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Doe's the saying Flash Harry, ORIGINATE FROM HARRY FLASHMAN ?
No best answer has yet been selected by daver. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.'Flash' has meant showy, gaudy or swaggering since the 1700s. Also since those days, the name 'Harry' has been applied as a general name for a man, as in "He's a country Harry".
The earliest recorded use of the phrase combining the words 'flash Harry' dates back only to 1960, when it appeared in 'Custard Boys' by J Rae.
Harry Flashman first made his appearance in 'Tom Brown's Schooldays', published in 1857 and later - as a marvellous anti-hero - in the novels of George Macdonald Fraser. Basically, there doesn't appear to be any basis for believing he and the phrase have a connection at all.
Dear Choc, I did think of the St Trinian's connection, remembering George Cole's contribution to that with fondness. All I can say is that the scholars of The Oxford English Dictionary simply didn't see the appropriate film-script, as it was their 1960 'earliest' reference I used.
The phrase may well, of course, have been common in speech for decades prior to Cole's script-writer or Rae, given that the makings of it - as I explained in the opening paragraph of my earlier response - had existed for two centuries! Cheers