Difference between revisions of "Cuttle-Fish: Persons Who Resemble A"
(Created page with "Cuttle-Fish: Persons Who Resemble A <ref name="term_75738" /> <p> It was an old Pythagorean maxim, 'Sepiam ne edito,' 'never eat the cuttle-fish.' The cuttle-fish has the pow...") |
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Cuttle-Fish: Persons Who Resemble A <ref name="term_75738" /> | |||
<p> It was an old Pythagorean maxim, 'Sepiam ne edito,' 'never eat the cuttle-fish.' The cuttle-fish has the power of emitting a black liquid which dyes the water and enables it to conceal itself. Have nothing to do with those who darken all around them that they themselves may be unseen; honest men love light, and only the evil find darkness to be congenial. When an author is too obscure to he understood, leave him till he knows how to write; when a preacher is mystical, high-flown, sophistical, shun him, for it is most likely he labours to conceal some latent heresy; when a man's policy is deep and artful, flee from him, for he means no good. No deceiver or double-tongued man must be admitted within the circle of your confidence. Remember the advice, never eat a cuttle-fish. </p> | Cuttle-Fish: Persons Who Resemble A <ref name="term_75738" /> | ||
==References == | <p> It was an old Pythagorean maxim, 'Sepiam ne edito,' 'never eat the cuttle-fish.' The cuttle-fish has the power of emitting a black liquid which dyes the water and enables it to conceal itself. Have nothing to do with those who darken all around them that they themselves may be unseen; honest men love light, and only the evil find darkness to be congenial. When an author is too obscure to he understood, leave him till he knows how to write; when a preacher is mystical, high-flown, sophistical, shun him, for it is most likely he labours to conceal some latent heresy; when a man's policy is deep and artful, flee from him, for he means no good. No deceiver or double-tongued man must be admitted within the circle of your confidence. [[Remember]] the advice, never eat a cuttle-fish. </p> | ||
== References == | |||
<references> | <references> | ||
<ref name="term_75738"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/charles-spurgeon-s-illustration-collection/cuttle-fish:+persons+who+resemble+a Cuttle-Fish: Persons Who Resemble A from Charles Spurgeon's Illustration Collection]</ref> | <ref name="term_75738"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/charles-spurgeon-s-illustration-collection/cuttle-fish:+persons+who+resemble+a Cuttle-Fish: Persons Who Resemble A from Charles Spurgeon's Illustration Collection]</ref> | ||
</references> | </references> |
Latest revision as of 00:08, 13 October 2021
Cuttle-Fish: Persons Who Resemble A [1]
It was an old Pythagorean maxim, 'Sepiam ne edito,' 'never eat the cuttle-fish.' The cuttle-fish has the power of emitting a black liquid which dyes the water and enables it to conceal itself. Have nothing to do with those who darken all around them that they themselves may be unseen; honest men love light, and only the evil find darkness to be congenial. When an author is too obscure to he understood, leave him till he knows how to write; when a preacher is mystical, high-flown, sophistical, shun him, for it is most likely he labours to conceal some latent heresy; when a man's policy is deep and artful, flee from him, for he means no good. No deceiver or double-tongued man must be admitted within the circle of your confidence. Remember the advice, never eat a cuttle-fish.