Translations:Aesop/7/en
After having embodied in places of nobility with fine raiment and countenance and wealth, scholarship and all the things that could be admired of the world, having preached relentlessly and striven with the recalcitrant children of light, having been murdered and assassinated by the jealousies of the Nephilim, by spiritual wickedness in high places, he put on what was, according to legend, a deformed body. Through his fables, Aesop stripped people of their own disguises, and he exposed them by taking on himself a countenance and a body that was considered asymmetrical and even ugly and becoming the wisest among those who considered themselves masters.