her without they smell carrion.
"Where the carrion is, there do the eagles gather."--_Danish._
Corbies dinna pike out corbies' een.
One rogue does not wrong another. "Crows do not peck out crows'
eyes."--_Portuguese._
Corn him weel, he'll work the better.
Counsel is nae command.
"Quod _Danger_, Sen I understand
That counsell can be nae command,
I have nae mair to say,
Except gif that he thocht it good;
Tak counsell zit or ze conclude
Of wyser men nor they."--_Cherrie and the Slae._
Count again is no forbidden.
Count like Jews and 'gree like brithers.
Count siller after a' your kin.
Courtesy is cumbersome to him that kens it na.
Crabbit was and cause hadna.
Crab without a cause, mease without mends.
That is, if you are peevish and ill-pleased without cause, you must
regain your good nature without amends.
Craft maun hae claes, but truth gaes naked.
Credit is better than ill-won gear.
Credit keeps the crown o' the causey.
Creep before ye gang.
"Ye will never make your bread that way, Maister Francie. Ye suld
munt up a muckle square of canvass, like Dick Tinto, and paint
folk's ainsells, that they like muckle better to see than ony craig
in the haill water; and I wadna muckle objeck even to some of the
Wallers coming up and sitting to ye. They waste their time war, I
wis--and, I warrant, ye might mak a guinea a-head of them. Dick made
twa, but he was an auld used hand, and folk maun creep before they
gang."--_St Ronan's Well._
Cripples are aye better planners than workers.
Cripples are aye great doers--break your leg and try.
People who are always very ready to give advice are generally slow
in giving assistance.
"Crookit carlin," quo' the cripple to his wife.
"Oh wad some power the giftie gie us
To see oursels as others see us!
It wad frae mony a blunder free us,
And foolish notion."--_Burns._
Cry a' at ance, that's the way to be served.
Curses mak the tod fat.
So long as he is cursed only, not hunted, does he thrive; for "A
curse will not strike out an eye unless the fist go with
it."--_Danish._
Cut your coat according to your cloth.
Daffin' and want o' wit maks auld wives donnart.
"Daffin'" is defined by Ramsay as "folly in general;" so the proverb
means that foolish conduct in the aged is
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