For he knoweth not that which shall be The subject of the sentence is apparently the wicked and tyrannous ruler. He goes on with infatuated blindness to the doom that lies before him. The same thought appears in the mediæval proverb, "Quem Deus vult perdere prius dementat," or, in our modern condemnation of the rulers or the parties, who "learn nothing, and forget nothing." The temper condemned is that (1) of the cynical egoism, which says, "Apres moi, le deluge," (2) of those who act, because judgment is delayed, as if it would never come.

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