“The Immortal’s mind to men is quite unknown.”
Again Moses, having prophesied that the woman would bring forth in trouble and pain, on account of transgression, a poet not undistinguished writes:
“Never by day
From toil and woe shall they have rest, nor yet
By night from groans. Sad cares the gods to men
Shall give.”
Further, when Homer says,
“The Sire himself the golden balance held,”[889]
he intimates that God is just.
And Menander, the comic poet, in exhibiting God, says: