The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction - Volume 13, No. 366, April 18, 1829 by Various
page 8 of 55 (14%)
page 8 of 55 (14%)
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No part of the history of civilized nations is involved in such deep
obscurity as the origin and progress of their names. I do not mean their names of men and women, the etymology of which are easy; for any stupid fellow can see with half an eye that Xisuthrus and Noah are one and the same person; and that Thoth can only be Hermes; nor is there any discernable difference between Pelagius and Morgan; _tout celà va sans se dire_, but when we come to account for the names of places or of signs, then indeed are we lost in a vast field of metaphysical disquisition and conjectural criticism. The _Spectator_, your worthy predecessor, threw much light upon the science, but still he left it in its infancy. To be sure, he traced the Bull and Mouth to the Boulogne Mouth, but I don't remember that he made many other discoveries in this _terrâ incognitâ_. However, he hinted that the roots of most of these old saws were to be found in the French language, or rather in the jargon spoken by the would-be-fine people, in imitation of the court, and by them called French. Neither the _Spectator_, however, nor any of his periodical imitators have ever found out why a certain headland, bare as the back of my hand, should be dignified with the appellation of Beechey Head; unless indeed, according to the Eton grammar, our ancestors used the rule of _lucus a non lucendo_. The reason, however, is to be found in the French language, and Beechey Head is the present guide of the old _beau chef_, whereby this point was once known. The _Spectator_ also, if I remember right, declared the old sign of the _Cat and the Fiddle_ to be quite beyond his comprehension. In truth, no two objects in the world have less to do with each other than a cat and a violin, and the only explanation ever given of this wonderful union, appears to be, that once upon a time, a gentleman kept a house with the sign of a Cat, and a lady one, with the sign of a Fiddle, or _vice versâ_. That these two persons fell in love, married, and set up an Inn, which to commemorate their early loves, they called the Cat and the Fiddle. Such reasoning is |
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