phrases, sayings, idioms and expressions at

"Up and at 'em!"

Posted by ESC on November 04, 2001

In Reply to: "Up and at 'em!" posted by R. Berg on November 03, 2001

: : : Does anyone know the origin of the phrase
: : : "up and at 'em"? Or more accurately "up and at them". This phrase is used when telling someone to get out of bed. Haven't we all used or heard this one before? I can't seem to find it anywhere. Any help would be hugely appreciated. Thanks.

: :
: : Hey it's me again. Was wondering if anyone who planned on replying to this post would send whatever they have to say to my email address. I'll probably forget to check back here. Or, does this message board send an email automatically when someone replies to your post? Hmmm. . . Whatever the case, this is going to drive me insane if I don't figure it out. Please Help! :) thanks

: Your phrase suggests combat. It may be derived from "Up, Guards, and at 'em!," about which Eric Partridge says the following in Dictionary of Catch Phrases: American and British, from the Sixteenth Century to the Present Day:

: A catchphrase of light-hearted or, at the least, nonchalant defiance . . . : late C19-20. Based upon a famous quot'n that is almost certainly apocryphal: in 1852, when asked what he had, in the fact, said at the Battle of Waterloo (22 June 1815), the Duke of Wellington replied to the anecdotist J. W. Croker: 'What I must have said and possibly did say was, Stand up, Guards! and then gave the commanding officers the order to attack.'

: Reasons for posting the answer here rather than e-mailing it:
: -- Posting lets other contributors know that the query has been answered so they needn't go to the trouble of finding the information and typing it out.
: -- This way, my e-mail address remains private.
: -- People who answer queries here are volunteers. They're providing a service for no fee. Those who post queries are getting a service for no charge. It would seem reasonable for the recipients of the service to meet the providers halfway by checking back for answers, having bookmarked this site if necessary.

This isn't the origin, but it certainly popularized the phrase: "Atom Ant is the smallest but mightiest defender of law and order. Headquartered in his secret lab beneath an ant hill, his cry of 'Up and at 'em, Atom Ant' sends evil-doers scrambling for cover! Comedian Howard Morris provided the voice for Atom. The show premiered on NBC's Saturday line-up in the Fall of 1965 in a one-hour block with another Hanna-Barbera series as 'The Atom Ant/ Secret Squirrel Show.' The back-up cartoons during Atom Ant's segment were 'Precious Pupp' and 'The Hillbilly Bears.'"
www.cartoonnetwork.com/ doc/atomant/

© 1997 – 2024 Phrases.org.uk. All rights reserved.