Part 27 (1/2)

Eith learned soon forgotten

”Easy colish_

Eith to that thy ain heart wills

Eith working ill's at ha to the French sayings, that ”Will is power;” and ”A willing heart helps work”

”Where the will is ready the feet are light”--_Gerude otten, and the best pay's on the peck bottooodrain is emptied from the ”peck” rain is ”told” on the bottoh's enough o' bread and cheese

Meaning, that too ood The French and Dutch say, ”Enough is better than too h, and too h mark

Even stands his cap the day, for a' that

”It took its rise from a minister in our country, who, in a serainst the supremacy of the Pope, at the conclusion said, 'Even stands his cap for all that I have said, drinking good Ronify that all we can say against any great man can do him no harm”--_Kelly_

Ever busy, ever bare

”Great cry and little wool”--_English_

Every ane loups the dyke where it's laighest

Every one leaps the wall at the lowest part,--athose who are unable to resist

Every bird thinks its ain nest best

Every cock craws crousiest on his ain midden head

”Every cock crows loudest on his own dunghill,” is a saying common to all nations

Every craw thinks his ain bird whitest

All think well of their own offspring ”Every mother's child is handsome,” say the Germans They also have, ”No ape but swears he has the finest children”

Every day is no Yule day; cast the cat a castock

The first half of this proverb is used literally by the Italians and Dutch A ”castock” is the stalk or core of a cabbage

Every dog has its day

Every dud bids anither gude-day