Friday, May 8, 2009

What's a poetical line like you...

...doing in a Bible like this? "The witchery of paltry things obscures what is right." -- Wisdom 4:12. A welcome spot of "dark speech" in the soggy cardboard of the New American Bible.

For the last few days I've been avoiding what's called "news" - the witchery of trivia, political propaganda and other paltry things. To follow the news nowadays is to be a misinformed citizen. Instead, I'm spending more time with Elizabethan poets, Constitutional history, the worthwhile blogs, etc. It's refreshing.

2 comments:

  1. I like the sound and rhythm of "the witchery of paltry things"! And you're right; it's not often one gets to say that about a New American Bible rendering.

    For the record, the King James Version with the Apocrypha has : "For the bewitching of naughtiness doth obscure things that are honest; and the wandering of concupiscence doth undermine the simple mind."

    And my nearest-to-hand modern translation, the Revised English Bible, says "because evil is like witchcraft : it dims the radiance of good, and the waywardness of desire unsettles an innocent mind."

    Thank you for giving me the opportunity to open up Wisdom, one of my favorite books!

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  2. "Naughty" seems to have lost something since Philip Sidney's time. His Psalm 5:

    For thou art that same God, farre from delight/In that which of fowle wickednes doth smell:/No, nor with thee the naughty ones shall dwell,

    "Foul wickedness" still has some heft to it, but "naughty ones" is more a Monty Python line nowadays.

    From "naught", I suppose it smelled of the worthless emptiness of sin, the anti-Being.

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