no rest for the weary (wicked)
no rest for the weary (wicked)
No peace and quiet for anyone; to be kept very busy. This term, dating from about 1900, today is used facetiously by or about a person who simply is kept very busy. It presumably echoes several biblical passages stating that God will take care of good people but will provide no peace for evildoers (Isaiah 48:22 and 57:21). Wicked is used more in Britain, weary in America. After a two-foot snowfall and predictions of at least another foot of snow, meteorologist Michael Henry said, “There’s no rest for the weary. Just when they . . . cleaned up after the last storm, here comes another” (Boston Globe, March 9, 2001).
See also: no, rest, weary
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
- be kept in the dark (about something)
- kept
- keep a firm grip on
- keep a firm grip on (someone or something)
- between you, (and) me, and the gatepost
- between you, me and the gatepost
- between ourselves
- between you and me
- between you me and the bedpost
- between you, (and) me, and the bedpost