By much slothfulness the building decayeth The maxim, though generalised in form, and applicable to every form of the evil which it condemns, may fairly be contemplated, in relation to its context, as having a political bearing. There, laissez-faire, the policy of indolent procrastination, may be as fatal to the good government and prosperity of a state as the most reckless profligacy. The figure is singularly apt. The fabric of a state, like that of the house (Amos 9:11), needs from time to time to be surveyed and repaired. "Time," as Bacon has said, "alters all things" (houses of both kinds included) "for the worse." "The timber framework of the house decays." The decay may be hidden at first (this seems the point implied in the relation of the two parts of the proverb) but the latent cause soon shews itself in a very patent effect, "The house lets in the rain," there is the "continual dropping," the "drip, drip, drip," which, to the householder seeking comfort, is the type of all extremest discomfort (Proverbs 19:13). Delitzsch quotes a curious Arab proverb that "there are three things that make a house intolerable, rain leaking through the roof, an ill-tempered wife, and the cimex lectularius." So is it with the state. The timbers are the fundamental laws or principles by which its fabric is supported. Corruption or discord (the "beginning of strife" which is "as when one letteth out of water," Proverbs 17:14) is the visible token that these are worm-eaten and decayed through long neglect.

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