Two snakes, very poisonous, were engaged in a friendly conversation. One said, “Oh! It’s no use biting them. Our venom doesn’t harm them. Perhaps theirs is more potent than ours.” The other said uneasily, “Yes. I feel they have fangs all over their body, even in their eyes. Whatever they touch turns into poison. They move about the air, it becomes nocuous. They go to the water, it turns toxic.” The first one, unfurling its hood, asked gravely, “Then how can we defend ourselves against them?” “By learning their art of biting—by learning how to bite for pleasure.”
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