Our Cats and All About Them - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
The shape of a good greyhound:
A head like a snake, a neck like a drake, A back like a beam, sided like a bream, A _foot like a cat_, a tail like a rat.
_Ale that would make a cat talk._ Strong enough to make even the dumb speak.
"A spicy pot, Then do's us reason, Would make a cat To talk high treason."--D'URFEY.
_A half-penny cat may look at a king_ (Scotch). A jeering saying of offence--"One is as good as another," and as a Scotchman once said, "and better."
_A m.u.f.fled cat is no good mouser._--CLARKE, 1639. No good workman wears gloves. By some is said "muzzled."
_A piece of a kid is worth two of a cat._ A little of good is better than much that is bad.
_A scalded cat fears cold water._ Once bit always shy. What was may be again.
_As cat or cap case_.
"Bouser I am not, but mild sober Tuesday, _As catte in cap case_, if I like not St. Hewsday."
_The Christmas Prince_, 1607.
_As gray as Grannum's cat._--HAZLITT. So old as to be likely to be doubly gray.
_As melancholy as a cat._--WALKER. The voice of the cat is melancholy.
_As melancholy as a gib-cat_ (Scotch). As an old, worn-out cat.--JOHNSTON.
"I am as melancholy as a gib-cat or a lugged bear."[B]
SHAKESPEARE.
[B] A lugged bear is a bear with its ears cut off, so that when used for baiting there is less hold for the dogs.
Gib-cat; an old, lonely, melancholy cat.
_Before the cat can lick her ear._ "Nay, you were not quite out of hearing ere the cat could lick her ear."--_Oviddius Exultans_, 1673, p.
50. That is never.
Dun, besides being the name of one who arrested for debt in Henry VII.'s time, was also the name of the hangman before "Jack Ketch."--GROSE.
"And presently a halter got, Made of the best strong teer, And ere a cat could lick her ear, Had tied it up with so much art."
1664, COTTON'S _Virgile_, Book 4.
_By biting and scratching dogs and cats come together._--HEYWOOD.
Quarrelling oft makes friends.
_Care clammed a cat._--SIR G. C. LEWIS'S "Herefords.h.i.+re Glossary."
Clammed means starvation; that is, care killed the cat; for want of food the entrails get "clammed."
_Care killed the cat, but ye canna live without it._ To all some trouble, though not all take heed. None know another's burden.
_Care will kill a cat._
"Then hang care and sorrow, 'Tis able to kill a cat."--D'URFEY.
Alluding to its tenacity of life and the carking wear of care.
_Cats after kind good mouse hunt._--HEYWOOD. Letter by F. A. touching the quarrel between Arthur Hall and Melch Mallorie, in 1575-6, repr. of ed. 1580, in "Misc^{y}. Antiq. Anglic." 1816, p. 93. "For never yet was good cat out of kinde."--_English Proverbs_, HAZLITT.
_Cats and Carlins sit in the sun._ When work is done then warmth and rest.
_Cats eat what hussies spare._ Nothing is lost. Also refers to giving away, and saying "the cat took it."
_Cats hide their claws._ All is not fair that seems so. Trust not to appearances.
_Cry you mercy, killed my cat._--CLARKE, 1639. Better away, than stay and ask pardon.
_Every day's no yule; cast the cat a castock._ The stump of a cabbage, and the proverb means much the same thing as "Spare no expense, bring another bottle of _small beer_."--DENHAM'S _Popular Sayings_, 1846.
OF FALSE PERSONS.
_He bydes as fast as a cat bound with a sacer._ He does as he likes; nothing holds him.
OF WITTIE PERSONS.
_He can hold the cat to the sun._ Bold and foolish enough for anything.
INCONSTANT PERSONS.
_He is like a dog or a cat._ Not reliable.
_He looks like a wild cat out of a bush._ Fiercely afraid.
_He's like a cat; fling him which way you will, he'll not hurt._ Some are always superior to misfortune, or fortune favours many.
_He's like a singed cat, better than he's likely._ He's better than he looks or seems.
_He stands in great need that borrows the cat's dish._--CLARKE, 1639.
The starving are not particular. The hungry cannot choose.
_He lives at the sign of the cat's foot._ He is hen-pecked, his wife scratches him.--RAY.
_He wald gar a man trow that the moon is made of green cheis, or the cat took the heron._ Never believe all that is laid to another.
_Honest as the cat when the meat is out of reach._ Some are honest, but others not by choice.