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University of OxfordTextArchive.1.23.4.5. BRITISH, Or old CAMBRIAN PROVERBS, And CYMRAECAN ADAGES, Never Englished, (and divers never published) before.6.
DIVERS CENTURIES OF NEVV SAYINGS, VVhich may serve FOR PROVERBS, TO POSTERITY.This material was created by the Text Creation Partnership in partnership with ProQuest's Early English Books Online, Gale Cengage's Eighteenth Century Collections Online, and Readex's Evans Early American Imprints. My Lord,I Have heard the English Toung often traduc'd abroad, that, whereas the witt and wisedom of a Nation is much discernd in their Proverbiall Speeches, The English is more barren in this kind then other Languages; To take off this Aspersion, and rectifie the Opinion of the world herein, was one of the main Motifs that induced me to impose this (no easie) taske upon my self of Collecting and publishing these English Proverbs, or old Sayed-Sawes and Adages, which I dare say, have as much Witt, Significance and Salt in them as any of the other Languages that follow. Some of them may be said to be as old as Pauls Steeple; And we live in those destructive fatall Times, that are like to verifie a very ancient Proverb of that stately Temple (the greatest Ornament London ever had) viz. Pauls cannot alwayes stand, alluding to the lubricity of all sublunary things.' Itala Lingua nihil nisi Linguae squama Latinae.Let not these three noble Languages take it for a disparagement that this word Squama is applied unto them, for the Chymist will tell them that squama is the flower of Metalls as well as the parings, &c.
The Englishman is High-Dutch capapie from top to toe go to the parts of his body inward and outward, together with his coverings and clothes; he is Dutch in drinking, in eating, at bed and at board, by sea also and by land when he steers a ship or drives the plough, In his nombers, in the dayes of the week, in his kindred, in the Church and holy things he is Dutch, &c. But in Hawking, in Hunting, in Heraldry, in Fencing, in Riding, in Painting, in Dancing, in Music, in Aires he is all French; Insomuch that it cannot be denied but if the English Toung shold repay unto the Dutch, and French all she ows, she wold prove a stark Bankrupt, and be as bare as Esops Crow. Then all the day be sparing.Some are wise, and some are otherwise.To loose a sheep for sparing a halperth of tarr.A thousand pounds, and a bottle of hay, is all one thing at dooms-day.Play, women, and wine, undo men laughing.An humble-Bee in a Cow-turd thinks himself a king.A man will rather hurt his body, then displease his pallate.Lend thy horse for a long journey, thou mayst have him return with his skinn.Ther's no fool to the old fool.So we get the clink, we will bear with the stink.He gave his wife a Recumbentibus; viz. He swadled her soundly.He who payeth last, payeth but once.The dogg who hunts foulest, hitts at most faults.Here will he a good fire anone, said the Fox when he pist on the Ice.A Nurse spoil's a huswife; viz. Because she is more daintily fed, and more idle all the while.'
Tis good sometimes to hold a candle to the Devill.A dogg in a dublett, bitch in a baskett. Then go thy way C.
And beg thy bread.Ile warrant you for an Egg at Easter.The Fox preyes furthest from home.A hungry horse maketh a clean manger; viz. He eateth all his Oats.You may drive a Toppe over a tylde house as soon.They stick together like burrs.As madd as a March-hare.The blind eats many a fly.' Tis sooner said then done.Bolster or pillow, be it whose will for me.Better it be done, then wish it had bin doneAs good undone as do it too soon.As soon goes the Lamb-skin to the market, as the old Ewes.' Tis a bad sack that will abide no clowting.An ill stake standeth longest.Proffer'd service stinks.Better to have then wish.Itch and ease can no man please.He cannot see the Wood for Trees, viz.
He is a blockhead.Snow is white, and lies in the dike,And every man letts it ly;Pepper is black, and hath a good smack,And every man doth it buy.Change is no robbery.He that is angry without a cause, must be pleased without amends.Tread on a worm, and it will turn against you.Too much of one thing, is good for nothing.VVit whither wilt thou?A dandiprat, a hopp on my thumb, a demilance, viz. At last comes home by weeping crosse.The Crow thinketh her own bird fairest.A meer Scholler, a meer Asse.A fatt commodity hath no fellow.You give me chalk for cheese.A young man old, makes an old man young.Beggers should be no choosers.Children and fools tell truth.You have let leap a Whiting, viz.
Makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise.There runs more water by the Mill, then the Miller knows of.You are a hot-shot indeed; A speech spoken in a slighting derision.He follows me like a tantony pigg.You tell your chickins before they be hatch'd.You leap over the stile before you come to it.Let every sack stand upon its own bottom.Life is sweet, though it alway sweat.Soon todd, soon with God, A Northern Proverb when a child hath teeth too soon.A thing there was, and done it was, and wise was he that hid it,Let no man know who knows it not, Not do so no more that did it. Of one who mistook his neighbours wife for his own.We must creep before we can go.Put thy wish in one fist, and shire in the tother, and try which will be fill'd soonest.Do not say go, but gaw, viz.
Go thy self along.Love me little, and love me long.I took her for a Rose, but she prov'd a Burr.We fish'd all night, and catch'd a Frogg.She thinks her farthing as good silver as anothers.A little horse is soon curried.Some are early up, yet nere the neer.Store is no sore.In the dark all Catts are grey.You must not look a given horse in the mouth.' Tis yet but honey moon with them, viz.
Who will not thrive at all, may sleep till eleven.A drunken C. Hath no Porter.Debt is better then death.Last make fast, viz. Shut the dore.If every fool should weat a bable, fewel would be dear.A fit night to steal away a fair Lady, viz.
After supper walk a mile.A Serjeant is the Spawn of some decayed shopkeeper.As lean as a Rake.To play least in sight.To walk by Owle-light, viz. Claw my elbow and Ile scratch your brich.Let not the Shooe-maker go beyond his Last.You putt the saddle on the wrong horse.All is is not gold that glisters.Ther's not a turd to choose.That will be when the Devil is blind.Ther's reason in ros.ing of Eggs.Ile not creep in her arse to bake in her oven.Catt to her kind.It's a sory dogg that is not worth the whisling after.You put the cart before the horse.This is to sell a pigg in a poke.One tale is good till the other be told.My elbow itches, I must change my bedfellow.' Tis an evil battle where the Devil carrieth the colours.They that love most are least set by.A light Christmass, a heavy sheaf.I would it were in again with the hedg-hogg after it; viz.
A fart.Give a man Fortune, and throw him into the Sea.All work and no play, makes Iack a dull boy. VVhat avails the dagger with the dudgeon heft?So you told me; Spoken ironically.Like a curst Cow that gives a paile of milk, and then kicks it down.Butter is in the Cows horns one a year.Like Banbury Tinkers, who in stopping one hole, make two.That which is got into the bone will never out of the flesh.Happy is the eye, that dwels twixr the Severn and the Wye.What's better then the Beer that's made of Malt?Whats sweeter then the C. Hipphalt?There is no fishing to the Sea, nor service to the King.A Northern sawing saw;Doll, Dick, and Davie,Look wel to thy Pater-noster, and thy Avie. To play the Clerk,And descant on the Bible.Bate me an ace, quoth Bolton.Mark Snelling anon.Find me a true man Trent Northward, and I will find you an honest whore.It works like soap in a Sowes tail.VVhere the hedge is lowest, all men do go over; viz. The poor is oppressed.VVords are but wind,But blowes are unkind.I must not hang all my bells upon one horse; viz. From a black man keep thy wife.Give me the Mayd that went to bed to her Master to keep him warm; A Proverb in Beverley.Wer't not for hope, the heart would break.Fidlers fare, meat, drink, and money.As warm as Wool.As cold as Charity.As comfortable as Matrimony.Colchester Oysters, Salzey Cockles, Rye Herrings, Severn Salmon.Let every Sack stand upon its own bottom.Happy man be thy dole.Even reckoning maketh long friends.At Christmas great loafs, at Easter clean souls, and at Whitsontide new clothes.
Sell thy Cow, and sow thy Corn.' Tis a good body, she wanteth but a new pair of sleeves.' Tis safe riding in a good Haven.What?
Are rushes and reeds.Little avails wealth, where there is no health.To day a Man, to morrow none.Good witts commonly jump.A Man of gladnesse, seldome falleth into madnesse.Make ab or warp of the businesse as soon as you can; A metaphor taken from weavers.The Devil wipeth his arse with the poore mans pride.Ile quickly make a shaft or a bolt of it.VVho draweth his sword against his Prince, must throw away the scabbard.The rath sower never borroweth of the late.Salisbury Plain, is seldome without a theef or twain.The furthest way about is the nearest way home.' Tis ill spurring a free horse.It is pitie to part three things, the Lawyer and his Client, the Physician and his Patient, and a pot of good Ale and a toast.Stoln goods seem sweet, but take heed of after-clapps.Crush the Cocatrice in the shell.Use maketh mastery.His toung is like a Lambs tail, or the clack of a Mill.Possession is eleven points of the Law.Diversity of humors breedeth tumors.He that bulls the Cow, must keep the Calf; A Proverb used in the Common Law of England.Pater Noster built Churches, and Our Father pull'd them down.' Tis but one Doctors Opinion.At latter Lammas when men shear their Calfs.I have gott it ore the left shoulder.
