Page:Hoyt's New Cyclopedia Of Practical Quotations (1922).djvu/679

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PROVERBS
PROVERBS
641
1

Make three bites of a cherry.

RabelaisWorks. Bk. V. Ch. XXVIII.


2

Many a smale maketh a grate.

ChaucerPersones Tale.


3

Many go out for wool, and come home shorn themselves.

CervantesDon Quixote. Pt. II. Ch. XXXVII.


4

Mariana in the moated grange.

Tennyson. Motto for Mariana. Taken, from "There, at the moated grange, resides this dejected Mariana." Comedy of Errors. Act II. Sc 1.


5

Mind your P's and Q's.

 Said to be due to the old custom of hanging up a slate in the tavern with P. and Q. (for pints and quarts), under which were written the names of customers and ticks for the number of "P's and Q's." Another explanation is that the expression referred to "toupees" (artificial locks of hair) and "queues" (tails).


6

Moche Crye and no Wull.

FortescueDe Laudibus Leg. Angliœ. Ch. X.


7

Much of a muchness.

VanbrughThe Provoked Husband. Sc. 1. Act I.


8

Needle in a bottle of hay.

FieldA Woman's a Weathercock. Reprint 1612. P. 20.


9

Neither fish, flesh nor good red herring.

Tom BrowneÆneus Sylvius. Letter. DrydenEpilogue to Duke of Ouise. MarsdenHistory of Christian Churches. Vol. I. P. 267. In Sir John Mennes' (Mennis) Musarum Deliciœ. (1651) Thos. NashLenten Stuff. (1599) Reprinted in Harleian Miscellany. Sir H. SheresSatyr on the sea officers. Rede me and be nott wrothe. I. III. (1528)


10

No better than you should be.

Beaumont and FletcherThe Coxcomb. Act IV. Sc.3.


No rule is so general, which admits not some exception.

BurtonAnatomy of Melancholy. Pt.I. Sec. II. Memb. 2. Subsect. 3.


Nought venter nought have.

Heywood—Proverbs. Pt. I. Ch. XI. Thos. Tusser—Five Hundred Points of Good Husbandry. October's Extract. </poem>


Old Lady of Threadneedle Street.

William Cobbett. Also Gilray Caricature. May 22, 1797, after the bank stopped cash payments, Feb. 26, 1797. Sheridan—Life by Walter Sichel. P. 16. Refers to the bank as an elderly lady in the city, of great credit and long standing, who had recently made a faux pas which was not altogether inexcusable.


14

On his last legs.

Thos. MiddletonThe Old Law. Act V. Sc. 1.


One good turn deserves another.

Beaumont and FletcherLittle French Lawyer. III. 2.


16

Originality provokes originality.

Goethe.


Passing the Rubicon.

When he arrived at the banks of the Rubicon, which divides Cisalpine Gaul from the rest of Italy ... he stopped to deliberate. . . . At last he cried out: "The die is cast" and immediately passed the river.

PlutarchLife of Julius Casar.


Performed to a T.

Rabelais—Works. Bk. IV. . Ch. LI. See also "Fitted, etc."


Pons Asinorum'.

The asses' bridge. Applied to Proposition 5 of the first book of , Euclid.


20

Present company excepted.

O'Keeee—London Hermit. (1793) '


Push on—keep moving.

Thos. Morton—A Cure for the Heartache. • Act III. Scl. </poem>


Put himself upon his good behaviour.
Byron—Don Juan. Canto V. St. 47.
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{{Hoyt quote
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 | text = Put your toong in your purse.
Heywood—Dialogue of Wit and Folly. Pt. II. L. 263.
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{{Hoyt quote
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 | text = Quo vac-is?
Whither goest thou?
From The Vulgate. John. XIII. 36. Domine, quo vadis? [St. Peter's question.] St. Thomas asks a similar question in John. XIV. 5. The traditional story is told by St. Ambrose—Contra Auxentium. (Ed. Paris, 1690) II. 867.
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{{Hoyt quote
 | num =
 | text = Safe bind, safe find.
Tusser—Five Hundred Points of Good Husbandry. Washing.
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{{Hoyt quote
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 | text = Scared out of his seven senses.
Scott—Rob Roy. Ch.XXIV.


27

Set all at sixe and seven.

HeywoodProverbs. Pt. I. Ch. XI. ChaucerTroilus and Cresseide. L. 623. Also Tourneley Mysteries. 143. Morte Arture. MS. at Lincoln. Degeevant. (1279) Richard II. Act II. Sc. 2. L. 122.