Lost for words: Keep your chin up when it’s down to the wire
Mickey Starling
reporter3@greenepublishing.com
First coming to use in the 1800s, “keep your chin up” came to be a popular expression for encouraging people to press on through difficult circumstances and to never give up. It is original to the United States, where it first came into print in the 1900 edition of a newspaper in Pennsylvania, the Evening Democrat: “Keep your chin up! Don’t take your troubles to bed with you - hang them on a chair with your trousers or drop them in a