Learn English – Origin of the expression “to run roughshod over someone”

etymology

What is the origin of the expression "to run roughshod over someone"? I have heard it being used by Mitt Romney, but I couldn't find if it has an American origin.

Best Answer

The first instance I can find is in an 1833 speech by Samuel P. Carson in the U. S. House of Representatives, cited in Niles' Weekly Register. It may have been commonly used in conversation before that, but Carson seems to have been the first person to use it in an ink-worthy setting.

I've always been of two minds as to the intended meaning of "rough", which could mean either brutal or rudimentary:

  • rough shoes (e.g. baseball spikes) might protect the walker's feet at the expense of what is walked on , or
  • rough shoes (e.g. zoris) might indicate that the walker is so confident that what's being walked on is harmless/helpless that no real foot protection is necessary.

I suspect it's the former, but I can see it either way.

Either way, it expresses indifference - but what kind?