[328] Prov. xxix. 20.
[329] Prov. xxiii. 9.
[330] Prov. x. 19.
[331] Prov. xiii. 3, 16.
[332] Prov. xiv. 23.
[333] Prov. xiv. 33.
[334] Prov. xiv. 7. There is a quaint and pertinent passage in Lyly's Euphues:—"We may see the cunning and curious work of Nature, which hath barred and hedged nothing in so strongly as the tongue, with two rowes of teeth, and therewith two lips, besides she hath placed it farre from the heart, that it should not utter that which the heart had conceived; this also should cause us to be silent, seeinge those that use much talke, though they speake truly, are never beleeved."
[335] Prov. xv. 2.
[336] Prov. xviii. 2.
[337] Prov. xii. 18.