Page:Farmer - Slang and its analogues past and present - Volume 7.pdf/258

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To go under, verb. phr. (common).—1. To die: whence the under-side = the grave.

18[?]. Hawkeye, the Iowa Chief, 210. Poor Hawkeye felt, says one of his biographers, that his time had come, and knowing that he must go under sooner or later, he determined to sell his life dearly.

1849. Ruxton, Far West, 2. Them three's all gone under.

1888. Daily Inter-Ocean, Mar. All . . . vowed to see that the mine should be worked . . . for the benefit of the girl whether Jim lived or had gone under.

1899. Hyne, Furth. Adv. Captain Kettle, vi. As sure as you are living now, you'll finish out on the under side then.

1902. Hume, Crime of the Crystal, i. Mother Bunch's gone under, I s'pose. She was making fast for Golden Jerusalem when I was a bud.

2. (common).—To become submerged in difficulty or debt, to be ruined, to disappear from society.

1879. Payn, High Spirits, 'Finding his Level.' Poor John Weybridge, Esq., became as friendless as penniless, and eventually went under and was heard of no more.

1890. Pall Mall Gaz., 29 May, 5. 1. He asks us further to state that the strike is completely at an end, the society having gone under.

Under a cloud, adv. phr. (old).—In difficulties or disgrace.

c.1520. Old Song of the Lady Bessy [Percy Soc.], xx. 79. [A man in disgrace] comes under a clowde.

Under the belt, phr. (common).—In the stomach.

1815. Scott, Guy Mannering, xxxix. They got me down to Clerihugh's, and there we sat birling, till I had a fair tappit under my belt.

See Below.

Under the rose, phr. (colloquial).—Secretly; in confidence (Dyche, Grose).

1546. Dymocke, Letter to Vaughan [Walsh]. And the sayde questyon were asked with lysence, and that yt should remayn under the rosse, that is to say, to remain under the bourde and ne more to be rehersyd.

1616-25. Court and Times James I. [Oliphant, New Eng., ii. 71. As to the prepositions we see under the rose].

1625. Jonson, Staple of News, ii. You are my lord, The rest are cogging Jacks, Under the rose.

1632. Chapman, Ball, ii. 2. Under the rose the lords do call me cousin.

c.1707. Old Song, 'Praise of the Dairy Maid' [Durfey, Pills, etc. (1707), i. 12]. Such bliss ne'er oppose If e'er you'll be happy—I speak under the rose.

1753. Adventurer, No. 98. Under the rose, I am a cursed favourite amongst them.

1762. Snelling, Coins, 2. The rose . . . symbol of secrecy . . . [was] used with great propriety on privy seals, which came into use about the middle of the twelfth century.

1821. Lamb, Elia (Mrs. Battle). All people have their blind side—their superstitions; and I have heard her declare, under the rose, that Hearts was her favourite suit.

1868. Ouida, Under Two Flags, iv. All great ladies gamble in stock nowadays under the rose.

1892. Nisbet, Bushrangers Sweetheart, 37. I no longer wondered that he should have quitted England under the rose.


Under-dubber (or -dubsman).—A warder other than a chief in command (Grose): see Dubber and Dubsman.


Underfellow, subs. (old).—A mean wretch; snide (q.v.): see Sidney, Arcadia, ii.


Undergear, subs. (American).—Underclothing.


Undergrad, subs. (University).—1. An undergraduate.

2. (racing).—A horse in training for steeplechasing or hunting.