Pale (pronounced peyl)
(1) Light-colored
or lacking in color.
(2) Someone
lacking their usual intensity of color due to fear, illness, stress etc.
(3) Not
bright or brilliant; dim.
(4) Faint
or feeble; lacking vigor (mostly archaic).
(5) To
seem less important, significant, remarkable etc, especially when compared with
something or someone else.
(6) A
stake or picket, as of a fence.
(7) An
enclosing or confining barrier; enclosure; a district or region within
designated bounds; to encircle or encompass.
(8) Limits;
bounds (now rare except if used figuratively in the phrase “beyond the pale”).
(9) In
heraldry, an ordinary (band) in the form of a broad vertical stripe at the
centre of an escutcheon.
(10) In
shipbuilding, a shore used inside to support the deck beams of a hull under
construction.
(11) In
some of the dialectical English spoken in southern Africa, a euphemism for
white.
1375-1400:
From the Middle French Palle, from the
twelfth century Old French paile &
paleir (pale, light-colored (pâle in the Modern French)), from the Latin
pallidus (pale, pallid, wan,
colorless), from pallēre (be pale,
grow pale) from the primitive Indo-European root pel- (pale) of which pallid is a doublet. Pel was
a significant root in many languages and productive, forming all or part of appall; falcon; fallow (in its adjectival
sense), pallid, pallor, palomino, Peloponnesus,
polio & poliomyelitis. The linkages were many including the Sanskrit
palitah (gray) & panduh (whitish, pale), the Greek pelios (livid, dark) & polios (gray (of hair, wolves, waves)),
the Latin pallere (to be pale) & pallidus, the Old Church Slavonic plavu, the Lithuanian palvas (sallow), the Welsh llwyd (gray) and the Old English fealo & fealu (dull-colored, yellow, brown). Pel also
forms the root of words for "pigeon" in Greek (peleia), Latin (palumbes)
and Old Prussian (poalis).
As an
adjectival descriptor of color, it seems first, from the early fourteenth
century to have been applied to human skin-tone and complexion to convey the
sense of “whitish appearance, bloodless, pallid". From the mid-fourteenth century it began to
be used as a modifier to nuance the tones of colors in the sense of “lacking
chromatic intensity, approaching white".
Late in the century, use was extended to non-human objects or substances
(such as ales and other liquors) at which time it became also a frequent figurative
form. Paleface, is said to be a
translation of a Native American word form noted in several dialects meaning "European";
attested from 1822 in American English, there are suggestions the tale may be
apocryphal and a creation of the palefaces themselves.
The
noun paling (stake, pole, stake for vines) was an early thirteenth century
adoption of the circa 1200 Anglo Latin from the Old French pal and directly from the Latin palus
(stake, prop, wooden post), source also of the Spanish and Italian palo, from the primitive Indo-European pakslo-, a suffixed form of the root pag- (to fasten) and a doublet of pole. By the 1550s, the adjective form existed to
refer to a fence made from palings, formed by connecting the pointed vertical
stakes by horizontal rails above and below.
Romanian Vlad the Impaler postage stamp, 1976.
Paling is a word still used in fencing and
impale is related. In the 1520s, impale meant
"to enclose with stakes, fence in", from the French empaler or directly from the Medieval
Latin impalare (to push onto a stake). The now better remembered sense "pierce
with a pointed stake" (as torture or capital punishment) dates from circa
1610-1630. In the popular imagination it’s
associated especially with the Romanian Vlad the Impaler (Vlad III, circa 1430-circa
1477, thrice Voivode of Wallachia, 1448-Circa 1477). One of his favorite methods of torture and
execution (there’s often a bit of overlap in these matters) was said to be
impalement but some of the more lurid tales of his cruelty may be from the
imagination of the medieval mind though his rule is thought to have been severe. Regardless, he remains a Romanian folk hero.
From the
late fourteenth century paling came to refer to the constructed boundary as
well as the components, understood generally to describe a "fence of
pointed stakes", Paler as a surname meaning "fence-builder" being
recorded from late twelfth century. Another
Middle English form of the word in the sense of "fence, paling, wall of an
enclosure" sense, based on the plural, was the late fourteenth century pales or palis, the surname Paliser attested from early in the century. Anthony Trollope (1815-1882) used the variant
Palliser in his “parliamentary novels” (1864-1879) as the name for the
repressed protagonist; Trollope took care with the selection of his character’s
names.
Palisade (a fence of strong stakes), is attested from circa 1600 and was from the fifteenth century French palisade, from the Provençal palissada, from palissa (a stake or paling), from the Gallo-Roman palicea, from the Latin palus (stake) from the primitive Indo-European pakslo-. The earlier Italian form was palisade, noted since the 1580s. Palisades entered military jargon circa 1690 and described "close rows of strong pointed wooden stakes fixed in the ground as a defensive fortification", a use which remains a standard part of costal defenses against seaborn invasion. The trap-rock precipices along the Hudson River opposite New York City were named The Palisades in 1823. The word remains popular with property developers searching for a word with connotations of elevation and luxury.
Three images of a pale Lindsay Lohan.
In English, pale, pallid and wan imply an absence or faintness of color, especially when used to describe the human countenance. Pale suggests a faintness or absence of color, which may be natural when applied to objects but when used to descript a human face usually means an unnatural and often temporary absence of color, as arising from sickness or sudden emotion. Pallid, used almost exclusively to describe the human countenance, implies an excessive paleness induced by intense emotion, disease or death. Wan implies a sickly paleness, usually as a consequence of illness.
The figurative sense of "limit, boundary, restriction" dates from circa 1400 and referenced the notion of "an enclosed space," hence "district or region within determined bounds" and later it meant "territory held by power of a nation or people". The more modern idiomatic use, referring to the behavior of a person as “beyond the bounds of morality or social acceptability”, is not without critics but now so common it’s doubtless now the assumed meaning. Using the phrase in the modern sense, in 2009, during one of their many squabbles, Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson (b 1941) said of his Liverpool counterpart, Rafael Benitez (b 1960), "…he's beyond the pale”. It’s said they’ve not since made up.
The English Pale in Medieval Ireland (1450).
Catherine the Great (Catherine II, 1729–1796; reigning empress of Russia 1762-1796) created the cherta (postaoyannoy yewreskoy) osedlosti (Pale of Settlement) in Russia in 1791. This was the name given to the western border region of the country (modern-day Belarus & Moldova and parts of the Ukraine, Lithuania, Poland, Latvia and western Russia) in which Jews were allowed to live, the motive being to restrict trade between Jews and native Russians. In a process something like COVID-19 travel exemptions, some Jews were allowed, as a concession, to live “beyond the pale”. Pales had been enforced in other European countries for similar political reasons. During the late Medieval period, the Pale (An Pháil in the Irish), often described as the English Pale (An Pháil Shasanach or An Ghalltacht), was that part of Ireland administered directly the English government and the Pale of Calais was formed by the French as early as 1360.
The first printed instance of the phrase is in John Harington's (1560-1612) lyric poem The History of Polindor and Flostella (1657). In the verse Ortheris withdraws with his beloved to a country lodge for “quiet, calm and ease” but later they’re tempted to wander:
"Both Dove-like roved forth beyond the pale to planted Myrtle-walk".
Clearly it was conveyed no good comes from venturing beyond the pale for soon the lovers are set upon by attacked by armed robbers with “many a dire killing thrust”.