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.”
shorthorn = tenderfoot, newcomer. “Let the
shorthorn go sleep onder a mesquite-bush; it’ll do him good a whole lot.” Alfred
Henry Lewis, Wolfville.
shot in the locker = ammunition and powder. “Ez soon as he
got inter trouble he knowed whar ter find a fren’ whut’ll stan’ by him ez long
ez there’s a shot in ther locker—savvy?” G. Frank Lydston, Poker Jim, Gentleman.
shot tower = a
building formerly used in the production of shot, in which molten lead was
dropped from a great height into water, thus cooling it and forming the shot. “Hills
twenty, thirty miles away rose like apparitions, astonishingly magnified.
Willows became elms, a settler’s shanty rose like a shot-tower.” Hamlin
Garland, The Moccasin Ranch.
shotgun messenger =
a guard on a stagecoach or train, to oversee a valuable private shipment, such
as a strongbox or safe; typically rode next to the stagecoach driver and
carried a short (or sawed-off) 12- or 10-gauge double-barreled shotgun, loaded
with buckshot. “Only the driver and a friend were on it, and both of them knew
the shot-gun messenger and the sheriff, and they asked in some astonishment
what the trouble was.” Owen Wister, Red
Men and White.
show-me = skeptical; believing nothing until is
it demonstrated. “He belonged to the show-me club, an’ had all his facical
muscles spiked fast for fear they’d come loose an’ grin before he saw the point
himself.” Robert Alexander Wason, Happy
Hawkins.
show shop = a place of exhibition, a theatre. “It was thar, in their ‘show shop’ one Sunday, that I heard a quaint sermon begun.” William De Vere, Jim Marshall’s New Pianner.
show shop = a place of exhibition, a theatre. “It was thar, in their ‘show shop’ one Sunday, that I heard a quaint sermon begun.” William De Vere, Jim Marshall’s New Pianner.
show the white
feather = display cowardice. “His victim had pulled an engine throttle too
long to show the white feather, but he was dying by the time he had dragged a
revolver from his pocket.” Frank H. Spearman, Whispering Smith.
shrammed = shriveled with cold. “He stepped
briskly from his house, for he was ‘schrammed’ with cold in his white drill
clothing.” Ridgwell Cullum, The Story of
the Foss River Ranch.
shy = to throw, fling something carelessly
or casually. “One, their chief, even as he howled in apprehension, shied a
bone-tipped spear up the bluff.” Hugh Pendexter, Tiberius Smith.
Sibley tent |
side eye = a sideways glance. “I just took one
side-eye at Jabez an’ his face looked like a storm cloud at a picnic.” Robert
Alexander Wason, Happy Hawkins.
side meat = salt pork and bacon
taken from the sides of a hog. “You’ll find lots uv pore corn-juice, canned goods,
ig’nance, and side-meat.” Willis George Emerson, Buell Hampton.
side-kicker = partner, accomplice (cf. sidekick).
“‘You’re a sassy side-kicker,’ he observed good-humoredly.” Caroline Lockhart, Me—Smith.
sideline = a line for tying together the fore and
hind legs on one side of an animal. “Just picket him or hobble him with a good
side-line.” Harry Leon Wilson, The Lions
of the Lord.
sign camp = a line camp, where line riders lived
while working. “We’ll show Red Dog an’ sim’lar villages they ain’t sign-camps
compared with Wolfville.” Alfred Henry Lewis, Wolfville.
signal service = national
weather service originated in 1870 by the Army Signal Corps. “Jode received us
at the signal-service office, and began to show us his instruments with the
careful pride of an orchid-collector.” Owen Wister, Lin McLean.
Silenus and donkey |
Silenus = in mythology, the oldest, wisest, and
most drunken follower of Dionysus. “He was accomplishing absolutely nothing by
continuing the struggle, nothing more than a woman yoked to a Silenus hoping to
reform him when he daily grew worse under her eyes.” Agnes C. Laut, The Freebooters of the Wilderness.
silver-tip =
grizzly bear. “The preacher shook hands with ’em all around – he had a grip
that woudn’t be no disgrace for a silver-tip.” Robert Alexander Wason, Friar Tuck.
Simmons, Joe = friend and colleague of Soapy Smith; died of pneumonia in 1892 in Creede, Colorado. “Joe Simmons had done very little to win the applause of the newspaper fraternity, but, dying as he did on the eve of the first issue of a great daily he made the hit of his life.” Cy Warman, Frontier Stories.
