English Language & Usage Asked by omnikron on March 30, 2021
It seems to me that the word ‘redress’ is seldom used without the word ‘balance’, so I was thinking that the phrase “redress the balance” might have origins in some trade or other, but I can’t find out much about it after much (well, a bit of) googling. Can anybody shed any light on it at all, or does it not really count as a phrase on its own – is that just what we have all decided to say when we want to convey something like ‘make things fair again’?
Readjust matters, restore equilibrium, as in:
- If our party wins in a few big cities, it will redress the balance of urban and rural interests in the House. [Mid-1800s ]
(AHD)
Balance has a long history of figurative usages, "redress the balance" is one of those, from the mid-19th century: -
- Many figurative uses are from Middle English image of the scales in the hands of personified Justice, Fortune, Fate, etc.; thus in (the) balance "at risk, in jeopardy or danger" (c. 1300). Balance of power in the geopolitical sense "distribution of forces among nations so that one may not dominate another" is from 1701.
(Etymonline)
The following figurative usage dates back to 1843, from The Dial:
- ..."and it now appears that we must estimate the native values of this immense region to redress the balance of our own judgment, and appreciate the advantages ..."
Correct answer by user66974 on March 30, 2021
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