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'To get on like a house on fire.'

Does this have a traceable origin?
 
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It's like loads of things I see on this site, a phrase I use all the time without thinking about it but when it comes up in a thread I haven't a clue where it comes from or why I use it. I'd love to know too.
 
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At a guess I would say it originated from a time when narrow streets and thatched roofs were prevelant, and the spread of fire from house to house would indeed be "very fast or vigorously".
 
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Here's a discussion about it from the Phrase Finder, though it isn't in my online OED.
 
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Well fanx but that's a definition not an etymology. Probably easier to find in a book than the internet, and I'm sure you lot/guys/ppl have loads of dusty old tomes full of useful info. Where's jheem? He seems to know everything.
 
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using google:

http://users.tinyonline.co.uk/gswithenbank/sayingsl.htm
"Like a house on fire - very well
Originally, very quickly or vigorously; the simile made better sense in the old days when houses were of wooden construction and had thatched roofs, etc."
 
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The phrase means 'get on well', right? But the origin suggested there does not so much imply a friendly relationship as a kind of contagion. To 'spread like houses on fire' would be more appropriate.

I recognise, however, that word origins do not have to be logical.
 
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