Cats after kind good mouse hunt
Cats after kind good mouse hunt. Heywood. Letter by F. A. touching the quarrel between Arthur Hall and Melch Mallorie, in 1575-6, repr. of ed. 1580, in "Miscy. Antiq. Anglic." 1816, p. 93. "For never yet was good cat out of kinde." English Proverbs, Hazlitt.
Cats and Carlins sit in the sun. When work is done then warmth and rest.
Cats eat what hussies spare. Nothing is lost. Also refers to giving away, and saying "the cat took it."
Cats hide their claws. All is not fair that seems so. Trust not to appearances.
Cry you mercy, killed my cat. Clarke, 1639. Better away, than stay and ask pardon.
Every day's no yule; cast the cat a castock. The stump of a cabbage, and the proverb means much the same thing as "Spare no expense, bring another bottle of small beer." Denham's Popular Sayings, 1846.
of False Persons.
He bydes as fast as a cat bound with a sacer. He does as he likes; nothing holds him.
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