The phrase was used, in a wider cultural sense, in Jonathon Green's book Days In The Life: Voices from the English Underground, 1961-1971, a collection of first-hand accounts of the 1960s counter-culture that often drew on carnivalesque and music hall traditions and styles.
Green Day | Green Party | Green Bay Packers | Green Bay, Wisconsin | Green | Green Lantern | Green Acres | Al Green | Green Bay | Bowling Green State University | Dixon of Dock Green | Anne of Green Gables | Tom Green | Bowling Green, Kentucky | Green River | Wood Green | Goose Green | Bethnal Green | Seth Green | Green Valley | Green Goblin | Green Giant | U.S. Green Building Council | Roland J. Green | Green Party (United States) | Green Party of England and Wales | green | Scottish Green Party | Professor Green | Green Party of Canada |
Chambers Slang Dictionary (by Jonathon Green, Chambers Harrap Publishers, ISBN 978-0-550-10439-7), 2008 previously Cassell Dictionary of Slang (Cassell Reference, 1998; last edition 2006, ISBN 978-0-304-36636-1)