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Mark Twain's famous usePosted by R. Berg on February 16, 2003 In Reply to: Re: Light out and ride posted by masakim on February 16, 2003 : : Recently, I was searching
lyrics to a Mark Knopfler tune called "Camerado" and found the line "light out
and ride" misquoted frequently. I understood the phrase to mean "get going", "get
out of here fast" or "leave quickly". I have a sense that I may have heard this
from old "B" westerns I watched as a kid in the fifties. I suspect it may have
something to do with bandits around a campfire that would have a posse come up
on them and they would kill the light of the fire, mount up on their horses and
scatter in all directions. Or possibly, blowing out a latern after saddling up
in a barn and riding out. : light out v phr
by 1870 To leave, esp hastily; = TAKE OFF, HIGHTAIL: "Jack, estranged from his
father by his brother's death in a helicopter crash, lights out for the "Light out for the territory" has become a cliché because the last sentence of "Huckleberry Finn" is "But I reckon I got to light out for the Territory ahead of the rest, because Aunt Sally she's going to adopt me and sivilize me, and I can't stand it. I been there before." |