Snakes in his Boots (To have).

To suffer from D.T. (delirium tremens). This is one of the delusions common to those so afflicted.

“He’s been pretty high on whisky for two or three days, … and they say he’s got snakes in his boots now.”—The Barton Experiment, chap. ix,

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Entry taken from Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, edited by the Rev. E. Cobham Brewer, LL.D. and revised in 1895.

Smith of Nottingham
Smith’s Prize-man
Smithfield
Smoke
Smoke Farthings
Smoke Silver
Snack
Snails have no sex
Snake-Stones
Snake in the Grass
Snakes in his Boots (To have)
Snap-Dragons
Snap of the Fingers
Snap One’s Nose Off
Snarling Letter (Latin, litera canina)
Sneck Posset
Sneezed
Sneezing
Snickersnee
Snider Rifle
Snob