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Debra writes: “I had cause to use the phrase ‘to vent your spleen’ the other day and I thought of you. How on earth did this come about?”
The spleen is an organ near your stomach that controls the quality of your blood.
That is how modern medicine understands it—however it was not always thus.
In the days before modern medicine, the ancients were basically guessing when they cut open a corpse and tried to work out what each organ did.
This was back in the days when the body was thought to be controlled by the four fluids called ‘humours.’
These four fluids that controlled your health and your temperament were: blood, bile, black bile, and phlegm.
These they thought (back in the days before modern medicine) had to be kept in balance—too much of one or another would mean you were unwell or behaving badly.
Back then it was wrongly believed that the spleen produced bile (it’s actually the kidneys that make urine, or yellow bile as the ancients called it).
Yellow bile was also called ‘choler’ and was believed to be the source of irritability and anger.
That’s why people who are irritable are often called ‘choleric.’
(Or used to be—is this word ever used these days? Or has this been lost in the dumbing down of the English language?)
For that reason, the spleen was assumed to be the source of rage and anger.
From this belief comes the notion of venting, or letting out, your anger—venting your spleen.
The origin of the idiom ‘to vent your spleen’ seems to date back to Hippocrates in 400 BC.
And for the reader who is often writing in, or calling in to 2GB, to claim that everything in modern English comes from Greek—well, this one did, so this should make you happy!
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