CURATE'S EGG

"True Humility" by George du Maurier, originally published in ''Punch, 1895''.

The expression "'a curate's egg'" originally meant something that is partly good and partly bad, but as a result is entirely spoilt. Modern usage has tended to change this to mean something having a mix of good and bad qualities; an example in conversation would be, "Ah Tisshaw, how was your holiday?" "Somewhat of a curate's egg, I'm afraid; the hotel was top-notch, but the rain was most irksome."
The phrase derives from a cartoon in the humorous British magazine ''Punch'' on 9 November 1895. Drawn by George du Maurier and entitled "True Humility", it pictured a timid-looking curate (a low-ranking church minister) taking breakfast in his bishop's house.
The bishop says "I'm afraid you've got a bad egg, Mr Jones". Apparently trying to avoid offence or curry favor, the curate replies, "Oh, no, my Lord, I assure you that parts of it are excellent!"
The original sense of the expression referred to an objective understanding of the depicted scenario: since an egg that is even ''partly'' "bad" is effectively inedible, the supposedly "excellent" parts do not redeem it (the curate's flattering objection nonwithstanding). The more modern sense of the expression reflects the point of view the curate is trying (however insincerely) to argue: that the "excellent" parts compensate enough for the "bad" parts to render complaints – or at least declaring something a total loss – inappropriate.

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Examples

Examples


Published examples of use cited by the OED:

1905 Minister's Gazette of Fashion "The past spring and summer season has seen much fluctuation. Like the curate's egg, it has been excellent in parts."

1962 Oxford Magazine "All the same it is a curate's egg of a book. While the whole may be somewhat stale and addled, it would be unfair not to acknowledge the merits of some of its parts."

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