Proverbs store the wisdom of ages in short, memorable lines with several layers of meaning. This blog states a weekly proverb and explores its meaning. Sir Winston Churchill, the former British Prime Minister, war leader, writer, painter, historian, bon viveur, whose mother was a United States citizen, recommended that people lacking formal education to learn proverbs. "The Wisdom of Nations lies in their Proverbs... Collect and learn them". William Penn, founder of the State of Pennsylvania.
Tuesday, May 30, 2006
Great and small makes up a wall
This is particularly appropriate to the country craft of building stone walls or drystane dykes. The mason skilfully places the naturally shaped stones together using different sizes to bind together and form a solid and lasting structure. People come in all shapes and sizes and we often find fault with what we have inherited in our physical make up - too tall, too short too dark, too fair, too fat too thin We all want to be perfect but is their such a thing? If we were all the same it would be very boring. Nature is very wise and makes us all different for a purpose - so that we can come together in groups and teams each helping the other with specific abilities derived from our inherited characteristics. We are stronger as a multitalented group. Interlocked we present a strong "wall" to all the storms and trials of existence - whether we are great or small we are an important part of the whole.
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2006
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May
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- Grasp all, lose all
- Great and small makes up a wall
- A bad workman blames his tools
- A rugged stone grows smooth from hand to hand
- Least said soonest mended
- A bad Jack may have as bad a Jill.
- Don't look a gift horse in the mouth
- Strike whilst the iron is hot.
- A barley-corn is better than a diamond to a cock
- A danger foreseen is half avoided.
- April showers bring forth May flowers
- A beggar can never be bankrupt.
- Beauty is in the eye of the beholder
- Don't get between a dog and his bone.
- Run your profits cut your losses.
- A bad excuse is better than none at all
- You must crawl before you can walk.
- A bad shift is better than none.
- The good a man does is oft interred with his bones...
- A bad bush is better than the open field.
- A bad padlock invites a picklock.
- It is not always May.
- If at first you don't succeed try try and try again.
- Seeing's believing.
- Most really good things in life take time.
- Cometh the hour cometh the man.
- The grass is always greener on the far side of the...
- What you never had you'll never miss.
- A little of what you fancy does you good.
- In for a penny in for a pound.
- Don't put all you eggs in the one basket.
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