H

HABERDASHER OF PRONOUNS. A schoolmaster, or   usher.

HACKNEY WRITER. One who writes for attornies or   booksellers.

HACKUM. Captain Hackum; a bravo, a slasher.

HAD'EM. He has been at Had'em, and came home by Clapham;   said of one who has caught the venereal disease.

HAIR SPLITTER. A man's yard.

HALBERT. A weapon carried by a serjeant of foot. To get   a halbert; to be appointed a serjeant. To be brought to   the halberts; to be flogged a la militaire: soldiers of the   infantry, when flogged, being commonly tied to three halberts,   set up in a triangle, with a fourth fastened across   them. He carries the halbert in his face; a saying of one   promoted from a serjeant to a commission officer.

HALF A HOG. Sixpence.

HALF SEAS OVER. Almost drunk.

HAMLET. A high constable. Cant.

HAMS, or HAMCASES Breeches.

HAND. A sailor. We lost a hand; we lost a sailor. Bear a   hand; make haste. Hand to fist; opposite: the same as   tete-a-tete, or cheek by joul.

HAND AND POCKET SHOP. An eating house, where ready   money is paid for what is called for.

HAND BASKET PORTION. A woman whose husband receives   frequent presents from her father, or family, is   said to have a hand-basket portion.

HANDLE. To know how to handle one's fists; to be skilful   in the art of boxing. The cove flashes a rare handle to   his physog; the fellow has a large nose.

HANDSOME. He is a handsome-bodied man in the face; a   jeering commendation of an ugly fellow. Handsome is that   handsome does: a proverb frequently cited by ugly women.

HANDSOME REWARD. This, in advertisements, means a   horse-whipping.

To HANG AN ARSE. To hang back, to hesitate.

HANG GALLOWS LOOK. A thievish, or villainous appearance.

HANG IN CHAINS. A vile, desperate fellow. Persons   guilty of murder, or other atrocious crimes, are frequently,   after execution, hanged on a gibbet, to which   they are fastened by iron bandages; the gibbet is commonly   placed on or near the place where the crime was committed.

HANG IT UP. Score it up: speaking of a reckoning.

HANG OUT. The traps scavey where we hang out; the officers   know where we live.

HANGER ON. A dependant.

HANGMAN'S WAGES. Thirteen pence halfpenny; which,   according to the vulgar tradition, was thus allotted: one   shilling for the executioner, and three halfpence for the rope,   —N. B. This refers to former times; the hangmen of the   present day having, like other artificers, raised their prices.   The true state of this matter is, that a Scottish mark was   the fee allowed for an execution, and the value of that   piece was settled by a proclamation of James I. at thirteen   pence halfpenny.

HANK. He has a hank on him; i.e. an ascendancy over   him, or a hold upon him. A Smithfield hank; an ox,   rendered furious by overdriving and barbarous treatment.   See BULL HANK.

HANKER. To hanker after any thing; to have a longing   after or for it.

HANS IN KELDER. Jack in the cellar, i.e. the child in the   womb: a health frequently drank to breeding women or   their husbands.

HARD. Stale beer, nearly sour, is said to be hard. Hard   also means severe: as, hard fate, a hard master.

HARD AT HIS A-SE. Close after him.

HARE. He has swallowed a hare; he is drunk; more probably   a HAIR, which requires washing down,

HARK-YE-ING. Whispering on one side to borrow money.

HARMAN. A constable. CANT.

HARMAN BECK. A beadle. CANT.

HARMANS. The stocks. CANT.

HARP. To harp upon; to dwell upon a subject. Have   among you, my blind harpers; an expression used in throwing   or shooting at random among the crowd. Harp is also   the Irish expression for woman, or tail, used in tossing   up in Ireland: from Hibernia, being represented with a   harp on the reverse of the copper coins of that country;   for which it is, in hoisting the copper, i.e. tossing up,   sometimes likewise called music.

HARRIDAN. A hagged old woman; a miserable, scraggy,   worn-out harlot, fit to take her bawd's degree: derived   from the French word HARIDELLE, a worn-out jade of a horse   or mare.

HARRY. A country fellow. CANT.—Old Harry; the Devil.

