Brewer's: Rantipole

(3 syl.). A harum-scarum fellow, a madcap (Dutch, randten, to be in a state of idiotcy or insanity, and pole, a head or person). The late Emperor Napoleon III. was called Rantipole, for his escapdes at Strasbourg and Boulogne. In 1852 I myself saw a man commanded by the police to leave Paris within twenty-four hours for calling his dog Rantipole.

“Dick, be a little rantipolish.” —Colman: Heirat-Law.

Source: Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, E. Cobham Brewer, 1894
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