Page:Farmer - Slang and its analogues past and present - Volume 5.pdf/248

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1841. Rime of the New-Made Baccalere. Around, around, all, all around, On seats with velvet lined, Sat Heads of Houses in a row, And Deans and College Dons below, With a poker or two behind.

1853. Bradley, Verdant Green, vii. A sort of young procession—the Vice-Chancellor and Yeoman-bedels. The silver maces carried by the latter gentlemen, made them by far the most showy part of the procession. Ibid. Tom is the bell that you hear at nine each night; the Vice has to see that he is in proper condition, and, as you have seen, goes out with his pokers for that purpose.

1865. Cornhill, Feb., 225. The heads of houses and university officers attend [St. Mary's] in their robes, and form a stately procession to and from the church. The Vice-Chancellor is escorted by his mace-bearers, familiarly called pokers, to and from his residence.

1870. London Figaro, 8 Oct., 2, 2. The bedels of a University are very important personages, although derisive undergraduates familiarly term them holy pokers.

4. (old).—A single-barrelled gun.

5. (fencing).—A rough fencer.

6. (old).—'One that conveys coals (at Newcastle) in sacks, on Horseback.'—B. E. (c.1696).

Other Colloquial usages:—Fore-pokers (old) = 'Aces and kings at cards' (Grose, 1785); Old Poker = the devil: see Skipper; by the Holy Poker (or Iron) = an oath: also, by the Holy Poker and tumbling Tom: cf. Poker, subs. 3; Jews-poker (q.v.), and add quot. 1899; to chant the poker = to exaggerate, to swagger, 'to put on SIDE' (q.v.): Fr. se gonfler le jabot, and faire son lard.

d.1797. Walpole, Letters, iv. 359. As if old Poker was coming to take them away.

1836. Marryat, Midshipman Easy, xxvii. "By de holy poker, Massa Easy, but that terrible sort of gale the other day, anyhow."

1840. Comic Almanack, 'Tom the Devil.' 214. A hotel's the place for me! I've thried em all, from the Club-house at Kilkinny, to the Clarendon, and, by the holy poker, never wish mysilf worse luck than such cantonments!

1886. R. L. Stevenson, Kidnapped, 169. I swear upon the holy iron I had neither art nor part.

1897. Mitford, Romance Cape Frontier, 1. viii. "I never saw anything to beat that—by the holy poker I never did."

1899. Whiteing, John St., 210. 'Does the Jew's Poker, Saturdays,' says Low Covey, 'tho' it's a poor lay summertime' . . . 'A Jew's Poker is a Christian person who attends to Jewish fires on the Sabbath-day.


POKERISH, adj. (colloquial).—1. Stiff; reserved: hence pokerishly.

1867. Broughton, As a Flower, xxxvi. I'm afraid I'm interrupting a pleasant tête-a-tête,' says the old lady POKERISHLY.

1883. Century Mag., xxxvi. 35. Stiff and pokerish, Ella called her.

2. (American).—Frightful: cf. Old Poker.

1864. Lowell, Fireside Travels, 144. There is something pokerish about a deserted dwelling, even in broad daylight.


POKER-TALK, subs. phr. (common).—Gossip; fireside chit-chat.

1885. Mrs. Edwardes, Girton Girl, ii. Gaston rattled forth this specimen of POKER-TALK lightly.


POKY (or POKING), adj. (colloquial).—Cramped; stuffy; shabby; stupid: a general depreciative. Also POKE-HOLE.

d.1771. Gray, Works, 11. Letter 36. Bred to some poking profession.

1850. Kingsley, Alton Locke, xxiv. I shall be shoved down into some poking little country-curacy, without a chance of making play before the world.