Shakespeare and Early Modern Proverbial Culture
@proverbialculture.bsky.social
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Account for the AHRC-funded project, Shakespeare and Early Modern Proverbial Culture. https://earlymodernproverbs.co.uk/
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proverbialculture.bsky.social
"When the fox sleeps nothing falls into his mouth" (Tilley F657). Even the sly need to hustle. No snacks for a snoozing fox.
proverbialculture.bsky.social
"When the frog has hair thou wilt be good" (Tilley F766). You’ll be good when frogs grow beards—i.e., never.
proverbialculture.bsky.social
“All women are good – either good for something or good for nothing” (Tilley W680).
A 17th-century zinger that shows its age—and its sexism. History, not advice.
proverbialculture.bsky.social
"A good meal, a bad meal, and a middling meal preserves a man in health" (Tilley M786).
Tudor wellness plan: feast, flop, average—repeat. Balance is the real superfood.
proverbialculture.bsky.social
"All things grow worse and worse" (T168).
Read the news lately? Some things never change.
proverbialculture.bsky.social
"A stitch in time saves nine" - from 1732, but the idea? Timeless. Why do some proverbs survive centuries while others vanish? What makes wisdom stick? #ProverbialWisdom #History
proverbialculture.bsky.social
"All that glisters is not gold" - Shakespeare borrowed this proverb for Merchant of Venice, perfect for awards season! Medieval wisdom about appearances vs reality, still relevant as we debate what makes "peak TV" actually good. #Emmys #Shakespeare #Proverbs
proverbialculture.bsky.social
“No good attorney will ever go to law.” ⚖️ (Tilley A393)
Tudor wisdom: the only people who enjoy lawsuits are the lawyers. Still true.
proverbialculture.bsky.social
“The more the merrier, the fewer the better cheer.” (Tilley M1153)
The Tudors knew: small dinner, good conversation; big dinner, shouting match. Never realised I'd been passive aggressive when I said "the more the merrier" until now... #oops
proverbialculture.bsky.social
🐴 “Better ride on an ass that carries me than a horse that throws me.” (Tilley A361)
Reliable donkey, or dramatic stallion?
Give me the one that gets me home alive.
Same goes for cars, jobs, software, and dating apps.
#TeamDonkey #StableWins
proverbialculture.bsky.social
“The physician is more dangerous than the disease.” ⚕️ (Tilley P267a)
Medieval doctors: leeches for a headache.
Us: side effects may include everything but relief.
#ReadTheLabel #ProverbialPrescription
proverbialculture.bsky.social
"Shunning the smoke he fell into the fire" (Tilley S570) - the eternal human tendency to overcorrect straight into worse problems. Avoiding one social media platform by joining three others. Medieval frying pan → fire dynamics still perfectly relevant. #OutOfTheFryingPan #EarlyModernOops
proverbialculture.bsky.social
"A dwarf on a giant's shoulder sees farther of the two" (Tilley D659) - Newton's "standing on shoulders of giants" but make it medieval and honest about the height dynamics. #Teamwork
proverbialculture.bsky.social
“The way to be gone is not to stay here.” 🏃 (Tilley W151)
Sixteenth-century productivity hack: if you want to leave… actually leave.
Still relevant for meetings, bad parties, and doomscrolling.
#ExitStrategy #TimelessAdvice
proverbialculture.bsky.social
“You cannot take a trout with dry breeches.” (Tilley T538)
No risk, no reward: the Renaissance edition. If you want results, you’ll have to wade in—figuratively or otherwise. #WadersOn
proverbialculture.bsky.social
“All his geese are swans.” (Tilley G369)
Everything he touches is “brilliant,” “genius,” or “disruptive.” Translation: he has no idea it’s just a goose. #DelusionsOfExcellence #EveryIdeaIsNotASwan
proverbialculture.bsky.social
“Two dogs never agree about one bone.” (Tilley D544)
Put one cookie on the table and watch civility vanish.
Whether it’s siblings, colleagues, or nations — one bone, two egos, no peace.
#ProverbialWisdom #EarlyModernTruth
proverbialculture.bsky.social
“We shall live til we die.” (Tilley L385)
Early modern existentialism, plain and undefeated. Stoic, blunt, and suspiciously applicable to the academic job market. #ProverbialRealism #LifeGoals
proverbialculture.bsky.social
“They are scarce of horses where two ride on a dog.” (H716)
If you're pushing a plan that clearly doesn’t work—maybe it's not the dog’s fault. #DoingTooMuch #TeamworkFails
proverbialculture.bsky.social
“Kings and bears often worry their keepers.” (K85)
Lesson: if you're in charge of something powerful and unpredictable, don't turn your back. Applies to monarchs, CEOs, and toddlers. #BearWithIt #ThroneAndDanger
proverbialculture.bsky.social
“Look high and fall low.” (Tilley L431)
Ambition meets gravity. Aim for tenure, land unemployed. The proverb saw it coming. #CareerTrajectories #TheFallIsReal
proverbialculture.bsky.social
“Better a louse in the pot than no flesh at all.” (L468)
Early modern comfort food: something between “protein-rich” and “please don’t ask.” Culinary optimism at its grimmest. #EarlyModernMealPrep
proverbialculture.bsky.social
“The great man is the spider, the poor man is the fly.” (Tilley M152)
In case you were wondering, trickle-down economics didn’t work in the 1500s either. #CaughtInTheWeb #TudorInequality
proverbialculture.bsky.social
"A piece of a churchyard fits everybody" (Tilley P290) - The ultimate equalitarian real estate market. Death: the only landlord who doesn't discriminate. #MortalityStudies #SocialEquality #RealEstateHistory
proverbialculture.bsky.social
"First thrive and then wive" (Tilley T264) - Medieval relationship advice that would break modern dating apps. Maslow's hierarchy of needs, Tudor edition. Sorry, Hinge. #MarriageHistory #SelfActualization #EarlyModernDating