{"id":"01KG8AKHM3X2QJMYPQSSYNASTV","cid":"bafkreierfqjhxao2pgadwxmwu32sna3sf5e46v43cj4aksgae2nh2erid4","type":"chunk","properties":{"end_line":2385,"extracted_at":"2026-01-30T20:48:05.590Z","extracted_by":"structure-extraction-lambda","label":"Chunk 4","source_file":"01KG89J1DKC9HHJRKY25JZBEXW","start_line":2313,"text":"“I know it, my honest friend; the sweeter the more dangerous. Arsenic\r\nis sweeter than sugar. I know you are a very sensible young man, not to\r\nbe taken in by an artful Ammonite, and so I think I had better convey\r\nyour message to the girl forthwith.”\r\n\r\nSo saying, the sage withdrew, leaving Israel once more gloomily seated\r\nbefore the rifled mantel, whose mirror was not again to reflect the\r\nform of the charming chambermaid.\r\n\r\n“Every time he comes in he robs me,” soliloquised Israel, dolefully;\r\n“with an air all the time, too, as if he were making me presents. If he\r\nthinks me such a very sensible young man, why not let me take care of\r\nmyself?”\r\n\r\nIt was growing dusk, and Israel, lighting the wax candle, proceeded to\r\nread in his Guide-book.\r\n\r\n“This is poor sight-seeing,” muttered he at last, “sitting here all by\r\nmyself, with no company but an empty tumbler, reading about the fine\r\nthings in Paris, and I myself a prisoner in Paris. I wish something\r\nextraordinary would turn up now; for instance, a man come in and give\r\nme ten thousand pounds. But here’s ‘Poor Richard;’ I am a poor fellow\r\nmyself; so let’s see what comfort he has for a comrade.”\r\n\r\nOpening the little pamphlet, at random, Israel’s eyes fell on the\r\nfollowing passages: he read them aloud—\r\n\r\n“‘_So what signifies waiting and hoping for better times? We may make\r\nthese times better, if we bestir ourselves. Industry need not wish, and\r\nhe that lives upon hope will die fasting, as Poor Richard says. There\r\nare no gains, without pains. Then help hands, for I have no lands, as\r\nPoor Richard says._’ Oh, confound all this wisdom! It’s a sort of\r\ninsulting to talk wisdom to a man like me. It’s wisdom that’s cheap,\r\nand it’s fortune that’s dear. That ain’t in Poor Richard; but it ought\r\nto be,” concluded Israel, suddenly slamming down the pamphlet.\r\n\r\nHe walked across the room, looked at the artificial flowers, and the\r\nrose-colored soap, and again went to the table and took up the two\r\nbooks.\r\n\r\n“So here is the ‘Way to Wealth,’ and here is the ‘Guide to Paris.’\r\nWonder now whether Paris lies on the Way to Wealth? if so, I am on the\r\nroad. More likely though, it’s a parting-of-the-ways. I shouldn’t be\r\nsurprised if the Doctor meant something sly by putting these two books\r\nin my hand. Somehow, the old gentleman has an amazing sly look—a sort\r\nof wild slyness—about him, seems to me. His wisdom seems a sort of sly,\r\ntoo. But all in honor, though. I rather think he’s one of those old\r\ngentlemen who say a vast deal of sense, but hint a world more. Depend\r\nupon it, he’s sly, sly, sly. Ah, what’s this Poor Richard says: ‘God\r\nhelps them that help themselves:’ Let’s consider that. Poor Richard\r\nain’t a Dunker, that’s certain, though he has lived in Pennsylvania.\r\n‘God helps them that help themselves.’ I’ll just mark that saw, and\r\nleave the pamphlet open to refer to it again—Ah!”\r\n\r\nAt this point, the Doctor knocked, summoning Israel to his own\r\napartment. Here, after a cup of weak tea, and a little toast, the two\r\nhad a long, familiar talk together; during which, Israel was delighted\r\nwith the unpretending talkativeness, serene insight, and benign\r\namiability of the sage. But, for all this, he could hardly forgive him\r\nfor the Cologne and Otard depredations.\r\n\r\nDiscovering that, in early life, Israel had been employed on a farm,\r\nthe man of wisdom at length turned the conversation in that direction;\r\namong other things, mentioning to his guest a plan of his (the\r\nDoctor’s) for yoking oxen, with a yoke to go by a spring instead of a\r\nbolt; thus greatly facilitating the operation of hitching on the team\r\nto the cart. Israel was very much struck with the improvement; and\r\nthought that, if he were home, upon his mountains, he would immediately\r\nintroduce it among the farmers.\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r","title":"Chunk 4"},"relationships":[{"peer":"01KG8AJJ212KH6VW4PD96ZS3YF","peer_type":"chapter","predicate":"in"},{"peer":"01KG89J1DKC9HHJRKY25JZBEXW","peer_type":"file","predicate":"extractedFrom"},{"peer":"01KG89HMDZKNY753EZE1CJ8HZW","peer_type":"collection","predicate":"collection"},{"peer":"01KG8AKHKYRYJYXP1M9Z2ZMFPC","peer_type":"chunk","predicate":"prev"}],"ver":2,"created_at":"2026-01-30T20:48:07.811Z","ts":"2026-01-30T20:48:14.948Z","edited_by":{"method":"manual","user_id":"01KFF0H3YRP9ZSM033AM0QJ47H"}}