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hey, Rube!, a rallying call or a cry for help used by circus people dates to 1884.
I knew it had to do with calling for help in altercations between circus folk and townspeople. I thought it might have to do with the great fighting term, rhubarb. Any insight on that one?
(as for 'rhubarb,' I anxiously await the Commando's return for comment)
Rhuby explained that the RhubarbCommando moniker came from a
"fighting" situation (with words, not sword). Calling someone a rube has nothing to do with them having been in a
rhubarb, though if he is an aggressive rube he may start a
rhubarb over being called that.
p.s. - more crowd noises: The unemployed actors had a wonderful time. We'd huddle together in a corner and repeat ‘Rhubarb, rhubarb, rhubarb’ or ‘My fiddle, my fiddle, my fiddle’—and it sounded like a big scene from some mammoth production.
My apologies for the delay, ladies and gentlemen. It has taken me a while to get round to this thread.
I was totally unaware of the belligerent connotations for "rhubarb". It puts a somewhat different slant to my soubriquet, does it not?
I was aware of "Hey, Rube" as an alarm call - I had thought among fairground folk, but that was from my hazy memory.
I read a wonderful short story about a couple of retired jugglers (so they were circus folk, weren't they?) who kept a store out in a lonely part of the mid-west USofA, who were invaded by a bunch of crooks who used the place as a HQ. The old couple overcame these thugs bu putting on a juggling act for them, using tins cans from the store shelves. At the shout of "Hey, Rube!" from the man (of course) they started to hurl the cans at the crims, causing damage and havoc, disarming them and generally conquering all before them.
Highly unbelievable, but the sort of thing that you wished would happen.
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