This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2013/may/15/in-praise-of-clouts

The article has changed 2 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 0 Version 1
In praise of … clouts In praise of … clouts
(4 months later)
Halfway through May, and temperatures are frozen in single figures. Definitely not a moment to be casting a clout, and if you belong to the rump of opinion that thinks the May in question is the hawthorn flower, well that's not out yet either. But it's odd that argument lingers over the May question when no one disputes clout, a word with many possible meanings in the Shorter Oxford Dictionary, none of them very satisfactory in the context of the old saw about casting them. Or it. Shakespeare put clouts in his shoes to avoid slipping in the mud, Chaucer's merchant described something being rente al to clouts, a contemporary washed the dishes with them, and a king of clouts was a straw man. Later the word came to mean a handkerchief or a length of cloth holding a certain number of pins or needles. None would be much help in keeping warm in the recent miserable weather. Best keep it on, all the same.Halfway through May, and temperatures are frozen in single figures. Definitely not a moment to be casting a clout, and if you belong to the rump of opinion that thinks the May in question is the hawthorn flower, well that's not out yet either. But it's odd that argument lingers over the May question when no one disputes clout, a word with many possible meanings in the Shorter Oxford Dictionary, none of them very satisfactory in the context of the old saw about casting them. Or it. Shakespeare put clouts in his shoes to avoid slipping in the mud, Chaucer's merchant described something being rente al to clouts, a contemporary washed the dishes with them, and a king of clouts was a straw man. Later the word came to mean a handkerchief or a length of cloth holding a certain number of pins or needles. None would be much help in keeping warm in the recent miserable weather. Best keep it on, all the same.
Our editors' picks for the day's top news and commentary delivered to your inbox each morning.