softly, softly, catchee monkey
English
Alternative forms
- softly, softly caught the monkey, softly, softly catch a monkey
Etymology
Uncertain. Commentators refer to a variety of African languages or nations, but generally lack specific detail.[1] Benham's Book of Quotations suggests the phrase originated from Black English, but is unclear.[2] Compare the Wolof proverb, Ndànk-ndànk, mooy jàpp golo ci ñaay (“Slowly, slowly one catches a monkey in the forest”).
Although the phrase is attested with non-standard assonant catchee mainly from the twentieth century, Eric Partridge suggests it was probably coined in the late nineteenth.[1] Quotations from the mid-nineteenth century use catch or caught the monkey.
Phrase
softly, softly, catchee monkey
- Proceed cautiously or gently to achieve an objective.
- 1840, Archer Polson, James Grant, Law and Lawyers; or, Sketches and Illustrations of Legal History and Biography, London: Longman, Orme, Brown, Green & Longmans, →OCLC:
- "Prudens qui patiens," was the motto of our great Coke : a motto which the negro pithily paraphrases — "Softly, softly, catch monkey."
- 1896 March, Robert Baden-Powell, “The Native Levy in the Ashanti Expedition, 1895-96”, in Journal of the Royal United Service Institution, volume 40, London: J. J. Keliher & Co., page 305:
- It is a West Coast proverb, which says, “Softly, softly, catchee monkey."
- 1920, John Hargrave, The Wigwam Papers and Totem Talks, London: C. Arthur Pearson, →OCLC, page 33:
- the really important part of Scouting is to become good Scouts — "wise old birds," in fact. "Softly, softly, catchee monkey!" Not by making a row, but by cunning and kindness
- 1950, “Conference Conundrums”, in The Journal – Institute of Journalists, volume 38, page 148:
- Having failed to secure a Press Council of the sort they wanted, they are now trying, in a small way, to get something established — on the old principle of ‘Softly, softly, catchee monkey.’
- Capture a target without startling it and causing it to run away.
See also
References
- Partridge, Eric (1977) A Dictionary of Catch Phrases: British and American, from the Sixteenth Century to the Present Day, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul
- Benham, William Gurney (1948) Book of Quotations, Proverbs and Household Words, London: Ward
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