A busybody is a gossipy, meddlesome person; one who pries into the affairs of others.
One of the world's greatest busybodies was Procopius, a Byzantine court historian circa 500 A.D. All the while he was writing an official court history, he was digging up all the dirt he could find on the Empress Theodora, and other prominent persons at court, which he published in a book titled Anecdota, usually referred to as the Secret History. In this book he, for example, accuses Theodora of having sex with animals on stage.
Perhaps the best known busybody of the Twentieth Century is Kenneth Starr. Appointed as an independent special prosecutor to investigate allegations of financial impropriety on the part of Hillary Clinton, he expended his investigation to dig up all the dirt on the Clintons that he could find, eventually exposing President Bill Clinton's marital infidelity and holding him up to ridicule and scorn.
In the early silent cinema in America, the busybody is a stock character, harassing The Girl in D. W. Griffith's Intolerance and trying to take The Kid away from the Little Tramp in Charlie Chaplin's The Kid. In these films, the busybody is usually an upper class woman with too much time on her hands, who believes that her social class gives her moral superiority over the lower class characters in whose lives she meddles.
In Harold Gray's comic strip Little Orphan Annie, Annie is often beset by busybodies who want to lock her up in an orphanage "for her own good".
Dorothy L. Sayers in her Christian apologetics bemoans the fact that so many Christians ignore Christ's injunction to not look for the mote in your brother's eye, and act like busybodies. "Busybody" is often preceded by the adjective "sanctimonious".
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"Busybody".
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