“Yes, willingly.”
“You will not be angry?”
“Proceed.”
“When wealth comes to a man late in life or all at once, that man, in order not to change, must most likely become a miser — that is to say, not spend much more money than he had done before; or else become a prodigal, and contract so many debts as to become poor again.”
“Oh! but what you say looks very much like a sophism, my dear philosophic friend.”
“I do not think so. Will you become a miser?”
“No, pardieu! I was one already, having nothing. Let us change.”
“Then be prodigal.”