[Thackeray by Anthony Trollope]@TWC D-Link book
Thackeray

CHAPTER VIII
8/13

You or I, reader, were we from the West, and were the dear County Galway to send either of us to Parliament, would probably endeavour to drop the dear brogue of our country, and in doing so we should make some mistakes.

It was these mistakes which Thackeray took for the natural Irish tone.

He was amused to hear a major called "Meejor," but was unaware that the sound arose from Pat's affection of English softness of speech.

The expression natural to the unadulterated Irishman would rather be "Ma-ajor." He discovers his own provincialism, and trying to be polite and urbane, he says "Meejor." In one of the lines I have quoted there occurs the word "troat." Such a sound never came naturally from the mouth of an Irishman.

He puts in an h instead of omitting it, and says "dhrink." He comes to London, and finding out that he is wrong with his "dhrink," he leaves out all the h's he can, and thus comes to "troat." It is this which Thackeray has heard.


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