LXXXV
Conceited Folly
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The veritable poverty is the poverty of sense: the world regardeth not other poverty as poverty.
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When a fool bestoweth a gift of his own free will, it is simply the good fortune of the receiver and nothing else.
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The troubles that a fool bringeth down on his head, it is hard even for his enemies to cause him.
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Dost thou want to know what is shallowness of wit? It is the conceit that sayeth to itself, I am wise.
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Behold the fool that pretendeth unto knowledge that be possesseth not: he raiseth doubts even as to those things that he really knoweth.
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Where is the good of the fool covering his nakedness, if the deformities of his mind are still left uncovered?
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Behold the shallow man that cannot keep a secret to himself: he will bring down great calamities on his own head.
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Behold the man who neither listeneth to advice nor knoweth for himself what is right: all the days of his life he is a plague to his fellows.
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He that trieth to open the eyes of a fool is a fool himself: for the fool seeth but one way and that way is never wrong in his eyes.
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Behold the man who denieth what all the world doth assert: he will be looked upon as a devil in human shape.