Sheshet devoted much time to
Biblical exegesis, and whenever he recapitulated his studies, as was his custom at the end of every thirty days, he used to say: "Rejoice, my soul! rejoice, my soul! For your sake have I read the Holy Scriptures; and for your sake have I studied the Mishnah and the baraitot". On the other hand, he took comparatively little interest in
aggadah, and he himself acknowledged his shortcoming in this respect, saying: "I cannot dispute with
Hana on aggadah". Some of his aggadic interpretations of Biblical passages, referring for the most part to Torah study, have been preserved. Thus, he interpreted
Proverbs 11:25 as implying that whoever teaches in this world will have the good fortune to teach in the world to come also; and explained Proverbs 3:16 as meaning that whosoever studies in the right manner receives as his reward length of days in addition to riches and honor, but that he who studies in a fashion not altogether unimpeachable receives riches and honor without length of days. He frequently elucidated Biblical passages by the application of well-known proverbs. Sheshet, who (as stated above) was blind, once mingled with a crowd waiting to see the entry of the king. A
heretic (probably an adherent of
Manicheism, against which Sheshet polemized) taunted him with the remark that he certainly would not be able to see the king. Sheshet, however, put the heretic to shame by recognizing, despite his blindness, when the instant of the king's appearance was at hand. When the heretic, in his astonishment, asked Sheshet how he knew it, he received the answer: "The earthly kingdom resembles the heavenly; God's appearance, however, is announced in I
Kings 19:12-13 by a deep silence". ==References==