There's a file that's been
circulating widely by
email which suggests some
pseudoetymology for several phrases. Several more
respectable websites devoted to
etymology have
panned this letter, partially or completely
refuting each and every etymology claimed.
One copy of it reads like this, in part:
Do you ever wonder where some of the everyday expressions we use come from? Here's a
chilling tale that takes us back to the dark days of the 16th century in England. Being a
small country with a high mortality rate they began to run out of burial sites. They began
to dig up the old graves to re-use the same grave site. When they opened the coffins they
dug up they found many of them had scratch marks and inner linings torn out. They realized
that they had been burying people alive! The solution....they decided to tie a string onto
the wrist of the recently departed, lead it through a small hole in the coffin, up through
the ground and tie it to a bell. Someone would be posted out in the graveyard through the
entire night to listen for the bells. Thus you have a watchman on the "graveyard
shift" listening for a "dead ringer" who would then be "saved by the bell."