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DFuller at May 28, 2018 03:10 AM

Untitled Page 2

CONCLUSION

Therefore you are a fool.
Epimendicularly proved. However it con-
tains two assumptions you might not
perhaps allow me.

I do not see the precise object of
your tirade; I am afraid I must call
it tirade, or - a favourite word of
mine - rhodomontade. It is weak,
you know; and conscious. What
you say about a man whose powers
are above mediocrity being a "greater
fool than a simple, decently well-in-
formed etc." contains thought and
truth. You remember that after More's
execution, one of his contemporaries
doubted whether to call him a foolish
wise man or a wise fool. Some one
of the same age also says of some
one else that he had not wit enough
to play the fool. Indeed it is a sub-
ject on which I have theories, but
as it may be said latius patere
we will dogmatize more at leizure
at another time.

The princess did not come. I might
have known she would not. Whene-
ver I wait on a contingency like
that, inevitably I am disappointed.
I am the victim of false alarms. I
have waited to see the Queen come
up to Miss Burdett Coutts's at High-
gate in the same way, and on num-
berless other like occasions have had
the same success. However, determined

Untitled Page 2

CONCLUSION

Therefore you are a fool. Epimendicularly proved. However it contains two assumptions you might not perhaps allow me.

I do not see the precise object of your tirade; I am afraid I must call it tirade, or - a favourite word of mine - rhodomontade. It is weak, you know; and conscious. What you say about a man whose powers are above mediocrity being a "greater fool than a simple, decently well-informed etc." contains thought and truth. you remember that after More's execution, one of his contemporaries doubted whether to call him a foolish wise man or a wise fool. Some one of the same age also says of some one else that he had not wit enough to play the fool. Indeed it is a subject on which I have theories, but as it may be said latius patere we will dogmatize more at leizure or another time.

The princess did not come. I might have known she would not. Whenever I wait on a contingency like that, inevitably I am disappointed. I am the victim of false alarms. I have waited to see the Queen come up to Miss Burdett Coutts's at Highgate in the same way, and on numberless other like occasions have had the same success. However, determined