Q: What turns a word into a sword and laughter into slaughter?
A: The letter S (p. 71)
* Known at the time as the “Trial of the Century Since We Don’t Expect There To Be Any Other Especially Noteworthy Trials This Century”, the 1905 case of United States v. The Letter “S” was the result of years of agitating by such luminaries as William Jennings Bryan, William Cullen Bryant, and plus-sized clothing magnate Lane Mullens Bryant. Accused of over “seven billion gajillion” crimes, it was the first time the visual representation of a phoneme had ever been arraigned by the American court system.
Fig. 766 – These gallows built for S’s execution now stand in the Phoenix University Museum of Lexicological Justice.
Unfortunately, despite a parade of witnesses who testified to S’s violent tendencies, ability to turn the necesary “not” into the patently offensive “snot”, and close association with snakes, he was eventually acquitted by a jury of his peers. The nation soon lost interest in the excitement over the new “not dying of consumption” fad, crippling the once-bright political prospects of the case’s prosecutor, Q (who sank into relative obscurity).
After his controversial memoir S Happens: Why I’d Do It All Again made S a hero in certain social circles, he retired to a palatial estate in Florida, appearing infrequently to speak out for the cause of various anti-lisping charities. The United States wouldn’t see such a public alphabetical trial again until Rudolph Giuliani’s successful 1998 crusade against X.










