The pot calling the kettle black

Black pot and kettle

The phrase "The pot calling the kettle black" is an idiom used to claim that a person is guilty of the very thing of which they accuse another.

Interpretations and origins

As generally understood, the person accusing (the "pot") is understood to share some quality with the target of their accusation (the "kettle"). The pot is mocking the kettle for a little soot when the pot itself is thoroughly covered with it.

An alternative interpretation, recognized by some,[1][2] but not all,[3] sources is that the pot is sooty (being placed on a fire), while the kettle is clean and shiny (being placed on coals only), and hence when the pot accuses the kettle of being black, it is the pot’s own sooty reflection that it sees: the pot accuses the kettle of a fault that only the pot has, rather than one that they share. The point is illustrated by a poem that appeared anonymously in an early issue of St. Nicholas Magazine:

"Oho!" said the pot to the kettle;
"You are dirty and ugly and black!
Sure no one would think you were metal,
Except when you're given a crack."

"Not so! not so!" kettle said to the pot;
"'Tis your own dirty image you see;
For I am so clean – without blemish or blot –
That your blackness is mirrored in me."[4]

Similar themes in antiquity

The fable of the Snake and the Crab in the 1470s Medici Manuscript

See also

External links

References

  1. Morris Dictionary of Word and Phrase Origins, by William Morris, Mary Morris
  2. Brewer’s Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, 1870, revised by Adrian Room (Millennium Edition)
  3. Pot in Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, by E. Cobham Brewer, 1898 edition
  4. St Nicholas Magazine 3.4, February 1876, p.224
  5. Francisco Rodríguez Adrados, History of the Graeco-Latin fable I, Brill, Leiden NL 1999, p.146
  6. Folklore and Fable vol.XVII, New York 1909, p.30
  7. The Words of Ahiqar: Aramaic proverbs and precepts, Syriac Studies site
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