(A brief essay on the influence of the horse in our language, which I began writing in 2005 when we did our first Art Horse fundraiser, and published on the Horsin' Around Rivendell pages of my website.  I have added to it every so often.)
Our culture’s relationship with the horse has given us many 
colorful words and phrases. These come from the horse itself as well as the gear 
and activities associated with the horse. 
We refer to young girls as fillies (female foals), 
virile men as stallions or studs (male horses), a person who 
constantly harangues is called a nag (an old and worthless horse), and 
little girls and aging hippies wear their hair in pony tails. We indulge 
in horseplay when we are having too much fun. This is also called 
horsing around.   When a person behaves in an arrogant, haughty or 
disdainful fashion we say he is on his high horse.    When we 
can't seem to let go of an untenable notion it is known by the rather unsavory 
phrase beating a dead horse.
  
Over a hundred years since the invention of the automobile we 
name our cars after the horse. There are the Mustang, the Colt, 
the Charger , the Bronco and the infamous Pinto. Our car’s engines are rated by
horsepower. When the automobile was first introduced it was called the 
horseless carriage and streetcars pulled by horses were called 
horse-cars. Our fascination with the power and mystery of the horse can be 
seen every day when we see car commercials on TV. Count the number of horses you 
see in one day’s worth of car commercials!
Another term for common sense is horse sense. Certain 
dancers have been called hoofers and when we decide to walk instead of 
drive, we are hoofing it. When we watch the Olympics we view gymnasts 
performing amazing feats on the pommel horse. The pommel is a part of a 
horse’s saddle. When we cut wood we use a saw horse. The term riding 
roughshod means to treat harshly and originates in a horse that has been 
shod with projecting nails (kinda like golf cleats).
A person with a long face, a lantern jaw and large teeth is 
derogatorily called horse-face. A person who is said to be very fond of 
his or her apparel is called a clothes horse.   Nonsense and silliness has been called 
horse feathers (think of the Marx Brothers). A slang term for a 
baseball is a horse hide, even though baseballs were never made from 
horse hide. A loud coarse laugh is called a horse laugh. Movies, TV shows 
and plays with a Wild West theme are called horse operas. A horse shoe 
is not just that piece of metal nailed to a horse’s hoof it also refers to 
anything that is U-shaped, including our own Horseshoe Falls.  When we go 
to the circus it is often held in a place called a hippodrome.  This 
comes from the ancient Greek and combines hippo (horse) and drome (race course).  
The ancients held chariot races in hippodromes.
Speaking of race courses, a lot of words and phrases in our 
language come from the race track.  When we start an new project with a 
great flourish, we say we are off to the races.  A project in its 
infancy is just out of the starting gate.  When this project is 
going well, it is on track.  When we uphold the losing side, we have
backed the wrong horse.  And when things get out of control we say 
it's anybody's horse race from here!
A shrewdly conducted bargain is still called a horse trade, 
to pony up means to settle an account, and a dark horse is not 
only a horse that comes out of nowhere to win a race but also a political 
candidate unexpectedly nominated.  When a person falls (or is thrown) from 
a horse there is much urging to get back on the horse  - that same 
phrase is used to encourage someone to overcome fear or doubt.  Riders 
often need a boost to mount a horse - this is the origin of the phrase leg up. The military even today uses the word dismount to describe getting out of a vehicle, a clear throwback to cavalry.  Also, the word cavalcade originally meant a procession of persons riding on horses.  When we 
promise to keep a secret we claim that wild horses couldn't drag it out of 
us.  When precautions are taken after a problem has occurred we refer 
to this as shutting the barn door after the horse has gone. When me 
mix up our priorities during a project this is commonly known as putting the 
cart before the horse.  In the four years that we presented Horsin' Around Rivendell, 
we accumulated a stable of artists.
A horse is controlled by its bridle and the attached reins. A 
laneway wide enough to accommodate a horse was called a bridle path.  
In many subdivisions today there are streets called The Bridle Path which have 
never seen a horse!   We 
refer to unbridled passions or enthusiasm; we rein in our emotions 
or our spending.  We also use the term free rein to mean letting 
someone do what he pleases. The metal mouthpiece of the bridle is called a bit which 
curbs or restrains the horse.  A curb is also a type of bit, hence phrases 
like curb your enthusiasm.  When we say the phrase taking the bit in 
one's teeth, we mean casting off control.  When we say champing at 
the bit it means to betray impatience.   A rider sometimes wears 
spurs on his boots to urge the horse along.  We still use the phrase 
spurred on to indicate that we are being goaded into action.
The rider sits in the saddle and we often refer to being 
saddled with burdens or debt.  A person who is in the saddle is 
a person in a position of authority.  When we return to working after an 
absence, we say we are back in the saddle. Saddle shoes are oxfords with 
a band of a contrasting color across the instep.  For a horse to carry 
items, saddle bags are used (think Pony Express mail carriers).  Women 
with, ahem, hefty thighs sometimes refer to this extra "baggage" as saddle 
bags!  When some niggling little thing keeps bothering the heck out of 
you it is frequently referred to as a burr under your saddle.  
 Sometimes when we work too many hours we 
complain that we have been in harness too long.  A person overly 
attached to the notion of working is often called a work horse.  
Another way of telling someone to leave well enough alone is to use the phrase 
don't switch horses in midstream.  You can imagine the problems that 
would arise from such an effort.
Words like corral, lasso and round-up all come from our 
Old West heritage. These words are frequently used to mean gather.
Horse of
a different color has come to mean something that is entirely different. 
When we wish to restrain wild impulses we say hold your horses. 
When we receive news from a trustworthy source we say we have gotten it straight
from the horse’s mouth.  Hot to trot means ready and eager, 
as does feeling one's oats.  A person who falls into a rage is said 
to be up on his hind legs, like a rearing horse.
A time-honored method of determining the age of a horse is to 
look into its mouth. The length and condition of the teeth reveal the age. Hence 
the phrase looking a gift horse in the mouth, meaning to question 
a gift. Not a good thing!  Carriage horses work long hours and are given 
food in nosebags or feedbags.  Hence, putting on the feedbag means 
to have a meal.
I will continue to add horse words as I think of them, but for now, I do not want to give anyone a nightmare so I will stop. Well, how about one little Night Mare?
I will continue to add horse words as I think of them, but for now, I do not want to give anyone a nightmare so I will stop. Well, how about one little Night Mare?
|  | 
| Night Mare, one of the first Art Horses I did for Horsin' Around Rivendell, 2005. | 
