943 Irish Proverbs / Page 34
661. 
The cat is always dignified, until the dog comes by.
662. 
The covetous person is always in want.
663. 
The day of the storm is not the time for thatching your roof.
664. 
The day of the storm is not the time for thatching your roof.
665. 
The day will come when the cow will have use for her tail.
666. 
The devil never grants long leases.
667. 
The dog that's always on the go, is better than the one that's always curled up.
668. 
The doorstep of a great house is slippery.
669. 
The early bird catches the worm.
670. 
The early riser gets through his business but not through early rising.
671. 
The end of a feast is better than the beginning of a fight.
672. 
The English always credit the rest of us with the qualities they don't need themselves.
673. 
The eye should be blind in the home of another.
674. 
The fewer donkeys, the more corncobs.
675. 
The fox never found a better messenger than himself.
676. 
The full man does not understand the wants of the hungry.
677. 
The full person can not understand the needs of the hungry.
678. 
The full person does not understand the needs of the hungry.
679. 
The full stomach does not understand the empty one.
680. 
The grace of God is found between the saddle and the ground.
943 Irish Proverbs, Page 34 of 48
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