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called mashals—not only those in the prophetic writings (see above), but the verses ascribed to 'those that speak in mashals' in Num. xxi. 27-30—are poetical in form, but this is because the Hebrew writers never conceived the idea of a narrative poem; even the prologue of the Book of Job is in prose.

These are the principal specimens of the mashal apart from those in the three Books of Old Testament Wisdom. They are but the 'two or three berries' left after the beating of the tree (Isa. xvii. 6), and excite a longing for more which cannot be gratified. We may be sure that in Israel's prime the telling of proverbs was almost as popular as the recital of stories, and became a test of ability. For—

The legs of a lame man hang loose,
so is a proverb in the mouth of fools (xxvi. 7);

and though Sirach says of the labouring class, 'They shall not be found where parables are spoken' (Ecclus. xxxviii. 33), it is reasonable to account for this by the aristocratic pride of the students of Scripture in the later Jewish community. At any rate, as I have said already, some at least of the early literary proverbs are very possibly based on popular sayings; these would naturally embody a plain, bourgeois experience such as marks not a few of the proverbs in our book. Dr. Oort conjectures[1] that some of our proverbs were originally current among the people as riddles, such for instance as, 'What is sweet as honey?—Pleasant discourse, for it is sweet to the soul and a medicine to the bones' (xvi. 24); 'What is worse than meeting a bear?—Meeting a fool in a fit of folly' (xvii. 12); 'What is sweet at first, and then like sand in the mouth?—Stolen food' (xx. 17). Certainly the introduction to the 'proverbs of Solomon' may seem to imply (i. 6) that the collection which follows contains specimens of the riddle, but probably all the writer means is that the 'words of the wise' are often 'knotty' because epigrammatic. We may indeed reasonably hold that, like their prototype Solomon,[2] the 'wise men' were accustomed to sharpen their intellects upon enig-*

  1. The Bible for Young People, E. T., iii. 105-6.
  2. 1 Kings x. 1; comp. Menander's account in Josephus, Antiq. viii. 5, 3.