Playing Hamlet (and Other Sayings) -- by Susan Price

Wikimedia, by Bhagerathe

 I was peering into the backyard, trying to work out whether it was worth pegging washing on the line.
It probably wasn't because, as I said to my friend, "It's getting very dark over Bill's mother's."

The situation over Bill's mother's has been a concern all my life: usually, but not always, when there's a load of washing to be hung out.

My mother mentioned the darkness over Bill's mother's at least once a week. She'd heard the phrase used by her mother and, for a while, it had puzzled her a great deal, because one of her older brothers was named Bill. So, surely, her mother was talking about herself? But she'd be nodding towards the dark clouds gathering over the hills, miles away. Who was this other Bill's mother and why was her mother keeping an eye on her?

I don't suppose there's anyone in Britain who doesn't know that the phrase means, 'I think it's going to rain soon (because rain clouds are darkening the sky over there).' In the Black Country, where I was born and raised, it's claimed as 'a Black Country expression' but I know for a fact that it's used in the North too. I wouldn't be surprised to learn that even soft Southerners use it.

Who was Bill? I've been told that he was originally Kaiser Bill. Perhaps the dark, gathering clouds were originally the clouds of war, who knows? I'm not very convinced. As well try and catch a will o' wisp in a jar as pin down the origins of these odd sayings.

Another Bill might claim some ownership of another Black Country phrase: 'Playing Hamlet up.' I heard this often during my childhood too. If someone was thought to be making a fuss over nothing, exaggerating their troubles and generally being a bit of a Drama Queen, then they were said to be, "Playing Hamlet," or "Playing Hamlet up," with the sense of 'upstaging' or 'outdoing Hamlet.'

How come my family of miners, steel-workers and factory-hands knew anything about Hamlet? -- Well, for one thing, the 'Wakes' or fairs used to have small touring theatres which would, typically, put on short Victorian melodramas. An aunt had a party-piece which consisted of a one-woman potted melodrama. It went like this:--

Wikimedia: 'The Victorian Web'
Cowers, with hands clutched under chin and eyes upraised: I can't pay the rent!

Leers, while twirling imaginary moustache: You shall pay the rent!

Takes a step forward with heroic, upraised fist: I'll pay the rent!

 Besides these melodramas, the theatres put on what might be called 'Classic Digests': short versions of Shakespeare, Sheridan and, I suppose, anybody else who'd been dead long enough not to ask for payment.

So the Black Country was familiar with Hamlet but, apparently, not impressed by all his fuss. After all, Dads were bumped off fairly frequently in the old Black Country: mine accidents, steel-rolling mill accidents, foundry accidents...

I was talking with a friend, born and raised in London, about these odd little sayings, and I mentioned 'Playing Hamlet up.' That wasn't a Black Country saying, he said, because his Granny often said it, in London. He paused on a sudden thought, and laughed. "But she came from Walsall!" Which is certainly a Black Country town.

A phrase I'm fond of, and often use, is, "That's killed me pig." Its meaning is, "I'm exhausted with this task, I can't go on any longer, I have to stop and rest." I heard it frequently as a child, and still hear it now, from older friends.

Many Black Country families kept pigs in their back-yards, as their rural ancestors had done. Most of these pigs were eventually butchered and eaten, although a great-aunt of mine took to the runt of one litter, which had been born with weak, twisted legs. She splinted the legs to straighten them, and took the piglet into the house to feed it, since it couldn't compete with its brethren at the trough.

The piglet lived the life of Riley (there's another of those odd expressions.) Since houses in those days had stone-flagged or tiled floors, with a couple of rag-rugs if you were lucky, the piglet made a great din, clattering and banging over the floors on its splints and squealing, as piglets do, with a sound like iron being scraped on iron.

There was no chance that this piglet was going to share the early end of its brothers and sisters. As it grew larger, it was supposed to move into the yard and live out there -- but I'm told that if you visited my great-aunt, there was usually a very large pig grunting and snoring comfortably on the rug in front of the fire. Was it house-trained? Can you house-train a pig? They're said to be highly intelligent. Surely it must have been house-trained...

Less fortunate pigs were killed when they were deemed fat enough. It was often enough done at home, as it always had been. There were no laws, then, to prevent it. A neighbour or friend more experienced in pig-killing might be called in to help.

It's been going on a long time... Pieter Bruegel, Wikimedia
It was, by all accounts, a long, exhausting exercise. First, catch your pig...A large, strong, intelligent
animal with a fearful bite. And once caught, you had to stun the beast and... But I won't offend your modern sensibilities.

Enough to say, even once safely dead, a fattened up pig is a large, heavy animal to deal with, involving a great deal of physical effort.

And the reason it was prized and kept in back-yards, is that there was hardly a part of a pig that couldn't be eaten: so almost every bit of it had to be either preserved by salting or smoking or eaten immediately. Some would be given away, as gifts or part exchange for some goods or services. Butchering your dead pig was, therefore, a long, long, involved process that nevertheless had to be done quickly, in as few hours as possible, because no one then had home freezers or even fridges. It meant hours and hours of heavy work.

If you'd become fond of your pig, I suppose there emotional exhaustion to add to the physical.

Hence the saying, expressive of great weariness: "I've killed me pig." It's a phrase that can be played with endlessly. A friend, tired from working in the garden all day, sighed, sank down on an upturned bucket and said, "Me pig's moribund. Bring me tea."