HARUM SCARUM. He was running harum scarum; said of   any one running or walking hastily, and in a hurry, after   they know not what.

HASH. To flash the hash; to vomit. CANT.

HASTY. Precipitate, passionate. He is none of the Hastings   sort; a saying of a slow, loitering fellow: an allusion to the   Hastings pea, which is the first in season.

HASTY PUDDING. Oatmeal and milk boiled to a moderate   thickness, and eaten with sugar and butter. Figuratively,   a wet, muddy road: as, The way through Wandsworth is   quite a hasty pudding. To eat hot hasty pudding for a   laced hat, or some other prize, is a common feat at wakes   and fairs.

HAT. Old hat; a woman's privities: because frequently   felt.

HATCHES. Under the hatches; in trouble, distress, or debt.

HATCHET FACE. A long thin face.

HAVIL. A sheep. CANT.

HAVY CAVY. Wavering, doubtful, shilly shally.

HAWK. Ware hawk; the word to look sharp, a bye-word   when a bailiff passes. Hawk also signifies a sharper, in   opposition to pigeon. See PIGEON. See WARE HAWK.

HAWKERS. Licensed itinerant retailers of different commodities,   called also pedlars; likewise the sellers of news-papers.   Hawking; an effort to spit up the thick phlegm, called   OYSTERS: whence it is wit upon record, to ask the person   so doing whether he has a licence; a punning allusion to the   Act of hawkers and pedlars.

To HAZEL GILD. To beat any one with a hazel stick.

HEAD CULLY OF THE PASS, or PASSAGE BANK. The top   tilter of that gang throughout the whole army, who   demands and receives contribution from all the pass banks in   the camp.

HEAD RAILS. Teeth. SEA PHRASE.

HEARING CHEATS. Ears. CANT.

HEART'S EASE. Gin.

HEARTY CHOAK. He will have a hearty choak and caper   sauce for breakfast; i.e. he will be hanged.

HEATHEN PHILOSOPHER. One whose breech may be seen   through his pocket-hole: this saying arose from the old   philosophers, many of whom depised the vanity of dress to   such a point, as often to fall into the opposite extreme.

TO HEAVE. To rob. To heave a case; to rob a house.   To heave a bough; to rob a booth. CANT.

HEAVER. The breast. CANT.

HEAVERS. Thieves who make it their business to steal   tradesmen's shop-books. CANT.

HECTOR. bully, a swaggering coward. To hector; to   bully, probably from such persons affecting the valour of   Hector, the Trojan hero.

HEDGE. To make a hedge; to secure a bet, or wager, laid   on one side, by taking the odds on the other, so that, let   what will happen, a certain gain is secured, or hedged in,   by the person who takes this precaution; who is then said   to be on velvet.

HEDGE ALEHOUSE. A small obscure alehouse.

HEDGE CREEPER. A robber of hedges.

HEDGE PRIEST. An illiterate unbeneficed curate, a patrico.

HEDGE WHORE. An itinerant harlot, who bilks the bagnios   and bawdy-houses, by disposing of her favours on the   wayside, under a hedge; a low beggarly prostitute.

HEELS. To he laid by the heels; to be confined, or put in   prison. Out at heels; worn, or diminished: his estate or   affairs are out at heels. To turn up his heels; to turn up   the knave of trumps at the game of all-fours.

HEEL TAP. A peg in the heel of a shoe, taken out when it   is finished. A person leaving any liquor in his glass, is   frequently called upon by the toast-master to take off his   heel-tap.

HELL. A taylor's repository for his stolen goods, called   cabbage: see CABBAGE. Little hell; a small dark covered   passage, leading from London-wall to Bell-alley.

HELL-BORN BABE. A lewd graceless youth, one naturally   of a wicked disposition.

HELL CAT. A termagant, a vixen, a furious scolding woman.   See TERMAGANT and VIXEN.

HELL HOUND. A wicked abandoned fellow.

HELL FIRE DICK. The Cambridge driver of the Telegraph.   The favorite companion of the University fashionables,   and the only tutor to whose precepts they attend.

