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- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Path: sparky!uunet!haven.umd.edu!darwin.sura.net!gatech!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!agate!rsoft!mindlink!a3130
- From: Marg_Meikle@mindlink.bc.ca (Marg Meikle)
- Subject: AHA She Cried and Waved...
- Organization: MIND LINK! - British Columbia, Canada
- Date: Fri, 8 Jan 1993 23:22:19 GMT
- Message-ID: <19395@mindlink.bc.ca>
- Sender: news@deep.rsoft.bc.ca (Usenet)
- Lines: 20
-
- My New Year's Eve resolution is to find the origin of this expression:
-
- "Aha She Cried and Waved her wooden leg aloft."
-
- It's an expression that lots of people (especially mothers around 70-ish
- now) use when they might have said "eureka" or "I found it." I have looked
- all over -- in Victorian Parlour Poems, in books of quotes, slang and
- Canadianism (although I think it is probably British but I have no idea why I
- think this). At one point it was thought to be from a parody on Cassabianca
- by Clara Denton but it isn't.
-
- Someone once suggested that the next line was "...but the villian he still
- pursued her. " and another version:
- Aha she cried in accents wild
- and waved her wooden leg aloft.
- Tis false tis false and with her evil eye
- she swept the garden path.
-
-
- Any ideas? I will be ever so grateful.
-