Let sleeping dogs lie

Origin of: Let sleeping dogs lie

Let sleeping dogs lie

This is a very old proverb meaning do not stir up unnecessary trouble, In the 1300s, Geoffrey Chaucer wrote, “It is nought good a sleeping hound to wake.” Five hundred years later, in 1850, Charles Dickens used the expression in David Copperfield, chapter 39, “Let sleeping dogs lie - who wants to rouse ‘em?”