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Re: ..., will travelPosted by ESC on November 12, 2009 at 13:27In Reply to: Re: ..., will travel posted by Smokey Stover on November 12, 2009 at 02:23: : : : : : I am interested in the phrase of "have _____, will travel". what is the origin and what does it mean? Thanks : : : : : : : It was the name of a radio and a television show, "Have Gun, Will Travel." : : : Everybody sing: : : : Have Gun, Will Travel reads the card of a man. : : : Paladin, Paladin : : : Title: "Have Gun Will Travel" : : The TV series was 1957-64. "A far cry from the stereotypical hired gun, Paladin is a cultured Renaissance man.His business card reads, "Have Gun, Will Travel - Wire Paladin, San Francisco,' charging a flat fee of $1,000 for his services, a small fortune in the late 1800s. He wears black but is the good guy, typically helping the oppressed and the wronged. Series co-writer Gene Roddenberry went on to achieve fame with Star Trek." The article goes on to list examples of use of the phrase including a name given by Handgun Control Inc. (later renamed the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence) to a proposed 1998 measure that would permit licensed gun owners to carry concealed weapons across state-lines. "Oxford Dictionary of Catchphrases" compiled by Anna Farkas (Oxford University Press, Oxford, New York, 2002), Page 117-118. : I should have remembered Paladin, one of my wife's favorite shows. I actually thought "gun" after I posted my lame contribution. Does this invalidate the notion of offering to travel to get employment? What made Paladin's creators think of: that title? (Answer: I don't know.) I am guessing the form of the phrase had an earlier origin. But I couldn't find any reference to it. |