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The Traceys have always the Wind in their Faces; To cut large Thongs out of another Man’s Leather; Too much of one Thing is good for nothing
After sweet Meat comes sour Sauce; [woodcut of stout man, seated, with bandaged foot]
One good Turn deserves another;  He steals a Goose, and gives the Giblets in Alms.
Brag is a good Dog, but Holdfast is a better;  The Belly has no Ears;  [woodcut: mouse by house perhaps made from candle with snuffer]
Many Words will not fill a Bushel;  The younger Brother the better Gentleman.
Well begun is half ended;  All is well that ends well.
Proferred Service stinks;  The Receiver is as bad as the Thief;  Reckon not your Chickens before they are hatched.
’Tis too late to spare when all is spent;  One Swallow does not make Summer.
One Man had better steal a Horse than another look over the Hedge;  [woodcut: highayman with hat and cape leads a horse]
Near is my Shirt, but Nearer is my Skin.
He makes a Rod for his own Breech.
The more Haste the worse Speed;  When the Sky falls we shall catch Larks.
When the Steed’s stolen, shut the Stable Door.
A scan of blank paper for use in backgrounds (public domain)
To buy a Pig in a poke;  Robin Hood’s Pennyworths;  He looks one way and rows another.
It’s neither Rhime nor Reason; What is got over the Devil’s Back will be spent under his Belly.
A Rolling Stone gathers no Moss;  It is good to make Hay while the Sun shines.
Give him a Rowland for his Oliver;  Penny Wise, and Pound Foolish;  He that Reckons without his Host must reckon again.
Sue a Beggar and catch a Louse; Many Hands make Light Work; [woodcut: well-dressed man scratches his head standing near a beggar with outstretched hat]
Need makes the old Wife trot;  [woodcut: barefoot old woman hitches up skirts to cross a stream]
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