"Me pig's pegged it... Me pig's expired... You behold a late pig... Are you coming to me pig's funeral?"

This blog's pig has breathed its last. But if you've any odd old sayings of your own, I'd be glad to see them in the comments. 

Wikimedia commons: Alan Fryer

Susan Price has won the Carnegie Medal and the Guardian Fiction Award.

You can learn more about her books at her website.


Comments

Sandra Horn said…
Oh lovely! I can't claim this as mine, and I think it might be another midland/northern one, but 'Well I'll go to the foot of our stairs' is one I like. I've always thought it was sarky - I'm underwhelmed by that bit of news. As for Bill's mother's, how about 'as black as me father's hat'? I don't know them origin of that either, sorry to say. Sussex sayings: 'Buxted treacle mines' in response to 'where are you going?' and meaning mind your own business, and 'a whim-whom from a mustard mill' when you don't know what something is.
Peter Leyland said…
Well I don't know any about pigs Susan, although my maternal grandfather was a Liverpool butcher, but I always think of 'a good drying day' when it's fine like I did this morning. It always puzzled me that non-scousers used to say 'Shepherd's warning' when the morning sky was red when of course it should be 'Sailor's warning'. Imagine how pleased I was when I found confirmation of this expression in Jon Fosse's novel, The Other Name, just recently. He is Norwgian and used to a more maritime turn of phrase as us Liverpudians are.

Thanks for a great post.
Sarah said…
If my brother or I complained about something and said "that's not fair", our mum would reply, "neither is a circus".
Never heard anyone else use it as an expression but would love to know if anyone else has heard or used it.
Umberto Tosi said…
What a trip! Thank you, Susan! You took this American city boy deep down
a rabbit hole of English country life that I didn't know existed with this one. I never chased a pig, but I did milk a goat onee.
Susan Price said…
Thank you all for your comments. Sandra, I'm very familiar with, "I'll go to the foot of our stairs!" Don't know why I didn't think of including it in the blog - but then, I have the pleasure of learning that you know it too!
'Black as me father's hat' I know as 'black as the inside of a funeral hat in a coal cellar.' There's also, 'stood out like a bar of carbolic in a coal cellar.' Carbolic soap usually being a bright yellow.

Peter, oh yes, I know 'good drying days', 'sailor's warnings' and 'shepherd's delights.' You might not think the Black Country would know much about sailors but a great many huge ship's anchors were made here.

Sarah, your mum's dry reply of, 'Neither is a circus,' is new to me. Clever! And Umberto, you are a man of so many talents. You milked a goat! I have been stalked by cows but I have never milked a goat.
Susan Price said…
And how did I miss remarking on Sandra's other sayings? I love 'a whim-whom from a mustard mill'!
Elizabeth Kay said…
Lovely post, Sue. Bob, who had a Licolnshire mother, used to say it's black over Will's mother. But I think my favourite saying was about speediness - like a wezzle up a bit of keck. (A weasel up a stalk of cow parsley, obviously)
Lovely. At Uni in Newcastle (upon Tyne of course) I learned that 'that won't make the baby a new dress', and from my Granny who grew up in Bristol, 'there's enough blue in that sky to make a pair o' sailor's trousers'.
How lively language used to be!

Thanks for your collection Susan!
Susan Price said…
Well, this is a delight! I thought that a blog about words might draw a few comments from writers, but didn't expect this much response.
Clare, my mother was always saying, with a heavy sigh, 'Well, this woe mek the babby a new frock.' And then she'd get on with the next task.
But as for blue skies, in the Black Country, it was always: 'Is there enough blue to mek a Dutchman a pair of trousers?' If so, it was going to be a sunny day.
But folks, I think we have a winner!
Though all contributions were wonderful, I think I have to award the crusty loaf to Liz and Bob for, 'quick as a wezzle up a bit of keck'!
Bob Newman said…
Thank you! My Mum would have been delighted.

Bonus expression of hers: When she couldn't stay sat down for any length of time, because things kept needing to be done, she'd complain she was "up and down like a frog in a fair".

Incidentally, for her (and Richie Benaud, remarkably) it was always Will's mother's it were a bit black uvver, not Bill's. But I don't know who the original Will was either, if there was one.
Susan Price said…
'Up and down like a frog in a fair!' -- Your mother had a gift, Bob. I didn't know that frogs were especially partial to fairs. (Which were/are called 'wakes' in my neck of the woods.)
Not heard of Bill's mother, but the cottage we bought in Herefordshire came complete with an old pig-hut in the far corner of the garden (no pig, sadly!). We kept it for a while to store garden tools, but eventually demolished it for materials to repair the fence.
Susan Price said…
I was always told that 'everybody' kept a pig or pigs in their backyard, Katherine, even in the 1940s and 50s. Certainly one or two of my relatives did (hence the pig snoring on the hearth). The Black Country museum bears this out with the old cottages rebuilt there.

Many also kept chickens, for the eggs. My grandmother did.

Clever to use the old pig-hut to repair the fence! The 'owd uns' would have approved.
Those are great sayings - I don't think Bill's mother travelled as far as Scotland. The first time I heard that one was when I got to know someone from Manchester.
I was trying to think of an equivalent to the Hamlet one, which I hadn't heard of at all and I believe the Scottish version may be 'he thinks he's Erchie' (or Archie, depending on where exactly you're from).
Susan Price said…
'He thinks he's Erchie'! -- I love it! I must ask my Scots partner (comes from Fife) if he knows it.

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