Part 17 (1/2)

c.o.c.k PIMP. The supposed husband of a bawd.

c.o.c.k ROBIN. A soft, easy fellow.

c.o.c.k-SURE. Certain: a metaphor borrowed front the c.o.c.k of a firelock, as being much more certain to fire than the match.

c.o.c.k YOUR EYE. Shut one eye: thus translated into apothecaries Latin.--Gallus tuus ego.

c.o.c.kER. One fond of the diversion of c.o.c.k-fighting.

c.o.c.kNEY: A nick name given to the citizens of London, or persons born within the sound of Bow bell, derived from the following story: A citizen of London, being in the country, and hearing a horse neigh, exclaimed, Lord! how that horse laughs! A by-stander telling him that noise was called NEIGHING, the next morning, when the c.o.c.k crowed, the citizen to shew he had not forgot what was told him, cried out, Do you hear how the c.o.c.k NEIGHS? The king of the c.o.c.kneys is mentioned among the regulations for the sports and shows formerly held in the Middle Temple on Childermas Day, where he had his officers, a marshal, constable, butler, &c. See DUGDALE'S ORIGINES JURIDICIALES, p. 247.--Ray says, the interpretation of the word c.o.c.kney, is, a young person coaxed or conquered, made wanton; or a nestle c.o.c.k, delicately bred and brought up, so as, when arrived a man's estate, to be unable to bear the least hards.h.i.+p. Whatever may be the origin of this appellation, we learn from the following verses, attributed to Hugh Bigot, Earl of Norfolk, that it was in use, in the time of king Henry II.

Was I in my castle at Bungay, Fast by the river Waveney, I would not care for the king of c.o.c.kney;

i.e. the king of London.

c.o.c.kSHUT TIME. The evening, when fowls go to roost.

COD. A cod of money: a good sum of money.

CODDERS. Persons employed by the gardeners to gather peas.

CODGER. An old codger: an old fellow.

COD PIECE. The fore flap of a man's breeches. Do they bite, master? where, in the cod piece or collar?--a jocular attack on a patient angler by watermen, &c.

CODS. The s.c.r.o.t.u.m. Also a nick name for a curate: a rude fellow meeting a curate, mistook him for the rector, and accosted him with the vulgar appellation of Bol--ks the rector, No, Sir, answered he; only Cods the curate, at your service.

COD'S HEAD. A stupid fellow.

COFFEE HOUSE. A necessary house. To make a coffee-house of a woman's ****; to go in and out and spend nothing.

COG. The money, or whatsoever the sweeteners drop to draw in a bubble.

COG. A tooth. A queer cog; a rotten tooth. How the cull flashes his queer cogs; how the fool shews his rotten teeth.

TO COG. To cheat with dice; also to coax or wheedle, To cog a die; to conceal or secure a die. To cog a dinner; to wheedle one out of a dinner.

COGUE. A dram of any spirituous liquor.

c.o.kER. A lie.

c.o.kES. The fool in the play of Bartholomew Fair: perhaps a contraction of the word c.o.xCOMB.

COLCANNON. Potatoes and cabbage pounded together in a mortar, and then stewed with b.u.t.ter: an Irish dish.

COLD. You will catch cold at that; a vulgar threat or advice to desist from an attempt. He caught cold by lying in bed barefoot; a saying of any one extremely tender or careful of himself.

COLD BURNING. A punishment inflicted by private soldiers on their comrades for trifling offences, or breach of their mess laws; it is administered in the following manner: The prisoner is set against the wall, with the arm which is to be burned tied as high above his head as possible. The executioner then ascends a stool, and having a bottle of cold water, pours it slowly down the sleeve of the delinquent, patting him, and leading the water gently down his body, till it runs out at his breeches knees: this is repeated to the other arm, if he is sentenced to be burned in both.

COLD COOK. An undertaker of funerals, or carrion hunter.