HELTER SKELTER. To run helter skelter, hand over head,   in defiance of order.

HEMP. Young hemp; an appellation for a graceless boy.

HEMPEN FEVER. A man who was hanged is said to have   died of a hempen fever; and, in Dorsetshire, to have been   stabbed with a Bridport dagger; Bridport being a place   famous for manufacturing hemp into cords.

HEMPEN WIDOW. One whose husband was hanged.

HEN-HEARTED. Cowardly.

HEN HOUSE. A house where the woman rules; called also   a SHE HOUSE, and HEN FRIGATE: the latter a sea phrase,   originally applied to a ship, the captain of which had his   wife on board, supposed to command him.

HENPECKED. A husband governed by his wife, is said to   be henpecked.

HEN. A woman. A cock and hen club; a club composed   of men and women.

HERE AND THEREIAN. One who has no settled place of   residence.

HERRING. The devil a barrel the better herring; all equally   bad.

HERRING GUTTED. Thin, as a shotten hering.

HERRING POND. The sea. To cross the herring pond at   the king's expence; to be transported.

HERTFORDSHIRE KINDNESS. Drinking twice to the same   person.

HICK. A country hick; an ignorant clown. CANT.

HICKENBOTHOM. Mr. Hickenbothom; a ludicrous name   for an unknown person, similar to that of Mr. Thingambob.   Hickenbothom, i.e. a corruption of the German   word ickenbaum, i.e. oak tree.

HICKEY. Tipsey; quasi, hickupping.

HIDE AND SEEK. A childish game. He plays at hide and   seek; a saying of one who is in fear of being arrested for   debt, or apprehended for some crime, and therefore does   not chuse to appear in public, but secretly skulks up and   down. See SKULK.

HIDEBOUND. Stingy, hard of delivery; a poet poor in invention,   is said to have a hidebound muse.

HIGGLEDY PIGGLEDY. Confusedly mixed.

HIGH EATING. To eat skylarks in a garret.

HIGH FLYERS. Tories, Jacobites.

HIGH JINKS. A gambler at dice, who, having a strong   head, drinks to intoxicate his adversary, or pigeon.

HIGH LIVING. To lodge in a garret, or cockloft

HIGH PAD. A highwayman. CANT.

HIGH ROPES. To be on the high ropes; to be in a passion.

HIGH SHOON, or CLOUTED SHOON. A country clown.

HIGH WATER. It is high water, with him; he is full of   money.

HIGHGATE. Sworn at Highgate—a ridiculous custom formerly   prevailed at the public-houses in Highgate, to administer   a ludicrous oath to all travellers of the middling   rank who stopped there. The party was sworn on a pair   of horns, fastened on a stick: the substance of the oath   was, never to kiss the maid when he could kiss the mistress,   never to drink small beer when he could get strong, with   many other injunctions of the like kind; to all which was   added the saving cause of "unless you like it best." The   person administering the oath was always to be called   father by the juror; and he, in return, was to style him   son, under the penalty of a bottle.

HIKE. To hike off; to run away. CANT.

HIND LEG. To kick out a hind leg; to make a rustic bow.

HINNEY, MY HONEY. A north country hinney, particularly   a Northumbrian: in that county, hinney is the general   term of endearment.

HISTORY OF THE FOUR KINGS, or CHILD'S BEST GUIDE TO   THE GALLOWS. A pack of cards. He studies the history   of the four kings assiduously; he plays much at cards.

HOAXING. Bantering, ridiculing. Hoaxing a quiz; joking   an odd fellow. UNIVERSITY WIT.

HOB, or HOBBINOL, a clown.

HOB OR NOB. Will you hob or nob with me? a question   formerly in fashion at polite tables, signifying a request or   challenge to drink a glass of wine with the proposer: if the   party challenged answered Nob, they were to chuse whether   white or red. This foolish custom is said to have   originated in the days of good queen Bess, thus: when   great chimnies were in fashion, there was at each corner   of the hearth, or grate, a small elevated projection, called   the hob; and behind it a seat. In winter time the beer   was placed on the hob to warm: and the cold beer was   set on a small table, said to have been called the nob; so   that the question, Will you have hob or nob? seems only   to have meant, Will you have warm or cold beer? i.e.   beer from the hob, or beer from the nob.

