Oh, dude, so like, in "The Great Horn Spoon," when they say "a lad with stuffings," they're basically talking about a young boy who's all dressed up fancy and proper. It's like saying he's all decked out and looking sharp. So yeah, it's just a fancy way of describing a well-dressed kid in the story.
Oh, dude, "Billy-be hanged" is just a phrase meaning "I don't care" or "whatever" in the book "By the Great Horn Spoon." It's like a sassy way of saying you're not bothered. So, if someone tells you to "Billy-be hanged cape horn," just shrug it off and keep doing your thing.
nothing happends
In the audiocast of By the Great Horn Spoon, the part of the miner with the toothache was voiced by Frank Fiumano. He also voiced the parts of the hotel clerk and a passenger.
In the cabin
I am Evelyn Rose Boyle I live
"Heres a lad with Stuffings" is not a common phrase, but it could possibly be a mix of different expressions or it could be a typo. "By the Great Horn Spoon" is a famous expression used to show astonishment or surprise, especially in old American English literature. It may have originated from the book "By the Great Horn Spoon!" by Sid Fleischman.
Eric Von Schmidt illustrated the book, Great Horn Spoon.
he does not go around the horn!
it is fiction
Oh, dude, "Billy-be hanged" is just a phrase meaning "I don't care" or "whatever" in the book "By the Great Horn Spoon." It's like a sassy way of saying you're not bothered. So, if someone tells you to "Billy-be hanged cape horn," just shrug it off and keep doing your thing.
The Gold Rush. Obviously.
Constance & Sarah
Harsh
A horn spoon is a cow's horn shaped into a spoon to clear out gravel.
It is about the Gold Rush time period
nothing happends
There are 18 chapters