CONTENTS

CHAPTER PAGE
[I][THE CHARACTERISTICS OF PROVERBS][13]
[II][THE PROVERBS OF THE JEWS][28]
[III][FORGOTTEN YEARS][43]
[IV][THE DAY OF SMALL THINGS][60]
[V][IRON SHARPENETH IRON][75]
[VI][A SOWER WENT FORTH TO SOW][100]
[VII][MEN AND MANNERS][108]
[VIII][THE IDEAL][136]
[IX][THE EXALTATION OF WISDOM][166]
[X][THE HILL “DIFFICULTY”][178]
[XI][HARVEST][194]
[XII][VALUES][214]
[XIII][NATURE IN THE PROVERBS][229]
[XIV][HUMOUR IN THE PROVERBS][237]
[XV][FROM WISDOM’S TREASURY][245]
[XVI][THE BODY POLITIC][248]
[XVII][A CHAPTER OF GOOD ADVICE][261]
[XVIII][CONDUCT][265]
[XIX][FAITH][273]
[XX][THE GIFT OF GOD][280]

CHAPTER I
The Characteristics of Proverbs

Most writers on proverbs have thought it necessary to attempt a definition of their subject, but the task is difficult, and the phrase that will silence criticism has yet to be produced. Lord Russell’s epigram describing a proverb as “The wisdom of many and the wit of one” is as good as any, but it leaves so much unsaid that as a definition it is certainly inadequate. On the other hand, it is a true remark, and the facts it emphasises may conveniently be taken as the point from which to begin this study.

No saying is a proverb until it has commended itself to a number of men; the wisdom of one is not a proverb, but the wisdom of many. Countless fine expressions well suited to become proverbial have perished in the speaking, or lie forgotten in our books. To win wide acceptance and then to keep pace with the jealous years and remain a living word on the lips of the people is an achievement few human thoughts have compassed; for thousands that pass unheeded only one here or there, helped by some happy quality, or perhaps some freak of fortune, is caught from mouth to mouth, approved, repeated and transmitted. Every accepted proverb has therefore survived a searching test, all the more severe because judgment is not always passed upon the merits of the case. Popular favour is at the best capricious, and often an admirable saying has died out of use and a worse become famous. But of one thing we can be certain: general recognition is never won except by that which expresses the beliefs, or appeals to the conscience, or touches the affections of average men. However many the defects of any given proverb may happen to be, it is sure to possess some quality of human interest.

In the second place, it is generally true that, although proverbs have a sovereign right to utter commonplace, there is no such thing as a dull proverb. No matter how pedestrian may be its doctrine, somewhere in its expression will be manifest the “wit of one”—a flash of insight or imagination, a note of pathos or power. Of course, many sayings through age and the changes of fashion have lost their savour for us, but—the point is important—even these are not inevitably dull. All were once piquant. If we could but recapture the attitude of the men who made the phrase proverbial, its interest would be felt again. But although it thus appears that proverbs are essentially human and generally witty, the study of them is attended by certain difficulties. It is wise, therefore, to acknowledge at the outset the obstacles that will beset our path; to be forewarned is to be forearmed.