English citations of esclop and eslop

Noun: "police"

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1851 1903
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1851, Henry Mayhew, “The Literature of Costermongers”, in London Labour and the London Poor[1], volume 1, page 25:
    Anything about the police sets them a talking at once. [] 'The blessed crushers are everywhere,' shouted one. 'I wish I'd been there to have had a shy at the eslops,' said another. And then a man sung out: 'O, don't I like the Bobbys?'
  • 1903 October, Rev. Arthur Tappan Pierson, quoting Hogg, Quintin, “Quintin Hogg and the London Polytechnic”, in Missionary Review of the World[2], volume 26, number 16, page 734:
    We had not been engaged in our reading very long when at the far end of the arch I noticed a twinkling light. "Kool esclop!" shouted one of the boys, at the same moment doucing the glim and bolting with his companion, leaving me in the dark with my upset beer bottle and my douced candle, forming a spectacle which seemed to arouse suspicion on the part of our friend the policeman, whose light it was that had appeared in the distance.