than half truth. "Ye1 shall not surely die," said the Serpent :
"for GOD doth know that in the day ye eat thereof, then your eyes shall be opened,
and ye shall be as2 GOD, knowing good and evil." Truth commends
itself to the human spirit, falsehood can make itself acceptable only in the disguise of
truth. And it is never so successful3 in doing this as when it is mixed with
what is unquestionably true. In the end, no doubt, the deception will be detected, the
false rejected, and the truth accepted, confessed and honoured. But this is often a very
slow process; and meanwhile Falsehood does its work of destruction until revealed in its
true character by its evil fruits. None but a fool or a madman knowingly takes poison into
his system of his own free will: but how often is this done when the deadly drug is mixed
with and concealed in food that would otherwise be healthy and