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    Brief Seasons of Intellectual Dissipation

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    I.

    FOOL.--I have a question for you.

    PHILOSOPHER.--I have a number of them for myself. Do you happen to have heard that a fool can ask more questions in a breath than a philosopher can answer in a life?

    F.--I happen to have heard that in such a case the one is as great a fool as the other.

    PH.--Then there is no distinction between folly and philosophy?

    F.--Don't lay the flattering unction to your soul. The province of folly is to ask unanswerable questions. It is the function of philosophy to answer them.

    PH.--Admirable fool!

    F.--Am I? Pray tell me the meaning of "a fool."

    PH.--Commonly he has none.

    F.--I mean--

    PH.--Then in this case he has one.

    F.--I lick thy boots! But what does Solomon indicate by the word fool? That is what I mean.

    PH.--Let us then congratulate Solomon upon the agreement between the views of you two. However, I twig your intent: he means a wicked sinner; and of all forms of folly there is none so great as wicked sinning. For goodness is, in the end, more conducive to personal happiness--which is the sole aim of man.

    F.--Hath virtue no better excuse than this?

    PH.--Possibly; philosophy is not omniscience.

    F.--Instructed I sit at thy feet!

    PH.--Unwilling to instruct, I stand on my head.

    * * * * *

    FOOL.--You say personal happiness is the sole aim of man.

    PHILOSOPHER.--Then it is.

    F.--But this is much disputed.

    PH.--There is much personal happiness in disputation.

    F.--Socrates--

    PH.--Hold! I detest foreigners.

    F.--Wisdom, they say, is of no country.

    PH.--Of none that I have seen.

    * * * * *

    FOOL.--Let us return to our subject--the sole aim of mankind. Crack me these nuts. (1) The man, never weary of well-doing, who endures a life of privation for the good of his fellow-creatures?

    PHILOSOPHER.--Does he feel remorse in so doing? or does the rascal rather like it?

    F.--(2) He, then, who, famishing himself, parts his loaf with a beggar?

    PH.--There are people who prefer benevolence to bread.

    F.--Ah! De gustibus--

    PH.--Shut up!

    F.--Well, (3) how of him who goes joyfully to martyrdom?

    PH.--He goes joyfully.

    F.--And yet--

    PH.--Did you ever converse with a good man going to the stake?

    F.--I never saw a good man going to the stake.

    PH.--Unhappy pupil! you were born some centuries too early.


    * * * * *

    FOOL.--You say you detest foreigners. Why?

    PHILOSOPHER.--Because I am human.

    F.--But so are they.

    PH.--Excellent fool! I thank thee for the better reason.

    * * * * *

    PHILOSOPHER.--I have been thinking of the pocopo.

    FOOL.--Is it open to
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