A Single Shard
What does Crane Man say is worse than foolishness?
In recounting his past, Crane Man says there is something even worse than foolishness. What is it?
In recounting his past, Crane Man says there is something even worse than foolishness. What is it?
From the text:
Eventually, many of them became monks themselves. This would have been the usual course for someone who met with misfortune as Crane-man had, and Tree-ear wondered why he had never asked the question before. Crane-man looked almost displeased for an instant; then his lips curled into a sheepish smile. "Ah. There is a reason, but it is a foolish one, and would become more so in the telling." Tree-ear waited. "Psshh," Crane-man said at last. "It is a worse foolishness to do something foolish and then to be unable to laugh at it later! A fox, then. It was a fox that kept me from the temple." "A fox?"