Think today and speak tomorrow

What is done by night appears by day

What a day may bring, a day may take away

We know not what a day may bring forth

Today a man, tomorrow none

Tomorrow is another day

To-day a man, to-morrow a mouse

To lay by for a rainy day

To come a day after the fair

To be in one’s birthday suit

The next day is never so good as the day before

The morning sun never lasts a day

The longest day must have an end

The day has eyes, the night has ears

The best fish smell when they are three days old

Sweet discourse makes short days and nights

Seize the day [trusting tomorrow as little as may be]

Praise a fair day at night

Patient men win the day

Necessity has no holiday

My turn today, yours tomorrow

Men may promise more in a day than they will fulfil in a year

March borrowed from april three days, and they were ill

On Monday morning don’t be looking for Saturday’s night

No day so clear but has dark clouds

No day passes without some grief

One to-day is worth two to-morrow

Stuff today and starve tomorrow

Never put off till tomorrow what you can do (can be done) today

Never is a long day [term]

When sunday comes it will be holy day

To put off till Doomsday

One day of pleasure is worth two of sorrow

He who sleeps all the morning, may go a begging all the day after

If the sun in red should set, the next day surely will be wet; if the sun should set in grey, the next will be a rainy day