Thursday, June 28, 2007

jimmy-isms...

I was researching clichés for a writer and I came across this reference to the term "Horsefeathers." Having heard this phrase my entire life, I was curious to its origin and thought I'd share my findings. If you are curious about any other Jimmyi-isms let me know...

KJ


The issue of American Speech dated December 1928 records that “Mr. William De Beck, the comic-strip comedian responsible for ‘Barney Google,’ assumes credit for the first actual use of the word horsefeathers”. This claim has been frequently reported since, to the point at which it has become accepted knowledge.


Barney Google and Spark Plug,
with Spark Plug’s colt Ooky, in a
strip from 1926. No sign of any
horsefeathers, though.
There’s no doubt Billy De Beck was an early user, since a short comedy film based on his comic strip had the title Horsefeathers, with Barney Hellum as Barney Google and Philip Davis playing Barney’s famous horse Spark Plug. This was doing the rounds in early 1928, so antedating by five years the Marx Brothers film of the same title. De Beck had something of a reputation for coining words and has also been credited with creating, among others, heebie-jeebies, jeepers creepers! and hotsy-totsy. However, so far as I know nobody has actually found the word in a Barney Google strip.

Oddly, the first recorded appearance of the word, in 1927, was in a different comic environment, a cartoon created by T A Dorgen: “The cashier’s department — Bah — Horsefeathers. He wouldn’t give you a ticket to see Halley’s Comet.”

The matter is somewhat confused because of another known sense of the word. Charles Earl Funk, formerly editor-in-chief of the Funk & Wagnalls dictionaries, gave the title Horsefeathers to one of his books on odd words. He told the story in the foreword of having come across it when having his house repaired by an aged master carpenter. On seeking further information from — of all bodies — the National Board of Fire Underwriters, he obtained the following comments:

It refers, as indicated in your letter, to the tapered boards laid on wood shingle roofs to provide a flat surface for asphalt shingles to be laid on in re-roofing. The term “feathering strips,” meaning the same thing, is found in some roofing manuals. The term “horsefeathers” is used colloquially in New England and New York. Its use other than in the slang sense is disappearing and it is only the old-timers who now understand it.
Others have confirmed that this term was indeed at one time in use in the trade, though it is long defunct. One possibility is that it was picked up around 1927 by Billy De Beck or some other writer, who appreciated its comic potential but changed its sense when reproducing it. But my suspicion — based on the early known evidence — is that carpenters around the late 1920s or thereabouts took a word already in existence and applied it to the tapered boards because of the coincidence with the word feathering.

It seems most likely that it began either as a bowdlerised variant of horseshit or as an expression of the view that something is highly unlikely, about as probable as that pigs might fly ... or that horses might have feathers.

3 comments:

Scott said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Scott said...

A few other jimmyisms in the same vein: horse pucky, horse hockey, great balls of hen manure, north end of a southbound horse, horse's patute, and rat's tookis.

Other less-directly-related jimmyistic mild oaths or terms of contempt and derision: great balls of fire, hells bells, H-E- double hockey sticks, what the 'H', meat head, muttonhead, dingbat, ding dong, ya-hoo, cockamamie yo-yo, cotton-pickin' idiot, village idiot, knucklehead, etc., etc., etc.

A few more while I'm on a roll: Go jump in a river, go jump in a lake, go fly a kite, take a hike, hold your horses, land of goshen, land sakes alive, take a long walk off a short plank.

I can't wait for a full report on the origins of each one, Keith. Should keep you very busy for a while.

Scott said...

And who can forget "HS," Sam Hill, for Pete's sake, and for crying out loud?

A couple other expressions and/or songs, that came to mind:
+ "grinning like a jackass eating cactus"
+ "she was only a farmer's daughter but 8 horsemen knew her"
+ "she has freckles on her but she's pretty"
+ "if you believe that, I've got a bridge for sale"
+ "cuter than little pig tracks"
+ "If you expect to rate with the ladies, don't expectorate on the floor" (W.C. Fields)
+ "Ah yes, my little chickadee"