Page:Farmer - Slang and its analogues past and present - Volume 5.pdf/254

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Pontius Pilate's Counsellor, subs. phr. (legal).—A briefless barrister: Fr. avocat ae Pilate. [Who, like Pilate, 'can find no (just) cause.']


Ponto, subs. (school).—New bread-crumbs kneaded into a pellet.

1900. St. James's Gazette, 15 Mar., 'Arnoldiana.' He [Mathew Arnold] was placed at the end of the great school, and, amid howls and jeers, pelted with a rain of pontos for some time.


Pony, subs. (old).—1. A bailiff: spec. an officer accompanying a debtor on a day's liberty.

2. (common).—Money. Hence, as verb. (to post the pony or to pony up) = to pay; to settle. See Post, verb.—Grose (1785); Vaux (1819); Bee (1823).

1823. Moncrieff, Tom and Jerry [Dick], 6. It's every thing now o'days—to be able to flash the screens—sport the rhino—show the needful—post the pony—nap the rent—stump the pew.

1824. Atlantic Mag., i. 343. Every man . . . vociferously swore that he had ponied up his 'quarter.'

1834. Ainsworth, Rookwood (1864), 240. I shan't let you off so easily this time, depend upon it. Come, post the pony, or take your measure on that sod.

1838. J.C. Neal, Charcoal Sketches [Bartlett]. It was my job to pay all the bills. "Salix, pony up at the bar, and lend us a levy."

c. 1861-5. Song, 'A Portland Conscript' [B]. We hadn't no rich parients to pony up the tin, So we went unto the Provost, and there were mustered in.

1876. New York Herald, 16 Mar. General Rice is a bachelor of expensive habits . . . you must pony up and keep him going, for he can't live on less than 10,000 dollars a year.

3. (common).—Twenty-five pounds sterling: see Rhino.

1818. Greville, Memoirs, 15 Aug. He is equally well amused whether the play is high or low, but the stake he prefers is fives and ponies.

1837. Dance, The Country Squire, i. 3. Geo. Look here, old man! (Holding up note.) Hor. Well, to be sure a fifty is two ponies; and the hair will grow again.

1842. Comic Almanack, 327. A Mayor who, though he makes of Fifties—cronies, Yet has a most maternal love for Ponies.

1849. Thackeray, Pendennis, lxi. The five-and-twenty pounds, or pony, which the exemplary Baronet had received.

1857. Kingsley, Two Years Ago, xviii. The bet of a pony which he offers five minutes afterwards.

1870. Figaro, 1 June. I have pulled off a couple of ponies on the event.

1880. Sims, Three Brass Balls, Pledge xv. "Here's a pony for the young 'un, and directly I get a bit straight I'll send you some more."

1883. Braddon, Phantom Fortune, xli. Sheafs of bank notes were being exchanged for counters which represented divers values, from the respectable pony to the modest chip.

1892. Pall Mall Gaz., 23 Mar., 6, 3. Mr. Kisch said the bets were two ponies The Master of the Rolls: What? Two what? Mr. Kisch said a pony was £25.

1898. Pink 'Un and Pelican, 155. He would write a long letter . . . and reproach him for not sending the pony he had been three times asked for.

4. (American school).—A translation; a bohn (q.v.); a crib (q.v.): also as verb.

1832. Tour Through College, 30. Their lexicons, ponies, and text-books were strewed round their lamps on the table.

1852. Yale Tomahawk, May. We learn that they do not pony their lessons.

1854. New England Mag., 208. In the way of pony or translation to the Greek of Father Griesbach, the New Testament was wonderfully convenient.

1856. Hall, College Words, s.v. Pony. So-called, it may be, from the fleetness and ease with which a skilful rider is enabled to pass over places which to a common plodder may present obstacles.