In Jesus, Moses, and in Moses, Jesus preach.
That King God made squint-eyed; things straight he could not see.
A King and squint-eyed? Ah! that one the two should be!
A master once a squint-eyed slave commanded so:
“Come here; that bottle from its shelf, go, fetch me; go.”
The squint-eye straightway asked: “Which, master, of the two?[81]
The case explain; clear up the doubt, and truly show.”5
His master answered: “Two there’s not; there is but one;
Put off thy strabism; with stupidity have done.”
“Good master,” quoth he, “chide me not; ’tis nature’s fault.”