Search this unit only. Search Now. Small Medium Large Landscape Portrait. Free Account Registration. First Name:. Create Your Free Account Now. They sound like something in a novel about the Napoleonic Wars, or a Gilbert and Sullivan operetta. What do you know about them? A: The first of those expressions originated in the British military and the second probably did, though its origins are a lot more obscure.
By some accounts, an adjutant shouted the expression to a battalion of the Buffs while it was on parade in Malta in Its origin? However it originated, the expression followed the regiment back home to Britain and became a popular catchphrase. This was a sort of exercise in which I did not excel.
Oh, why had I not brought my goloshes? Lieutenant Cotter would not brook any disarray on the parade ground from his raw recruits, shouting "Steady, The Buffs! The Fusiliers are watching you! The phrase caught on and was soon shouted whenever The Buffs marched by. It then passed into common usage, even appearing in Rudyard Kipling's novel Soldiers Three ". Gunner J. Chief Boatswain J. Cotter H. Had charge of the rockets at the Battle of Nyezane 22nd January Formed part of garrison at Eshowe until it relief.
Afterwards joined H. Crealock's Division and advanced to Port Durnford. Thanks Jim. Who was the chap killed at Eshowe. It became a common phrase in the British Army and was popularised by Kipling.
My girlfriend has just left me, I've been fired from work and my dog has dog. My life has gone down the drain. I don't know what to do" "Steady the Buffs!
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