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<p>Note, 1. He that is wise does not affect to proclaim his wisdom, and it is his honour that he does not. He communicates his knowledge when it may turn to the edification of others, but he conceals it when the showing of it would only tend to his own commendation. Knowing men, if they be prudent men, will carefully avoid every thing that savours of ostentation, and not take all occasions to show their learning and reading, but only to use it for good purposes, and then let <i>their own works praise them. Ars est celare artem—The perfection of art is to conceal it</i>. 2. He that is foolish cannot avoid proclaiming his folly, and it is his shame that he cannot: <i>The heart of fools</i>, by their foolish words and actions, <i>proclaims foolishness</i>; either they do not desire to hide it, so little sense have they of good and evil, honour and dishonour, or they know not how to hide it, so little discretion have they in the management of themselves, <a class="bibleref" title="Eccl.10.3" href="/passage/?search=Eccl.10.3">Eccl. 10:3</a>.</p>
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