Page:Mallarmé - Œuvres complètes, 1951.djvu/1178

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97. — Conjonction. 1. When Tom’s pitcher is broken I shall hâve the shards. 2. He is like a swine, he will never do good when he lives. 3. He will mend when he grows better, like sour ale in summer. 4. When the sky faits we shall catch larks. 5. When you are ail agreed upon the time quoth the vicar, 1’11 make it rain. 6. He that is needy when married shall be rich when buried. Hold the dish while I shed my pottage. 8. Beware of the geese when the fox preaches. 9. JÈAéVZ he has feathered his nest, he may flee where he likes. g8. — Conjonction. That. 1. They talk of Christmas so long that it cornes. 2. If one, two or three, say you are an ass put on the ears. 3. Look before you leap. 4. ’Tis pity thou art not a little more tonguetied. 5. When ail men say you are an ass it is time to bray. gg. — Conjonction. 1. A book that remains shut is but a block. 2. A hog in armour is still but a hog. 3. A little ship needs but a little sail. 4. Hope is a good breakfast but a bad supper. 5. A solitary man is either a brute or an angel. 6. He never was good, neither egg, nor bird. 7. Share not pears with your master, either in jest or in earnest. 8. If your shoe pinch you, give it your man. 9. The mother knows best whether the child be like his father. 10. Like Maud’s dog, he’ll neither go to church nor stay at home. 100. — Interjection. 1. You cry hem ! when there is no écho. 2. What ! keep a dog and bark myself. 3. It is time enough to cry oh ! when you are liurt. 4. Back with that leg.