Below is a list of mostly forgotten terms, people, and the
occasional song, drawn from a reading of frontier fiction, 1880–1915. Each week
a new list, progressing through the alphabet, “from A to Izzard.”
piazza = a
colonnaded porch. “Conrath’s shadow was thrown up against the side of the
house, as he came along the piazza, walking with a heavy, careful step.” Mary
Hallock Foote, The Led-Horse Claim.
Piazza, Verona, c1900 |
picket = small
detachment of troops positioned towards the enemy to give early warning of attack.
“And the riders, front and rear, were in the nature of pickets; for, though it
was unlikely that any one would be met at that time of night, it was just as
well to take no chances.” A. M. Chisholm, Desert Conquest.
picket house =
a dwelling with walls made of stakes or
poles driven into the ground. “A picket house is sorter like a Mexican jacal;
it’s jest poles driv’ in the ground, clost together, an’ chinked, for a wall;
the dirt fer a floor; an’ a roof put over of some sort.” Grace and Alice MacGowan,
Aunt Huldah.
Picketwire / Pick Wire = a river
in southeast Colorado, called La Riviere-de-la-Purgatoire (River of Lost Souls)
by early French explorers. “When the cowboy followed the pioneer, knowing
neither French nor Spanish, he onomatopoetized the last appellation into ‘The
Pick Wire,’ which was as near as he could come to the pronunciation of
Purgatoire.” Cyris Townsend Brady, Web of Steel.
picture hat =
an elaborately decorated, broad-brimmed
hat for women. “Her figure was perfection, her gowns of the quiet elegance of
ultra-refinement always harmonious, as now, from the tip of the jeweled
aigrette in her picture-hat to the points of her aristocratic shoe.” Hattie
Horner Louthan, This Was a Man!
pie foundry = an eating place. “At the Delmonico pie foundry he let out that he craved for sausages, mashed potatoes, and green tea.” Roger Pocock, Curly.
Pier glass |
pike = to leave, run off quickly. “Apache, who had either
played possum for sheer devilment, or wakened up and tumbled—after this fellow
piked out—and reckoned it was his long suit, though maybe they didn’t think
so—well, Apache had ridden along and cached himself there in the scrub.”
Frederick Niven, Hands Up!
piker = a vagrant, tramp, small-time gambler. “A few pikers
followed and ‘stood up’ a coach occasionally, but the strong organized bands
were extinct.” Edgar Beecher Bronson, The Red-Blooded.
pilgrim = a tenderfoot. “Two pilgrims that called theirselves
sawyers not bein’ able to dodge a kick-back.” James Hendryx, The Promise.
pin pool =
a variety of the game of billiards in
which small wooden pins are set up to be knocked down by the balls. “Gusts of
hurricane force that blew open the north door of the dining-room, picked up a
great pin-pool board standing across a biscuit-shooting opening in the
partition.” Edgar Beecher Bronson, Reminiscences of a Ranchman.
pinch-ins = a corset. “‘If I ever git me another of these “pinch-ins”,’ panted Mrs. Terriberry, ‘you’ll know it. Take holt and lay back on them strings, will you?’” Caroline Lockhart, The Lady Doc.
pinchbeck = an alloy of copper and zinc resembling gold, used in watchmaking and costume jewelry. “Then he got together his small belongings—an old campaign hat, a pair of boots, a tin of tobacco, and a pinchbeck bracelet which he had found one Sunday in the Park.” Frank Norris, McTeague.
pink = to nick with a sword or bullet. “I had been
expecting one of them to draw to that card, and while his arm was pulled back I
pinked him from the hip.” Hugh Pendexter, Tiberius Smith.
pink tea = any
frivolous social gathering, attended largely by women. “In them days there
wasn’t a railroad in that section, ranches were scatterin’, and people weren’t
givin’ pink teas to every stranger that rode up—especially when they were as
hard-lookin’ as we were.” Rex Beach, Pardners.
