeat the word?" the Princess asked.

"Psychical," the Green Goblin repeated it.

"Mother, will you hand me my pocket dictionary?" said the Princess to the Queen. "Certainly," that Royal Lady replied, and handed over a daintily bound copy with mother-of-pearl covers inlaid with gold filigree.

"Thank you," the Princess responded, and began to run her taper fingers through the vellum pages.

"Here, here!" exclaimed the Schoolmaster, "that isn't allowed!"

"What's the trouble?" asked the Green Goblin.

"Why, she's looking up the word in the dictionary!"

"And why not?" inquired the Pirate. "Isn't that what a dictionary is for? That is what they tell me."

"But it's against the rules!" objected the Schoolmaster.

"What rules?" the Green Goblin remarked. "I am running this spelling-match—not you. And if her Royal Highness prefers to use a dictionary, I say she is heartily welcome to it! Long live the Princess!"

And the whole throng gave her three cheers, and wound up with a Siss-boom-ah-h!

"Please don't do that!" objected the Bandit, "for that is a Princeton cheer, and I was once—" here he burst into tears—"a Yale graduate!" Whereupon he took up his carbine, threw his cloak around his shoulders, and left the cave, while the Schoolmaster followed him with reproachful glances, saying, "To think that a Yale graduate should become no more than a common bandit!"

"Now if your Royal Highness has found the word—" the Green Goblin said.

"But I can't find it," said the Princess. "I thought it was fair to use the dictionary, for unless you know how to spell the word you can't find it in the dictionary! So the book is no use to me at all. See if you can find it," and she handed the book to the Squire.

He took it and after a while said, "I have looked all through the S's—and 'psychical' isn't there."

"I can spell it," the Genie announced, "for I am a reformed speller. S-i, sigh; k-i-c, kick; u-l, ul. That is my way of spelling it. And it's better than the old way, I think."

"Not at all," the Schoolmaster insisted. "It is derived from Psyche, the soul. Now Psyche was Greek, and she—"

"I didn't come here to hear lectures," observed the Sultan, and he clapped his hands thrice.

Whereupon three large and powerful Ethiopian slaves armed with simitars entered, seized upon the Schoolmaster, and marched him out. This was certainly high-handed, but nobody missed the Schoolmaster much, and so no notice of the incident was taken.

"Speaking of simitars," observed the Green Goblin, "it is an odd coincidence that 'simitar' is the next word on the list. Will you spell it?" he asked the Teacher of Dancing.

"Certainly. I will spell it in a variety of ways, and you can take your choice." So he proceeded to give the following spellings: simitar, scimitar, cimitar, cimeter, cymiter, cimiterre, cymeter, scymitar, scimiter, scimeter, scymeter, scymetar, semitar, semitary, smiter, smyter, smeeter.

"That is truly remarkable," was the comment of the Green Goblin. "How in the world did you happen to know all those spellings—and which of them is right?"

"Alas!" exclaimed the Dancing Teacher, his voice choked with emotion, "the Yale graduate who became a bandit is not the only unhappy guest at this party. I am the man who wrote the Dictionary! And, owing to misfortunes and bad spells of weather, I have had to teach dancing for a living, and, I blush to confess it—I am a very poor teacher of dancing. I will tell you the experiences of my life. I was the son of poor but humble—"

"Enough!" cried the Witch, "now you may all disappear!" And she waved her crutch in the air and pronounced a magic spell.

It was the correct spell—and everybody and everything vanished at once.

The poor Will-o'-the-Wisp is still wandering about looking for them.

This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.

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