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— Have a norange.
— Mon premier est un métal précieux;
Mon second est un habitant des cieux;
Mon tout est un fruit déicieux.
— Yes ; there’s truth in that, and scarcely exaggeration. (John, fetch the N.E.D., article ‘orange.’) It’s too great, really; too round, too golden, too juicy, too Brangwyn, too coster’s barrow, too abundant.
— Augustine consecrated it in an able image.
— Looking at it as segments compact in the cortex. We think of it as a bag of juice; a potable lawn-tennis ball. (What’s it say, John?)
— ‘Orange, orenge, narancia, arancia, naranza, naranja, laranja; mediceval Greek, nerantzton.’
— Push on.
—1 The fruit of a tree {see sense 2) a large, globose, many-celled berry (Hesperidium) with sub-acid juicy fulf, inclosed in a tough rind, externally of bright reddish yellow colour.’
— Thattledoo.
— Globose. That dates Dr. Murray’s early education.
—You can hear the governess’s voice : ‘The form of the earth is oblate spheroid; in other words, like an orange. Now if I were to take a knitting needle,’
— pin, she meant, but don’t let her go on. The earth, an orange; a globose fruit (which is what the
N.E.D. means);
— (Look up ‘berry,’ John)
— the association is impressed in our minds.
— Should you think ....
— ‘Berry. Any small globular or ovate fruity not having a stone'
— Thattledoo. Should you think that geodesy and the orange are practically contemporaneous?
— 1497. For bering the appill oreynzeis fra the schip.
— It was regular merchandise in the middle ages; but I see the globose berry growing more delectable and less of a medicine as time passes ....