old school

Part of Shane's previous post--where he discusses words that fall into popular usage--reminded me of a phrase that I thought was recent. Reading Charles Dickens' Bleak House over the summer proved me wrong. Dickens describes his character Mr. Tulkinghorn as old school:

"He is of what is called the old school--a phrase generally meaning any school that seems never to have been young--and wears knee-breeches tied with ribbons, and gaiters or stockings."

Maybe I'm the only one that thought that "old school" was a more recent description, but it seems to me that Dickens is using it in essentially the same way a lot of us do, minus the breeches. Am I missing something here? Any thoughts? And isn't it interesting how words and phrases fade in and out of vogue?

1 comments:

Unknown said...

Wow, I'm surprised, too, that the term has been around for so long. When I went to the OED to look it up, the first usage they record there is actually back in 1712! I think it might seem newer because of the phrase "old skool" (popularized with rap or hip-hop music) that's certainly newer. And the interesting thing is how little the meaning of the phrase has changed over the centuries--those uses from the 1700s make the same sense to me.