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The London Traveler

Pop goes the weasel

by Andrea on July 3rd, 2008

Most of us know the words to nursery rhymes - but few people track down what they originally meant.

It’s not always innocent. “Pop goes the weasel” is a song about poverty - and it can be very precisely located in North London.

Up and down the city road,
In and out the Eagle,
That’s the way the money goes,
Pop! goes the weasel.

Well the City Road is in Islington. And the Eagle is a well known pub on City Road. So ‘That’s the way the money goes’ - spending it on beer and, probably, gambling. Or, possibly, women.

As for the weasel going ‘pop’ - well, ‘popping’ a thing meant taking it to the  pawnbroker’s as security for a loan till the end of the week, when you were short of ready cash. Again, it’s a song about money. And the weasel? Weasel and stoat - coat, a little piece of Cockney rhyming slang.

 

POSTED IN: History & Information

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