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All About Our World

T. Tembarom
Frances Hodgson Burnett

Page 1 of 1031


T.  TEMBAROM 

by Frances Hodgson Burnett 

CHAPTER I: 

The boys at the Brooklyn public school which he attended did not know
what the "T." stood for.  He would never tell them.  All he said in
reply to questions was: "It don't stand for nothin'.  You've gotter
have a' 'nitial, ain't you?" His name was, in fact, an almost
inevitable school-boy modification of one felt to be absurd and
pretentious.  His Christian name was Temple, which became "Temp." His
surname was Barom, so he was at once "Temp Barom." In the natural
tendency to avoid waste of time it was pronounced as one word, and
the letter p being superfluous and cumbersome, it easily settled
itself into "Tembarom," and there remained.  By much less inevitable
processes have surnames evolved themselves as centuries rolled by. 
Tembarom liked it, and soon almost forgot he had ever been called
anything else.

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