Pure men of studied eloquence should study an audience before speaking deliberate words.§
Let good men who know the orator’s art knowingly await the right moment to articulate their good knowledge.§
Failing to assess an audience before venturing to speak is to be unaware of the way of words and remain ineffective.§
Be brilliant before brilliant men; but assume the dullness of pale mortar before dullards.§
Of all good things, the best is the polite reserve that refrains from speaking first when with elders and superiors.§
To blunder before perceptive, erudite men is like slipping and falling from a very high place.§
A learned man’s learning shines the brightest among luminaries capable of critiquing his language.§
Speaking to an audience of thinking men is like watering a bed of growing plants.§
Those who speak good things to good and learned gatherings should never repeat them to ignorant groups, even forgetfully.§
Expounding to a throng of unfit men is like pouring sweet nectar into an open gutter.§