TO LEND AND PRESTAR
Polonius, in Hamlet (Act 1, Scene 3), advises us: “neither a borrower nor a lender be.” Getting into debt is one of the worst mistakes we can make, and I have tried to avoid it all my life. I am poor, but I owe nothing. What a relief. And as for lending, my poverty has kept borrowers at a safe distance! Keep away from mortgages, credit cards, and installment buying, and you will sleep soundly. In Spanish, prestar means ‘to lend’, whereas ‘to borrow’ is tomar prestado or pedir prestado . I have listed the following in my Phraseological Dictionary : He who lends loses his friend (he that doeth lend loseth money and friend) Quien presta no cobra, y si cobra, no todo, y si todo, no tal, y si tal, enemigo mortal “…he who lendeth money unto his friend, looseth both money and friend.” Richard Younge, The Prevention of Poverty , 1655, UK. Quien presta no cobra, y si cobra, no todo, y si todo,...