Back in 1952 when Harry Truman called Republicans "a bunch of snolly-gusters," it set off such a shock wave that my late colleague Eric Sevareid thought it necessary to counsel calmness. After all, he said, the man's remark wasn't nearly as bad as when President McKinley's opponent said he had "the backbone of a chocolate eclair."Snolly-guster?
Oh, internet! Can you tell me what a snolly-guster is?
thank you, World Wide Words!SNOLLYGOSTER
A shrewd, unprincipled person, especially a politician.
This is another of that set of extroverted and fanciful words that originated in the fast-expanding United States of the nineteenth century (I see a snollygoster as a outsized individual with a carpetbag, flowered waistcoat, expansive demeanour and a large cigar). These days it’s hardly heard. Its last burst of public notice came when President Truman used it in 1952, and defined it, either in ignorance or impishness, as “a man born out of wedlock”. Many people put him right, some quoting this definition from the Columbus Dispatch of October 1895, with its splendid last phrase in the spirit of the original: “A Georgia editor kindly explains that ‘a snollygoster is a fellow who wants office, regardless of party, platform or principles, and who, whenever he wins, gets there by the sheer force of monumental talknophical assumnacy’.” But an American dictionary fifty years earlier had defined it simply as a shyster. The origin is unknown, though the Oxford English Dictionary suggests it may be linked to snallygoster, which some suppose to derive from the German schnelle Geister, literally a fast-moving ghost, and which was a mythical monster of vast size — half reptile, half bird — supposedly found in Maryland, and which was invented to terrify ex-slaves out of voting.
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