Paroemiologia Anglo-Latina in usum scholarum concinnata. Or proverbs English, and Latine, methodically disposed according to the common-place heads, in Erasmus his adages. Very use-full and delightful for all sorts of men, on all occasions. More especially profitable for scholars for the attaining elegancie, sublimitie, and varietie of the best expressions.

About this Item

Title
Paroemiologia Anglo-Latina in usum scholarum concinnata. Or proverbs English, and Latine, methodically disposed according to the common-place heads, in Erasmus his adages. Very use-full and delightful for all sorts of men, on all occasions. More especially profitable for scholars for the attaining elegancie, sublimitie, and varietie of the best expressions.
Author
Clarke, John, d. 1658.
Publication
London :: Imprinted by Felix Kyngston for Robert Mylbourne, and are to be sold at the signe of the Vncorne [sic] neere Fleet-bridge,
1639.
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Subject terms
Proverbs, English.
Proverbs, Latin.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A18943.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Paroemiologia Anglo-Latina in usum scholarum concinnata. Or proverbs English, and Latine, methodically disposed according to the common-place heads, in Erasmus his adages. Very use-full and delightful for all sorts of men, on all occasions. More especially profitable for scholars for the attaining elegancie, sublimitie, and varietie of the best expressions." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A18943.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 4, 2024.

Pages

I cannot live by selling ware for words.

Miss-reckoning is no pay∣ment.

A long harvest of a little corne.

I have brought my hogs to a faire market.

Share and share like, some all some never a whit.

Bid a man to rost, and beat him with the spit.

Breake a mans head, then give him a plaster.

He that is mann'd with boyes, and horst with colts, shall have his meat eaten, and his worke undone.

A foysting hound.

If you will have the faire lady, you must have her foule—

Page 157

A man may buy gold too deare.

He gave him a flap with a fox tayle.

He loseth favour on land, to seeke fortune at sea.

He hath brought up a bird to pick out his owne eyes.

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