Saturday Proverb:
Proverb: "A fool and his money are soon parted."
Meaning:
Literal meaning.
History / Interesting Fact:
This is quite an
early proverb in the English language and due to this might be thought to
contain the wisdom of the ancients. The notion was known by the late 16th
century when it was out in rhyme by Thomas Tusser in Five Hundreth Pointes of
Good Husbandrie in 1573:
A foole & his money,
be soone at debate:
which after with sorow,
repents him too late.
be soone at debate:
which after with sorow,
repents him too late.
The precise wording of the expression comes just a
little later, in Dr. John Bridges' Defence of the Government of the
Church of England, 1587:
If they pay a penie or
two pence more for the readinesse of them.....let them looke to that, a foole
and his money is soone parted.
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