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Netherlandish Proverbs
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Everything about Netherlandish Proverbs totally explained

Netherlandish Proverbs (also called The Blue Cloak or The Topsy Turvy World) is a 1559 oil-on-oak-panel painting by Pieter Bruegel the Elder which depicts a land populated with literal renditions of Flemish proverbs of the day. The picture is overflowing with references and most of the representations can still be identified; while many of the proverbs have either been forgotten or never made the transition to the English language, some are still in use. Proverbs were popular during Bruegel's time: a number of collections were published including a famous work by Erasmus. Frans Hogenberg had produced an engraving illustrating about 40 proverbs in around 1558 and Bruegel himself had painted a collection of Twelve Proverbs on individual panels by 1558 and had also produced Big Fish Eat Little Fish in 1556, but Netherlandish Proverbs is thought to be the first large scale painting on the theme. Rabelais depicted a land of proverbs in his novel Pantagruel soon after in 1564.
   Bruegel's paintings have themes of the absurdity, wickedness and foolishness of mankind, and this painting is no exception. The picture was originally entitled The Blue Cloak or The Folly of the World which indicates he wasn't intending to produce a mere collection of proverbs but rather a study of human stupidity. Many of the people depicted show the characteristic blank features which Bruegel used to portray fools. His son, Pieter Brueghel the Younger, specialised in making copies of his father's work, and painted up to twenty copies of Netherlandish Proverbs. Not all versions of the painting, by father or son, show exactly the same proverbs, also differing in other details.

Detail

There are around 100 identifiable idioms in the scene (although Bruegel may have included others). Some are still in use today, amongst them: "swimming against the tide", "big fish eat little fish", "banging one's head against a brick wall" and "armed to the teeth", and there are some that are familiar if not identical to the modern English usage, such as "casting roses before swine". Many more have faded from use or have never been used in English, "having one's roof tiled with tarts" for example which meant to have an abundance of everything and was an image Bruegel would later feature in his painting of the idyllic Land of Cockaigne . The Blue Cloak referred to in the painting's original title is being placed on the man in the centre of the picture by his wife. This was indicative that she was cheating on him. Other proverbs indicate mankind's foolishness: a man fills in a pond after his calf has died, just above the central figure of the blue-cloaked man another man carries daylight in a basket. Some of the figures seem to represent more than one figure of speech (whether this was Bruegel's intention or not is unknown), such as the man shearing a sheep in the centre bottom left of the picture. He is sat next to a man shearing a pig, so represents the expression "one shears sheep and one shears pigs" meaning that one has the advantage over the other, but he may also represent the advice "shear them but don't skin them" meaning make the most of your assets.
Proverb Meaning Location
To even be able to tie the devil to a pillow Obstinacy overcomes everything
To be a pillar-biter To be a religious hypocrite
To carry fire in one hand and water in the other To be two-faced and to stir up trouble
To bang one's head against a brick wall To try to achieve the impossible
One foot shod, the other bare Balance is paramount
The sow pulls the bung Negligence will be rewarded with disaster
To bell the cat To be indiscreet about plans that should be secret
To be armed to the teeth To be heavily armed
To be an iron-biter To be boastful/ indiscreet
One shears sheep, the other shears pigs One has all the advantages, the other none
Shear them but don't skin them Do not press your advantage too far
The herring doesn't fry here Things don't go according to plan
To fry the whole herring for the sake of the roe To do too much to achieve a little
To get the lid on the head To end up taking responsibility
The herring hangs by its own gills You must accept responsibility for your own actions
There is more in it than an empty herring There is more to it than meets the eye
What can smoke do to iron? There is no point in trying to change the unchangeable
To find the dog in the pot To arrive too late to prevent trouble
To sit between two stools in the ashes To be indecisive
To be a hen feeler To count one's chickens before they hatch
The scissors hang out there They are liable to cheat you there
To always gnaw on a single bone To continually talk about the same subject
It depends on the fall of the cards It is up to chance
The world is turned upside down Everything is the opposite of what it should be
Leave at least one egg in the nest Always have something in reserve
To shit on the world To despise everything
To lead each other by the nose To fool each other
The die is cast The decision is made
Fools get the best cards Luck can overcome intelligence
To look through one's fingers To be indulgent
There hangs the knife To issue a challenge
There stand the wooden shoes To wait in vain
To stick out the broom To have fun while the master is away
To marry under the broomstick To live together without marrying
To have the roof tiled with tarts To be living in the lap of luxury
To have a hole in one's roof To be simple
An old roof needs a lot of patching up Old things need more maintenance
The roof has lathes There could be eavesdroppers (The walls have ears)
To have toothache behind the ears To be a malingerer
To be pissing against the moon To waste one's time on a futile endeavour
Here hangs the pot It is the opposite of what it should be
To shoot a second bolt to find the first To repeat a foolish action
To shave the fool without lather To trick somebody
Two fools under one hood Stupidity loves company
It grows out of the window It can't be concealed
To play on the pillory To attract attention to one's shameful acts
Where the gate is open the pigs will run into the corn Disaster ensues from carelessness
Where the corn decreases the pig increases If one person gains then another must lose
To run like one's backside is on fire To be in great distress
He who eats fire, shits sparks Do not be surprised at the outcome if you attempt a dangerous venture
To hang one's cloak according to the wind To adapt one's viewpoint to the current opinion
To toss feathers in the wind To work fruitlessly
To gaze at the stork To waste one's time
To want to kill two flies with one stroke To be efficient (equivalent to today's To kill two birds with one stone)
To fall from the ox onto the ass To fall on hard times
To kiss the ring of the door To be insincere
To wipe one's backside on the door To treat something lightly
To go around shouldering a burden To imagine that things are worse than they are
One beggar pities the other standing in front of the door
To fish behind the net To miss an opportunity
Big fish eat little fish
To be unable to see the sun shine on the water To be jealous of another's success
It hangs like a privy over a ditch It is obvious
Anybody can see through an oak plank if there's a hole in it There is no point in stating the obvious
They both shit through the same hole They are in agreement
To throw one's money into the water To waste one's money
A wall with cracks will soon collapse Anything poorly managed will soon fail
To not care whose house is on fire as long as one can warm oneself at the blaze To take every opportunity regardless of the consequences to others
To drag the block To be deceived by a lover or to work at a pointless task
Fear makes the old woman trot An unexpected event can reveal unknown qualities
Horse droppings are not figs Don not be fooled by appearances
If the blind lead the blind both will fall in the ditch The is no point in being guided by others who are equally ignorant
The journey isn't yet over when one can discern the church and steeple Do not give up until the task is fully complete
Everything, however finely spun, finally comes to the sun Nothing can be hidden forever
To keep one's eye on the sail To stay alert, be wary
To shit on the gallows To be undeterred by any penalty
Where the carcass is, there fly the crows If the evidence points to something it's likely to be true
It is easy to sail before the wind If conditions are favourable it isn't difficult to achieve one's goal
Who knows why geese go barefoot? There is a reason for everything, though it may not be obvious
If I'm not meant to be their keeper, I'll let geese be geese Do not interfere in matters that are not your concern
To see bears dancing To be starving
Wild bears prefer each other's company
To look for the hatchet To try to find an excuse
Here he's with his lantern To finally have an opportunity to show a talent
A hatchet with a handle Probably signifies "the whole thing"
To blow in the ear To spread gossip
To chalk up To make sure to remember
The meat on the spit must be basted Certain things need constant attention
There is no turning the spit with him He is uncooperative
To sit on hot coals To be impatient
To catch fish without a net To profit from the work of others

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