The Cobbler Turned Doctor

Summary

The story centers around a cobbler who, driven by poverty, decides to masquerade as a doctor in a town where he is not known. He creates a false reputation for himself by claiming to sell a miracle antidote against poisons. As his fame grows, he falls gravely ill, prompting the town's governor to challenge his supposed medical expertise by asking him to drink a concoction allegedly mixed with poison as a test of his own medicine's efficacy. Fearful for his life, the cobbler admits his lack of medical knowledge and acknowledges that his reputation was built on the gullibility of the townspeople. The governor then addresses the public, highlighting their error in trusting a man with their health who is not even competent in his own trade of cobbling shoes, thereby underscoring themes of deception, gullibility, and the importance of recognizing true expertise.

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A Cobbler unable to make a living by his trade and made desperate by poverty, began to practice medicine in a town in which he was not known. He sold a drug, pretending that it was an antidote to all poisons, and obtained a great name for himself by long-winded puffs and advertisements. When the Cobbler happened to fall sick himself of a serious illness, the Governor of the town determined to test his skill. For this purpose he called for a cup, and while filling it with water, pretended to mix poison with the Cobbler’s antidote, commanding him to drink it on the promise of a reward. The Cobbler, under the fear of death, confessed that he had no knowledge of medicine, and was only made famous by the stupid clamors of the crowd. The Governor then called a public assembly and addressed the citizens: “Of what folly have you been guilty? You have not hesitated to entrust your heads to a man, whom no one could employ to make even the shoes for their feet.”