Jellyby

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

After the character of Mrs Jellyby in Charles Dickens' novel Bleak House (1852), who busies herself with charity work for Africa while her own household goes to ruin.

Noun[edit]

Jellyby (plural Jellybys or Jellybies)

  1. A philanthropist who cares only for people in distant regions, or people away from their own household.
    • 1992, Bernard Shaw, Rebecca Swift, Letters from Margaret: correspondence between Bernard Shaw and Margaret Wheeler 1944-1950:
      My mother, devoted to music, was a Jellyby. Strictly brought up, straight backed, never careless of her person, but still as to her children, a Jellyby.
    • 2005, American Society of Magazine Editors, The Best American Magazine Writing 2005, page 360:
      Chuck Collins, a great-grandson of Oscar Mayer, is a rare non-fictional example of someone who gave away all his assets during his lifetime—a half-million-dollar inheritance, which he donated to charity nearly twenty years ago. [] He now has a daughter, who does not live like a Jellyby.