Hog on ice

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  1. Herding Cats |:

    […] the words. Picture, for example, “as independent as a hog on ice.” According to Evan Morris, The Word Detective,  this lovely phrase expresses the hog’s predicament perfectly. “While he’s technically […]

  2. and:

    “He’s independent as a hog on ice” also appears on page 266 (chapter seventeen) of the novel “A Thief of Time” by Tony Hillerman. The quote is used to refer Dr Randall Elliot, a very peculiar (scientist) character of this novel.

  3. Neil Hand:

    I stumbled across the expression for the second time (the first being in a Tom Waits song) in Part One, Chapter Two of Robertson Davies’ The Lyre of Orpheus. Wondered if Waits had picked the expression up from this book: “Independent as a hog on ice, he thought, in one of the Old Loyalist Ontario expressions which popped up, unbidden, in his mind when least expected.” Maybe Davies reckons he knows the origin, or maybe he’s inferring that the character in question, Simon Darcourt, thinks he does.

  4. Beth:

    I only heard this phrase y-day. Thought maybe it was a reference to cold ham… :-)

  5. michael loren:

    I had a patient use this expression.. her father used it to describe his daughter as very independent, with a mind of her own. The likely simple meaning.

    I have a friend who recently took up curling and she mentioned there is a “hog” line on the ice. I think the stone needs to get past this line to be a valid stone. This expression may have some meaning to an experienced curler.

  6. Dan McCurdy:

    It seems to me that while ‘a hog on ice’ may imply freedom with no ability to negotiate direction, is a smile-provoking little oxymoron, the more apparent word-picture invoked is that of sheer ‘no progress’ absurdity. Rather than over-thinking the obvious in order to draw an oxymoronic debating point, the faux intellectuals have sentenced themselves to the hog’s dilemma.

  7. Richard Hultquist:

    I have always heard it used as meaning a hog is helpless on ice.
    See “INDEPENDENT AS A HOG ON ICE & Other Curious Expressions

  8. Deke Thomas:

    Robert Ansoin Heinlein used the phrse in “Lost Legacy”, a novella first published in the late 1940s, but I get the sense thar RAH is using it to mean that the hog is extremely independent; you obviously aren’t going to herd it with a section of fence, as you could with swine on dirt or concrete. He writes:

    “Thanks, darling,” the doctor answered, “but I’d much rather hear about the Mad Scientist and his Trilby.”
    “Trilby, hell,” Huxley protested, “She’s as independent as a hog on ice. However, we’ve got something to show you this time, Doc.”

  9. Laura:

    My grandmother (b. 1891) used this expression and it was understood to mean, independent to one’s own detriment.

  10. Clay Commons:

    John Gould of Maine opined that the expression referred to the sublime peace exhibited by a butchered hog lying on a slab of ice – free from all the worries of the world. I have only his word for it.

  11. James Stewart:

    The phrase comes to light courtesy of Carl Sandburg, who uses the expression to describe the city of Chicago. I have had occasion to ask some rural people with experience with hogs and they are divided. About half say that a hog cannot walk easily of ice. The other half insist that a hog has no trouble walking on ice. So, take your pick. If the expression is to be consistent with other things that Sandburg said about Chicago it would suggest a large animal walking forward despite slipping and sliding while receiving no help from outside.

  12. Mary Clark:

    My family has used this expression for years. Just a week ago someone finally asked what the source was. I really didn’t know! I have always thought it meant exactly that: a hog skittering around on ice unable to help himself and woe betide anyone trying to help him.
    Hmmmm….now I have to research “woe betide”….

  13. Anonymous:

    You are correct Laura. I have heard this expression all my life and it always described a person who would not accept help no matter how much they needed it and usually resented the offer. It described my grandmother to a T

  14. Chris:

    I encountered the phrase a little differently. It was used in The Whisper of the River, by Farrol Sams. The character said he was, “serious as a hog on ice”. I think this makes more sense in the context of a trapped or scared hog.

  15. ron:

    Laura. Absolutely correct. A hog on ice cannot stand once it has fallen. May not be able to move off the ice at all. But it will fight any attempt to help it. Your grandmother gave the proper meaning as was commonly understood prior to the middle of the last century. And the saying is “Independent as a hog on ice”.

  16. CB:

    There is a fantastic image of a hog on ice by Maine phototgrapher Kosti Ruohomaa. It’s here: https://semioticapocalypse.tumblr.com/search/kosti

    I encountered it in a fantastic book called “Night Train at Wiscasset Station.” The book includes photos of daily life in rural / coastal Maine in the early 1900s.

  17. Minneapolis:

    I don’t know when Tom Waits wrote CEMETERY POLKA but Edward Abbey used the term in 1972 in his book ABBEY’S ROAD:
    “Connie strikes me as being every bit as shrewd, tough, and independent as the boss himself. Independent as a hog on ice. The sparks must fly when these two cross each other. I tried to imagine Gloria Steinem explaining women’s rights to Connie Nunn. Connie would laugh her all the way to Adelaide. Connie was born liberated.”