Proverbs and old sayings, page 1167

43575 proverbs and old sayings

Marry a mountain woman and you will marry the mountain.

Proverbs and old sayings Irish about woman, contentment

A wren in the hand is better than a crane to be caught.

Proverbs and old sayings Irish

There is nothing in the world so poor as going to hell.

Proverbs and old sayings Irish about hell, world, nothing

Never sleep with a stranger or borrow from a neighbour.

Proverbs and old sayings Irish about sleep

Those who get the name of rising early may lie all day.

Proverbs and old sayings Irish about name, lie, day

'Tis as hard to see a woman cry, as a goose go barefoot.

Proverbs and old sayings Irish about woman

Women in state affairs are like monkeys in glass-houses.

Proverbs and old sayings Irish about state

Do not mistake a goats beard for a fine stallion's tail.

Proverbs and old sayings Irish about mistake

It is in the shelter of each other that the people live.

Proverbs and old sayings Irish about people

Often have the likely failed and the unlikely prospered.

Proverbs and old sayings Irish

True friendship is like one soul living in two bodies. -.

Proverbs and old sayings Irish about friendship, soul

Comfort is not known if poverty does not come before it.

Proverbs and old sayings Irish about poverty

Patience and forbearance make a bishop of his reverence.

Proverbs and old sayings Irish about patience

Three people can keep a secret, if two of them are dead.

Proverbs and old sayings Irish about secret, people

It was not on one foot that st. patrick came to ireland.

Proverbs and old sayings Irish

He who is best for me is he who shall get the best share.

Proverbs and old sayings Irish

What won't choke will fatten and clean dirt is no poison.

Proverbs and old sayings Irish

Show the fatted calf but not the thing that fattened him.

Proverbs and old sayings Irish about things

From the king to the beggar, they all depend on the farm.

Proverbs and old sayings Irish

Do not mistake a goat's beard for a fine stallion's tail.

Proverbs and old sayings Irish about mistake