'Brown the Bottler' the placards said. Gordon Brown had recently taken over as prime minister of Britain in 2007, and he'd been thinking of holding a general election, to confirm his leadership. Then he suddenly seems to have been struck by terrible doubts over whether he'd win, so he decided not to have an election after all. His enemies accused him of being scared, of, to use a different metaphor, chickening out. That's what 'bottler' means in British slang: a person who lacks the courage to go through with something.
But why? It all goes back to a rather strange use of 'bottle' to mean 'bravery' or 'nerve', which has been around for nearly a century now. So if someone has lost their bottle, they've lost their nerve, they're afraid. The verb 'to bottle' soon followed: you could 'bottle out of' something, or simply 'bottle it', if you didn't have the guts to do it. And so we got 'bottler'.
But the original question why remains. There's an old slang expression 'no bottle' meaning 'no good' which may have something to do with it, and it's often claimed that it's linked with Cockney rhyming slang 'bottle and glass'. That stands for 'arse', and various not entirely convincing attempts have been made to connect that with the idea of courage.
And a word of warning: in Australia, 'bottler' means 'someone or something excellent' (as in "That try he scored was a real bottler"). A slippery thing is slang.
This is the last programme in this series of Keep Your English up to date. A new series called The English We Speak will be coming soon.
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