[Gargantua and Pantagruel<br> Book III. by Francois Rabelais]@TWC D-Link book
Gargantua and Pantagruel
Book III.

CHAPTER 3
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CHAPTER 3.XIX.
How Pantagruel praiseth the counsel of dumb men.
Pantagruel, when this discourse was ended, held for a pretty while his peace, seeming to be exceeding sad and pensive, then said to Panurge, The malignant spirit misleads, beguileth, and seduceth you.

I have read that in times past the surest and most veritable oracles were not those which either were delivered in writing or uttered by word of mouth in speaking.
For many times, in their interpretation, right witty, learned, and ingenious men have been deceived through amphibologies, equivoques, and obscurity of words, no less than by the brevity of their sentences.

For which cause Apollo, the god of vaticination, was surnamed Loxias.

Those which were represented then by signs and outward gestures were accounted the truest and the most infallible.

Such was the opinion of Heraclitus.
And Jupiter did himself in this manner give forth in Ammon frequently predictions.


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