HOBBERDEHOY. Half a man and half a boy, a lad between   both.

HOBBLED. Impeded, interrupted, puzzled. To hobble;   to walk lamely.

HOBBLEDYGEE. A pace between a walk and a run, a dog-trot.

HOBBY. Sir Posthumous's hobby; one nice or whimsical   in his clothes.

HOBBY HORSE. A man's favourite amusement, or study,   is called his hobby horse. It also means a particular kind   of small Irish horse: and also a wooden one, such as is   given to children.

HOBBY HORSICAL. A man who is a great keeper or rider   of hobby horses; one that is apt to be strongly attached   to his systems of amusement.

HOBNAIL. A country clodhopper: from the shoes of country   farmers and ploughmen being commonly stuck full of   hob-nails, and even often clouted, or tipped with iron.   The Devil ran over his face with hobnails in his shoes;   said of one pitted With the small pox.

HOBSON'S CHOICE. That or none; from old Hobson, a   famous carrier of Cambridge, who used to let horses to the   students; but never permitted them to chuse, always   allotting each man the horse he thought properest for his   manner of riding and treatment.

HOCKS. vulgar appellation for the feet. You have left   the marks of your dirty hocks on my clean stairs; a frequent   complaint from a mop squeezer to a footman.

HOCKEY. Drunk with strong stale beer, called old hock.   See HICKEY.

HOCKING, or HOUGHING. A piece of cruelty practised by   the butchers of Dublin, on soldiers, by cutting the tendon   of Achilles; this has been by law made felony.

HOCUS POCUS. Nonsensical words used by jugglers, previous   to their deceptions, as a kind of charm, or incantation. A   celebrated writer supposes it to be a ludicrous corruption   of the words hoc est corpus, used by the popish priests m   consecrating the host. Also Hell Hocus is used to express   drunkenness: as, he is quite hocus; he is quite drunk.

HOD. Brother Hod; a familiar name for a bricklayer's   labourer: from the hod which is used for carrying bricks and   mortar.

HODDY DODDY, ALL A-SE AND NO BODY. A short clumsy   person, either male or female.

HODGE. An abbreviation of Roger: a general name for a   country booby.

HODGE PODGE. An irregular mixture of numerous things.

HODMANDODS. Snails in their shells.

HOG. A shilling. To drive one's hogs; to snore: the noise   made by some persons in snoring, being not much unlike   the notes of that animal. He has brought his hogs to a   fine market; a saying of any one who has been remarkably   successful in his affairs, and is spoken ironically to signify   the contrary. A hog in armour; an awkward or mean   looking man or woman, finely dressed, is said to look like   a hog in armour. To hog a horse's mane; to cut it short,   so that the ends of the hair stick up like hog's bristles.   Jonian hogs; an appellation given to the members of St.   John's College, Cambridge.

HOG GRUBBER. A mean stingy fellow.

HOGGISH. Rude, unmannerly, filthy.

HOGO. Corruption of haut goust, high taste, or flavour;   commonly said of flesh somewhat tainted. It has a   confounded hogo; it stinks confoundedly.

HOIST. To go upon the hoist; to get into windows   accidentally left open: this is done by the assistance of a   confederate, called the hoist, who leans his head against the   wall, making his back a kind of step or ascent.

HOISTING. A ludicrous ceremony formerly performed on   every soldier, the first time he appeared in the field after   being married; it was thus managed: As soon as the   regiment, or company, had grounded their arms to rest a   while, three or four men of the same company to which   the bridegroom belonged, seized upon him, and putting a   couple of bayonets out of the two corners of his hat, to   represent horns, it was placed on his head, the back part   foremost. He was then hoisted on the shoulders of two   strong fellows, and carried round the arms, a drum and fife   beating and playing the pioneers call, named Round Heads   and Cuckolds, but on this occasion styled the Cuckold's   March; in passing the colours, he was to take off his hat:   this, in some regiments, was practised by the officers on   their brethren, Hoisting, among pickpockets, is, setting   a man on his head, that his money, watch, may fall   out of his pockets; these they pick up, and hold to be   no robbery. See REVERSED.