Simon-pure = the genuine article; the real thing. “I have been reading of Southern gentlemen all my life, and there is the Simon-pure, only with the great heart this generous big State gives to all of its men.” Patience Stapleton, Babe Murphy.
singlefoot = a rapid gait of a horse in which each foot strikes the ground separately. “By the time he gets half a mile out of Pimienta, I singlefoots up beside him on my bronc.” O. Henry, Heart of the West.
sinker = a pancake, round breakfast biscuit or
roll. “He was not alone to have the pleasure of his sister’s company during the
summer, but would enjoy a respite from the “camp sinkers” and “mulligan” of the
boarding house.” Dennis H. Stovall, The
Gold Bug Story Book.
Sir Oracle = a dogmatical person; one not to be contradicted (from Shakespeare, Merchant of Venice). “He was no Sir Oracle, and had never pretended to be, and he began to doubt himself and his conclusions.” John H. Whitson, Justin Wingate, Ranchman.
sit in the dry =
to lack a drink (alcoholic). “Are you again so drunk that you can’t see that we
are sitting in the dry?” Charles Sealsfield, The Cabin Book.
sitkum = Chinook
jargon for half. “ ‘Huh!’ Simon grunted. ‘Mebbyso white man; mebbyso sitkum
Siwash.” A. M. Chisholm, Desert Conquest.
Siwash = derogatory term used to refer to
Indians in the Pacific Northwest; from French, savage. “Even a hulking Siwash, with
his squaw and children, came dragging down the valley in the wake of the
freshets.” Marah Ellis Ryan, Told in the
Hills.
Siwash logger = a beachcomber. “I am a Siwash logger. Well, and what then? Answer me now!” Martin Allerdale Grainger, Woodsmen of the West.
sixes and sevens = a state of total confusion or disarray. “Then things’ll go to sixes and sevens, as they did after Sophy died.” Gilbert Parker, Northern Lights.
skate = a mean or contemptible person.
“Collectively, I’m assoomin’ you’re the darndest lot of skates I ever run up
agin’.” Willis George Emerson, Buell
Hampton.
skeezicks = rascal. “ ‘Here’s Carlota,’ he says, ‘She’d make a figger fer a book.’
Carlota!—the little skeezicks!” Eleanor Gates, Alec Lloyd, Cowpuncher.
skew-gee = crooked, slanted, cockeyed. “The
dashboard’s smashed into matches, the tumblin’-rods is broke, the
spark-condenser’s kaflummuxed, and the hull blamed business is skew-gee.” Eleanor
Gates, Alec Lloyd, Cowpuncher.
skilly = a thin oatmeal soup or gruel. “If you
don’t tell us all you know, in you go to Calford and a diet of skilly’ll be
your lot for some time to come.” Ridgwell Cullum, The Story of the Foss River Ranch.
skin = to glance at, examine. “I’m skinnin’
my kyards a bit interested anyhow, bein’ in the hole myse’f.” Alfred Henry
Lewis, Wolfville.
skin = to run off. “I skun fer Hairoil
Johnson’s shack to borra a diff’rent suit of clothes offen the parson.” Eleanor
Gates, Alec Lloyd, Cowpuncher.
skin game = any
form of gambling designed to fleece the uninitiated. “I ain't going to stand
for putting up a summer breeze ag’in’ that feller’s good dough—that’s a skin
game, to speak it pleasantly.” Henry Wallace Phillips, Red Saunders.
skin out = to renig on a debt. “You have all
treated me fine an’ I hate to skin out without saying good-bye but I have not
the nerve.” Robert Alexander Wason, Happy
Hawkins.
skin the deck = in gambling, to palm cards from the
deck. “Monody would ’a’ done anything he could for me,—well, he lay down his
life an’ I reckon that’s about skinnin’ the deck.” Robert Alexander Wason, Happy Hawkins.
skip = a bucket, cage, or vehicle for
lowering and raising materials or workers in a mine or quarry. “He mounted the
skip and went down the incline, stopping on every level and dodging into each
drift and tunnel.” Dennis H. Stovall, The
Gold Bug Story Book.
skipper = small insect. “In the Old Dominion the
farmers sprinkle a little clean hickory-wood ash over it when salted down so as
to give it an appetizing flavor and also the keep the skippers off.” John C.
Bell, The Pilgrim and the Pioneer.
skirt dance = a ballet dance popular in the 19th century distinguished by the dancer’s manipulations of her long flowing and varicolored skirts or drapery. “This was to be followed by ‘The Lamont Sisters, Winnie and Violet, serio-comiques and skirt dancers.’” Frank Norris, McTeague.
skitter = mosquito. “They were stretched out
well to leeward of the fire, so that the smoke passed across them, driving away
a few of the less audacious ‘skitters.’” Ridgwell Cullum, The Story of the Foss River Ranch.
Previous: S (seven-up – shortening)
Next: S (skive – snap)
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: Alethea Williams, Walls for the Wind
show the white feather. I remember that from some book I read. I thought shorthorn only referred to cattle.
ReplyDeleteAnother fine batch of skewed ole words and usage..
ReplyDelete