Take two-o coo, Taffy!
Take two-o coo, Taffy!
Alluding, says Mr. Chambers, to a story of a Welshman, who thus interpreted the note, and acted upon the recommendation by stealing two of his neighbour's cows.
[DOMESTIC POULTRY.]
The clucking conversation of poultry, the cackling of the hen, and the replying chuckle of the cock, is represented by the following dialogue:
Hen.
Cock, cock, I have la-a-a-yed!
Cock.
Hen, hen, that's well sa-a-a-yed!
Hen.
Although I have to go barefooted every da-a-y!
Cock (con spirito).
Sell your eggs, and buy shoes,
Sell your eggs, and buy shoes!
Mr. Chambers, p. 167, has given a very different version of this current in Scotland. In Galloway, the hen's song is:
The cock gaed to Rome, seeking shoon, seeking shoon,
The cock gaed to Rome, seeking shoon,
And yet I aye gang barefit, barefit!
The following proverb is current in the North of England:
If the cock moult before the hen,
We shall have weather thick and thin;
But if the hen moult before the cock,
We shall have weather hard as a block.