HOITY-TOITY. A hoity-toity wench; a giddy, thoughtless,   romping girl.

HOLBORN HILL. To ride backwards up Holborn hill; to   go to the gallows: the way to Tyburn, the place of   execution for criminals condemned in London, was up that   hill. Criminals going to suffer, always ride backwards,   as some conceive to increase the ignominy, but more   probably to prevent them being shocked with a distant view   of the gallows; as, in amputations, surgeons conceal the   instruments with which they are going to operate. The   last execution at Tyburn, and consequently of this   procession, was in the year 1784, since which the criminals   have been executed near Newgate

HOLIDAY. A holiday bowler; a bad bowler. Blind man's   holiday; darkness, night. A holiday is any part of a   ship's bottom, left uncovered in paying it. SEA TERM. It   is all holiday; See ALL HOLIDAY.

HOLY FATHER. A butcher's boy of St. Patrick's Market,   Dublin, or other Irish blackguard; among whom   the exclamation, or oath, by the Holy Father (meaning   the Pope), is common.

HOLY LAMB. A thorough-paced villain. IRISH.

HOLY WATER. He loves him as the Devil loves holy water,   i.e. hates him mortally. Holy water, according to the   Roman Catholics, having the virtue to chase away the Devil   and his imps.

HOLLOW. It was quiet a hollow thing; i.e. a certainty, or   decided business.

HONEST MAN. A term frequently used by superiors to inferiors.   As honest a man as any in the cards when all the   kings are out; i.e. a knave. I dare not call thee rogue for   fear of the law, said a quaker to an attorney; but I wil   give thee five pounds, if thou canst find any creditable   person who wilt say thou art an honest man.

HONEST WOMAN. To marry a woman with whom one has   cohabitated as a mistress, is termed, making an honest   woman of her.

HONEY MOON. The first month after marriage. A poor   honey; a harmless, foolish, goodnatured fellow. It is all   honey or a t—d with them; said of persons who are   either in the extremity of friendship or enmity, either   kissing or fighting.

HOOD-WINKED. Blindfolded by a handkerchief, or other   ligature, bound over the eyes.

HOOF. To beat the hoof; to travel on foot. He hoofed it   or beat the hoof, every step of the way from Chester to   London.

HOOK AND SNIVEY, WITH NIX THE BUFFER. This rig   consists in feeding a man and a dog for nothing, and is   carried on thus: Three men, one of who pretends to be   sick and unable to eat, go to a public house: the two well   men make a bargain with the landlord for their dinner,   and when he is out of sight, feed their pretended sick   companion and dog gratis.

HOOKEE WALKER. An expression signifying that the story   is not true, or that the thing will not occour.

HOOKED. Over-reached, tricked, caught: a simile taken   from fishing. **** hooks; fingers.

HOOKERS. See ANGLERS.

HOOP. To run the hoop; an ancient marine custom. Four   or more boys having their left hands tied fast to an iron   hoop, and each of them a rope, called a nettle, in their   right, being naked to the waist, wait the signal to begin:   this being made by a stroke with a cat of nine tails, given   by the boatswain to one of the boys, he strikes the boy before   him, and every one does the same: at first the blows are   but gently administered; but each irritated by the strokes   from the boy behind him, at length lays it on in earnest.   This was anciently practised when a ship was wind-bound.

TO HOOP. To beat. I'll well hoop his or her barrel, I'll   beat him or her soundly.

TO HOP THE TWIG. To run away. CANT.

HOP MERCHANT. A dancing master. See CAPER MERCHANT.

HOP-O-MY-THUMB. A diminutive person, man or woman.   She was such a-hop-o-my thumb, that a pigeon, sitting   on her shoulder, might pick a pea out of her a-se.

HOPKINS. Mr. Hopkins; a ludicrous address to a lame or   limping man, being a pun on the word hop.

HOPPING GILES. A jeering appellation given to any person   who limps, or is lame; St. Giles was the patron of   cripples, lepers, Churches dedicated to that saint   commonly stand out of town, many of them having been   chapels to hospitals. See GYLES.

