This proverb means we must endure a good deal that we don't like
A peck is a unit of measurement equal to 8 dry quarts or 9.09 liters. So if you had to eat a peck of dirt before you die, you'd be consuming quite a bit of it!
'Why then, here's some Dirt in my Tea-cup.'‥'Poh! you must eat a Peck of Dirt before you die.'[1738 Swift Polite Conversation i. 48]
A saying from the 18th Century meaning that everyone has to endure something unpleasant during their lifetime
If you do not wash your hands after coming in from gardening work.
A peck is a unit of dry volume equivalent to 8 dry quarts or one-fourth of a bushel. It can also refer to a quick, light kiss or a sharp strike with a beak or bill.
to clean them out from rocks and dirt when they land on tree branches
They learn to scratch and peck the dirt for food learning from their mother .
Probably nothing ... you eat a peck of dirt before you die. Perhaps you'll learn to look first.
Peck is bigger
In English receipts before 1800, a peck of flour weighed 14lbs. However, in some receipts it was a volume measurement of 2 gallons weighing 8/10lbs
About 275 pounds
No, he is not