Meaning of “Keep a Stiff Upper Lip” Origin of Phrase with examples.

Keep a Stiff Upper Lip

Meaning

Remain resolute and unemotional in the face of adversity, or even tragedy.

Origin

This is such a clichéd expression that it is difficult to imagine doing anything else with a stiff upper lip apart from keeping it. It is similar to ‘keep a straight face’, ‘keep your chin up’, and (to the amusement of many Americans) ‘keep you pecker up’.

The phrase has become symbolic of the British, and particularly of the products of the English public school system during the age of the British Empire. In those schools the ‘play up and play the game’ ethos was inculcated into the boys who went on to rule the Empire. That ‘do your duty and show no emotion’ feeling was expressed in Alfred, Lord Tennyson’s The Charge of the Light Brigade:

“Forward, the Light Brigade!”

Was there a man dismay’d?

Not tho’ the soldier knew

Someone had blunder’d:

Their’s not to make reply,

Their’s not to reason why,

Their’s but to do and die:

Into the valley of Death

Rode the six hundred.

In more recent years British heroes have been able to show more emotion. Footballers now cry when they lose and the public don’t turn away that would have been unthinkable before WWII. The national outpouring of grief at the death of Princess Diana, although intensified by a media frenzy, began a trend toward accidental deaths being commemorated with garlands of flowers laid by the public.

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