Impromptu writing, whatever comes...on writing or whatever the question of the day is. |
Proverbs are sometimes metaphorical, but mostly, they are based on common human experience. Every culture has its own proverbs. In history, the Bible with the Book of Proverbs and the Latin culture in general played a considerable role in distributing proverbs across Europe. Proverbs are useful in writing, whether you take a proverb and make a story or poem out of it or you apply it to an already existing but not quite finished work. I started getting tweets from a Twitter site called Ancient Proverbs. Each time they send me one, I realize once again how universal and how regardless of time and place the ancients’ words sound. Here are a few proverbs from Twitter’s Ancient Proverbs: Three methods to learn wisdom: 1 reflection, which is noblest; 2 imitation, which is easiest; & 3 experience, which is the bitterest. –Confucius One never needs their humor as much a when they argue with a fool. -Chinese Proverbs The innkeeper loves a drunkard, but not for a son-in-law. -Jewish Proverb The great question is not whether you have failed, but whether you are content with failure. -Chinese Proverb Bad is never good until worse happens. -Danish proverb Smooth seas do not make skillful sailors. -African proverb Every path has its puddle. -English proverb Forever is composed of nows. -Emily Dickinson What is told into the ear of a man is often heard a hundred miles away. -Chinese Proverbs Who ceases to be a friend never was one. -Greek Proverb |