• The Great Exhibition opened, London (1-5-1851)

    From Ross Clark@21:1/5 to All on Thu May 2 09:36:21 2024
    "Great Exhibition of the Works of Industry of All Nations" -- the first
    of the great World's Fairs of the 19th century.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Exhibition

    The Crystal Palace, the vast central building of the Exhibition, had a
    complex after-life. It was rebuilt (rather differently) in a different location, and survived as a kind of Events Centre until destroyed by
    fire in 1936.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Crystal_Palace

    Meanwhile, Crystal (no relation) is most interested in the _Official Descriptive and Illustrated Catalogue_ of the Exhibition, a massive
    1400-page inventory of the modern world's productions. "Dozens of new formations are listed....The Catalogue sometimes provides the first
    recorded use of an item..." (a reference to OED). His first-use examples
    are:
    sulphurator "An apparatus for sprinkling plants with flowers of sulfur, fumigating with sulfur, or the like."
    Tahiti cane "The sugar cane, Saccharum officinarum."

    More interestingly, one of the new industrial wonders of the Exhibition
    was--- pay toilets! Designed by George Jennings, and apparently referred
    to colloquially as "monkey closets", they cost one penny to use. Whence
    the expression "spend a penny", which survived longer than the Crystal
    Palace.

    Oh yes, it was also May Day, with all that that entails. Since Tennyson
    is in the air (at least on a.u.e.) let's recall:

    You must wake and call me early, call me early, mother dear;
    To-morrow ’ll be the happiest time of all the glad new-year,—
    Of all the glad new-year, mother, the maddest, merriest day;
    For I ’m to be Queen o’ the May, mother, I ’m to be Queen o’ the May.

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  • From Aidan Kehoe@21:1/5 to All on Thu May 2 06:50:46 2024
    Ar an dara lá de mí Bealtaine, scríobh Ross Clark:

    [...] More interestingly, one of the new industrial wonders of the Exhibition was--- pay toilets! Designed by George Jennings, and apparently referred to colloquially as "monkey closets", they cost one penny to use. Whence the expression "spend a penny", which survived longer than the Crystal Palace.

    On its last legs now, I would say, but I don’t watch much British TV lately.

    I wonder if there an online resource for dying English phrases. I remember the Duden Oxford German-English dictionary translated „futsch sein“ as ‘to be gone
    for a Burton’ and when the phrase came up in a German conversation exchange locally I realised the latter phrase has no currency locally.

    --
    ‘As I sat looking up at the Guinness ad, I could never figure out /
    How your man stayed up on the surfboard after fourteen pints of stout’
    (C. Moore)

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