As Gimpel explores the world, discovering how vast it is and how varied and remarkable the events are that take place in it, he has an epiphany about the distinction between “lies” and the “truth.” He comes to the conclusion that the things we identify as lies—because we imagined them or because they strike us as implausible—constitute a significant part of reality. First of all, as Gimpel has learned from his travels, many things that seemed impossible in Frampol really do happen. The world is such a big place and human history has been going on for so long and has such a long future ahead of it, that all kinds of preposterous-seeming things happen, or will happen. Thus, often when we invent what we think is a piece of fiction, it may well be the case that it has actually taken place somewhere; or if it hasn’t happened yet, there is a strong chance that it will happen. And even if it never happens, the fact of our dreaming it up in our heads means it has a place in our mental reality, which plays as significant a role in our lives as the reality of the external world. Thus, lies and dreams, rather than distracting from the truth of the real world, actually give a fuller picture of what the real world is. The fact that Gimpel has also become a travelling story-teller, weaving the same kinds of preposterous tales people used to make up to trick and humiliate him, also speaks to how whole-heartedly he has embraced the world of the imagination. But Gimpel makes up his tales not to deceive, but to entertain and enlighten. Finally, it is worth noting that as Gimpel has left Frampol behind and embraced the life of an itinerant traveler, “good people” of the world support and protect him in a way that the people of Frampol, his neighbors, never did. Gimpel finds that as he more fully and clearly embraces the role of the holy fool, the world has in it space for goodness and kindness, too.