Library of Formatting Examples:Gesperrt/16A: Difference between revisions
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{{LOFE:Navbar|prev=Gesperrt/15A|next= No-wrap|cat= Gesperrt}} | {{LOFE:Navbar|prev=Gesperrt/15A|next= No-wrap|cat= Gesperrt}} | ||
{{LOFE:Example start |image-filename=104-16A.png|iw= | {{LOFE:Example start |image-filename=104-16A.png|iw=30|tw=35}} | ||
This regard that Madame Blavatsky | This regard that Madame Blavatsky | ||
had for her colleague William Q. Judge | had for her colleague William Q. Judge | ||
Revision as of 04:52, 5 December 2025
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Correctly formatted text
This regard that Madame Blavatsky had for her colleague William Q. Judge continued undiminished until her death in 1891, when he became her successor. Madame Blavatsky, in 1889, writing in her Theosophical magazine published in London, said that the purpose of the magazine was not only to promulgate Theosophy, but also and as a consequence of such promulgation, "to bring to light the hidden things of darkness." She further says: /# As to the "weak-minded Theosophists"--if any--they can take care of themselves in the way they please. <sc>If the "false prophets of Theosophy" are to be left untouched, the <g>true</g> prophets will be very soon--as they have already been--confused with the false. It is high time to winnow our corn and cast away the chaff.</sc> The Theosophical Society is becoming enormous in its numbers, and if the <i>false</i> prophets, the pretenders, or even the weak-minded dupes, are left alone, then the Society threatens to become very soon a fanatical body split into three hundred sects--like Protestantism--each hating the other, and all bent on destroying the truth by monstrous exaggerations and idiotic schemes and shams. We do not believe in allowing the presence #/
Gesperrt in English
Never say "never". Here is a genuine use of gesperrt in English text: the word "true" in the small-caps text of the third paragraph.
