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4play See other 4play Articles Title: Word of the Day Effigies of the guilty parties were paraded through the streets on a cart or the back of a donkey; sometimes neighbours would impersonate them instead. It was this part of the custom that was the skimmington, or skimmington riding. The word is obscure, but probably derives from a skimming ladle, shown in early illustrations wielded by an enraged wife. The custom is recorded from the seventeenth century onwards, in Pepys's diary for example, and there's a good description in Thomas Hardy's The Mayor of Casterbridge of 1884: An earlier example, from 1857, appears in A journey through Texas; or, A Saddle-trip on the Southwestern Frontier by Frederick Law Olmsted: "In the evening we heard a din which proved to be a charivari, offered as a tribute of public opinion to a couple who had been married in the morning. The bride was suspected not to be immaculate. After some exhibition of endurance, the bridegroom, we were told, 'caved and treated,' that is, came to the door, and furnished drinks for the crowd". You can imagine how the custom might later have softened to one of the kind Mr Wood describes. A related custom is known in Australia Michael Boddy wrote to say that "In Tasmania, where I lived for a while, this performance at a wedding night was known as a tin-kettling, which explains itself. It would also be put on if the locals disapproved of some action on the part of the person being tin-kettled. From what I remember it is a relic of mining days and the mining camps". Peter Emery also wrote from Australia to confirm that the practice is known there, commenting that it is a custom now mainly of rural areas. The Oxford English Dictionary includes the term, and adds: "also to cause (swarming bees) to settle, by beating a tin-kettle". That's not something you need a word for every day.
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#1. To: Mr Nuke Buzzcut (#0)
Their descendants all watch Jerry Springer.
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