<P> Late 20th - century songs that refer to Davy Jones include Paul McCartney's song "Morse Moose and the Grey Goose" and the Beastie Boys' song "Rhymin and Stealin". </P> <P> In the English translations of The Adventures of Tintin, the character Captain Haddock makes occasional references to Davy Jones . Also, Secret of the Unicorn, on page 17, while recounting Sir Francis Haddock's manuscript to Tintin, references a pirate ship raising the red flag and says, "The red pennant!...No quarter given!...A fight to the death, no prisoners taken! You understand? If we're beaten, then it's every man to Davy Jones's locker!" However, it is not the case in the original version, since the idiom only exists in English (in French, he uses another archaic French idiom, "Que le Grand Cric me croque!", which is not particularly related to sailors and has nothing to do with Davy Jones). </P> <P> In the Genesis song "Dodo / Lurker" from the 1981 album Abacab, the sixth stanza has the lyrics: "One he got a dream of love, deep as the ocean Where does he go, what does he do? Will the siren team with Davy Jones, And trap him at the bottom of the sea?" </P> <P> The Iron Maiden song "Run Silent Run Deep" (about submarine warfare) contains the lines: "The lifeboats shattered, the hull is torn / The tar black smell of burning oil / On the way down to Davy Jones / Every man for himself--you're on your own ..." </P>

Where did the term davy jones locker come from