Follow him that bears the purse.As sure as a Juglers box.He speaketh like a mouse in a cheese.As white as the driven snow.VVho goes a borrowing goeth a sorrowing.Change is no robbery.You teach your father how to get children.You are come in pudding-time, viz. What avails the dagger with the dudgeon heft?A Jaylors conscience and his fetters made both of one mettle.Who sweareth when he playeth at Dice,May challenge his damnation by way of purchase.Wife and children are bills of charges.The wholsomest way to gett a good stomach is to walk on thy own ground.Many great men so ignorant, that they know not their own fathers.Money is that which Art hath turned up trump.An Usurer is one that tormenteth men for their good Conditions; viz. The Conditions of their Bonds.A Prisoner, though a shop-keeper cannot call himself a Freeman.An Usurer is one that putteth his money to the unnaturall Act of Generation, and the Scrivener is his Bawd.' Tis better ro be stung by a Nettle, then prickt by a Rose; viz. To be wrongd by a foe, then a friend.You may as soon hold water in a Sive.Make not thy tail broader then thy wings; viz.
It is good for neither Man nor Beast.It will not out of the flesh, that is bred in the bone.Prove thy friend ere thou have need.Of sufferance cometh ease.Understanding and Reason cannot conclude out of mood and figure.The Cock crowes, but the Hen goes.Need maketh the old wife trott.He capers like a flie in a tar-box.Never pleasure without repentance.Youth and Age will not agree.No man loveth his fetters, be they made of gold.A strumpet with child, like one prickt in a hedge, and cannot tell which thorn it was. And as sharp as a thorn.Of little medling cometh great ease.Through Peace cometh Plenty.Riches like muck which stinks in a heap, But spread abroad, maketh the Earth fruitful.A rich Citizens daughter marrying a Noble man, is like a black-pudding, the one bringeth blood, the other sewitt.A new Office, like a new Garment,Strait at first putting on.Love like a wife and child.Riches are but the baggage of Fortune.Men fear death as children do to go to the dark.Stay a little that we may make an end the sooner.Many can pack the cards, yet cannot play well; viz.
Witty men seldom wise.Choose thy Friends like thy Books, few, but choice.Ther's a Devill in every berry of the Grape; A Turkish Proverb.A lye stands on one legg, but Truth upon two; A Iewish Proverb.Shoot the second shaft, and perhaps thou maist find again the first.Who goeth to School to himself, may find a fool to his master.Change is no robbery.Knaves and whores go by the clock.The most essentiall part of a wise man is, not to open all the boxes of his brest.Pains is the price, that God putterh upon all things.Lett him chomp upon the bitt, and think on it. In time of adversity not one amongst twenty.The Dutchman drinketh pure wine in the morning, at noon wine without water, in the evening as it comes from the Butt.Nick would wipe his nose if he had one.Some places of Kent have health and no wealth, some wealth and no health, some health and wealth, some have neither health nor wealth.A Burford bait; viz. VVhen one sipps or drinks but part, they still fill his cupp untill he drinketh all.Drink off your drink and steal no Lambs.As craftie as a Kendale Fox.They thrive as New-Colledge Students, who are golden Schollers, silver Batchelors, and leaden Masters.As fierce as a Lion of Cotshwold; viz.
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I would ne care for the King of Cockeney.Hugh Bigod in Henry the seconds time; these places are in Suffolk.It shall be done when the King cometh to VVogan, a little Village; viz. An impossibility.Cheshire chief of men, Lancashire for fair women.Iudas might have repented before he could have found a tree to have hang'd himself upon, had he betraid Christ in Scotland.Essex Calfs, Kentish Long-tails, Yorkshire Tikes, Norfolk Bumkins.VVho fetcheth a wife from Dunmow,Carrieth home two sides of a Sow.Madame Parnell, crack the nut and eat the kernel; This alludes to labor.When Gabriel blowes his horn, then this question will be decided; viz. To the knowing Reder.SOm ther are who reproch the English, that in regard the Genius and Witt of a Nation is much discernd in their common, Proverbiall Speeches, The English Language is more barren and meager in this Particular then others: To take off this Aspersion, and rectifie the World herein, I have thought it worth the pains to publish both in French, Italian and Spanish, these ensuing English Proverbs, wherein the impartiall Reder will find as much Salt, Significancy and true Sense, as in the Proverbs of any other Language.