2 lines
1.5 KiB
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2 lines
1.5 KiB
HTML
<p>Tale-bearers are those who secretly carry stories from house to house, which perhaps have some truth in them, but are secrets not fit to be told, or are basely misrepresented, and false colours put upon them, and are all told with design to blast men’s reputation, to break their friendship, to make mischief between relations and neighbours, and set them at variance. Now the words of such are here said to be, 1. <i>Like as when men are wounded</i> (so the margin reads it); they pretend to be very much affected with the miscarriages of such and such, and to be in pain for them, and pretend that it is with the greatest grief and reluctance imaginable that they speak of them. They look as if they themselves were wounded by it, whereas really they <i>rejoice in iniquity</i>, are fond of the story, and tell it with pride and pleasure. Thus their words seem; but they <i>go down as poison into the innermost parts of the belly</i>, the pill being thus gilded, thus sugared. 2. <i>As wounds</i> (so the text reads it), as deep wounds, deadly wounds, <i>wounds in the innermost parts of the belly</i>; the <i>venter medius vel infimus—the middle or lower belly</i>, the <i>thorax</i> or the <i>abdomen</i>, in either of which wounds are mortal. The words of the tale-bearer wound him of whom they are spoken, his credit and interest, and him to whom they are spoken, his love and charity. They occasion sin to him, which is a wound to the conscience. Perhaps he seems to slight them, but they would insensibly, by alienating his affections from one he ought to love.</p>
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