HOPPER-ARSED. Having large projecting buttocks: from   their resemblance to a small basket, called a hopper or   hoppet, worn by husbandmen for containing seed corn,   when they sow the land.

HORNS. To draw in one's horns; to retract an assertion   through fear: metaphor borrowed from a snail, who on the   apprehension of danger, draws in his horns, and retires to   his shell.

HORN COLIC. A temporary priapism.

HORN FAIR. An annual fair held at Charlton, in Kent, on St.   Luke's day, the 18th of October. It consists of a riotous   mob, who after a printed summons dispersed through the   adjacent towns, meet at Cuckold's Point, near Deptford,   and march from thence in procession, through that town   and Greenwich, to Charlton, with horns of different kinds   upon their heads; and at the fair there are sold rams   horns, and every sort of toy made of horn; even the gingerbread   figures have horns, The vulgar tradition gives the   following history of the origin of this fair; King John,   or some other of our ancient kings, being at the palace of   Eltham, in this neighbourhood, and having been out a   hunting one day, rambled from his company to this place,   then a mean hamlet; when entering a cottage to inquire   his way, he was struck with the beauty of the mistress,   whom he found alone; and having prevailed over her   modesty, the husband returning suddenly, surprised them   together; and threatening to kill them both, the king was   obliged to discover himself, and to compound for his safety   by a purse of gold, and a grant of the land from this   place to Cuckold's Point, besides making the husband   master of the hamlet. It is added that, in memory of this   grant, and the occasion of it, this fair was established, for   the sale of horns, and all sorts of goods made with that   material. A sermon is preached at Charlton church on   the fair day.

HORN MAD. A person extremely jealous of his wife, is   said to be horn mad. Also a cuckold, who does not cut   or breed his horns easily.

HORN WORK. Cuckold-making.

HORNIFIED. Cuckolded.

HORSE BUSS. A kiss with a loud smack; also a bite.

HORSE COSER. A dealer in horses: vulgarly and corruptly   pronounced HORSE COURSER. The verb TO COSE was used by   the Scots, in the sense of bartering or exchanging.

HORSE GODMOTHER. A large masculine woman, a   gentlemanlike kind of a lady.

HORSE LADDER. A piece of Wiltshire wit, which consists   in sending some raw lad, or simpleton, to a neighbouring   farm house, to borrow a horse ladder, in order to get up   the horses, to finish a hay-mow.

HORSE'S MEAL. A meal without drinking.

HOSTELER, i.e. oat stealer. Hosteler was originally the   name for an inn-keeper; inns being in old English styled   hostels, from the French signifying the same.

HOT POT. Ale and brandy made hot.

HOT STOMACH. He has so hot a stomach, that he burns   all the clothes off his back; said of one who pawns his   clothes to purchase liquor.

HOUSE, or TENEMENT, TO LET. A widow's weeds; also   an atchievement marking the death of a husband, set up   on the outside of a mansion: both supposed to indicate   that the dolorous widow wants a male comforter.

HOYDON. A romping girl.

HUBBLE-BUBBLE. Confusion. A hubble-bubble fellow;   a man of confused ideas, or one thick of speech, whose   words sound like water bubbling out of a bottle. Also an   instrument used for smoaking through water in the East   Indies, called likewise a caloon, and hooker.

HUBBLE DE SHUFF. Confusedly. To fire hubble de shuff,   to fire quick and irregularly. OLD MILITARY TERM.

HUBBUB. A noise, riot, or disturbance.

HUCKLE MY BUFF. Beer, egg, and brandy, made hot.

HUCKSTERS. Itinerant retailers of provisions. He is in   hucksters hands; he is in a bad way.

TO HUE. To lash. The cove was hued in the naskin;   the rogue was soundly lashed in bridewell. CANT.

TO HUFF. To reprove, or scold at any one; also to bluster,   bounce, ding, or swagger. A captain huff; a noted bully.   To stand the huff; to be answerable for the reckoning in   a public house.

HUG. To hug brown bess; to carry a firelock, or serve as a   private soldier. He hugs it as the Devil hugs a witch:   said of one who holds any thing as if he was afraid of losing   it.