Julius Pintsch |
pip = ill humor, poor health; a disease of poultry and
other birds. “‘You certainly have about as much spunk as a chicken with the
pip!’ he said contemptuously.” Honoré Willsie Morrow, The Heart of the
Desert.
pipe = to follow,
pursue, inspect. “I think he piped me as I blew in, but I ain’t sure.” Henry
Herbert Knibbs, Overland Red.
pipe off = to watch, notice, look at. “His hat was slouched, he’d one cock eye, / That ‘piped off’ every passer-by.” William De Vere, Jim Marshall’s New Pianner.
pippin = a perfect example. “There’s a girl for you! Say! What ’d we do without her, eh? She’s a pippin!” Rex Beach, The Spoilers.
piroot = to go, travel, move about, explore. “The hawg comes
pirootin’ about Hoskins’s fence, an’ he goes through easy.” Alfred Henry Lewis,
Wolfville.
pistol = whiskey bottle. “‘Gimme a pull at yer pistol, wont
ye?” G. Frank Lydston, Poker Jim, Gentleman.
pitch hole =
a defect in a road or trail, a pothole.
“The huge sleighs made pitch-holes in the road. Altogether it was discouraging.”
A. M. Chisholm, The Boss of Wind River.
plank up =
to put money down, to lay out money. “He
won next time. Won again, then went three times to the bad. Planked up the
fourth time and won; the fifth time and won.” Dennis H. Stovall, The Gold
Bug Story Book.
plant = a hiding place for stolen goods. “I’ll go with her.
It’s no use for me to get to the plant before afternoon.” Caroline Lockhart, Me—Smith.
play ducks and drakes
= to throw money away, squander; originally, to skip stones on water. “And it is a
charming thing, is it not, to hear a man who has made ducks and drakes of his
life, and who will probably continue to do so until he, or somebody else, blows
his brains out.” Mollie Davis, The Wire-Cutters.
play hob = to cause
mischief or disturbance (related to hobgoblin). “It weakens the spirit, and it
plays the very hob with the women.” Harry Leon Wilson, The Lions of the
Lord.
play horse =
to fool around, indulge in horseplay. “It
shorely tries me the way them aliens plays hoss.” Alfred Henry Lewis, Wolfville.
play hunk = to get
even. “‘Th’ wall-eyed piruts,’ he muttered, and then scratched his head for a
way to ‘play hunk’.” Clarence E. Mulford, Bar-20.
play up = to give trouble. “He was equally ready to play his
employer up should any one else offer a higher price.” Ridgwell Cullum, The
Story of the Foss River Ranch.
plead the baby act = to plead ignorance or inexperience as an excuse for a mistake or wrongdoing. “Of
course I believe ye. Not that you’re any too blame good, Bob, but you ain’t the
kind what pleads the baby act.” Randall Parrish, Bob Hampton of Placer.
pliers man =
derisive name for a cowboy working for a
fenced ranch, carrying pliers to mend fences. “She left the road and run agin
the fence, cuttin’ the wires as clean in two as a pliers-man.” Eleanor Gates, Alec
Lloyd, Cowpuncher.
plucked = courageous. “She was that well-plucked she’d laughed
at the idea of spending her nights at Flynn’s.” Herman Whitaker, The Settler.
plucked = to be flunked for failure to pass an exam. “He had
always done just enough to prevent him being plucked.” Gilbert Parker, Northern
Lights.
pluffy = puffy and fat. “A man with a rolling gait, heavy
brows, and red, pluffy hands, a big, unwieldy man in a dark, dusty suit, came
in and sat down at my table.” Frederick Niven, The Lost Cabin Mine.
plug tobacco = chewing
tobacco made by pressing together cured tobacco leaves in a sweet (often
molasses-based) syrup and cut into pieces (plugs). “He was in his shirt sleeves
for greater comfort, and he smoked particularly strong plug tobacco in a brier
pipe.” A. M. Chisholm, Desert Conquest.
plum duff =
a heavy pudding of flour, water, suet, and
raisins or currants, boiled in a cloth or bag. “Marthy remembered your taste,
Jack; und a half dozen of Mis’ Effens’s saucer pies, all kinds; und six of mein
meat turn-ofers, und plumy duff, und a loaf of salt risin’, und a loaf of plain
bread.” Nancy Mann Waddell Woodrow, The New Missioner.
