Originally posted by rjpalmer
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Well, it's your digestive tract, Caz, and you can decide what you are willing to swallow, but I'm not having any of it.
Language doesn't work in the way that you (and Al?) are suggesting.
Yes, it's plastic, and we have the ability to uniquely link words together. ("Indefatigable penguin"---but who ever heard of that?).
But, in the grand scheme of things, when someone uses a phrase -- "bumbling buffoon" --it isn't because they are having an independent and spontaneous brainstorm, is it? People repeat word patterns and the sounds of word patterns. They aren't reinventing language every time they open their mouths; they are aping combinations they have heard before--and, as is now increasingly obvious, the combination of "bumbling buffoon" only made its way into popular culture in the 1940s.
The example that Harry uses of "bumbling fellow" is in an essay about bees called "The Wasp" that actually first appeared in the St. James Gazette on 22 April 1887. I had already noticed it, but it was just another rare example of "bumbling" being used in the context of bumble bees. If you read the whole essay, the author meant "fussy." The essay was popular enough that it was reprinted in other newspapers, and thus it almost single-handedly accounts for the hits for "bumbling" in the Victorian press. It was a 'one-off' and WAS an independent creation by a clever writer.
But it is not used in the sense of 'bungling' that we get in bumbling buffoon. And thus you're still not finding anyone --except for 'Maybrick'--having thought to use the combination of bumbling + buffoon before 1949.
And is that surprising? In 1887 we have James A. H. Murray, and his fellow Oxford scholars, stating that the adjective "bumbling" is obscure...ie., not in wide use. They are the ones that invented the OED, and were alive at the moment, so I'm guessing they knew what they were talking about.
And we have two American authors in 1908 and 1916 respectively, under the strange impression that they had invented the adjective "bumbling" (And I fancy that the author of the St. James Gazette piece must have felt the same way). Why is that if the word was in wide circulation?
And this is even without the word being linked to "buffoon."
So, it seems to me, the choice is yours, as is an obvious one.
You can believe that Maybrick/the old hoaxer independently invented an insult "bumbling buffoon," and that it just happened to become popular and widely used 70 years later...
Or you can accept that the Diary was written at least 70 years later than you think it was...when the insult was already in wide circulation...
Not really much of a choice, is it, considering the diarist also uses "one-off," has the modern obsession with Abberline, doesn't sound Victorian, and references a police inventory list under lock-and-key until a few years before Bongo Barrett came bumbling in?
Personally, I think 'The Baron' nailed this one. "Bumbling buffoon" a verbal anachronism. But that's as far as I'm taking it.
Summed that up well. Good post. Unless the phrase turns up at some point, the matter is pretty much put to bed. Good spot from The Baron.
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