Victorians! discussion
Parlour Games
>
Dickens Quotation Challenge
date
newest »
newest »
message 1:
by
Lynne, In Memoriam
(new)
Jan 17, 2017 01:45PM
Mod
reply
|
flag
Natalie wrote: ""A Christmas Carol""
I know, too easy! How about this one?
"Put the kibosh on"
Technically, word historians say this had been used earlier, but Dickens is the one who popularized it. Bonus---whence comes the term "kibosh"?
I know, too easy! How about this one?
"Put the kibosh on"
Technically, word historians say this had been used earlier, but Dickens is the one who popularized it. Bonus---whence comes the term "kibosh"?
Not Oliver Twist. Best guess is that it derives from Yiddish or Anglo-Jewish. With the character Fagin in Twist, that is a good guess! Anyone else want to guess and put the kisbosh on this phrase?!
Ah! you are on the track so I will give it to you----it is from Sketches by Boz. It was a hard one.
I am guessing that it's a phrase that recurs with the speaker---so I will take a wild guess and say Jaggers from "Great Expectations".
Wow! That I know but cannot remember where it comes from. The Law is certainly a major theme in DIckens. I am going to guess Bleak House but it's only a guess. Maybe Mme. Hortense or the guy who spontaneously combusts?
No, not Bleak House. Here's more of the quote, if that helps, with the name of the speaker xxx'd out.If the law supposes that," said Mr. XXX, squeezing his hat emphatically in both hands, "the law is a ass — a idiot. If that's the eye of the law, the law is a bachelor; and the worst I wish the law is, that his eye may be opened by experience — by experience.”
Jane, thank you for the extra context. I am still at sea. I cannot eliminate anything absolutely in my mind except "The Christmas Carol" and I am sure it's not in "Great Expectations". What about "Little Dorrit"? The law and the circumlocution office are certainly a ass in that novel!
I remember now! It has been driving me crazy. Mr Bumble in Oliver Twist! Actually, supposedly Dickens did not originate the comments; it came from a play over a hundred years earlier, and we know Dickens and acting. But he is the first one whose publication gave it a wider audience.
"You have been the last dream of my soul." I don't have any idea but I will take a stab: Perhaps David Copperfield to Agnes?




