When all the girls and young fellows had arrived,-such pretty girls, with such soft, liquid voices and captivating dialects, the one their black Mammies had taught them,-and such unconventional, happy young fellows in all sorts of costumes from blue flannel to broadcloth,-one in a Prince Albert coat and a straw hat in his hand, and it near Christmas,-the old darky grew more and more restless, limping in and out of the open door, dodging anxiously into the drawing-room and out again, his head up like a terrapin's.
"The Other Fellow"
F. Hopkinson Smith
Delilah was also actively at war with Dr. Wortley, as the black Mammies and the doctors invariably were, and during the visits of the doctor, who was a peppery little man, it was no infrequent thing to hear his shrill falsetto, the general's loud basso, and Delilah's emphatic treble all combined in an angry three-cornered discussion carried on at the top of their lungs.
"Throckmorton"
Molly Elliot Seawell
Tell your Mammies and your dads, And all those that news desire, How you saw a walking fire.
"The Sources and Analogues of 'A Midsummer-night's Dream'"
Compiled by Frank Sidgwick