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You can........?
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Where does this saying originate from?
"You can pee on the fire now - I've had my toast".
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.In a book called 'Brassbounder' by D W Bone, published in 1910, the following appeared: "It's 'Damn you, Jack, I'm all right!' with you chaps." This gave rise to all sorts of variants, such as: "I'm aboard, Jack. Pull the ladder up!" and so forth.
All of them suggest that the speaker is perfectly fine and satisfied and he couldn't care less that there are others still to be helped in the same way.
Your "pee on the fire" version is clearly just a more recent - because ruder - version. "I've got my toast and I don't care whether anyone else gets any toast or not. So, piddle on it!"
All of them suggest that the speaker is perfectly fine and satisfied and he couldn't care less that there are others still to be helped in the same way.
Your "pee on the fire" version is clearly just a more recent - because ruder - version. "I've got my toast and I don't care whether anyone else gets any toast or not. So, piddle on it!"