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2 lines
1.7 KiB
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<p>Note, 1. Passion is folly: <i>A fool is known by his anger</i> (so some read it); not but that a wise man may be angry when there is just cause for it, but then he has his anger under check and direction, is <i>lord of his anger</i>, whereas a fool’s anger lords it over him. He that, when he is provoked, breaks out into indecent expressions, in words or behaviour, whose passion alters his countenance, makes him outrageous, and leads him to forget himself, <i>Nabal</i> certainly is his name and <i>folly is with him. A fool’s indignation is known in the day</i>; he proclaims it openly, whatever company he is in. Or it is known in the day he is provoked; he cannot defer showing his resentments. Those that are soon angry, that are quickly put into a flame by the least spark, have not that rule which they ought to have over their own spirits. 2. Meekness is wisdom: <i>A prudent man covers shame</i>. (1.) He covers the passion that is in his own breast; when his <i>spirit is stirred</i>, and his <i>heart hot within him</i>, he keeps his mouth as with a bridle, and suppresses his resentments, by smothering and stifling them. Anger is shame, and, though a wise man be not perfectly free from it, yet he is ashamed of it, rebukes it, and suffers not the evil spirit to speak. (2.) He covers the provocation that is given him, the indignity that is done him, winks at it, covers it as much as may be from himself, that he may not carry his resentments of it too far. It is a kindness to ourselves, and contributes to the repose of our own minds, to extenuate and excuse the injuries and affronts that we receive, instead of aggravating them and making the worst of them, as we are apt to do.</p>
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