HUGGER MUGGER. By stealth, privately, without making   an appearance. They spent their money in a hugger   mugger way.

HUGOTONTHEONBIQUIFFINARIANS. A society existing in   1748.

HULKY, or HULKING. A great hulky fellow; an over-grown   clumsy lout, or fellow.

HULVER-HEADED. Having a hard impenetrable head; hulver,   in the Norfolk dialect, signifying holly, a hard and   solid wood.

TO HUM, or HUMBUG. To deceive, or impose on one by   some story or device. A humbug; a jocular imposition,   or deception. To hum and haw; to hesitate in speech,   also to delay, or be with difficulty brought to consent to   any matter or business,

HUMS. Persons at church. There is a great number of hums   in the autem; there is a great congregation in the church.

HUM BOX. A pulpit.

HUM CAP. Very old and strong beer, called also stingo.   See STINGO.

HUM DRUM. A hum drum fellow; a dull tedious narrator,   a bore; also a set of gentlemen, who (Bailey says) used to   meet near the Charter House, or at the King's Head in St.   John's-street, who had more of pleasantry, and less of mystery,   than the free masons.

HUM DURGEON. An imaginary illness. He has got the   humdurgeon, the thickest part of his thigh is nearest his a-se;   i.e. nothing ails him except low spirits.

HUMBUGS. The brethren of the venerable society of humbugs   was held at brother Hallam's, in Goodman's Fields.

HUMMER. A great lye, a rapper. See RAPPER.

HUMMING LIQUOR. Double ale, stout pharaoh. See PHARAOH.

HUMMUMS. A bagnio, or bathing house.

HUM TRUM. A musical instrument made of a mopstick, a   bladder, and some packthread, thence also called a bladder   and string, and hurdy gurdy; it is played on like a violin,   which is sometimes ludicrously called a humstrum; sometimes,   instead of a bladder, a tin canister is used.

HUMP. To hump; once a fashionable word for copulation.

HUMPTY DUMPTY. A little humpty dumpty man or woman;   a short clumsy person of either sex: also ale boiled   with brandy.

TO HUNCH. To jostle, or thrust.

HUNCH-BACKED. Hump-backed.

HUNG BEEF. A dried bull's pizzle. How the dubber   served the cull with hung beef; how the turnkey beat the   fellow with a bull's pizzle.

HUNKS. A covetous miserable fellow, a miser; also the   name of a famous bear mentioned by Ben Jonson.

HUNT'S DOG. He is like Hunt's dog, will neither go to   church nor stay at home. One Hunt, a labouring man at   a small town in Shropshire, kept a mastiff, who on being   shut up on Sundays, whilst his master went to church,   howled so terribly as to disturb the whole village; wherefore   his master resolved to take him to church with him:   but when he came to the church door, the dog having perhaps   formerly been whipped out by the sexton, refused to   enter; whereupon Hunt exclaimed loudly against his dog's   obstinacy, who would neither go to church nor stay at   home. This shortly became a bye-word for discontented   and whimsical persons.

HUNTING. Drawing in unwary persons to play or game.   CANT.

HUNTING THE SQUIRREL. An amusement practised by   postboys and stage-coachmen, which consists in following   a one-horse chaise, anddriving it before them, passing close   to it, so as to brush the wheel, and by other means terrifying   any woman or person that may be in it. A man whose   turn comes for him to drink, before he has emptied his former   glass, is said to be hunted.

HUNTSUP. The reveillier of huntsmen, sounded on the   French horn, or other instrument.

HURDY GURDY. A kind of fiddle, originally made perhaps   out of a gourd. See HUMSTRUM.

HURLY BURLY. A rout, riot, bustle or confusion.

HUSH. Hush the cull; murder the fellow.

HUSH MONEY. Money given to hush up or conceal a robbery, theft,   or any other offence, or to take off the evidence   from appearing against a criminal.

HUSKYLOUR. A guinea, or job. Cant.

HUSSY. An abbreviation of housewife, but now always   used as a term of reproach; as, How now, hussy? or She   is a light hussy.

