XXI
Fear of Evildoing
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The evil fear not the folly called sin: but the worthy flee from it.
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Evil bringeth forth evil: evil therefore shall be feared even more than fire.
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The chiefest wisdom, they say, is to abstain from injury even to an enemy.
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Let not a man compass another’s ruin even by oversight: for Justice will compass the ruin of him that plotteth evil.
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Let not a man work evil saying, I am poor: for, if he do, he will sink into a lower destitution than before.
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Whoso desireth not to be saddened by ills, let him abstain from doing injury to others.
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There is a way of escape from every other enemy: but ill deeds never die but pursue and destroy their author.
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As the shadow leaveth not a man but doggeth his steps wherever he goeth, even so do evil deeds pursue their author and work his destruction.
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If a man love his own self, let him not incline toward evil in any degree.
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Know that man to be secure from ills who leaveth not the straight path in order to commit wrong.