In the penultimate chapter of Charles Dickens’s Bleak House (1853), “two young ladies are occasionally found gambolling in sequestered saw-pits and such nooks of the park.” Saw-pits? Huh? The Oxford English Dictionary explains:
An excavation in the ground, over the mouth of which a framework is erected on which timber is placed to be sawn with a long two-handled saw by two men, the one standing in the pit and the other on a raised platform.The first citation is from 1408, where the word is spelled sawpytt. Wikipedia has a photograph of a saw-pit, or sawpit, or saw pit in action.
Talk about fortuitous reading: Richard Rorty’s Contingency, Irony, Solidarity (1989) contains a passing reference (in a footnote about the use-mention distinction) to Dudley Do-Right’s faithful dog Faithful Dog. That reference made me wonder about the origin of underdog. And it so happens that folkloric etymology has it that top dog and underdog refer to the two sawyers of a saw-pit, with the sawyer down below, the underdog, being showered with the top dog’s sawdust. But there’s no evidence to support that claim.
Instead, think dog fighting (ugh). The OED defines top dog as “the dog with the best chance of winning a fight; the dominant dog in a fight.” First citation: 1847. And underdog: “the beaten dog in a fight; figurative the party overcome or worsted in a contest; one who is in a state of inferiority or subjection.”
Elaine and I both think that I’m part-beagle. No wonder I’m always going down rabbit holes.
Also from Bleak House
At Peffer and Snagsby’s : Bucket’s Moleskine? : Dickens in the house : Five sentences : Gridley’s monologue : “It must be a strange state” : Jellyby closets : Learning to write : Living on credit : “London particular” : Not quite teleportation : Reading don’t pay : “Town-talk”