Bustle frame, 1873 |
plunge = to spend money or bet recklessly, to run into debt.
“Say! But ye’re the stuff! Always light on yer feet. Gawd! How yer used ter
plunge, too.” Frank Lewis Nason, To the End of the Trail.
plunger = a reckless gambler. “And the chief was the biggest
plunger of all.” Hugh Pendexter, Tiberius Smith.
plunk = a dollar. “You stake yer bottom plunk on it, d’ye
see?” Marguerite Merington, Scarlett of the Mounted.
pocket miner =
a prospector or miner who extracted ore in
small increments to pay expenses and make a modest income. “While the Scot did
not lose much love for the pocket-miner, he was well aware of his grit.” Jack
London, A Daughter of the Snows.
point out =
to leave, cancel out, die. “The one of us who draws a black bean is to
p’int out after the lieutenant.” Alfred Henry Lewis, Wolfville.
pointer = a boat developed in Canada in the 19th century for
use in the logging industry. “We had to’ help them into a thirty-foot ‘pointer’
made t’ carry a crew o’ eight shanty-men ’n’ their supplies on the spring
drives.” Edgar Beecher Bronson, The Red-Blooded.
pole = a long tapering wooden shaft fitted to the front of
a cart, carriage, or other conveyance and attached by a yoke or collar to the
draught animals. “She heard only the pole and harness jigging a merry
accompaniment to the beat of quick feet, whirring song of swift wheels.” Herman
Whitaker, The Settler.
pomatum = a perfumed
ointment for grooming the hair; pomade. “In five minutes he was gone in a cloud
of dust, the tatters of the hat on his pomatumed head.” Charles Lummis, A
Tramp Across the Continent.
pomelo = grapefruit (Spanish). “She could think of no further
retort to his pretty speech, and busied herself with showing him how to eat the
grape-fruit, wondering, vaguely, where he could have been, in the desert, not
to have encountered pomelos.” Adeline Knapp, The Well in the
Desert.
Pommery Sec =
a French champagne introduced to America
in 1872 by a New York City wine importer, Charles Graef. “From each bottle
knock the neck, / Fill each glass with Pommery Sec.” William De Vere, Jim
Marshall’s New Pianner.
pone = cornmeal bread made in a skillet. “Here is a little
crock half full of eggs—prairie-chicken, I guess—say, can you make a pone?”
Marah Ellis Ryan, Told in the Hills.
pongee = a soft thin
cloth woven from Chinese or Indian raw silk or an imitation thereof. “The men
strolled in to luncheon in shirts of lightest flannel or pongee.” Charles King,
Two Soldiers.
pony = a small drinking glass, or the liquid contained in
it. “As often as he had a moment to spare he went down the street to the
nearest saloon and drank a pony of whiskey.” Frank Norris, McTeague.
popple = any of various poplar trees, found in northern
forests. “Where the Siwash had pointed, he made out only a clump of popple,
pale in the somber sea of spruce, and started toward it.” Robert Dunn, The
Youngest World.
More:
Sources: Cassell’s
Dictionary of Slang, Dictionary of the American West, The Cowboy Dictionary,
The Cowboy Encyclopedia, Cowboy Lingo, The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary, and
various online dictionaries
Image credits: Wikimedia
Commons
Coming up: Michael
Zimmer, Leaving Yuma
We had some chickens and the pip was going around. Boys' (and men's) sore nipples was called the pip.
ReplyDeleteplumpers...I seem to recall this also referred to cotton-stuffed pads that helped too-thin ladies help out their figures a bit in the bosom and rear (back in the days when Rubenesque forms were the prevailing mode).
ReplyDelete