HUZZA. Said to have been originally the cry of the huzzars   or Hungarian light horse; but now the national shout of   the English, both civil and military, in the sea phrase   termed a cheer; to give three cheers being to huzza thrice.

HYP, or HIP. A mode of calling to one passing by. Hip,   Michael, your head's on fire; a piece of vulgar wit to a   red haired man.

HYP. The hypochondriac: low spirits. He is hypped; he   has got the blue devils,

JABBER. To talk thick and fast, as great praters usually   do, to chatter like a magpye; also to speak a foreign   language. He jabbered to rne in his damned outlandish   parlez vous, but I could not understand him; he chattered   to me in French, or some other foreign language, but   I could not understand him.

JACK. A farthing, a small bowl serving as the mark for   bowlers. An instrument for pulling off boots.

JACK ADAMS. A fool. Jack Adams's parish; Clerkenwell.

JACK AT A PINCH, A poor hackney parson.

JACK IN A BOX, A sharper, or cheat. A child in the mother's   womb.

JACK IN AN OFFICE, An insolent fellow in authority.

JACK KETCH. The hangman; vide DERRICK and KETCH.

JACK NASTY FACE. A sea term, signifying a common   sailor.

JACK OF LEGS. A tall long-legged man; also a giant, said   to be buried in Weston church, near Baldock, in Hertfordshire,   where there are two stones fourteen feet distant,   said to be the head and feet stones of his grave. This   giant, says Salmon, as fame goes, lived in a wood here, and   was a great robber, but a generous one; for he plundered   the rich to feed the poor: he frequently took bread for   this purpose from the Baldock bakers, who catching him   at an advantage, put out his eyes, and afterwards hanged   him upon a knoll in Baldock field. At his death he made   one request, which was, that he might have his bow and   arrow put into his hand, and on shooting it off, where the   arrow fell, they would bury him; which being granted,   the arrow fell in Weston churchyard. Above seventy   years ago, a very large thigh bone was taken out of the   church chest, where it had lain many years for a show,   and was sold by the clerk to Sir John Tradescant, who,   it is said, put it among the rarities of Oxford.

JACK PUDDING. The merry andrew, zany, or jester to a   mountebank.

JACK ROBINSON. Before one could say Jack Robinson; a   saying to express a very short time, originating from a   very volatile gentleman of that appellation, who would call   on his neighbours, and be gone before his name could   be announced.

JACK SPRAT. A dwarf, or diminutive fellow.

JACK TAR. A sailor.

JACK WEIGHT. A fat man.

JACK WHORE. A large masculine overgrown wench.

JACKANAPES. An ape; a pert, ugly, little fellow.

JACKED. Spavined. A jacked horse.

JACKMEN. See JARKMEN.

JACKEY. Gin.

JACOB. A soft fellow. A fool.

JACOB. A ladder: perhaps from Jacob's dream. CANT. Also   the common name for a jay, jays being usually taught to   say, Poor Jacob! a cup of sack for Jacob.

JACOBITES. Sham or collar shirts. Also partizans for the   Stuart family: from the name of the abdicated king, i.e.   James or Jacobus. It is said by the whigs, that God   changed Jacob's name to Israel, lest the descendants of   that patriarch should be called Jacobites.

JADE. A term of reproach to women.

JAGUE. A ditch: perhaps from jakes.

JAIL BIRDS. Prisoners.

JAKES. A house of office, a cacatorium.

JAMMED. Hanged. CANT.

JANIZARIES. The mob, sometimes so called; also bailiffs,   their setters, and followers.

JAPANNED. Ordained. To be japanned; to enter into holy   orders, to become a clergyman, to put on the black cloth:   from the colour of the japan ware, which is black.

JARK. A seal.

JARKMEN. Those, who fabricate counterfeit passes, licences,   and certificates for beggars.

JARVIS. A hackney coachman.

JASON'S FLEECE. A citizen cheated of his gold.

JAW. Speech, discourse. Give us none of your jaw; let us   have none of your discourse. A jaw-me-dead; a talkative   fellow. Jaw work; a cry used in fairs by the sellers of   nuts.

JAZEY. A bob wig.

 

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