Part 1: On humility, self-control, self-knowledge, self-respect, and self-restraint
L
Labal b fi ara w y , k l e  e y .
The butterfly likens itself to a bird, but it cannot do what a bird can do.
(Attempts to emulate those better endowed and qualified than oneself always prove futile.)
Compare L b l b fara w ar . . .
L b l b
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fara w ar , k l e b ar ; p p d
[65]
fara w gb do.
Ash mixed with water likens itself to indigo dye, but it cannot do what the dye can do; the large red bean likens itself to corn.
(One should know better than to attempt to overreach one's capabilities.)
Compare Labal b fi ara w y . . .
L gb j b w a di j m r ; ni t b n w j di oloyo?
Were So-and-So alive he would transform himself into a brown monkey; did the person who preceded him ever transform himself into any kind of monkey?
(One should not make excessive claims when there is no basis for them.)
[66]
L k - l k   fi l j ; m e g n   gb er .
A limp is no great asset for a person wishing to stop a fight; a masquerader's child is no easy playmate.
(One should know one's limits and also what one would be ill advised to attempt.)
L s n k l d t ; n ni t r b t mu.
One does not wear t
[67]
cap as a matter of course; only certain people have heads suited for such a cap.
(Not every person is made for greatness.)
L k l k y yin d d ; funfun ni w n y yin w n.
Cattle egrets never lay black eggs; only white eggs do they lay.
(Only certain types of behavior are suitable for people in certain positions.)
66. The proverb in all probability refers to al r nj (itinerant performing masqueraders) contests during which they claim to transform themselves into animals and reptiles. Oloyo is another name for the brown monkey.
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67. t is a rich cloth cap that only the prosperous wear.
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