break a butterfly upon the wheel
English
    
    Alternative forms
    
Etymology
    
Coined by English poet Alexander Pope in 1734 in Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot.
Verb
    
break a butterfly upon the wheel (third-person singular simple present breaks a butterfly upon the wheel, present participle breaking a butterfly upon the wheel, simple past broke a butterfly upon the wheel, past participle broken a butterfly upon the wheel)
- To inflict a punishment out of all proportion to the offence.
- 1734, Alexander Pope, An Epistle from Mr. Pope, to Dr. Arbuthnot:- Let Paris tremble—“What? that Thing of ſilk,
 “Paris, that mere white Curd of Aſs’s milk?
 “Satire or Shame alas! can Paris feel?
 “Who breaks a Butterfly upon a Wheel?”
 Yet let me flap this Bug with gilded wings,
 This painted Child of Dirt that ſtinks and ſtings
 
 
- To employ great exertions for insignificant ends.
Related terms
    
Translations
    
to inflict a punishment out of all proportion
to employ great exertions for insignificant ends
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See also
    
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