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Milking the bull

Proverb indicating a fruitless task


Proverb indicating a fruitless task

Milking the bull is a proverb which uses the metaphor of milking a bull to indicate that an activity would be fruitless or futile.

In the 16th century, the German painter Hans Schäufelein illustrated the proverb on the eight of bells in a deck of playing cards.

Dr Johnson used the proverb to criticise the work of David Hume and other skeptical philosophers.

References

References

  1. Malcolm Jones. (1989). "Folklore Motifs in Late Medieval Art I: Proverbial Follies and Impossibilities". Folklore.
  2. [[Edgar Wind]]. (1943). "Milking the Bull and the He-Goat". Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes.
  3. Malcolm Jones. (2009). "The Proverbial Pied Piper". [[Peter Lang (publishing company).
  4. [[Thomas Babington Macaulay, 1st Baron Macaulay]], [[Thomas Carlyle]]. (1895). "Macaulay's and Carlyle's essays on Samuel Johnson". H. Holt & Co..
  5. Peter Ryan. (2000). "Milking the bull". Quadrant.
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