Page:Three Books of Occult Philosophy (De Occulta Philosophia) (1651).djvu/580

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556
Book I.

they are your enemies, and ſtand on a precipice, that ye may erre & fall head-long into miſery: if any therefore through his incredulity or dulneſs of intellect, doth not obtain his deſire, let him not impute the fault of his ignorance to me, or ſay that I have erred, or purpoſely written falſly and lied, but let him accuſe himſelf, who underſtandeth not our writings; for they are obſcure, and covered with divers myſteries, by the which it will eaſily happen, that many may erre and looſe their ſenſe; therefore let no man be angry with me, if we have folded up the truth of this ſcience with many Enigmaes, and deſperſed it in divers places, for we have not hidden it from the wiſe, but from the wicked and ungodly, and have delivered it in ſuch words which neceſſarily blind the fooliſh, and eaſily may admit the wiſe to the underſtanding of them.






FINIS.