Notes and Queries, Number 51, October 19, 1850 by Various
page 41 of 117 (35%)
page 41 of 117 (35%)
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In conclusion, allow me to ask the correspondents to the "NOTES AND QUERIES," what is meant by "dancing the _Huckler_, _Tom Bedlo_, and the _Cowp Justice of Peace_?" T.T. WILKINSON. Burnley, Lancashire, Sept. 21. 1850. _Sirloin._-In Nichols's _Progresses of King James the First_, vol. iii. p. 401., is the following note:-- "There is a laughable tradition, still generally current in Lancashire, that our knight-making monarch, finding, it is presumed, no undubbed man worthy of the chivalric order, knighted at the banquet in Hoghton Tower, in the warmth of his honour-bestowing liberality, a loin of beef, the part ever since called the _sirloin_. Those who would credit this story have the authority of Dr. Johnson to support them, among whose explanations of the word _sir_ in his dictionary, is that it is 'a title given to the loin of beef, which one of our kings knighted in a fit of good humour.' 'Surloin,' says Dr. Pegge (_Gent. Mag._, vol. liv. p. 485.), 'is, I conceive, if not knighted by King James as is reported, compounded of the French _sur_, upon, and the English _loin_, for the sake of euphony, our particles not easily submitting to composition. In proof of this, the piece of beef so called grows upon the _loin_, and behind the small ribs of the animal.' Dr. Pegge is probably right, and yet the king, if he did not give the sirloin its name, might, notwithstanding, have indulged in a pun on the already coined word, the etymology of which was then, as now, as little regarded as the thing signified is well approved." |
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