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stolen?   Dost thou not know that whoso buyeth aught without examining it, falleth into error and becometh like unto the weaver?"   Quoth he, "And what is the story of the weaver?"; and quoth she:--I have heard this take of   

   The Foolish Weaver

   There was once in a certain village a weaver who worked hard but could not earn his living save by overwork.   Now it chanced that one of the richards of the neighbourhood made a marriage feast and invited the folk thereto: the weaver also was present and found the guests, who wore rich gear, served with delicate viands and made much of by the house-master for what he saw of their fine clothes.   So he said in his mind, "If I change this my craft for another craft easier to compass and better considered and more highly paid, I shall amass great store of money and I shall buy splendid attire, so I may rise in rank and be exalted in men's eyes and become even with these."   Presently, he beheld one of the mountebanks, who was present at the feast, climbing up to the top of a high and towering wall and throwing himself down to the ground and alighting on his feet. Whereupon the waver said to himself, "Needs must I do as this one hath done, for surely I shall not fail of it."   So he arose and swarmed upon the wall and casting himself down, broke his neck against the ground and

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