curate's egg

{{short description|Idiom derived from two late 19th century cartoons}}

[[File:True humility.png|thumb|upright=1.3|Right Reverend Host: "I'm afraid you've got a bad Egg, Mr Jones!"; The Curate: "Oh no, my Lord, I assure you! Parts of it are excellent!"

True Humility by George du Maurier, originally published in Punch, 9 November 1895.]]

A "curate's egg" is something described as partly bad and partly good. In its original usage, it referred to something that is obviously and entirely bad, but is described out of politeness as nonetheless having good features that redeem it.Paraphrase of definition in Collins Dictionary of the English Language, London, 1986, p.381{{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/236346040|title=Style guide.|date=2005|publisher=Profile Books|others=Economist Books|isbn=978-1-84765-030-6|edition=9th|location=London|pages=59|oclc=236346040|quote=[G]ood in parts is what the curate said about an egg that was wholly bad. He was trying to be polite.}} This meaning has been largely supplanted by its less ironic modern usage, which refers to something that is in fact an indeterminate mix of good and bad,[https://web.archive.org/web/20121216085117/http://oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/curate%27s%2Begg Oxford Dictionaries definition][https://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/163300.html The Phrase Finder: Curate's egg] possibly with a preponderance of bad qualities.{{Cite web|url=http://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/british/curate-s-egg|title=curate's egg Meaning in the Cambridge English Dictionary|website=dictionary.cambridge.org|language=en|access-date=2018-08-26}}

History

The expression is pre-dated by an anecdote in the 1875 Our Bishops and Deans by the Reverend F. Arnold, referenced in an issue of The Academy: A Weekly Review of Literature, Science, and Art: "Without pledging our credence, we could afford a grin to the story of the 'young Levite' who at a bishop's breakfast-table, was so {{abbreviation|'umble|humble}} as to decline the replacement of a bad egg by a good one with a 'No thank you, my Lord, it's good enough for me'."{{Cite book|title=The Academy|publisher=Robert Scott Walker|year=1875|location=London|pages=651–652}}

File:Cartoon - Bishop's Breakfast Table.jpg, 22 May 1895.]]

In May 1895, the satirical British magazine Judy published a cartoon by artist Wilkerson, showing a timid curate and a fierce-looking bishop at breakfast in the bishop's house. The bishop says, "Dear me, I'm afraid your egg's not good!" The curate, desperate not to offend his host and superior, replies, "Oh, yes, my Lord, really – er – some parts of it are {{em|very}} good."{{Cite web|url=https://quoteinvestigator.com/2019/04/04/egg/|title=The Curate's Egg: Parts of It Are Excellent|website=Quote Investigator|language=en|access-date=2019-03-05}} In November that year, the magazine Punch (which had a much wider circulation than Judy) published a similar cartoon by staff illustrator George du Maurier. Titled True Humility, it also pictures a timid-looking curate eating breakfast with his bishop, though in this case with others at the table and servants shown in the background.{{cite book| title = The New Oxford Dictionary of English| publisher = Oxford University Press| year = 1998| pages = 449}} The bishop says: "I'm afraid you've got a bad egg, Mr Jones." The curate replies: "Oh no, my Lord, I assure you! Parts of it are excellent!" An editor at Judy accused Punch of plagiarism, saying in an editorial, "anyone can see the coincidence for themselves". This version of the gag has become the best known.

For the final issue of Punch, published in 1992, an artist, Tony Hannan, redrew the du Maurier cartoon, with the curate simply saying, "This f***ing egg's bad!"{{cite book | title=How to Sound Really Clever: 600 Words You Need to Know | publisher=A & C Black | author=van den Bergh, Hubert | year=2013 | pages=39 | isbn=978-1408194850}}{{cite web|url=https://twitter.com/VictorianHumour/status/1014537505587302400 |title=Tweet depicting 1992 Punch redrawing of the cartoon |quote=Punch returned to its famous curate's egg cartoon in 1992 for the magazine's final issue, with a subversive re-telling that highlighted the apparent death of Victorian manners. |work=Victorian Humour |first=Bob |last=Nicholson |publisher=Edge Hill University/British Library |date=2018-07-04 |access-date=2019-04-19}}

The Economist{{'s}} Style Guide of 2018 cites the curate's egg in its entry for the connotations of 'good in parts'. It states: "good in parts is what the curate said about an egg that was wholly bad. He was trying to be polite."{{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1040691923|title=Style guide.|publisher=Profile Books Ltd|others=Economist Newspaper Limited.|year=2018|isbn=978-1-78125-831-6|edition=12|location=London|pages=57|oclc=1040691923}}

References