bee in one's bonnet, to have a

bee in one's bonnet, to have a

To have a strange fixation about something; to have an eccentric idea or fantasy. A version of the term appears in Robert Herrick’s “Mad Maid’s Song” (ca. 1648): “. . . the bee which bore my love away, I’ll seek him in your bonnet brave.” Allegedly the expression stems from the analogy of a bee buzzing inside one’s hat to a peculiar idea in one’s head. It has been a cliché since the eighteenth century. Lest one think it is obsolete, it appeared in a 2004 murder mystery: “By the way, what bee got into your bonnet at the meeting? Bailey had been pretty cooperative” (David Baldacci, Hour Game).
See also: bee, have
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
See also:
  • Gather ye rosebuds while ye may
  • Gather ye rosebuds while ye may.
  • rosebud
  • strange bird
  • strange duck
  • find (someone or something) a little off
  • find (someone or something) a bit off
  • (as) mad as a March hare
  • hare
  • mad as a March hare