10/26/18 Grif.Net - Wellerism

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Robert Griffin

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Oct 26, 2018, 10:56:35 AM10/26/18
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Sam Weller in Charles Dickens' "Pickwick Papers" (1836-7) was prone to producing punning sentences such as: 'Out with it, as the father said to the child when he swallowed a penny'. This type of verbal play, involving a metaphorical and a punningly literal sense, soon gained popularity under the name of ‘Wellerism’, and a craze for devising such expressions rapidly sprang up on both sides of the Atlantic. A sample familiar to children is: 'I see, said the blind man, when he picked up his hammer and saw.'

 

A “Tom Swifty” is MY FAVORITE type of Wellerism. This has an adverb relating both properly and punningly to a sentence of reported speech.

 

"The doctor had to remove my left ventricle," said Tom half-heartedly.

"Your Honor, you're crazy!" said Tom judgmentally.

 

The quip takes its name from Tom Swift, a boy's adventure hero created by the prolific American writer Edward L. Stratemeyer (pseudonym Victor Appleton) who published a series of books featuring the young Tom Swift. Tom Swift rarely passed a remark without a qualifying adverb as "Tom added eagerly" or "Tom said jokingly".

 

**In a true Tom Swifty, it is an adverb (word specifying the mode of action of the verb) that provides the pun:

"Elvis is dead," said Tom expressly.

"I cut myself on some glass from that broken window," Tom said painfully.

 

**Frequently the pun occurs in the verb, and there may not be an adverb at all. Strictly speaking such puns are not Tom Swifties, but they are generally included in the term.

"My garden needs another layer of mulch," Tom repeated.

"You must be my host," Tom guessed.

 

**Sometimes it is neither a verb, nor an adverb, but a short phrase acting like an adverb in modifying the verb:

"I've only enough carpet for the hall and landing," said Tom with a blank stare.

"Don't let me drown in Egypt!" pleaded Tom, deep in denial.

 

**Traditionally, Tom is the speaker, but this is by no means necessary for the pun to classify as a Tom Swifty. Sometimes the pun lies in the name, in which case it will usually not be Tom speaking:

"Who discovered radium?" asked Marie curiously.

"I'm going to end it all," Sue sighed.

 

**Most Tom Swifties are morphological; i.e. the words must be broken down into morphemes (smaller components) to understand the pun:

"This is the real male goose," said Tom producing the propaganda.

"The cat sounds as if she's happy now she's been fed," said Tom purposefully.

 

**Often the adverb (or whatever) has a homonym (a word which is pronounced, and perhaps spelled, the same, but has a different meaning) which leads to the punning meaning of the sentence:

"I have a split personality," said Tom, being frank.

"I love hot dogs," said Tom with relish.

 

**There is a special kind of homonym called a homophone (homonyms spelled differently):

"There's no need for silence," Tom allowed.

"I won't finish in fifth place," Tom held forth.

 

~~

Dr Bob Griffin

b...@grif.net www.grif.net

"Jesus Knows Me, This I Love!"

 

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