The word
dates from the sixteenth century and originally referred to the wooden heads
used to hold hats or wigs. Shakespeare used it in this sense in Coriolanus.
Simultaneously, according to the OED, people began using the word in the
modern sense to describe the backward and slow. See Thomas Nashe: “Bee he the
veriest block-head vnder heauen.”
The most
famous use of blockhead in the language, as reported by James Boswell,
is surely Dr. Johnson’s: “No man but a blockhead ever wrote, except for
money.” Johnson must have been fond of the word. On this date, March 22, in
1776, Boswell and Johnson are in Birmingham and visit the home of Edmund
Hector, a surgeon and friend of Johnson’s since they were boys in Lichfield:
“A very
stupid maid, who opened the door, told us, that ‘her master was gone out; he
was gone to the country; she could not tell when he would return.’ In short,
she gave us a miserable reception; and Johnson observed, ‘She would have
behaved no better to people who wanted him in the way of his profession.’ He
said to her, ‘My name is Johnson; tell him I called. Will you remember the
name?’ She answered with rustick simplicity, in the Warwickshire pronunciation,
‘I don't understand you, Sir.’—'Blockhead, (said he,) I'll write.’ I never
heard the word blockhead applied to a woman before, though I do not see why it
should not, when there is evident occasion for it. He, however, made another
attempt to make her understand him, and roared loud in her ear, 'Johnson,' and
then she catched the sound.”
It's true: I
hadn’t thought of applying blockhead to a woman. Something about it
sounds masculine, though I find no substantiation for my assumption in the OED.
3 comments:
One of the best things about blockhead is that you can change it up according to need - lemonhead, skillethead, bonehead, knucklehead etc. All are useful and all have slightly different nuances. Recently, while watching the defunct television series Deadwood, I was delighted to add hooplehead to my vocabulary. The connotation is childishness or immaturity, deriving from the bygone habit of children rolling hoops for fun.
Moe's most frequent epithet, however, was knucklehead. Appropriately, just now, I went to look knucklehead up in the dictionary, and could not find it. It just wasn't there. Then I realized I was looking under "n". Knucklehead!
Stories of his encounters with dunderheads invariably brings to mind the Hebrides journey, when they were on a mountain traveling by horseback with a local guide.
“As he road upon it down hill, it did not go well; and he grumbled. …
Just when the Doctor was uttering his displeasure, the fellow [guide] cried ‘See, such pretty goats!’ ...
Here now was a common ignorant Highland clown imagining that he could divert, as one does a child,--DR. SAMUEL JOHNSON! The ludicrousness, absurdity and extraordinary contrast between what the fellow fancied, and the reality, was truly comick.”
https://books.google.com/books?id=dpgYAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA144&lpg=PA144&dq=boswell+hebrides+look+look+at+the+pretty+goats&source=bl&ots=9-zdUpPGiW&sig=ACfU3U0gLJVX3F3nc4wJxrLijBxLsmG7HA&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiU4qzToa_oAhVIma0KHVRsCEUQ6AEwCnoECAsQAQ#v=onepage&q=boswell%20hebrides%20look%20look%20at%20the%20pretty%20goats&f=false
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