By hook or by crook


"By hook or by crook" is an English phrase meaning "by any means necessary", suggesting that any means possible should be taken to accomplish a goal. The phrase is very old, first recorded in the Middle English Controversial Tracts of John Wyclif in 1380.
The origin of the phrase is obscure, with multiple different explanations and no evidence to support any particular one over the others. For example, a commonly repeated suggestion is that it comes from Hook Head in Wexford, Ireland and the nearby village of Crooke, in Waterford, Ireland. As such, the phrase would derive from a vow by Oliver Cromwell to take Waterford by Hook or by Crook ; although the Wyclif tract was published at least 260 years before Cromwell.
Another is that it comes from the customs regulating which firewood local people could take from common land; they were allowed to take any branches that they could reach with a billhook or a shepherd's crook.
The phrase was featured in the opening credits to the 1960s British television series The Prisoner. It appears prominently in the short stories "The Snows of Kilimanjaro" by Ernest Hemingway and "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" by Washington Irving. It was also used as the title of the 2001 film By Hook or by Crook directed by Silas Howard and Harry Dodge.
In Modern English, the meaning of the phrase is often misunderstood as to refer more specifically to a willingness to accomplish objectives using unethical and/or illegal means, or having patience as with a fishing hook, or by using force as done in a robbery by a 'crook'.