A man at five may be a fool at fifteen.
In the days when cock-fighting was a fashionable pastime, game chickens that crowed too soon or too often were condemned to the spit as of no promise or ability. "A lad," says Archbishop Whateley, "who has to a degree that excites wonder and admiration the character and demeanour of an intelligent man of mature years, will probably be that and nothing more all his life, and will cease accordingly to be anything remarkable, because it was the precocity alone that ever made him so. It is remarked by greyhound fanciers that a well-formed, compact-shaped puppy never makes a fleet dog. They see more promise in the loose-jointed, awkward, and clumsy ones. And even so there is a kind of crudity and unsettledness in the minds of those young persons who turn out ultimately the most eminent."
Soon ripe soon rotten.
"Late fruit keeps well" (German).[132]
It is better to knit than to blossom.
Orchard trees may blossom fairly, yet bear no fruit.
It early pricks that will be a thorn.
Some indications of future character may be seen even in infancy. The child is father of the man.
Soon crooks the tree that good gambrel will be.
A gambrel (from the Italian gamba, a leg) is a crooked piece of wood, on which butchers hang the carcasses of beasts by the legs.