Was this phrase used in 1880s London?

This weekend, I went to see From Hell with two friends. Discussing it afterward, one of them said she didn’t think the phrase “piss off” (as in go away, not as in to make angry) would have been used in 1880s England. I speculated that it would have been. Was it?

It’s hard to tell. The OED can’t find an instance of “piss off” in print with the meaning “go away” before 1958. Interestingly, “piss” didn’t use to be a vulgar term. It entered English from French about 1250. Until some point (about 1750, I’d guess from the citations given in the OED) it wasn’t considered at all obscene.

heh its still used over here , but piss has been replaced largely with fuck

Eric Partridge, in The Penguin Dictionary of Historical Slang, says:

But note: