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THE
SPIRIT
OF
HEBREW POETRY,
/
BY
J.
G.
HERDER.
IN
BURLINGTON:
E D
WA
R D
1833.
SMITH,
Entered according
to
Act of Congress
in
Chauncet Goodrich,
in the office of the
TO THE READER.
In entering upon this second portion of the work, I would repeat the wishes which I expressed in the preface to the former, and shall only add here such
remarks as apply peculiarly to the present volume. The form of dialogue employed in the introduction is dropped here, because, in treating matters of the kind here presented, it would only have been burthensome, and have weakened the impression intended to be produced. The reader is supposed rather to be seated in familar discussion with the author or with
himself, and
in adopting this
Where
upon what
the matters
here treated
of,
are perhaps too strange and foreign from received opinions, to gain the assent of the pubries instituted,
But what is not done to-day may be done to-morrow, and those, who do not here find satisfaction on topics treated of in this part of the work, I beg will withhold their conclusions, and wait for th^ third and last parts of it.
lick at once.
have
wounded
award
to to
Others,
trust, will
me
me.
leave
every one the reward of his labour, aiming myself only to gather fruits that may be useful, and now and
then a flower for enjoyment.
give
What
pleasure would
it
have made more accessible, more natural, and more delightful the view of the Sacred Scriptures, which they exhibit from the side from which I have laboured to present them. The influence of the impression thus produced would be of wide extent, much wider than I can explain by a few brief remarks. The observations, which, to many readers might appear too learned, I could wish to have passed over by all such. They are inserted for the sake of others, to whom the reasons of my translation must be given. No word is employed without necessity, or for a disto
me
play of learning
critick
for
my
vocation
is,
not to be a verbal
to
of the
Hebrew
to
language,
but
make
the
Hebrew books
proper
use.
light,
intelligible
by placing them
in their
and
show
and
Herder*
HEBREW POETRY.
Hebrew Poefy had its origin in How far therefor* 1. The union of ouiwtird form with inward feeling. how far humin. First essays in poetry among the it is Divine, and Hebrews. The most ancient tablet of images. Language and poetry,
an imitation of thit creative agency, which determines the
ble essence and
intelligi-
outward form of its creations. Whether the poetical images and feelings of one nition, especially an ancient one, are to
be judged by those of other nations.
poet.y.
ions
Whether individual images can be taken out of their connexand compared to any purpose with each other. Example in Job's
ii<irse.
description of the
2. Personification.
human mind.
Its efTects
on
Examples
this,
oi
it
Fable.
(Jrij,in
of
and
its
maxims of prudence.
its
Respect
in poetical
which
it
was
beid in the
E.'.sf,
and
influence on poetry.
Tradition.
Essays
family tradi'
5.
Poetical invciition.
Its
other inveniiofis,
the
design. Examples of it in the Cherub and kingdom of the dead, &c. Collection of these
its
different
is
movement
and purpose
into
i
t'le
whole of
harmony, and the most ancient times was adapted to a chorus. Combination of figur-itive discourse and the song. Genius of Hebrew
i
poetry, as learned
from
its
or gin.
Appendix.
poetry.
Some
oi the
1*
Hitherto,
in
phenomena exhibited by
Hebrews, we havp
will
We
now
sit
down,
and arrange
in
The
its
We
Hebrew
1.,
poetry.
I
This, as
showed
in
treating of the
radical
is
words of
form and
From
own
feeling,
and
The whole
all
universe with
its
movea vast
for the
He
life,
which
them.
is
own
ing as he feels
and impresses
its
upon him from without, accordhis own feeling upon it, forms
original
elements.
may
human and
with
Divine,
for
it is
in
of feeling in man,
the feelings of his
who placed
num-
upon him, and mingled them with own breast. He gave him also language
far is the oriIt is
human
in respect to the
measure
ami peculiarity of
is
this feeling,
given to
it
for only
human organs
Poetry
a Divine
we understand
;
by
it
what
whatever was
given to the most godlike men, even through a higher influence, to feel and experience in themselves,
was
still
human.
If
we knew more
of the psychological
ati'l
historical
circumthe
first
children of creation,
we might perhaps
tion.
give also a
more
definite
conclusion re-
has denied us
and thus we
human.
The
was
first
exhibited
full
in a dic-
of imagery
world, in
know
of no poetry in
the
which
this origin
is
The
first
series of
in
Light
is
the
uttered
word
of the creator,
human
creation
is
the
the
luminaries,
creatures in the sea and on the land, are measured and esti-
to the
human
eye, to
man.
The wheel
bracing
in
himself as
God
all
In giving
his
names
to
all,
and ordering
own inward
feeling,
creative poet.
Following
this origin
of the poetick
art, instead
of placing
its
we might
still
it
in
Gen,
form and determinateness to the objects of its creation. Only of God, however, are truly ohjeclive
in
have actuality
their
Man
forms,
can only give names to these creations, arrange and link them
together; beyond
his
this, his thouglfts
remain but
are
lifeles:^
his feelings
not
in
them-
intuition, with
the
which we contemplate and systematize the ol>jects of creation, more unsophisticated ai.d full the impulse of feeling,
which impels us to impress every thing with the purest char-
that which
matks the
will
to that of
beautiful, the
more
more powerful
be our poetick
and
man of
in their
feeling, the
this
most
doubt whether
origin
by the
Hebrew
^ U)
to ii?tprint to to
and so
speak in
are
pro-
lheQ"'^ty^
to
of the
Hebrew
a
poetry
;
and again to
finally,
speak as
to he
king or judge,
mouth.
powerful by the word of one'' Here we have the history of the origin of poetry
have dominion,
it,
which
is
most powerful
in its influence.
it
not necessary to
tliat
the j)oetical images and feelings of one people, and of one age can never be judged, censured, and rejected accord-
Had
Creator so ordered
if,
that
game spot of
earth, at the
we had all been born upon same time, with the same feel-
injjs
rn
since nothinir
IS
more
human
on whici)
and passions
depend, since
ture, that
it
it
human
na-
anew under every climate, in every age, and every peculiar mode of existence, since finally that modicum of articulated air, which we call
organize and form
language, and which yet bears upon
its
light
and butterfly
wings
all
seems
to indicate either
a stupid or a proud
presumption
poetical
to
most
its
and fashion
conceptions in
It
manner
to suit
wants.
its
human
him
in
life,
(at least
feel,
men imagine
as a
same manner
man
of
of
which with us
is
the squeamishness
and over refinement of our exhausted and worn out hearts. We must learn to dwell long upon plain and siiiiple imagery,
to revolve
them over
in
our contemjilations,
in giijantick
to excite
the
forms.
Such
They look
with child-like
with discrimination.
pears to them
that are
in the
10
upon
their unpractised
They know
to belittle the to
its
not as yet
how
falls
to
The tongue
strives
express
and
language
not
They
art
often speak
tilt
learn to
and
let
those Orien-
it
belongSy
and compare
style
No
is
two things
alike.
No
one thing
made
for
compared with another, and the most fresh and delicate growth, when torn from its place, is the first to wither. A poetical image exists only in its connexion with the emotion that prompted it. In losing that it loses
the purpose of being
is
comparison of extract-
removed from
us, they
sung
in
another world, in
we discoursed about Should one compare for example, the picture of a horse in Job with Virgil's description of it, and neglect to remark, who it is that speaks in Job, and for what end, what was the
them.
character and estimation of the horse in Virgil's time at Rome, and in the days of Job in Idumoea, and for what purpose it was
introduced in these different authors, (to say nothing of language, metre, thegeniusof the people, and the form of their po-
11
etry)
would they be
2.
would he form a good comparative estimate of them ? fairly balanced and compared?* But we proceed.
or image of sense accompanied with emotion
in the
life,
The form
becomes
readily
its
influ-
ence a thing of
higher step
It
is
the second
in the origin
human
is
soul to
itself, to
like itself,
and thus
every thing.
loving us
;
That which
is
agreeable to us
we regard
hate
it
;
as
what
we
that,
with which
also,
we would
slightest
to hold converse,
its
speaks to us
utterance,
is
and
its
sound,
most
trifling
In this respect
all
their
that
distinction of gender,
and events which took place regarded as workings and agencies of living beings, according to the analogies of our
human
being.
is full
of personifications, and
to poetry,
* Aikin, in his
No
poet will or
poetry aims not to give particular traits with distinctiveness, but to give
power and effect to the combined whole. This must be looked for as the aim of the writer in Job, as in the same passages, the gigantick, the
mysterious, and the marvellous, in these pictures, belong to the general
The
was
suitable
aim of the book, and indeed made it necessary. But so soon as we suppose tlie author to have Lioeii an Egyptian, all these relations fail, and are out of r': '.lecause in that country every one must buve been familiar wi a the ostrich, and the hippo, ;, the crocodile,
potamus.
12
it
is
around
us,
and ascription, as
with vvLi^h
it
were, of our
own
we hold converse,
has formed not only the inspiring principle of language, of speech, but to a certain extent also the first development
and existence of moral principle. Relations of feeling and mora! duties cease, where I conceive nothing in a living being analogous to my own being. The more deeply rnd inwardly
I feel this
it,
so
much
an-
the
it,
more
in
accordance with
savage
my my own
The most
men
in their
state,
made use of
of overfeelings
flowing sensibility to
them the
In the blood
to
of Abel his
So
brute creation,
all
seemed
to be
animated by
ion.
and he sought among them all for a help-meat and companThe sun and moon were kings of heaven, servants of
God
himself,
workwork,
his
Nay, what
be
his vicar
Extravagant
was
as this rep-
resentation
may seem
to a heartless deist,
yet natural
and necessary for the unbiassed feelings of the human heart. Without God tl>e creation is for us a chaos, and without a
is
we
do, no friendship or
affection towards
him is possible, nor can we feel a child-like confidence in communinj4 with a being, so beyond our knowledge, and yet The infinite Cod, therefore, vouchso intimately near to us.
safed to render the primary ideas of liim?elf as accessible,
to
man, as was
in
the
first
pictures of
13
creation, as in
the
history of the
is
patriarchs
this friendly
man
also
to
man.
God
all.
the father of
to
He
visits
them
as a friend,
be invited to
with his son
He was more
pleased
Abel, than with Cain, and in vouchsafing his presence to Noah after the flood he smelled a sweet savour from the re-
newed
earth.
On
the contrary, he
field,
if
as
it
Of Abraham,
he
him
the
name of
a hero.
we have
affecting discourses,
and so
it is
pathy in
all
kinds of emotion.
human
heart,
(and
it
it
of doing so by
of the heart
is
own
man
them by
rules,
he will find
In
of personification
its influence. Every them has voice, mouth, hand, countenance, and those relations, which render their representation as son and daughter, one, become necessary for them as for other Orien-
tals
An
idiom, however,
in Jones'
commentar, poes,
Asiaticee in euffi-
14
which
''
for the
apprehensions, for
the bolder
is,
we may almost
it
affirm
it
as a general rule
figure
3.
the
more
is
is
represented in
The
transition
from the
is
more
When God
Adam
to see
what he would call them, he placed man in a school of fable. In order to be able to designate an animal by a name he
must know its character and instincts, and both were learned from the animal's actions and mode of life.
least reflection applied to these, since the
to
be
The
being,
man
thereby brought
his
them
into connexion,
own
so,
when unexpressed
a fable was
The
first
Adam
all
the objects
of creation, pre-suppose this tendency of his mind. It is the It might be said, indeed, that punctum saliens of fable.
from
it
first
similar feelings with men, the influence in cultivation of his reason. forming a had has It is not only that in order to attain it, man must observe the
animate creation in
its
or otherwise.
What we denominate
fall
cient numbers.
son,
daughter,
may
be referred
to.
15
was the
first
As
we
are
derstandincp of
itself
now rendered skillful by experience, so then the unman in his state of nature formed and guided
Their adapfully developed, their char-
tive
and
Here
then,
man was
placed in a school
most
first
it is
and
different
modes of
action,
The earliest names, by which distinctive characters among men were designated, are all derived from animals, as the
first
general
we
shall
maxims relating to manners and prudence for show their origin in fable. This last remark pursue more at large.
A
still
general
maxim
ticular occurrences,
So
it
is
with
many of
the pro-
ancient nations.
actual
&c. and indeed with all the finest proverbs of The fable was constructed in view of an occurrence the moral lesson was deduced from it,
;
and
it,
to the senti-
ment, was compressed into a metaphor, a proverb, or even an enigma. All these modes of representation are essentially
one, and are
favourites.
all natives of the East, where they are peculiar There the fable was invented, and there proverbs,
of
maxims, enigmas, even the radical forms of language are full fable. The whole ^rt of poetry has there a sententious
16
character, and a dress of fable,
which separates
it
widely
style in
There
tiful.
allegory and fable, are the most' abundant and the most beau-
In
one
of trees,
we may
short of the
strings of
former
in
richness of poetical
invention.
The
pearl, as
more elevated
poetry,
which
expands
its
richly
nificence, appears to
forms of poetry we
place
4.
;
them noble and godlike. But of these speak more at large in their proper
to remark,
at present
we proceed
That even
when
it
relates
to
the ancient
patriarchal traditions,
readily
assumes the
the
becomes
as
it
Whoever reads
Old Testament, from the most anscarcely deny this, and one, that is acquaintIt
is
be
still
less
disposed to do so.
them from
itself aflfects
them
for the
of words
but for the most part also the form and outline of
is
poetical.
Nor
its
is this at all
prejudicial
17
it
was taken
and retain
this
The
continues
downward
has
to the history
of the Jewish
patriarchs.
Tradition
formed into a
forth as the ori-
beams
right to
What among
other races
firmed by genealogical registers and monuments, and exhibiting such simplicity of ornament, that the artificial forms of
it.
Among
all
grown out of tradition, and among the Hebrews it has remained even down to the period of the kings, in regard to the style,
almost always traditionary
in its character.
To
come now
called,
distinctly marked unknown, and having its own distinctive character. Of this poetical creation the Cherub may serve as an example. The lion, the ox, the man, and the eagle are beings well known the combination of them into a
which consists
combining known,
images, to form a
new
creation before
was
the
work of
poetical in-
import of a sym-
19
truth.
The
parts themselves Qf
2*
18
the composition are taken from nature, and
I
know no
fiction,
its
Hence,
new
is
removed
from each other coincide in the essential characters, and leading forms of those beings, with which they have peopled
the world of their imaginations. the features of which are recognized
leading forms,
nations,
which
have poetry,
creations.
is
It
which, in
history,
and, in
lies
Egyptian temples.
occurs
traditions
its
own
Midis
Even
Age
has
made use of
in
it,
un-
The Hebrews,
my
traditions respecting
strange
and marvellous.
According
to their
account
proachable.
itself,
easy transition, it become component parts, a mystery, a synthesis of the most noble and exalted of living creatures. It came to be
this,
From
by an
in its
who watched
last
over them.
first
It
was transferred
also
became
These
applications of
alone.
however, belong to
in the char-
Hebrews
The Cherub,
19
acter which
it
known
in the character
given
it
among
Hebrews
after the
it
glory of God,
it
have explained.*
From
this
wings
In
fiction.
The ground of
mind the numerous fabled creations in the Oriental every fiction is for the most part a truth
we have
fic-
fiction,
the extravagant.
An example
of this
is
of the tree of
life,
Paradise.
intelligible
and natural
the tree of
was gradually,
ped
life
into a strange
Now
was represented as a peculiarly healthful tree, that stood near to that which bore the forbidden and deadly fruit then and it become a growth productive of physical immortality the tree, by which God proved the obedience of man, was,
; ;
become
The same
process of the fancy will be found in regard to other inventions of Oriental fable.
were
in
real animals,
were pictured
* See Vol.
1.
Dialogue VI.
30
would have transformed them
and mere objects of wonder.
In the prophets certain fictitious animals occur, the existentirely into creatures of fable
ence of
traditions.
which was
at
in
the
popular
kept
itself
But aside from these, the Hebrew poetry has pure from whatever is monstrous and inconceivable
As
it fills
Jehovah, so
its
boldest combinations
of imagery proceed
the voice of
;
from
this
source.
the
God, a
voice which
was his garment which he cast about him as a mantle, and in the morning dawn outspread upon the darkness of the night.
sacred poets understood
light
his
Univer-
nature composed a
his
employed as
filled
ministering servants.
The
universe was
form
for
Word
of his
will, the
in the earlier
demons,
nations
this
was
vile, imbecile,
till
as
it
was.
of God,
whom God
on the
side of
God
for the
21
complaint.
ly
Thus
book
is
whol-
process.
The kingdom of
occurrence
tions.
conceptions so natural in
No
itself, that I do not wonder at its Hebrews, as among many other nametaphorical separation of the body and the soul
among
the
was yet known, and the dead with their visibly prostrated powers, were conceived as still living in the grave, but in a
shadowy, obscure, and powerless condition.
voice of the dead was
The
voice of
the murdered victim cried out in his blood, and the feeble,
stifled
still
The whispering
a general article
voices of those,
who
of popular faith
Hebrews, the Arabians,* and Now as the tombs of the East were other ancient nations. spacious caves, in which multitudes were deposited side by
with
side in their
last sleep, the
conception of a subterranpous
easily
formed. Thither whole families descended to join the ghosts of Heroes, kingdoms, and all the trappings of victheir fathers.
which they were buried, went down there together. The heroes, who were already there received them and as powerless shades they pursued the same unsubstantial phantory, with
;
tom of
glory,
in life.
To
all
these
or strong hold,
was given a king, with his royal tower whose bars and gates no one could break
to light
through
for
and
life.
There murmured the dark rivers of the dead, because in the deep caverns of the earth we so often meet with streams of water, and hear their obscure, subterraneous, and melancholy sounds. The dying man hears these streams, because
according to oft
recorded experience, the senses of those
Hamasa,
p.
558.
22
sinking through weakness, as they gradually
sciousness of sounds as of distant waves.
urative representations, death,
for his prey,
fail,
have a config-
In the same
who
is
is
sumed in the earth, he is described as a monster, who feeds upon and devours the dead. So neutral were all their transi-
common
to almost all
nations.
We
which
all
will
personifications, the
same
and
inspiring prin-
of energy,
we
From
and
these
expressions of the
prophets
difier strictly
style, only as the weaker from the stronger, the later and often imitative from the ancient and original power. For
in the
The language
in their
become more practised, images and sentiments had become more common-place, the spirit of poetry did not reach nor retain the vigour
If
no
23
liar species
of poetry.
Their
still
style
was
movement
When the
style is aphoristick,
we have
observable.
class,
nT^n?
the
is,
it,
dis-
course, includes
more than
mere
at the
same time
of
apprehension, belongs to
princi-
To what
is
sublime or enigmatical style of figurative discourse be expressive of praise or blame, of love or hatred, of joy or
They are
all varieties
But we here enter upon a second species of the poetick art, mean the song. So soon as musick was invented, poetry acquired a new power, a more graceful movement, and greater harmony of sound. The simple utterance of motion in
I
images of sense had only the most natural and simple form and dimension, the systole and diastole of the heart anjl
breath
the parallelism.
With
it
24
rhyme, as we see in the song of Lamech.
What was
before
a simple play of the breath, became now a measured sound, a dance, a choral song, a musical utterance of emotion.
musick was invented, lyrick poetry also, and the dance measured movements without doubt were brought into Let us see then what the art of poetry gained or lost use.
in
When
by the change.
1.
If
it
expressions, these
and
movement of
Whatever may
in a lyrical
will
ingly.
joy,
hymn
in the
modulated
the same
There
are, thereis
conception
The
elegy HJ''
p5
^^Wf
the
song
of praise
fl/'r'^fn*
and' the
different
modifications of the
mode of singing arising from the difference of instruments, all come under the common name, song
"IIDIDj
duced.
which derives
its
distinctive
import
from the
To
is
circumstances, and to
the idyll,
Hebrew
deed unpoetical.
parts
Among
in the
acter
of
the
idyll,
although
of
whole corresponds
utterance,
to
the general
conception
Even the
and
in
is its
more general
most
form
to
of figurative
not
absolutely opposed
the song, as
we
perceive in
many
25
of the Psalms,* and in short, the contents, the subject matter
do not determine the kind, but the mode of treatment, and the form in which it is expressed.
2.
From
this
view
it
whole and
all
in the
simply figura-
tive style,
except so
Not
red.
its
that I
own
and hence those Psalms, which are properly expressive of emotion, cannot be without these. The didactick pieces, though accompanied with musick, have
characteristick aim in
less of these,
and so arrange
as such
by the
lyrick
letters
of the alphabet.
Yet even
this
must have a sort of measure, and a determinate extent, though it should be taken from the alphabet
itself.
poem
3.
artificial rules,
ments of the
than a
Nothing
is
more
difficult
to
translate,
Hebrew Psalm,
breathed in a rhythmical movement of the most free and unrestrained character, while the difficult measures of our lan-
guage,
its
tediously along.
and agreeable
in sound,
In
with
it
more
4.
logical distinctness, it is with less ease and eloquence. Most of the poetry, that was accompanied with instru Ps. xlix. 78., &c.
26
ments among the Orientals, was composed of the choral songs, often sung by several choruses, and sometimes accompanied
with the dance.
What
must
controled,
when
in
praise of
it
God
or in
was
and of popular exultation, I leave every one t8 judge accordIn our own times, when nations are ing to his own feelings.
mingled
in confusion, so that
we scarcely have the same God, common, and no common country, we kind. With them, musick and language
but were the native, the inspired and
had nothing
ness,
artificial,
No
no
chills of a
its
and
re-
strained
emotions.
The song
voice of a host of
many myriads
where
1
is
ating as this.
And
this, too,
and song, are the two leading forms, under which among the Hebreus manifested itself; and They are poetry for the eye should or could there be more 1 and the ear, through both which they soften and agitate the
allegory,
heart.
In the figurative
style
of discourse an individual
speaks.
He
commends,
The song
melt the heart, or they infuse instruction in sweet and liquid Both these kinds of poetry were held sacred among tones.
the Hebrews.
The most
first
kind
lyrical effusions
were
27
thn songs of the temple.
panded
will
be shown hereafter.
Neither
is
this
com-
mon
he that
may
knowledge.
The ground
of this
lies in
were
And when a man divinely inspired name of God he discourses of the destinies of the future, who would not readily anticipate more than And who would not, moreover, perhaps he means to utter.
illustrated
and explained.
in the
speaks,
when
gladly find
it
if
he be
Thus
is
it
and persevering
endeavour to approximate
spirit
at least,
of those ancient poets, and to listen to their oracles in the true of antiquity, undazzled and unprejudiced by glosses and
the notion of a mysterious meaning.*
*
I
have ventured
to
German
for gar-
office
nishing, and are not necessary to the connexion of the author's views.
28
APPENDIX.
Some
of the subjective grounds of the origin of
Hebrew
poetry.
The
characters of
Hebrew
poetry objectively
as they spring
to see
in oth-
words to find some of the circumstances designated, in which the language became adapted to such images and emotions, and could extend its powers of expression by personifications, fictions, songs
and proverbs.
Here
ceding observations,
tions.
1.
I shall
ideas, as
even the
first
chapters of Gen-
esis
cultivated people.
So long
as
man remained
first
Who-
gives proof,
images, and the scope of its representations, of being the work of a skilful master. No Orpheus here tames the tiger, and the lion no Silenus sings in grandiloquent poetry a cosmogony wrapped in fable. All this was the birth, or abortion,
in its
;
of a later
artificial
mode
Here
of representation.
the Elohim had
if
one of
The most
slight
and
facile
and active
toil,
to
be the
visible lord
of creation.
29
2. But again, these refined ideas, even in the relation, which they are here placed, are found already fixed in the
in
ra-
had heen planted in, This language, therefore, however numerous may be the traces, which it bears, in its ideas and the
it.
simplicity of
already
fragment
No
Ca-
Here
all hangs rather on a single thread, and so the whole language branches regularly from the simplest roots. In regard to its etymology and grammar, (I do
not say
its
brew language
a masterpiece of conciseness
to the
and orderly
arrangement, corresponding
fancy of the
impressions of sense.
it
One
were,
human
race, in order to
communicate,
as
it
A language
formed
it. They had in numerous images and emotions already embodied, which became their inheritance, and which they had only to apply.
We
know nothing
were embodied
in the ancient
we
know
Greece, that the Pelasgians and lonians were originally Asiatick tribes, having probably an affinity with those, to
this
whom
Mosaick records it was transmitted from upper Asia to the banks of the Euphrates, and its whole character gives proof, that the climate of Asia was its birth place. Its ideas are full of striking contrasts, of
language belonged.
According
to the
light
activity.
This
is
the character
3*
30
In Greenland
it
Where
nature
is
would not so early have unfolded itself. man labours under the
imposes, he becomes skilled perhaps
is
not
the development
as
it
Men
mode of
it
life
to pre-
serve and
torical
more
fully to carry
traditions
which
The
occupation of
human
im-
served
to unfold the
to establish paternal
for the
and
patriarchal authority.
domesticated animals
use of
man, and
still
in general.
is
God
of nature,
who were
roving
root,
mode of life
a favourable
soil, in
which
to take deeper
traditions,
Hence, the
come
in the
form of the
a
They
herdsman might naturally apprehend and preserve in his sphere of life and his associations, as much as was adapted to This same peculiar his forms of thought and mode of living.
by
so characterized,
and
to this
31
we
was
so,
the matter nearer to our modes of conceptions), what admirable firmness in the
for three
him, and
who gave
to the
dominion of God
in the
heavens, and
how
become
So
ed
how
beautiful, considered
even as
herdsmen
To
the successive
generations,
by
whom
bring
God
human
affections
of domestick
life.
No
Huron
life
had a
still
more decided
in-
to
peculiar distinction ?
its
The same,
its
of which
already treated,
language, and
original descent,
traditions,
and
its
phetick blessings of
pise
its
des-
Ham
and Canaan?
Because
ancestor degraded
them, and the shame of a deed of villany was fixed upon their Why wa.s it, that Amnion and Moab were placed so family.
at the
their
It
was
32
because they were dwellers in caves, and the offspring of an
in-
How came
it,
that Israel in
Egypt remains a
all
distinct people,
his
pre-eminence of
tian
rank among that people, numbered his sons, born of an Egypwoman of high rank, with these poor herdsmen, and not
with the Egyptians?
If here be not pride of birth distinctly
marked,
it
fathers, to
whom
preserve and
Why
to suffer affliction
to
which he sprung
He saw
in the
enjoyment
herdsmen, has, together with their primitive language, preserved to us, free from foreign mythologies, which they regard-
upon
which
an-
was
possible.
ces reigned, and where they followed a severe and laborious mode
of
a
life,
character.
6.
33
idences, that alphabetical writing
was invented
in
connexion
It
for this
was
cumstances
there
gether.
in
was an
effort to
Thus
same time the names of those characHebrew alphabet, means In form it was made to resemble a house, and at a house. the same time, by chance perhaps, the opening .of the mouth The alphabet must hi articulating it, and so of other letters. be very ancient, for it seems to have been formed at the same In these remarks I do not time with the language itself mean to give the Hebrew praise which is not due to it. It is
alphabets, and at the
ters.
Its let-
fitted
known,
unknown, were
sufficient to
determine the
and
relations,
and, since
all
accents, the completion, of the most ancient prosody was effected by placing,
where
it
to de-
were not
like
yet by
the brief
artificial
rhythm
was produced.
7.
belief,
commencement of human
cultivation arose,
among
And
as
little
as I
am
34
mode,
would
in
I
which
this
still
less
numerous written monuments of ancient found them among uncultivated tribes of the present day, this origin would undoubtedly be confirmed by greater variety of evidence.
so
it
As here
culiar
the
but
Thus here every thing proceeds from first original impulse, and the Hebrew race claim no merit, for transmitting, by their language, climate, and mode of
modes of thought.
these original impressions
times.
life,
unmixed and unsophisticated to These appear to me the subjective grounds, which have produced and moulded the original memorials of
later
this people,
ken or denied.
II.
The appearance
God
to
men.
Fire
was
the manifestation of the Divine presence. gel of God, the angel of his presence.
OfGod'sappearing to Moses, to the Elders of Israel, to Elijah, to Isaiah, Ezekiel and Daniel. Comparison of these with his appearing in the most ancient times. Gradations of poetry in the development of images. What influence was exerted on
Hebrew poetry by
of
it
was permitted
to
The word
according
God to Moses
Power of
to the
the Prophets.
Whether
will.
the Prophets
Form
given to
in-
Hebrew
spiration.
3.
Sifins
with what
nal,
and in
the
For what purpose, and Those exhibited by later Prophets, rn things exterthemselves. Examples from Isaiah.
originally signified.
What
name Prophet
How
in
transferred to ora-
Whether
the Pro-
the exercise
of reason.
Why
to the
Hebrews.
Most of the Hebrew poets were sacred personages, wise men Let us point out and unfold some of the peculiarities of this vocation and character. As Moses
in his
in the deserts of
Ar-
abia, he
came
to
And
the an-
gel of the
Lord appeared
him
v.
in a fiery flame
from out of a
Ex.
36
him from out the flame and revealed of his fathers. He gave him vi'ords of commission for the deliverance of his people, and when Moses suggested doubts he gave him signs. Thus visions words and signs, as with the first and greatest of the Prophets 80 afterwards, either separately or together, were the credentials of his follov/ers, and consequently also the soul of their
bush.
called
And God
God
poetry.
large.
1.
It is
The
a flame of
in a bush.
this
symbol in
the nearer consideration of it be what it might, it was here a symbol of the present manifestation of the Divinity, which,
under the circumstances of time and place, could not be manWhat prominent and visible ifested in a more simple form. object was there in the Arabian desert, but here and there
perhaps a tree, a dry and arid shrub
ancient times,
tions, a
fire
1
was
in the East,
all
na-
properties,
It
worship and idolatry, a standing symbol of Jehovah. Thus God is often called by him a consuming fire, whose wrath burns
even
also,
he appear-
ed on Mount Sinai he went before the host of Israel in a cloud of fire, sacred fire fell from heaven and consumed the
offering,
and a cloud
lik(? fire
In
the Prophets and Psalms, these images also are customary. The God, who here reveals himself, assumes the name
Jehovah, and
is
also
Thus
and and Only an
Jehovah moved
yet
in
it
camp of
Israel,
Israel,
was
God himself
34.
Ex.
iii.
2. 4.
6. xiv.
19.
24. xxxiii.
37
ignorance of the
spirit
of Moses in
these peculiarities of
language, could have created a doubt here, or have formed different kinds of " angels of his presence." The Jehovah
of Moses cannot himself be seen, Avhen he appears in the
and
this
is,
his visible
messenger, or according
name of God
is
in
As
in the
books of Moses
it is
so often
to
and expressly
said, that
;
no man
God
so
on the other
God
Then,
too,
God
signifies
even in the natural import of the term, the face of " the special providence and oversight," which
Israel,
accompanied
and so
far as
an outward sign of
this
presence was apparent, this sign was denominated the messenger, the angel of his presence.
To
to
Moses, therefore,
this
divine manifestation
was only a
refused
symbol.
From
admit him
to a vision of himself,
He
and the
the con-
Among
all
human
descended low,
the people
saw
the cloudy
all
column
rose up,
And bowed themselves each one before his tent. Jehovah spake with Moses mouth to mouth,
As one holds converse with his friend. And Moses said to God, "behold, thou
Lead
forth this people," but hast not
saidst to
me.
showed me
* Ex. xxxiii.
923. xxxiv.l 8.
38
Whom
Thou
saidst to
thou wouldst send to be my present help, me " I know thee by thy name,
hast found favour in
And thou
my sight,"
Jehovah said, " my presence shall go with thee, And I myself will give thee rest."
He
Then
For whereby now shall it be known That I, and this thy people are received by thee If not by this, that thou dost go with us.
And I and this thy people are distinguished From all the nations of the earth ?"
Jehovah answered, " even this I do for thee, For thou hast found acceptance in my sight, And by thy name I know thee." " Then" I beseech thee " show me thy glory." My goodness will I malJe to pass before thee.
And
For
will proclaim
I
Jehovah's majesty.
am rich
in grace,
where
give grace.
And filled
my face.
me,
my
He
There
a place by
Where
shall
my
And
My
I pass by.
Then I will take away my hand. And my back parts shalt thou behold.
But
my
And Moses rose up early in the morning, And went to Sinai as the Lord commanded him, And took the two stone tables in his hand. Then came down Jehovah in the clouds. And stood before him there. And proclaimed Jehovah's name. He passed by, Jehovah passed before him, And proclaimed " The Lord, the Lord God,
Merciful and gracious, long suffering,
39
Forgiveth iniquity, transgression, and
sin.
But
in
whose
He
visiteth the
Upon
their children,
Unto the
third
And Moses hastened, and bowed himself. And fell upon his face, and worshipped.
In like manner he manifested himself to the elders of Israel
in his essential
They saw
At
the
it
God
was
of Israel,
like
his feet
glowing sapphire,
To
God had
no place
in the primitive
Being farther
God gave
But
still
we
Moses, who
ried only in
accordance
remained the basis of the whole economy, vawitii the times, and the apprehensions
'In the beautiful manifestation
made
second Moses, upon the same Horeb, the mount of God, perhaps even in the same cleft of the rock, Ave cannot
fail to
now
given.
of God, and
the
came
to a
thou here Elijah ?" And when he had answered, the voice said, " Go forth and place thyself upon the mountain before
the face of Jehovah."*
And
lo
A great
*1 Kings
xix.
8 13.
40
That
rent the mountains, and brake the rocks,
forth before Jehovah, But Jehovah was not in the tempest. And after the tempest came an earthquake.
Went
in the
earthquake.
And
And after the fire came a And when Elijah heard the
small voice.
voice.
He wrapped
!
And went and stood in the door of the cave. And lo there came a voice unto him. And said, " What doest thou here Elijah ?"
The
who,
vision
to
in
reformation,
movements of God's
phenomena of the
vision.
To the
Hence
God appeared
as a
king enthron-
according to the
ancient simple representation, he was wont to dwell, are converted into Seraphim, which derive their characteristicks partly
from the servants of the throne and partly from the priests
of the temple.
The whole
The year in which the king Uzziali died. I saw Jehovah sitting on a high uplifted throne.
His train of glory
filled the
temple.
And
4.
of the Seraphim are derived from the Cherubim, and only their number increaseO, though the form of the animal, as well as the name, is otherwise changed. Seraphim, according to the import of the
The wings
41
With tSvain they covered their face, With twain they covered tiieir feet, With twain did they fly. \nd one cried to another and said,
"Holy, holy, holy,
Jehovah,
God
of hosts.
The
At
earth
is full
of thy majesty."
moved
him
that cried,
filled
And
temple was
with smoke.
The smoke
fering, to
of-
To
Ezechiel
God
The
sapphire
basement under
as described
his feet is
;
by Moses
himself
is
also from
not behold
the
first
God
in
humam
form.
The
Daniel
is
of the Prophets,
who ventured
to represent
God
fully
is in
in the
form of man.
It is a figurative
representation
This
among
I
And
The
head
forms,
nobles,
princes,
human form
their
Four of
for flight
fif
The composition
the picture
al
1
accordance
Pan.
vii. 9,
IQ,
42
Its
wheels
fiery
stream issued
And went
him,
Ten thousand times ten thousand The judgment was set, And the Books were opened.
This picture,
nai, as the)'
were exhibited
in
and
in
human
Thus
gress of time
in
In Job,
God
is
able being;
who speaks
can be looked upon only in his back parts, or in the outward manifestations of hiy* being. He shows himself in his attributes alone, and in striking symbols. In the time of the patriarchs he was conceived by them as a herdsman to the
;
tlie
which he
dv\'elt,
his
seen
in
the
To Abraham
The
farther
as
he was a
friend,
making
denominated an angel,
when he appeared
the subject the
to
form.
we
it
trace
seemes
silent reverence of the infinite and ineffable one Even among the Prophets the appearance of God in vision was no necessary part of their calling to the prophetic office. Samuel, next in order to Moses, God call-
me, the
increase.
ed only by a voice from his seat above the Cherubim, v/here no form appeared, and most of the others received the word
43
of
God unaccompanied by
to the
a visible manifestation.
What
it
this
gave
art
poetry of the
ail
Hebrews
to distinguish
is
from the
It
among
mythological nations,
obvious of
itself.
was the poetry of sages, not of mythological ghostseers and Hyms and epick poems, filled with visionvisionary idolat' rs.
ary forms of G>-'s
engaged
in
conflict,
were not
their
work.
The
works
with symbolical
in proportion as the
prim-
2.
But
still
word of God
to
more important, than the appearance, was the Moses, the revelation of his name, and the
for the deliverance
commission given
of his people.
Of
the
name
of Jehovah
we
shall
the law.
the soul, as
to Moses it was an obvious comsame also with the eai'lier Prophets. command was given them containing not general precepts
As given
it
we
find
the
So spake Samuel
Eli-
They required
I
command, and
hence
sisted
tinguish
might call them Prophets of action, of deeds, to disthem from the later Prophets, whose prophecies conmore of general instruction and consolation, of reproof
and encouragement.
in the
The most
living
His whole life was the word of God, was action. Of Samuel, as the Judge of the nation, the same may be said. In later times the power was in the hands of the kings, and to the Prophets nothing was
left
ficient deed, as a
we
a word however, which they represoit as efmost living and energising agency. Hence find so many images to represent the power of the prophet;
44
ick word, wliich by a distant analogy also were applied to the
spiritual efficacy of the
fire,
word of God
in general.
It is called a
hammer
and again a
in the delightful
image of
Isaiah. *
My thoughts
earth,
My
ways
And my
And return not thither, but water the earth, And make it bring forth leaf and herb. That ii may give seed and bread to the sower, So is my word, that goeth out of my mouth. It shall not return to me void.
But
shall
I please.
it.
And
So
prosper
whereto
I sent
shall ye also
go out from
me
with joy.
The
As
itself often
means among
the
He-
was given,
tian, so
to deliver his
to
merous plagues
port of
own
The imit was also with the oracles of the Prophets. them is twofold, made up of affliction and consolation,
evil
in both
the foundation.
They
the plagues
own
in the wilder-^
ness, of a delightful
This I
will
am aware
has with
many
812,
45
1
deny, that from the national pride of the Hebrews, the harsh
expressions of
many
As Moses undertook
true of most of the
so the
same was
who
is
mu.st be
As no one
where he would
we
which
utter,
which they
respect
is
treat as already
accomplishment, as matter of
fact, gives to
themselves
No
one
in
this
more an object
soul of the
and
still
greater sorrows.*
with pain,
cannot hold
my
peace.
My
The
For
Destruction, desolation,
all
cried,
the land
is
desolate,
suddenly spoiled.
shall I yet see the standard,
?
^
My
understand
me
not,
Unwise children and void of sense. Wise to do evil, but never to do good.
I
And
it is
Upon
I see the
And
all
1937,
46
I
behold and
all
lo
there
is
no man,
And
I
look and
Carmel
is
a desert,
And
Prophet,
who
the Prophets
Their souls expand again with the freshness of the rose, when the storm has passed, and their agonized sensibility,
fold
That this " energizing word, "this outspeaking of God by the mouth of a Prophet, gave to the poetry of the Hebrews a To them their oracles had peculiar form, is manifest of itself.
the utmost certainty,
truth.
They saw
ing,
tors of
even crea-
They smote
their
deliver-
ance.
God placed
his
message upon
their lips,
and breathed
on them with the fire of Divine inspiration. ed by an irresistible impulse, they spoke
their natural inclinations,
little
or nothing to correspond
to
them
in-
vented
pastime.
The
Had
we
which
still
undeniably
in .^schylus,
47
and of those, who prophesied either
of death.
in visions or at the
moment
The
later Prophets,
who
in figurative
God himself
unambiguous
voice,
vi-
and dreams,
is
sufiiciently
still
which are
What
the oracles of
the
Hebrew
poets moreover,
as
and in the play of fancy, they gain in the inward consciousness of truth, in godlike dignity, in sacred earnestness, and in
these respects will always remain the admiration of the world.
3.
To
signs, or
miraculous manifestations, which were adapted to the superstitious and conceited Egyptians, and designed to put to shame
their wonder-working magicians. These wonders had no more determinate aim than this, alid do not belong insepara-
The
workers were subject to be tried by the law of Moses, and could be condemned to death, if they taught any thino- contrary to Jehovah.
The
earlier
weak-
ness and idolatry, and these powers of the ancient world seemit
God
those
men of Egypt. Among the later Prophets, and more properly poetical in their character, the signs which they gave were of another kind. Instead of miracles, which supersede the laws of nature, the Prophet often employs
over the wise
is,
accompanying
sort, is
his
mands
tions.
Of this
48
speaks as a pledge of the deliverance of the kingdom of Judah, which is determined with reference to the age of the child.
Here it was only the connexion between the two events that was remarkable, because it was beyond the powers of merely human foresight. Whatever may be understood by the shadow on the sundial of Ahaz, its regress in the language of the Prophet, was a present sign of returning yeara in the life of
Hezekiah, and therefore
ture event, " a sign."
in that
connexion a pledge of a
fu-
other dignity
among Hebrew
to foreign
were ascribed
resort to
prophets, and a them was forbidden. God reserved to himself his signs as pledges and assurances, or as means of rousing attention to the word of Jehovah, and this only on account of unidolaters
belief.
and
In many cases the Prophet himself was the sign, either by means of things, which he was required to set forth as symbols,
or by fortunes
which he experienced.
Of the
first,
examples
occur
in Isaiah,
who
are witnesses.
As
in the latter,
is
through the
last
half of his
and
God
in joy
and
in
sorrow
seems
to suffer the
he exhibited to
we have hence
which are so
ters
affecting
his per-
me
of Isaiah, as the evangelical part of the Old Testament. of them, has indeed, been found
some cases
it
is
hardly
known
49
of
whom
the Apostle
is
speaking.
By
now been
when
In short, vision,
But what
is
Is
it
equivalent
to vates, poet
or
men
gies,
The word
phet."
elech,
God
man
The word
known
to
Abimthe
whom
is
ground of doubt
Among
;
those
who
This is plainwhich the word Prophet occurs in the most ancient writings of the Hebrews. Abraham was represented
ly the sense, in
to the
sels
of the Deity
in a strange land.
and who must be preserved harmless, even Again, God says to Moses,t " thou shalt
;"
showing
with
iii.
indis-
*Gen.
XX. 7.
Compare Ex.
vii. 1.
16,
50
putably, that a Prophet imports the
primi-
Moses and the Prophets, and indeed the whole prophetick character and " A claim, as exemplified in Moses, was founded on this*. Prophet shall God raise up like Moses, who shall speak to you in the name of God. Surely, the Lord will do nothing, but
it
often occurs in
The
poets.
conception
now
Neither
The
and
intelligible prose.
which they gave, were the other hand, Dabut not Prophets. The example
oracles,
On
of one, f
who
as
it
is
said, to
awaken
applied.
He
called
him
in order to
much
less
By
term seers,
also,
S \muel and David, they were clearly distinguished from minThey saw hidden things, looked into the future, and strels. were what we call wise men, " sages." But, secondly, because these wise men, whether they spake of the past, the present, or the future, were the mouth of the
Divinity
that
is,
;
tlie
Divine Being,
and so that came to be in name prophetick language, which was the most elevated poetry. Who, in speaking in the name of God, would speak in a manner unworthy of his majesty and Who that is inspired speaks coldly and without eledignity 1
*
Num.
7.
1
xii. 6.
Deut.
xviii.
15
20.
xxxiv. 10.
{
Amos
iii.
Kings
Jer. v. 13.
2 Kings
iii.
15.
51
Did not the Pythia think it necessary to utter her it were of the worst style of verse 1 The origin of this notion shows itself from what was said above, In all lanbut only as an incidental and derivative sense. guages poets are called vates but only because they were orivation
?
and revealers of
were
in reality, the
Nothing, therefore,
more
natural,
of Divine Oracles should, in process of time, be denominated prophesying, as we now daily use the word " preaching,"
The
is,
evil spirit
came upon
Saul,
and he pro-
We
dences of
it,
that poetry
and
this
power manifested
in his present
The
e.
spoke in
lofty
as Prophets
were accustomed
to speak.
Miriam, Debo-
rah,
al
inspiration,
and others were Prophetesses, because they had a poeticand inspired, especially sacred poetry, was alorigin.
And
musick and poetry were associated, and even the poet and musician often united in the same person,
it
was
in-
struments, that
lofty
Poetry never
as
when
is
it is
supported by mu-
feeling,
which
it
combined,
?.hat
enthusiasm.
But
52
name and
office distinguished
him
as a minstrel.
The
pro-
many of
was scarcely
fitted for
musick.
They
carefully distinguished
man
We
and political
must appear
ed by reason.
very strange, they themselves confess, and this was the very aim
of their actions.
cum
here.
was
They
were,
at
all
vulgar,
While
his
Jehovah was an object of reproach, oracles uttered in and containing severe admonitions would be counted
madness.
their truth.
name
and
folly
But
alas
Jehovah gave to me the tongue of the learned,* That I might know to speak in season A word to them that are weary. He waked me morning by morning,
He made mine
As
ear to hearken,
Jehovah spake
me
in
mine
ear,
And
I
gave
my
back
to those that
smote me,
And my cheeks to them that insulted me, Nor hid my face from shame and spitting. My God Jehovah stood by me, And therefore was I not confounded,
But hardened
my
face like
flint.
And knew
*Isa.
1.3,
53
Since he
is
Who
is
he that
contend with
me
I
Let us stand together in judgment Let him, who is against me, come near
Behold, Jehovah
is
my
helper,
Who
They
is
he that condemneth
shall
shall
me
all
wax
old as a garment,
The moth
consume them
you, that feareth Jehovah,
Who
And And
is
among
But walketh
seeth no light
in
Jehovah,
And
Behold
ye that kindle a
fire.
That compass yourselves with sparks. Go walk in the light of your fire. And by the sparks which ye have kindled. One movement of my hand upon you*
And
*
ye shall
lie
down
in
sorrow.
How
how
sublime an expression
Prophet but
his
hand and
They
lie
The down
THE PROPHETS.
My
Ye
inmost soul your sainted
spirits greets
messengers of God
rest,
Take now, amidst your palmy groves, that Which Horeb, Zion, Carmel never gave.
gifts
!
ye gave of old
rites
Laws and
To states prosperity and steadfast rule, And customs wise and good by you were
For great in soul, exalted far above The present times, and freed from vulgar
given.
fears,
Ye stood superior to the idle cares. And senseless turmoil of the busy throng, And backward far and forward cast your view. And saw the heavenly light of ages shine.
The light of ages, streaming
through'all time.
Enkindled in your souls a heavenly fire. That, glowing long obscure, sent forth at length
yet unborn.
Your ear
Of that small voice, to which at dead of night And early dawn, your wakeful hearts were tuned.
Like gentle showers from heaven, thus gently came Those tones, which yet with all the tempest's force,
Awoke the slumbering world, as if the past And future times had seat their m^irmurs there.
55
Again
Ye
hands of God
Like harps responded, and expressed his will, Revealed the future and his laws enforced.
Oh
Didst
thou,
lift
who on the holy mount thyself above thy people and thine age,
see, amid the thickest smoke, that light, That wisdom now and glory gives to all.
And
And thou, whose kindling spirit summoned fires From heaven, and from the dead the widow's son, Thou too, who didst behol Jehovah clothed
1
Ye mourners, who with deepest sadest tones And tears of anguish uttered forth your griefs; And ye, who at the Prophets' setting sun
In shadowy twilight saw the promised times
;^
|]
Ye
Prophets
all,
who now
in
purer
light,
Escaped from inward and from outward thrall. Breathe tranquilly in palmy groves that peace, Which Horeb, Zion, Carmel never gave
What now do
behold
In friendly guise
Commingled witii you are the wise and good Of other nations, friends of God on earth, The Druids, Orpheus and Pythagoras,
And Plato, and whoe'er by wholesome laws Has proved his people's father and their guide. Has listened to the voice of God in truth, And yeilded up to God a guileless heart.
* Moses,
others.
t Elijah,
t
Isaiah.
||
Daniel and
the closing
The evening
means
56
APPENDIX.
Reasons why Prophets were peculiar
to the Israelites.
The
existence cf Prophets
it
among
peculiar privilege,
may
also
be shown to
As
it
was
distinguished with
creator,
to the
this sacred
was manifest
the histo-
Shem may
dis-
He
left his
country in or-
God of
where a Mel-
chisedeck yet
lived.
But
to
The head of
Hebrew
men
as
and, what
is of still higher import even that of a friend of God, was by no means hyperbolical. Even in the book of Job a Prophet occurs, and throughout that work a religious
had become already a matter of political management Their Prophets were an organised society of As Moses was instructed in the wisdom, which they priests. taught, and now learned, that the true sources of that, which led
ligion
and
state-craft.
57
to
cestors, so
as
communion with God, were to be found among his own anwhen God appeared to himself, and employed him his instrument, no better word was in use, by which to deword Prophet. Prediction, or the was as little thought of with him
signified a
as with
Abraham.
The word
God
spake, and
his purposes.
Has
tiie
their cultivation?
And was
human
tlie
not he
who undertook
stacles
to
advance
amid obsupport,
apparently
it
whether he did
life,
as a teacher, or as an actor on
stage of
was he not truly a man of God, a genius of humanity? Let one but look at those nations, which have remained behind or sunk into a savage state observe to what a condition
;
of horrible depravity
human
nature sinks,
when
it is
not forced
upward by a living power and aroused from its gloomy lethargy, and he will then be able to appreciate the services of those
early guardians of our race,
who
They
human and
what the
and heaven
their lives in
men.
They
offer
up
with which as a divine commission they have been intrusted animae magnaj prodigi.
in
this
They
also,
which
it
"God
58
on them" according
to the simple expression
of the original.
Nor was
the
this great
man
same
So
spirit.
Thus were
to
those
men
derstanding,
who were
the
judge
God.
also
He
his
e.xpressed
up
who
its
ultimate perfection.
end by the
Spirit of
This
may
4.
nation.
But
as the noblest
advocati patriee
and best things of this world are liawas the name of Prophet. Orator js leit was their duty to be, and they became
in their times alone as wit-
in process of
inated a Prophet.
not to be denomwas with his office, as it is with all offices so soon as they become a mere mechanical employment. 5. Again let no one create difficulties for himself neither in regard to prophetick visions, nor with respect to wonders and
God
of truth, and
It
Amos desires
to the
phet.
The
ing
is
spirit
of striking representations.
effectual by the simplicity of
it
As
its
drew
to iiself
And
69
finally
we must
is
Whatever denominated a
extraordi-
sign,
even a
artificial
expression,
more
times.
such the attention of these sages was directed, and when they addressed the people they placed them in the most striking light. They were the mouth of Providence, and saw
To
to their view.
at
penetrating and
working ourselves into the subjective condition of the Prophets, when the spirit of the times has been so entirely changed.
Among
How
then shall
all
was affected and condiwhich was imparted to it 1 We, who know indeed, scarcely more how it was with the
spirit,
Homer.
If
we knew
this,
why might we
own
same model, and produce works, which, so far as their relation to the Divinity is concerned, might shame a Homer, an .(Eschylus, or a Pindar. What reverence for the Gods do we find in them, and here and there what sublimity and dignity,
It
not only
to
and that
it
power of imagination
in
them, there
is
much
of wisdom.
enjoyment of
writing, as
his own individual style of representation, and of we must leave to him his age and its characteristick aims, while we employ the fruits of his spirit only, for the benefit of our own times.
III.
Idomatick representations of deliverance out of great waters, of blooming deserts, and of the Shechi-
at the
upon the mountain, as a retinue of angels, as a warlike host, and as God of Sabaoth. Origin of this name. Its signification as extended in later times. The triumphal march of God as in
chariots of war.
the 68th Psalm.
What we
smoke and
Whether
sea
is
a mythical
representation.
How
it
Habakkuk's
we have
yet
none
in
which Moses
is
the hero.
The
de-
them
and the
freest poit
seems
me, a nobler theme than the horrors and extravagances of The most ancient lawgiver, of war and knight errantry.
to
in the organization
many The
history of his
in
God
men
61
pillars of fire
and
ot'
the
art, religion, customs, and nations, and an accompaniment of the marvellous, that is at the same time full of nature, would almost of itself, assume the form of an epic, that
from nature,
is,
Yet,
vyould
German Hebrew.
To him
the subject
His more unbiassed and more early acquaintance with the poets of his nation, must give to the work
a national one.
more
man
We
if
we
leave
ther to
make
a heroic
will
Since we have already spoken of the calling of Moses, we now proceed to treat briefly of his doings, of his conductthe Arabian desert.
poetry.
ing his people out of Egypt, his passage through the sea, and
his journey through
Obviously, this
is
Hebrew
When
series of the
works of God,
the de-
among which
I04th
107th
The
?salms are
into distinct
all
Their division
Psalms
In the
Moses
is
more 6
noticeable.
They
62
as
is
and almost
all
drawn
When
Israel
was a
child,*
And
And And
I
them
was thy God from Egypt forth, Thou knewestno other God,
And no
There
deliver but
me.
were they
full.
They were full, their heart was And they forgot their God.
proud,
The images
history.
here are
all
euTectionate designation of
born son
is
That
all
Israel
is
is
him
among
nations,
42d chapter
The
when we
neglect to
bear in
tion.
mind
that primeval
so
many images
God wrought
sea.
deliverance, of streams,
through which he
is
Canaan had
is
so little
through which
;
God
in a
Hosea,
xi.
63
ical
fact
became
"
He
me up
to
is
all
in the writings
dangers.
which he
to
applies
it,
he pic-
the clouds.
Commentators seem
life.
me
injudicious,
when
of
deliverance, referred
his-
To
the
same
origin
are
is
God
and
to offer
up nait
their sake.
When
is
may be made
which God makes plains and fruitful fields images in which were clothed even the return from captivity, and the delights of a coming golden age. I must go through a great, though perhaps, the most delightin regard to the deserts,
;
fid
part of Isaiah,
if I
would furnish
these views.
all
illustrate
We
the
Red
dwelt above them, and Canaan the object of their hopes, and
in tlie
all
the
To
young man, who would understand the Psalms and Prophets in their true spirit, I might give it, inded, as a general rule,
superseding
ry !"
all
others
single
word occuring
finest
casion
for
the
poetical
is
chapters.
What Homer
Hebrews,
to the
in his
relation to the
Of the
At
pre-
64
sent
we
When
Israel
forth,
The house of Jacob from a strange Then Judah was his sanctuary, And Israel his dominion. The sea beheld and fled,
Jordan was driven back,
people,
The mountains leaped like rams. The hills, they skipped like lambs.
What ailed thee, O sea, that thou fleddest, Thou Jordan that thou drewestback. Ye mountains, that ye leaped like rams, Ye hills, that ye skipped like lambs ?
Before the Lord the earth did quake.
Before the presence of the
God
of Jacob,
Who
The
flinty
This psalm
is
one of the
finest
The
expressed, the
mountains, and
hills,
and repeated
that
it
all
glance of Jehovah,
look,
which converted rocks and stones to streams and living fountains, all these give us, in the compass of this little ode.
the substance of a long description.
65
The
_
passage of the
sonorous song of triumph, wliich we have in this language. It is a choral ode, one voice describing perhaps the acts
themselves, those of the chorus striking in and as
it
were
re-
of
allitera-
doing violence to
forms,
is full
for the
simplicity of
its
the
Flowing and prolonged words but few in number float upon air, and terminate for the most part in an obscure monoformed perhaps the burden of the chorus.
Here
is
The
For he hath triumphed gloriously, horse and his rider hath he thrown
strength and
The Lord is my
my
song,
He He
is is
become my salvation.
my God
is
and
I will praise
him,
My
father's
God, and
I will exalt
him,
Jehovah Jehovah
man
of war,
is his
name.
Hath he
The
Are
reedy sea.
them,
Thy right
Hath shown
hand,
Jehovah,
majesty.
itself glorious in
Thy
right hand,
Jehovah^
c*
66
Hath dashed in pieces the enemy. By thine exaUed power
Thou Thou
It
consumed them like stubble. At the blast of thy nostrils, The waters were gathered together.
like heaps,
The enemy
My My
sword
will I
draw
out.
Who
is like to
thee
O Lord
?
Who, among
the
Gods
Who
is like
thee glorious
in holiness.
Thou stretchedst out thy hand. The earth swallowed them up.
AVith gentle hand thou leddest forth
The people which thou hadst redeemed. Thou guidest them with strength
Unto thy holy
habitation.
The
The princes of Edom are amazed, The heroes of Moab are seized with dread. The dwellers in Canaan are melting away.
Let fear and dread
fall
The
whom
Bring them in
Plant thy people
Lord,
67.
Upon the mount of thine inheritance, The place of tliy habitation, Which thou hast made ready for thyself, The sanctuary, which tliy hands have made.
Jehovah reigns forever and ever.
He went
with his horsemen down into Then brought Jehovah upon them The returning waves of the sea. The tribes of Israel passed dry
the sea.
Through
So
memory concerning
let it
the
whole
we should
be borne
to
in
which
were
to
in
be formed.
Hebrews,
as the song
The
rythmical move-
ment is animated by the same caesuras and cadences and by the same lively correspondencies of sound. The frequent
exclamations, the oft recurring
Praise to Jehovah!
Sing praises
to
Jeliovah
which
68
the historical song
is
arranged.
grew out of
chorus,
this,
as an
known
to
many
Jah or Jehovah.
The appearance
tion of
of
God upon
Sinai
is
Moses
itself fearfully
it
it was therefore became the subject of the most magMoses had it distinctly in his thoughts, when
sublime,* and
communion with God, who derived pleasure and The most High in
his
and
is
in his con-
The
mark
more
fully.
At present we
upon-
re-
the appearance of
personifications,
God
Mount
Sinai
gave occasion
for
The
diance, in which God was manifested, became, in the language of poetry, angels, orders and retinues, in the midst of
which the
Law was
given.
Even David| formed them into a made these ten thousand most High servants obedient to his com-
mand.
as given
Law
of
and uttered
forth by angels,
is
God
was in accordance with it, that this host accompanied him. Thus, he appears in the song of Deborah, where the stars in battle array fought for Israel,^ and I
doubt not that hence the exalted
oth,
name
bacame a
distinct
Deut. xxxiii. 2.
Ps. xlvii
18.,
IIDan.vii. 10.
Jud.
v. 4. 20.
69
brews.
plained
is,
David used
it
it first
as the
name
of the
God
of one
who
ex-
the
name
God
od
it
Sinai
proceeded from the glorious manifestations opon Mount from the lightnings and thunderings, and from the
;
starry hosts
mingling in the
conflict,
its
From
this, its
all
meaning
expressed
became
al
all
such poeticit
when much
used,
can no longthough
this
God
of war
was
its
primitive import. It
is
and
to the
God
of
all in
This
is
name, and
had nothing
to do.
When,
Moses,
of his majesty.
Deborah, David, and the Psalms, are the successive steps, by which they were elevated to their sublime conception. As an
let
us observe
how David
to
applies
in the wilderness
an object,
to^find
it
ark to
Mount Zion.
He
to
mountain, from victory to victory, and Deborah was plainly his model. The Psalm might be denominated the march of Jehovah, an expression used by Habakkuk, and derived from this Psalm.
the triumphal song of
* 1 Sara. xvii. 45.
GOD.
Our God
ei'ahs himself,
And
his
They
[The triumphal language of Moses, with- which he addressed when the march of the people'proceeded.]
As smoke disperses, so they As wax is melted before the
So
shall the
disperse,
fire,
wicked perish
at the
presence of God.
[Smoke and
fire
They They
with joy.
in their
march.
Here the
in-
commences.]
Sing praise
to
God
extol his
name
in
the desert,
name
Jah,
And
The orphan's father, the widow's judge. Is God exalted in holiness. Our God to the desolate
!
He gave a habitation, He brought to happiness those who were And the rebellious dwelt in a dry land.
'
bound.
71
[We may
tians,
who opposed themselves to the march of God. The desolate and those who were bound are the Israelites, whom
he
is
whom
he designs the
the
rich land of
Canaan.
The
other chorus
march
itself is
And
When
Then the earth did quake The heavens distilled in drops, When God looked forth upon them.
This Sinai there before the face of God,
The God
Thou,
of Israel.
God, didst send a gentle rain, Thou didst revive thy parched inheritance, Thy congregation can inhabit there.
God
[To
the poet comes also through She painted the heavens as drop-
make
ping of the clouds, which swelled the river Kishon and the Kadumim, and contributed to the victory. The gentle herds-
man
to
make
has here applied the heroic figure to a peaceful object, the wilderness a garden for the delightful habitation
These,
too,
and victory
follow.]
"
The Kings
She
that tarried at
Why
wait ye there
The wings
*
The noun
here
ie
leminine.
72
Her feathers sparkle with yellow gold. As the Almighty scattered the I'ings, The snow descended upon Salmon."
These words were, perhaps, taken from an ancient triumphIt related, obvisong, which as usual, was also satirical. In the Northern and woody ously, to the victory of Deborah. part of Judsea their freedom was at that time recovered by Isal
and mention
was made
also of the
snow.t
The news
to
decided the
battle,
and
it
was not
memorial of Deborah,
ick mother.
The
who remained
be-
hind
is
with a
subtilty
and refinement.
it
imputed
this
to
them, that
3. is
passage.
fell
on Salmon," pertain
to the taunting
expression
mained
were
to
found so conducive
her success.
When
Salmon, lying
in the
This conclu-
The
of the passage
may
be expressed as
follows
ye
who
rest
amid your
folds.
What stays you loitering there, To gaze upon your glossy doves And mark their golden wings, When God the Lord the nations smote And Canaan's heroes slew, Then truly was a wintry day, And snow on Salmon fell.
73
from timidity and an effeminate horror of war, they chose ratlier, in those raw and wintry days, to gaze with wonder upon the silvery wings and golden feathers of their doves, gleaming as they rise in flight, while Deborah, a woman, a dweller in
the house, (a bee as the
name
signifies)
is
" The Lord gave the word," means he gave command for* the war, he roused up heroes and so the messengers of victory. Next follows the march of Jehovah upon the mountains. He descended upon the diminutive Zion, and how many more beautiful and more fruitful mountains were there, that were desirous of this honour. The fertile Bashan he had passed by, and here that mountain, which was one of the greatest in the land of Israel, draws the attention of the poet, and becomes
the object of his song.
Thou mount of God, mount Bashan, The mountain range, mount Bashan,
Why
them
[The account
Bashan
is
is
named, because
was
situated
it
God
of the promised land. Zion was recently gained by conquest, and the remnant of the Jebusites was perhaps still in Jerusalem. Then too God dwelt in the vicinity of his conquered foes a circumstance, which gave occasion to the sublime pic-
ture of his
Sinai.]
*
More
regard with
envy.
In this
may
be translated thus:
Why
Upon
look, so
this
enviously down ye mountain ranges, mount, which God has chose to dwell in.
J.
74
The
chariots of God, a thousand thousand,
And
The Lord comes forth in their midst. From the glory crowned summit of Sinai. Thou didst raise the chariots aloft. Thou leddest forth thy captives with thee, Thou gavest men for thy triumphal gifts. And madest rebels now to dwell with thee.
Jehovah, God.
to night
be praised,
help,
He layeth on our burdens, and giveth us He is our God, the God of our salvation,
Jehovah the Lord hath the issues to death. Surely God will wound the head of his enemies.
The
who
is
against him.
I will bring
I will bring
him from
Thy foot shall yet wade Thy dogs lick the blood
of thine enemies!
But
We see
clearly
what this
difficult
the national
God of
he has newly conquered, that he will free them from those enBut emies, who now remain only as a kind of sinoffering. we return to our subject and ask.
What meant that smoking Sinai ? What were those pillars of cloud and
fire ?
to
fiery
which, as was customary in was carried before the host, and served both as a signal for breaking up the encampments and renewing the march, and as a guide in their journeying. When the Israelites went out of Egypt it followed and stood
similar cases in those regions,
75
between them and the Egyptians.
even
in I remember to have read what originated probably in a mis-
some Pagan
writer,
Exodous of the children of Israel, that first occur, and they are at once accompanied with miraculous effects, which still followed them throughout the journey.* When the host were encampproach.
the
ed,
it
When
the
moved
but
their
camp,
it
went before
as their guide.
They
when
they arrived in
Canaan
the
Ark of
the Cove-
pillars are
no
mere symbol, but which produced marvellous and sometimes fearThe two phsenomena admit of being so naturally
see not
identified, that I
different.
and be
their guide.
presence that
is
ance, and
all this
pillar
of
fire.
By
it
day
it
Before
was the most revered seat of judgment, the highest tribunal. If Moses and Aaron were safe no where else, they were yet safe here, and the fire of God avenged them in a way that was manifest to the sense. When the journey was ended,
the memorial of
and
for
it was perhaps placed in the holy of holies, some time preserved and hence the Jewish fable re;
Nothing
is
* Ex,
zxxiii.
911.
Num.
ix.
1523.
76
explanation.
It denies no miracle and only shows the medium, by which God wrought miracles, since this must be the
as
Habakkuk
calls
it,
the veil of
The
splendid appearances on
possibly
similar natural
God works no
miracles except
The
extraor-
dinary splendour, in which the sandy deserts of Arabia sometimes appear, the smoke, in which the mountains are veiled, the
thunders, which
are
multiplied
and
fearfully
reverberated
among
and magnificant phaenomena of nature God on this occasion combined together, as the symbols and manifestations of his Whoever would deny the miraculous character of presence. the phaenomena, must make the description of Moses a fable.
Nor
ena.
are they less so from the fact, that this region of fearful
is
desolation
always
fruitful in
it
The Israelites could not moreover have been much and they probably passed by Suez somewhat farther Now South, than the route which the caravans now take. though the gulf then extended according to remaining traces
isthmus.
below
it,
of
it
it
was
so
wide as readily
to ac-
count
in the
darkness of the
and panick struck, the whole host of Egyptians might well fall into disorder, and lose themselves beyond the possibility of
escape, whether
falling into the
Nor
is
it
would be im-
n
possible for the Israelites
to
accomplish
it
in a single night.
All the
which have recently been accumulated reThe ancient monuspecting the matter, are overstrained. ments of the Israelites, the feast which was established as a memorial of this passage over the sea, the triumphal song of Moses, and the numerous exhortations, which he enforced updoubts,
on the assembled
Israelites
by a reference to
it,
show
clearly
at all events
attended with
Would that our devotional songs, in which reference ia made to this event had more resemblance to the Hebrew These do not repeat it, though it was to them a national blessing,
litanies, as
we
new
occurrences, combine
sing
it,
if I
manner.
ple
a business like
and passages
for
an examin
which
Jehovah,
And
was
take place.
what was then to Once God strove for his people, now he would forsake them, and give them over to their enemies. Both of these are enlarged upon
in the piece,
catastrophe.
and the Prophet longs to see the purpose of God in this sad This is what is expressed in the petition, " show thy work,
make known with the progress of years what thou hast purposed, and in' thy present severe counsels call to mind thine ancient miracles of goodness to this people. 7*
78
With coming
years, Jehovah,
As
years revolve
make known.
When God came on from Tcman, The high and holy one from Mount Paran,
His glory covered the heavens,
The
earth
was
full
of his praise.
like the sun,
forth,
Out from
his
And
was but the veil of his might. Before him went the pestilence,
this
at his feet.
was moved, t looked; and nations were scattered abroad. The everlasting mountains were trod to dust,
stood, the earth
He He
The
bow
themselves.
When
The huts of Cushan I saw in affliction,!! The tents of Midian vanished away.
the rivers
at the
? ?
waves
The
parallelism
seems
common
to
reading,
13
is
for his
work
be manifested
The
3.
4. to
wait
re-
Several translations give this sense, and the parallelism obviously reit.
quires
The
nations flee
away
at the violent
misapprehended expression the most intelligible sense. It the march of God in ancient times, his stepping f;om mountain to mounParan, Bashan) which so
many
and
B
this
They
were under
affliction.
few moments.
79
Was
For thou
And ride with horses, thou God of salvation, Thou drewest forth thy bow,
Multiplying sevenfold thine arrows.t
And the streams cleft asunder the land. The mountains saw thee and trembled,
The
the speaker,
and gives a sublime movement to the ode. Several Psalms interrupt the narrative by such unexpected questions, as Ps. cxiv. 5. 6. and others, a
striking peculiarity in the style of Oriental poetry.
This
line,
which
is
we
adopt
this,
becomes what
intelligible in the
is
the
meaning of
" word"
If
we
Thou drewest forth thy bow, The arrows of the commander were
still
to
The
fact
every reader of nice discernment, the connexion will appear harsh. here assumed, that God is so suddenly called the " word," while
through the whole ode he does not speak as an inactive commander, but is himself active as a warrior, that his arrows are already satiate with
blood, while in the progress of the description this
is first
mentioned
af-
all Sthis
That
it
often
means "to make manifold" is well known, and seems to me, to be explained in the simplest
accordance with the scope of the imagery.
is
finely in
The
known from
passage.
But how conies it, that now, when God draws out his arrows with his bow, the rivers also rush through the land? If the^reader proceeds farther on, he will see that] a universal shuddering and alarm of nature is
described, such us
we remark
before a tempest.
It is
asif
all
things
felt
The
river rolls
lift
on
more
hands
the
rapidly,
up their
in expectation.
There
is
no doubt, that
and
to the
all
Red Sea,
to Jordan, to Sinai,
80
The overflowing waters fled away, The deep uttered its voice. The heights lift up their hands. The sun and moon stood still in their
At the dazzling light of thine arrows At the lightning glance of thy spear.
course,*
flying,
in
when
but
all
are com.
bined into one picture, and hence, to follow out chronologically and historically,
is
incorrect.
It is
plainly a continuous
The im-
age of the alarmed and troubled waters, which are sensible of the nearness of God,
is
v.
17
21. whose
* The image of the sun and moon are taken from both the history of Joshua and the song of Deborah combined together. In the former they
stand
still
God
is
engaged
the
in battle
in the latter
Should not
also, putting
common
reading
is ?
The
since
the
it
translates
dp
jfj
ra'^et av^tifg
picture
of action.
They
stand
They see
in.
the the
shade.
t
The
picture
is
progressive.
first
land.
I'he
first
Here he is proceeding onward and trampling upon nations at every step. The poet advances also with the progress of tlie national history, and comes down to the kings, especially the age of David, as the
verse.
Hence,
too,
The
6.
David often uses the peculiar expression, "to wound or divide asunder
the head."
81
For thou wentest
forth to
To
Thou
And
foundation even
the rock,
Thou piercedst the head of the leader of their They were rushing as a storm to disperse me,
Exulting as
if to devour the oppressed, Like the wild beast in his covert.
ranks,+
Then did thine horses tread upon the They came upon the swelling floods.
*
sea.
The
figure
is
dashed
in pieces,
will
is
be
made
bare and
fall to
That the word " head" is often thus used, especially in the^Psalms, I need not show. The dilapidation of the house means, according to Oriental custom, the ruin of the whole family. It need not be asked to what enemies of David the poet had reference in this passage. The images are here introduced into the picdation stone, which
laid
upon a rock.
The
to the
made
to
here.
meaning, as
off,
it
seems
its
me,
ranks, families, or
memvilla-
as
In the song
of Deborah (Jud.
assemblages from
there
Here
who according
have
clear,
chap.
i.
9. will
tTo
to the
is,
The
which
it
gives unity
whole view.
As
economy of th
ode, this
poem is
82
When
My
lips
quivered
A shuddering
And my
feet
ran through
my bones,
were
tottering.
Yet must
day of calamity,t
When
Then
cometh upon
us.
bloom,
And
The hope of the olive tree shall fail, The fields shall yield no bread, The flopk shall be cut off from the fold,
And
no herd shall be
in the stall.
Yet
*
will I be confident in
Jehovah,!
Now
Israel,
pressed in
it.
The preceding
i.
it,
especially chap.
f The leading
ii.
1.2. 12
is
14. chap.
4.
word here
4.
He was
directed by
the time.
ity,"
This he
now
calls
God to remain tranquil he must wait for " resting and waiting for the day of calam;
when
which he described
in chap. 1st.
He
to Chaldsea, but of a
coming of the
following lines
The
^^escribe the entire desolation of the country, by the Chaldees. 'V' Dark and discouraging as I Here the ode draws to a conclusion.
.
....
17.
it is
to the
4.)
he gives himself up
It
to
name of
it,
his
whole nation.
the Prophet does not yet see, and though he so strongly desires to see
as the leading subject of his prophecy. (See Chap. i.2. 3. 12
ii.
Chap,
4.
Chap.
iii.
2.),
The
itself,
is
no less a beautiful
whole, than
crown of the That in the last verse there is a reference to Ps. David applied the last xviii. 34. and Deut. xxxiii. 29. I need not show mentioned passage to himself, and the Prophet refers it to the whole naIt will yet, once more ascend upon its ancient heights, the scenes tion.
this
ode by
which
might justly
call the
Hebrew
lyrick Poetry.
83
And
exult in the
is
God
of my salvation,
Jehovah God
my
strength,
He will make me to leap as the hart, And to tread again upon my high places.
APPENDIX.*
Of the
miracles in the Journeying of the Israelites, and the giving of the
Mosaick law.
" Must not the whole description of this march through the Arabian deserts be a sort of epick poem of later date, and pro-
duced
ed cerned
at a period,
when
was already
purpose
it
cloth-
in the
it
marvels of fiction?"
history remains the
So
far as
my
is
con-
were even so
leo-islation
?
Hebrew
and poetry.
simplicity,
to believe this
its
Let
entire
Every new
and even to the present day the traditions of the neighbouring nations and races are full of this ancient history. I am aware
that the
Mohammedan
;
religion has in
it
a peculiar
manner
re-
them,
for
The
lonely desert
word
'high places,
used.
The
All the feeUngs and fortunes of his people, prosperity and adversity, the poet experiences inhis own breast.
*This
the
among Herder's
G. Mueller.
first editor, J.
84
seems
to
be designed
for the
purpose, that in
it
this
history
Mo-
Homer, and
if
we saw
in
it
events combined
and adorned
for
was incompatible with the truth of nature then it might be seen distinctly in the Arabian desert, as well as on the plains of Troy, where fiction begins and history ends. The fiction would show itself by a reference to the purpose, to which it was directed.
it
same time,
Now,
in
Moses, nothing of
this
sort
is
perceivable.
The
Red
The
Mount
is
Sinai
is
Whatever
belongs to
So
it
is
They
ments of the tabernacle, of the laws, the sacred rites and vestments, all of which are certainly historical monuments of that
age.
we give credence to the one and not to must we insist that all things shall proceed in every age, as they do in our own ? There a system of doctrine and legislation was to be established, which has extended its power over nations and centuries. Could Moses, unaided with all his Egyptian wisdom, or even with the added wisdom Could he do it against the of his Levites, accomplish this ?
then should
?
Why
the other
Why
opposition of
ious
sert
stiff-necked
and
rebell_
men ?
? it
And how
show
how
might be done
but
let
the whole h^ pi
:od between
S5 same people. 1. to Yet nobody requires us on the authority of Moses believe fables, of which the history knows nothing, and which the later Rabbins have invented, respecting the manna, the cloudy pillars, the angels by whose ministration the law was
Sinai and Paran, and suited to that age and to the
:
given,
&c.
either from
childish interpretations or
for
moral
purposes.
2.
Rather,
is
Since there
miraculous phfenomena,
causes.
the manna, as this far more ancient description does, and the
account
is
The
atmospher-
phgenomena of the country among the mountains of Arabia are alike known. Of the stifling wind Simoom, the avenging messenger of the Lord, the phaenomena of the East wind, in which all objects appear magnified, and the sandy desert It is a fearfuJ looks like a sea of fire, the same may be said.
solitude of nature, formed as
lir.ie
it
3.
But so
far as discoveries
come within my own knowledge, no miracle of Israelitish history can be fully explained on these principles. There are no
oak
forests in those regions,
from the
manna
its
of which so great
a multitude could
Israelites
have subsisted in
sense as
wanderings,
and the
had as
much
we have
in
Finally,
it is
these mi-
Canaan
and had,
Sinai
was not
God.
in
Canaan, and
in
They saw
8
them the
career
but in
Canaan he
rested
in his
86
upon no mountain summit. The history remained what it was, ancient history, and if an Elijah sometimes fled thither to console and strengthen himself by the fortunes of Moses,
yet the place, as an object of popular superstition,
down
was not laid was never sent to for the purpose of obtaining oracular responses, and on the same ground the places consecrated in the history of the Patriarchs, Mamre, Luz, Bethel, could never become places of idolatrous worship. When Bethel from political causes was becoming such, the Prophet changed its name Bethel, (house of God) into Bethin the
map
of Moses.
It
It
Hebrew
legis-
lation, that
was perverted to superstitious uses, which for centuries held the minds of the people in fetters, though it did
not differ in this respect from other religions.
Note.
I
have ventured
to
previous note.
Tr.
IV.
INSTIUTIONS OF MOSES.
Of
the
it
involved
and
how
far
its
folded.
The
God, of moral
brews.
1.
m the
Legislation of Moses.
equality established by
it.
The
National as-
God
in nature.
An
to this effect.
Of
the light
priest.
Images
are
drawn from
priests in
Hebrew
poetry.
They
symbols of a flourishing
heavenly ministers.
4.
state.
of sacrifices.
in
poetry.
Examples
in several
Psalms.
re-
and symbolical observances. The institution of the sabhath all that reraams of their ancient history and poetImages drawn from it of a perpetual sabbath and the year ot
jubilee.
The Tabernacle
of
Moses
a symbolical representation.
upon
his
name
of the
God
of their fathers.
It
expressed
and
It
and
glory.
am,
shall be," or as
God
am
in that I
am."
88
tion in the law of
Moses
Lord,*
tions of
German language. God drawn from the works of creation prohibited, but this sacred name was the occasion for unfolding the highest
attributes
as
denominated the holiness of the I know no synonym in the Not only were all images and representais
to serve
of man. unfolded
Israelites,
To
God must appear and be represented more especially as the guardian God of Israel, and on this conception are grounded many forcible and striking passages of his admoniand of his songs. But what he as a lawgiver could not was done afterwards by the wise men and poets of Israel. Was Jehovah the one only God, the creator of the world, so was he also the God of all nations, and of all generations of men, and for the unfolding of this rich and fruitful gem these needed but time, unbiassed thought, and the calm Spirit of God. It is not here the question, whether other nations have For why need we be envious, also unfolded the same ideas.
tions
do,
may
be, credit
each
in their proper
measure
in wliich they
ment.
He
and what he derived from Egypt in the outward form and costume of his institutions and laws was
cestors of his race,
hi/n in the
Thus with
we
find in the
is
*The
89
To
illustrate this
is
as-
author.
unfolds the
name
Jehovah, that
is,
From
generation to generation
Or the earth and the world upheaved them, From eternity to eternity thou art God. t Thou lettest man return to the dust,
And
men.
For a thousand years are But as yesterday when it As a watch of the night.
Thou lettest them pass away. There are they in a dead sleep. In the morning they were as the green grass, In the morning it was green and flourishing, In the evening it was parched and dried up. So thou didst consume us by thy breath.
The blast of thine anger drives us away. Thou placedst our iniqui ies belbre thee, Our secret sins came to light
Before thy view.
We
*How
sublime an idea
earth.
We
Only
are but in
in
God
is
our steadfastness.
He
is
whom Moses
tGen.
all
in the desert.
8*
90
Yet
its
whole extent
is toil
and pain,
are gone.
It is
we
If the
and the religion of Moses. There is no attribute, no perfection of God, which did not
fiSd
its
in the
Psalms and
in fact
is
natural theology.
read withof
who on occount
great age,
He
fails
and
sinks in the midst of his way, with his eye directed to the promise,
but
God
live to
witness
accomplishment,
for
God
is
Jehovah.
My days
And
I
decline as a shadow,
am
But thou,
Thy name
come
it is
written,
Lord.
He will look down from his holy heights, From heaven will Jehovah look upon the earth. And hear the groaning of the prisoners. And deliver those that are condemned to death. Then shall they praise in Zion the might of Jehovah, Then shall his praise be sounded in Jerusalem
When
And kmgdoms
Jehovah.
it,
My
strength indeed
ere I attain
And my
I said also
In the midst of
not
away
91
Yet thy years go on from age to age, Thou it is, who of old hast founded the world,
The heavens also are the work, of thy They too perish, but thouabidest, They become old like a garment. As a garment thou layest them aside. And new heavens are brought forth.
But thou
art the
hands.
same,
^
Thus
nature.
God intihuman
The
dom, the particular care and providence of God are represented in the Psalms and Prophets with such a sense of reality and
inwardness, that one cannot escape the consciousness of being
Theism were
to
He He Ye
that hath
made
? ?
Consider
ye brutish
senseless fools,
Can any
dences of design
stract
in nature? All,
an abto
and
lifeless
nature,
the
their false
The
its
expressions, will
it
approach
Old Testament.
is
we must -not
sense, in
92
which they were practised py the people, but as they ought to be practised. Neither must we look for these in the passages,
in
politi-
where
insti-
In his positive
would be
folly to
de-
mand
Yet the law, which he gave them, was too spiritual and too good for the Israelites, since they had neither power nor inclination to observe it. But where JNIoses speaks as a monitor and teacher of the people,
o/ him more than
especially in
his
last
Israel,
is
'
one Jehovah,
And
With With
thy heart.
command
Who
it
down
for us
Who
And
shall
bring
to us,
and cause us
That we may understand and do it. For the word is nigh thee, in thy mq^th, and That thou niayest do it !*
heart,
David
in his
personal conduct
may
be as he will
he may
selfish
XXX.
IL
93
Psalms of his, which contain general instruction, and still more those of Asaph and of an anonymous author are full of the purest doctrines of morality. The Proverbs of Solomon
c<intain
much
teach
strictly
much
the
maxims of life
fulness
of Jehovah.
The
Prophets
in the
the
Gnomick
blooming garden,
also
it
may
and of parables and descriptive representations. In short, be said, of the law of Moses, in the language of this
book, "
Wisdom
it
it
The
miirlit
Legislation of
Moses had for its purpose the formation none but the taw and that no one
;
God
of the law,
in the
much abused
The whole
shall be to
stituted a priestly
the
ly
law.
Thou
me
a priest-
which Moses comprehended the character of his legislation. If we would not call But in this a theocracy, we may denominate it a nomocracy. reference to the poetry, that grew out of it, and in accordance
kingdom," was the
principle, in
with the truth of those ancient times and their history, the
All pois far more expressive and beautiful. serand the organization, related political which to the etry, vice of God, was theocratic. Let us consider what consti^
term theocracy,
tuted
its
specific character.
94
The honours of the tribes, equality of national and liberty. No provision was made for a king in the legislation of Moses; God and his law were alone king. All
First
;
rights,
whom
To
this
rite
honour.
head, so that
all
the fraternal
or
They came together not to hear sermons mass for seven days, but to rejoice together in their community of privileges, and to feel that, as the people of God, they were one people All their three great festivals were national, and associated with liberty. The passover was a memorial of the day which made them a free people; the feast of pentecost of the law, by which that freedom was confirmed; and
the feast of tabernacles, of
its
enjoyment
in their first
simple
festi-
AU
the
abounded
in sacrificial feasts, in
The
people of
God
in
Lord, and before the tabernacle, in which his law was deposited, could not but be a rejoicing people.
By
these assembla-
is,
who
all
Jehovah, one invisible king, one law, one temple, were awakened and cherished, and by their social participation of the
feast
and song, the origin of the nation, the history and meal-,
95
ways
feast,
When we
we
either form
no clear con-
we have
no law
rejoicing,
fathers,
for
with this
spirit,
are so of-
No
people can have a national poetry, that has not objects of general pride interest
;
and gratulation,
in
which
all
have a community of
in
much
less,
when nourished up
opposing senti-
combine contradictory conceptions with the words pertaining to Divine worship and things sacred, can
ments and
ideas, they
Hence
we
forget
word Psalms and substitute national songs in its stead, is at once changed. If we consider the spirit of social union and friendship, that animates the national poetry and songs, when all ranks of free people come together mutually to excite and congratulate each other, in prosperity, in joy and in succes.sful well-doing, or to condole with each other respecting national misfortunes, we shall find in most of the Psalms more beauty and interest. Some, for example, are obviously songs of gratulation and joy, that they could now go up to Jerusalem to rejoice as a
nation.
come,
let
Make
And make
For great
A great king
abo/e
gods.
* Ps. xcv.
96
The
Hia
heights of the mountains are his alsois
the sea,
which he created,
The
Come
For he
us worship and
bow down,
the people of his land,
like a shepherd.
we
The
flock,
if
which he feedelh
To-day,
The
application of an historical
'
fact
as
to-day,"
which
which
a nation
is
summoned
val proclaimed,
Considered
in reference to this,
of opposite
meaning.
er Psalms.
at
The same,
In others
also,
may be
and oth-
we
who
ple,
to their
journey thither.*
How beautiful are thy tents, Jehovah Sabaoth, My soul longeth and fainteth for the courts of Jehovah. My heart and my flesh cry out for the living God.
As the bird, that hath found her house. The swallow her nest, where she left her
So look
I
y9ung.
upon thy
altar,
Jehovah Sabaoth,
in
My
They sing
Blessed
is
And goeth joyfully to thee in thy ways.t They go through the thirsty valley of Baca.
* Ps. Ixxxiv.
't
be
full
Obviously the publick roads to Jerusalem, which at that time would " The trodden ways are in their hearts, means, of travellers.
to a well
accordmg
known idiom,
97
And
find
it
abounding
is
in
water.*
Blessed also
Til! they
They go with
Jehovah,
behold
Zion the
God
of Gods,
God
of Sabaoth!
!
Hear my prayer
Give ear,
Behold,
And
Ad
I
y in thy courts
at the
threshold of my God,
||
Than dwell
Fur Jehovah God is our sun and shield, Jehovah assures to us grace and glory, No good will he wit.^hold from the upright. Blessed, O Jehovah Sabaoth
1
Is the
man,
The
those,
first
Psalm cannot bo
with them the
in passing
to
Mecca.
As
when
means
to drink,
and Baca the sense becomes more beautiful and natural. They forget their thirst, and are animated by their approach
between
for
this
to
Jerusalem,
still
That
they are
tThis
is
to
Mec-
ca denominate him.
X
II
and prodigal.
This word That is, who is faithful and true, as our law books say. embraces in the Psalms the duties of a subject towards God, as the preTious verses celebrate the benefits conferred by
God
as a protector.
98
the
parched valleys
them, as
Caaba, so here the marchi to Jerusalem through the is pursued with longing desire, and still in-
These burning
vales
in
for
The second
is
word
for
As
whole land
adapted
am
glad,
to
me,*
Let us go
house of Jehovah.
My feet
Jerusalem
Jerusalem
is built
a compact city,
it.f
House
To To
the
memorial
The
There stand the thrones of judgment, thrones, which the king hath established
for the
Pray
peace of Jerusalem,
walls,
They
Peace be within
And
1
I will
The young
seen
* Ps. cxxii.
t
As
among us would
putavi
aaj,
99
it
er
with more simplicity of fseling, than this song exhibits. OthPsalms express the wi;~h for prosperity in general, others
still
otherB
reli-
the
pomp
of the
gious ceremoniel.
In
ea! unitous
word have prowhich a true pLii)lick spirit All which commence with " the Lord is king," are prevails. of this kind most, also, of the thanksgiving and halelujah
joyousness
;
festivals in a
duced
"As
!"
ex-
such a national
festival.
It
is
main point of
now
participate
who dance
at the
temple of God.
and
is
therefore,
Second.
sentation.
laid the
The God
ark,
The
space between them was regarded as the dwelling place of Jehovah, and thus he* is often called, " Jehovah who dwelleth
in
The book
He was
his authority.
at,
than to
make
God
According
100
ist
among
and sanctioned by the law. But poetry was on this account the more free to celebrate the praises of God, as the God of the nation and the giver of its laws and
fered in the temple
; ;
this
it
Many
who dwelleth in darkness (so it was in the most who hath established his throne in righteousness and judgment. They exhort all the magistrates of the land to administer justice in the name of God for only through the medium of his laws is God present, and efficiently working among his people.*
brate the king,
;
Jehovah reigns the nations tremble before liim He is throned upon the Cherubim, the world is moved!
! I
is in
Zion,
The lofty one above all the nations. The king hath strength, who loveth judgment, Thou hast established ordinances.
And
at his footstool.
Moses and Aaron among his And Samuel among them, that They called upon Jehovah, And he answered them
;
priests.
He spake to them from the clouds, And they observed his words,
The laws and
ordinances, which he gat^e.t
it
tThis languase
fJie
land
to utter feel'ngs of
triumph respecting
tl^ese
is
101
Thou
and vindicate
their
work.*
Where
is
enthroned.
How
its
original con-
God
He judgeth among
How long
And
will
ye judge unjustly
Do justice
Give their right to the oppressed and needy. Deliver them out of the hand of the wicked
have
said,
ye are Gods,
And together
Lift
as one go
ground.
up
all
thyself,
For
Thus
*
Thou
them against
their enemies,
t Ps. Ixxxii.
&c.
God
sat in
judgment
in the
in the
mosj
holy place, where in doubtful cases the highest judge consulted him.
sat also in all the tribunals of the country,
He
which were held only in his name. God alone was king and judge; and, evea when there were kings in Israel, they could and must be regarded only as vicegerents of God,
subject to the constitution of the country as their law.
I
The
7th verse
is
its
mem-
bers.
all
and one, th
obscurity disappears.
*9
102
and present in the midst of them that king,
in
whose name
The
same subject
with
still
greater ardour.
which celebrate
fundamental prinin
God
ciples of the
regard to
this,
to confess,
they sing, is alone an upright and just Judah alone has a form of government eternal like God, strong and impregnable like nature, for both are the work of one and the same God. It is the method of many Psalms to place side by side, the wonders of God in nature, and his
God of whom
king
that
in
these enumerations, and, by combining together as one, the great and the small, they give to the
dignity and stateliness.
1. 2. 1.
Praise ye Jehovah, *
2.
1,
it is good to sing praises to our God, For pleasant and comely is the song of praise. Jehovah buildeth up Jerusalem,
For
And
He
2.
And
He
And
them by
their
names.
Great
His understanding
1.
2.
1.
And boweth
Sing
to
t iie
oppressor
to the dust.
Jehovah
in alternate choirs,
*Ps. cxlvii.
this psalm, that the two numbers of the parallelism were sung by two different choirs. By the numbers I have only indicated the general economy of the piece.
103
2.
1.
Play
to
He covereth the heaven with clouds, He prepareth rain for the earth, He maketh grass to grow upon the mountain!^ He givelh to the beasts their food, To the young ravens, when they cry.
His delight
is
3.
Nor
And
1.2.
Praise Jehovah,
Jerusalem
!
Zion
He He
1.
And
He
giveth his
commandment
swiftly.
to the earth,
He giveth snow like wool, He scattereth hoar-frost like ashes, He casteth down ice in masses,
Wiio can stand before
2.
his cold
He uttereih his word, and they are He causeth the wind to blow, and the 1.2. He showeth his word unto Jacob,
His statutes and judgments unto
melted,
waters flow.
Israel.
He
And
they
know
Praise ye Jehovah.
Far as
am
artifices
of dramatic repre-
wise divided.
The
Third.
servants,
his
who
its
in
kingdom;
and even
and guardians of the constitution, supreme executive for they were the highest triinterpreters
;
104
bunal
in the land.
They
accordthe
summoned
people
to
the national
assemblies,
The
first
first
servant
of righteousness.
among
before
The
bore
but the
names of
light
is,
Thummim
little
can
it
"Thou
and
shall
make
(set, give)
Thummim" means
in the
Hebrew, "Thou
avail."
I
shall
make
in
it
the
Urim mark
which no eva-
how
the oracle of
God
in the
as
it
when he
place, he felt himself seized by a Divine influence, and inspired with Di-
vine truth.
It is
enough
God
and
to enquire of
that the high priest answered in the name of God by Urim and Thummim, means simply to who bore the Urim and Thummim, and who,
qualified to answer, that
is,
was
legitime modo,
See Num. xxvii. 21, His answer too was confided in as an oracular decision, and we find at a later period the expression, even respecting human counsels, "v.'hen one enquired of him, it was as if he enquired of God." In short the Urim and Thummim was wisdom and truth, as of a Divine oracle, the clearest and most infallible
through the presiding judge.
decision.
is,
to
make
attire,
consecrate
and adapt
its
form
attire
t,
this
purpose.
The
same with
this, as
with the
of the
105
light,
it,
abide in his
breast.
priest,
secration to God.
Hence
The
priests
is,
were
that
as they
was
symbol of
this idea
both justice, the general order of society, and of the well being of the nation and Jehovah's delight in
it.
From
to us
any sym-
Our
is
so
The term " established religion" is much a term of reproach and contempt,
priest,
many
countries
in
that
when,
conn
Lord."
place
to
bear the
them
in
was by
God
in his
Moses
When he was no more, who should enquire judge, He did so by right of office, and there-
dared never appear before Jehovah without his breast plate of judg-
ment.
could
it
More
nor
ciri
cumstantial, than
was
106
nexion with entirely different establishments and times,
we
debased and
belittled.
than by saying,
the priests go in
"The
is
profaned,
the
crown of
priest,
fallen
Their defilement
their
in
Jehovah,
My
He He
As As
joyful in
my God,
clothes
covereth
a
bridegroom
And
And
seed
to
grow,
to
spring up,
the nations.*
Such among
Unity
tifully set
this people
in families
that
was poured upon the head of the high priest.t As the most precious odour offered to Jehovah diffused around an
Simon, the son of Onias, the high
priest.
!
How was he honoured before the whole people When he came forth out of the Sanctuary,
As As
Morning star coming out of a cloud, moon, as the'clear sun Shineth upon t'le temple of the Most High.
the
the full
As As As
107
agreeable sensation, which nothing else gave^ so unity
among
from the earliest times associated under the conceptions that both stood in the place of God, and in this language, according to the origin of the word, they
were, as servants
who
vernment of the primitive world the father was the prince and his family; Melchisedeck, king of righteousness,
and priest of the most high God.
The
Psilni,
which depicts
hand,
the regal dignity in the highest colours, which places the king
at his right
him
periods of
Hebrew
were associated. t
hovah, thnt
is,
as the tent
Even
in
servants
who marks
||
epared,
is
a priest;
may be who
At
images of puri-
of dignity,
New
ix.
Testament.
3.
*P8. ex.
ii
laa. Ti. 3.
||
Ezech.
Dau.
x.5.
108
In the Revelation of John angels and heavenly priests, are
when
to be exhibited, is
this
mentioned hereafter.
Among
for this
were noxious, hateful, and of evil omen while to the good spirits were offered inanimate, and for the most part odoriferous
gifts.
As Moses,
enemy of
slavery,
made
perty of Jehovah.
his right; he
gave to
for
him a beast
less
an
much
be presented to
So also with the fruits of the land, which belonged to God, and of which he reserved to himself the first fruits, as a thankoffering, and an acknowledgment of the
him
as an offering.
The
first fruits
and the
first
Do good
Then shall sacrifices of duty please thee, The oflerings, which go up with incense, The young bullocks upon thine altar.
The
sin
109
they brought out secret sins, which the law could not punish,
and even
officers,
Jehovah, that
is,
before his
Even
be
made only
But the best application, which poetry made of these offerings, was of a spiritual kind.
sight necessary.
to
thy mercy,*
my
transgressions.
For
lo
am
a sinful man.
me. But thou lovest inward truth alone t And shewest me the hidden sense of thy law.
sinful the mother, wliich bore
;
And
wash me,
all
I shall
Look
not upon
my
misdoings,
Blot out
Create
in
my me a
transgressions,
clean heart,
God,
way,
Renew
So
me.
And
So
Deliver
me from
blood-guiltiness,
God;
it
Thou desirest not sacrifice, else would I give Thou delightest not in burnt-offerings. The sacrifices of God are a contrite spirit,
||
*Ps.
t
li.
"The outward
It
which the people know not, and which thou has taught me." t This is the hidden import of sacrifices according to David's imderstanding. God must purify men, and the purification of the priest could
be only an emblem of
y
this.
'
10
110
An humble
Thou
And
fits.
in
Many things, O Jehovah, hast thou done for us,* And thy wonderful thoughts are without number.
Yet
will I declare,
Thou
saidst to
me
!
secretly in
mine ear,+
Then Said I, lo I come freely,! Yea it is written for me in the law, I delight to do thy will, O my God! What thou requirestis within my heart.
I will
proclaim what
the people,
is
thy will,
Before
all
my
lips,
r;iving,
and main-
he
fulfils
the law.
sions.
cis
The
Prophets are
filled
We
have no
;
sacrificial
mo-
ral
and
spiritual.
510.
means obviously only
The
what is clearly expressed afterwards. Thou lettest me silently apprehend thy will, thy proper aim, in all sacrifices. Thou sayest in mine ear, what the common people do not know, the sense of thy written law, and
f the duties there prescribed.
t
That
is,
" as a servant
am
" If
this
abides also in
my own
breast.
which
my own
as duty.
11. 12.
Ill
most pleasing, unbloody thanko-fferings, and offerings of inWe have one song respecting tliem, of wliich the most cense.
enlightened age need not be ashamed.
It is
The
The God
Fiftieth Fsalm.
Asaph's.
And
,
called
From the rising of the sun to its going down. From Zion, the glory of the land, God shone Our God Cometh, and shall not be silent.
Devouring
fire
And a mighty tempest is round about him. He calleththe heavens above, and the earth, To give judgment upon his people.
" Gather
'
my
me,
sacrifice."
Who
And
me by
him judge,
speak,
thy
Hear,
O my people,
and
I will
even
I,
God.
me.
Nor he
mine,
hills.
know
all
And
If I
mine.
thee,
were hungry, I need not For mine is the world and its
;
tell
fulness.
Seir, but
from Zion, the glorious crown, the chief ornament of the whole
land, because
t
it.
Before heaven and earth Israel had bound themselves to his covenant,
Deut- xxxi. 28. and these must now, therefore, be witnesses, how Israel had understood and kept it. The Allwise, however, v. 7. speaks in their name, and the judge becomes himself the witness.
tThat
is, I
trial
me enough.
112
Thinkest thou
'
I eat
Or
Offer unto
God
thanksgiving,
to the in the
Most High,
day of trouble,
me
And when I deliver thee, honour thou me. Whoso offereth praise glorifieth me. And to him, that taketh heed to his way,
Will
It
I
show
would carry
me
more
particulars
of the Mosaick cods, and show, how, evefi in regard to individual expressions, they have modified the language of poetry
in tlie
Let
it
1.
originally
dis-
of them impure.
were regarded as rendering the Hence, not only those were very
naturally used as
poets spake of
freely, openly,
emblems of these, but also, the Prophets and them in the language of the Sanctuary, that is,
and without circumlocution.
us,
They
regulated
of which they
knew
are
nothing.
They
To
allowed, which
;
from no regard
to morality, avoids
and a
physician,
who
mere
among
fect to
the
Hebrews bv
shudder
113
In
this, too,
however, poetry
is
modified in accord-
ance with the particular age and cliaracter of the poet. At the court of Solomon was not heard the language, which Ezechiel, the son of a priest,
to study the
who had
earnestly
devoted himself
Such things ventured to employ in his minute expositions. were called by their true names in the East, too, for the very purpose of awakening detestation and loathing, by the shame
of the exposure
;
for
it is
known,
all
these
more
had
its name, and since all these things, on Mount Sinai, and minutely de-
came down
to a later age,
it
was a matter
Yet,
poetry
it is
Hebrew
knew nothing
of the fables,
which were invented by the allegorizing spirit of a later age. What David sings of the hidden import of the law, is all of it really contained in Moses, and the developments of the Prophets, remain always true to the general character and frame
of the institution.
ple
when
was to be built, hidden meanings began to be devised, yet with some degree of wisdom, as is seen in Haggai and Zecharias.
The
spirit
of mystical interpretation
later period.
first
spread
itself
from Egypt, at a
I
still
do not mean by
his
of Moses,
and
their
minute particulars.
whole.
They were
so,
10*
114
Egyptians were fond of hieroglyphics
in their religious service,
and even
in their
sacred edifices.
Of
in fol-
and the point of view, in which he stood; otherwise, we are in danger of seeing every thing in a wrong and inverted position. The Prophets will furnish occasions for saying something on this point, and something will be indicated in the
following poetical sketch, but this
is
The
Tho
most enlightened of the Prophets, especially Samuel and Isaiah, proceeded on the same plan, and there is no one of them, who
did not
If,
make
and plans.
and customs
which they held with others, if in regard to Psalms, and the goat, that was sent into the wilderness, systems were invented, of which David and Moses never thought, this is yet but the common and necessary result, to which the revolutions of time subject them. It is to be considered, that those later ages had a number of differeiit books, whose different sentiments they confounded together, and whose language, moreover, they employ^ for Here, too, it was a matter of clothing their own thoughts. importance what kind of men made use of them, what ideas they had in their own minds, and what would particularly find favour with them; finally, in what regard they were themsalves,
* Thus Moses speaks of the circumcision of the heart, that the priest, when he goes into the sanctuary, bears the sins of the people, &c. The
latter
to the beautiful
115
held by the succeeding age, and what kind of style
its
taste
approved.
sophical
to its
;
own
and the best course, therefore, is age, and its own author, and go
form
more
the Sabbath.
To
we indebted
owing
for the
was
it
human
blessings,
and cultivation
and by means of
it
neglect,
festivals
With
the sabbaths
state,
their freedom,
year of jubilee.
Can we,
many golden
dreams of future happiness, and express, in joyful songs, ideas of endless freedom and perpetual jubilee, with obvious reference
to^abbatical institutions and forms
?
thus
is it
and from the ruins of former prosperity, foresees and celebrates in song the greater prosperity and happiness, that
is still to
be attained.
Of
the paternal
authority.
maxims of
Hebrews.
Proofs of
it
Figurative represen-
3.
Moral precepts of the mother of Lemuel to her son. Praise of a country housewife among the Hebrews. Union of families in a tribe. Lidependent freedom of the individual
wisdom.
tribes.
into
Form
4.
of
Hebrew
people.
Why
The
the Prophets
were so zealous against luxury and oppression. marked out in the Mosaic
6.
economy, their right and authority. Connexion of all the tribes through their relation to the promised land and to the Patriarchs. Confinement of the people and of the law of Moses to the local boundaries of the country. Local character of all
the
Hebrew
Of
the peculiar
providence of
tion.
6.
Use of it in Moses and in the poets, Second bond of connexion among the tribes from the Theocracy.
rational beings.
General principle of the government. Dignity and beauty of it for Proofs from the tribunals, punishments, taxes, revenues, &c.
Most of
the
Hebrew
tribe in
7.
Objection against the tribe of Levi as being the chief support of the
Theocracy.
of Moses.
Why this
it,
was placed
far
it
in that condition.
First plan
The manner,
and how
was
Of
the Prophets, on
whom
the hopes
Sad
117
fate of Moses, that he could not himself establish his laws in Canaan. Causes and consequences of this, and his own regret on account of it. End of the 90th Psalm. Hope of Moses.
9.
Of
of
to
the reference
this.
Whether
decide on this
God in the laws of Moses. Necessity and use was merely pretented. Whether we can or ought point. The law of God and Moses, a Jewish fa^.
to
it
It will
,
tlie
res-
fruit
grew.
The
rclalions
forms of government
offather and child, constituted the primitive among men, and with a race of herdsthese remained for a long pe-
men, such
as the
Hebrews were,
As
them
no other
lavv^
of Moses.
It
prescribed to
to
Their language has no more favourite expression, by which to designate even a king, a priest, a Prophet, the director or invenof a thing, than the word father.
productions were from the times,
tor
its style,
eara
still
race of herdsmen,
which followed.
and unaffected
and these served as a model for those So too are their proverbs and preceptive in-
structions peculiarly
sincerity, of
human
race.
The
first
118
estness,
lips
Moses do not abandon this tone, wherever they enforce human obligations, and the b^k of Deuteronomy has the dignity and impressiveness of a s^e imparting the lessons of wisdom to his children. Let one
the rigorous and precise laws of
collect
Even
what
is
and he
will
earliest
lightful
is
moral sentiments.
The ethical
of the
delicate nourish-
ment of the
2.
The
the husband.
posing elevation of
and celebrated
only chastity,
and matronly
virtues.
Customs,
them,
It
would
is
in that
shame.
able conversation
among
a people,
when
up
in retirement, either
fruit like
bloomed
bore
the vine.
Blessed
is
children,
119
a rural simplicity,
which poetry
could not,
it
The
kingdom, than
by the expression,
in the land,
there shall be so
much
the wife can give him protection, and, according to the condition of the ancient world, in the sphere of domestick happi-
The
The human who had built an house, and had not yet inhabited it, who had planted a vineyard, and had not yet enjoyed its fruits, who had
enjoyment.
lawgiver excused even from warlike service every man,
betrothed a wife, and had not yet brought her to his home.
"Let him
remain
at
"and
home,
lest
he die
in the
Happy
the lawgiver
of such sentiments!
The
two sexes.
No
unchaste
woman was
tolerated in Israel.
The
human
band.
tives dangerous, or to
On
all
moral, and the most prudently devised, which were ever fra-
a climate.
*Deut. xz. 5
7.
120
treat of the virtues
will find
there
all
that
is
in a
garland of flowers.
of an
It is
ill
The
anointed with
the
festal
in songs of gratulation.
The
all
fruitfulness
of the
marriage
relation
merous expressions in the Psalms* respecting an unexpected good fortune under the figure, "that God makes the barren woman to be the mother of children," had in the sense of that
nation the strongest emphasis.
So
it is
mother of Samuel,! who ascends by a climax of triumphal expression, from her own domestic happiness to the happiness of
her country, and of ihe world.
So
also
promises, that
ly
God
more
especial-
Lo
A flourishing offspring
As arrows
in the
So are sons
They
shall not be
ashamed,
When they
The
Platonism of love, as
v/ell as
but
how
all
delicate
standing, pervade
omons
songs.
The
den flowers, the most delicate fruits are tested with the innocence of a brothers and sisters love. In the Proverbs of
*Ps.
cxiii.
6.
&c,
tl
Sam.
ii.
1.
121
folly are
both females.
The
latter
could
be represented under no image with more forcible admonition, than as the personification of a seducing adulteress, the
for-
young man a
The
It
passage of
is
in the
Proverbs of Solomon
confirms by an
example what
it
an agreeable interruption to
it
my
course of remark,
ly follows it.*
The words of King Lemuel, The oracle, which his mother taught Ah my son thou son of my heart Thou son of all my vows,
!
him.
to
women,
To
Neither
Neither
kings,
to
O Lemuel
in
'
is it for
kings
drink wine.
Nor strong drink for those They drink and forget the
power.
laws,
the poor.
And
all
And wine
Let him drink and forget his sorrow, And think of his misery no more.
Open
And
And
A virtuous woman, who shall search out? Her preciousness is far above rubies. The heart of her husband can trust in her. So that he hath abundance of spoil.
*Prov. xxxi.
11
15J2
Love and kindness will she show him, And do him no evil all her days. She diligently seeketh cotton and wool, And worketh cheerfully with her hands. She is like the merchant's ships, She bringelh her food from afar. She riseth up while it is yet night Giveth meet to her household, and work to her maidena She considereth afield, and buyeth it.
From
She girdeth herself with new strength, Still braceth her arms for renewed toil For she tastelh the fruit of her diligence, And even by night her lamp goeth not out. She reacheth her hand to the distaff, Her hand holdeth the spindle. Sheopeneth her hand to the poor. She reacheth forth her hand to the needy. She feareth not for her household. In the snows of the winter season. For all her household are doubly clothed. She worketh fine clothing for herself, Her festal garment is byssus and purple; For her husband is already known in public.
And And
sitteth
She
weaveth
and
selleth them,
Worth and honour are her apparel. She hails with gladness every opening day. She openeth her mouth with wisdom,
In her tongue
is
And idleness
Her sons go forth and call her blessed. Her husband also, and praiseth her.
"fMany daughters of the land do virtuously,
tliou excellest them all. Charms are deceitful, and beauty vain. But a woman, that feareth God, deserveth
But
prai.
123
praise of an industrious
country
woman
it
in
economy of
wat
Moses connected throughout particular families each with its own tribe, and to this he gave its own independent domain, the right of establishing its own regulations, and tri3.
war upon
its
own
ar-
eount.
that
No
contest need
come
was not brought there from choice. The father was at own family, the most aged men ruled over the families of their descendants, and from these each tribe had The several generations were astits princes or chief rulers.
the head of his
ties
of blood.
The judge
could always
it.
know
fully his
own
land,
and the
it
business 'pertaining to
In the
earlier life
of industry
might be anticipated as a reward to become aged in the mid^t of the family, for gray hairs were t|ie ornament of the aged,
comparison of
states
and the crowning glory of the tribe. I this with what may be the
of the aged in
managed by
we every where
discover the
respect paid to the aged, to the patriarch of the family and of the
tribe.
tinctions of birth
servile
Moses had not made the honour of families and di^, dependent upon a gilded despotism, and the dignities of a royal city much less had he founded the
;
pomp
or martial re-
nown.
ews of the
<he people, " that every one should enjoy the fruits of his labour,
own
olive
and
figtree."
The
first
among
124
aged parents.
Even
poems of
tlieir
re-
marks assume
later didactic
this shape, as
we
some
the Hebrews.
for this
very rea-
They
find in
it
ence of
tical
their lives;
every thing
is
cation. In Tyre, Sidon, or Carthage, in a warlike state of Cyclops and cannibals, such poems were never sung, such
country of
which
toil
agriculturists and herdsmen, amidst mountains, and industry alone coidd render productive. The
poetess
Deborah was
a dvi-eller
in
tents,
David was
a shepherd,
Amos was
and
in all the
may
human
it
earliest
dance
tion.
4.
in
From
so
this
we may
to the
judge,
why
not only
Samuel proceed-
ed so unwillingly
showed
warm
were foreign
to the legislation of
The
country of the
conquests.
On
both
'
125
preferred health to superfluity, and the happiness^
ened.
He
which attends on industry and temperance, to worldly renown Those, therefore, who are with enervation and tyranny.
fond only of these variegated and bloody pictures in the poetry
among
other nations.
Jeshu-
run was
to
ous country,
who
conquest should
this,
live at
peace.
And
and
at
because the
in a
yet, the
ciples of his
How
excellent
in permitting every
Prophet
do
this
to appeal
fol-
Whether
name
of Jehovah, that
is,
national God,
and favouritism
nation, the
Israelites, as
citizens appointed
and authorized so
to do.
Respecting ma-
new
much used
to be, notvvithstanding,
126
how
did
Moses bind
and
I
twelve free
In the
first
place, by
means of
government.
who
till
much complained
of,
aside,
Moses united the tribes together by means of their country. was the land of Jehovah, the country of their common ancestors, which had been given exclusively to them from time
It
immemorial.
The
Jehovah,
and only the usufruct was theirs. To the land strictly appertained also the law, and to the law the land of Jehovah. They,
could not be separated, and
God would
God of
to
By
he
it
made
they, Israel,
was Israelno
it,
longer.
With united
as
force they
it
'
were
to take possession of
among Above
West by
the sea.
We
was
were
to
Now, though
this object
not attained, nor the will of the Patriarch followed, yet Moses
did not
fail
local spir-
which appears in
all
the Prophets.
in the
Psalms,
127 and
in all the
works pertaining
land.
to the
captivity,
the sighing
after their
full
own
Even now,
after
longing after
land of their
fiithers, for
God
shall
the earth,
awake again
What
his
fathers.
He
planted a
Since so
last phrase,
much
and
is
said in the
way of
all
same conception,
I
may
it.
ing
The
God
Whose
land of
and valleys,
from heaven.
i.t
That
drinketli rain
Thy God
From
the
doth
visit
continually,
it
And whoever
this description.
is
make and
soij
condition of
may
The
fertility
of the
depended on the
128
indebted to a constant Providence.
rains, 'he
The
early
and the
and so
latter
wind from
this or
heavens deit
was
Moses should
take,
as he did,
heaven and
avenge
its
every violation.
to
law of God, who looked down upon them from these heavens, and who gave them this land for a possession. Every one
perceives
how
impressive,
how adapted
to
They (embrace
the nation thus
mode of thinking of
and
all
of the country.
law, every season of the year, every fertile spot and watered
glen, but
still
more
worship, with
its festivals
and ceremonies.
genuine national
And on
spirit
Yet
it
was no weak
which he required
application
such as we ought
to the law
6.
all
So
far
we
miglit
all
it is
precisely that,
which all wise men have laboured, but which Moses alone and at so early a period had a
which
all
men
wish
and
for
and not a lairgivtr, that a free people shoidd adopt it of their men free lolll, and voluntarily observe it, that an invisible, rational, beneficent power should control us, and not fetters and chains. Such was the idea of Moses, and I know of none
more pure and sublime.
But alas
!
for that
and
all
the
jnsti-.
129
tutions founded on
it,
end of six thousand, another Moses would find, that the time had not yet come. All government is matter, not of choice, but of necessity, that, which is too corporeal and visible, becomes a yoke of
oppression, nay, often a disgrace to
light-
er
and more
together, the
their
tive
all
more
the
governing principle
more
one or a few men, which always is felt as severe, is excluded, and all power is vested in a national law, above the reach of
arbitrary will, and as
it
invisil>le
tlie
throne
by so much
is
a constitution of government
more
And
what
is
The law
reigned, in-
wardly indued
was
or
Tliis
was a tabernacle
all
God
the
at
Dan and
Thus
it
was
to
man
bound by obligations of duty and good ftith. Before him they and deeds exposed to his view, yet,
not as slaves, but as children,
as a chosen inheritance;
and
remembrance,
is
as rational
anew
in
What more
refined
method
130
the courtly sensualities of a throne, to place
men
with their
than they.
Who
has not
felt
how much
life
oppres?
sion
in
is
involved in giving to
men power
over the
of njen
to the
presence of
God and
judges chosen of the people, but by the hired servants of princes, in fortified places, in a labyrinth of judicial halls, technical
formularies,
&c.
of the matter.
The
God
The bench
of justice was
name
of Jehovah, were
to
publick action.
This joy
and
were called
it,
religion,
With
which animated oracles of the Hebrews, are filled. poetry, which is so generally held
the enthusiasm,
7.
it
it,
The
to
be
it
we
find,
was
to
The
who had
the prece-
tribes,
consumed
in times of distress
There
and
in this objection,
which no one has seen more clearlv, than Moses His Jirst plan was, that the Jirst-honi of everu kimself did.
truth,
131
family and
of honour
to
the
of the national
consequently,
vvhat a
to the nation,
to families
crown would
such an arrangement
have been,
in wliich all
the
heads of
tribes
and servants in the palace of Jehovah. By this method the would have been most intimately united and no jealousy
But when the Israelites danced round a golden calf, when Moses saw, that he must not commit himself to the people at
large, in
their rude state, that they
to
were
far
from being
suffi-
ciently
advanced
name of
gle tribe, and through that accomplish his purposes with the
rest
?
to
the
it
Egyptian
necessar
tribes,
of execution, but
of
whom would
tribe, Moses natwhich was most nearly allied and most faithful to him, which on the occasion of the golden calf, that is, of the rebellion against Jehovah, had proved true, and
tribe.
its
head.
The
brother of
was
The
tribe
less
a legisla-
and
power.
The
execution of ev-
ery political enterprize depended on the elders of the tribes of the whole people.
tribe,
and since on
Ex.
xiii. 2.
xxxii. 23.
132
the sanctuary, jurisprudence, medical knowledge, and what-
to the people
which they implied. The priests were in every thing only Even in the highest consultation counsellors, mere servants. by Urim and Thummim, the royal shield of truth, the person
of the high priest was
priest
lost sight of, for
God
spake, and
if
the
was a man of any degree of feeling, he could not, under the impression of awe, which the most holy place inspired, and
in the
name
is it
Yet
Moses seems
try
himself,
when
in
his benedictions he
employment of the breastplate of the high priest. The fulfilment of the law of Moses was not pressed, as it should have been, and here was laid the foundation of all
find little
we
The
economy
for the
most part
The
was scarcely apprehended at all, and still such was the constant complaint of the Pro-
phets.
8.
he
v/as, to
whom
heed as
to
him
why
did
this
or if he
How
1
man
The work
of
Moses remained
alas
own
Deut. xxxiii.
8.
133
of
tiie
longed
for
crown of
lu a
iew months
his laws
after
was arranged, men were sent to explore the country, and he was already upon its borders. But the cowardly people were rebellious, and he must return and encamp for thirty
eight tedious years in the cheerless desert of a peninsula in
the
Red
Sea.
Of the
was
we have nothing
Now
it
own
life
passing as an idle
tale,
to
enduring.
lime ode,
We have already
let
God
as alone
us
now hear
the other.
Who sees that this, O God, is thine anger, That he may fear thee, as thy wrath is fearful Teach ue, O Lord, so to number our days, That we may apply our hearts to wisdom. Turn, O Jehovah how long art thou angry
!
'
Comfort us again, we are thy people. Let us early rejoice in thy goodness,
Then
will
we
Make our lives, O Lord, joyful agam. Which thou so long hast afflicted. Which so many years have seen only
Let thy work,
sorrow.
Lord, appear.
Which thou hast reserved for thy servants. Show them, show their children thy favour. Let the smiles of Jehovah our God Be upon us again, establish, O Lord,
Establish the work of our hands,
it.
But the supplications of Moses did not avail. He was not destined to survive the establishment of his work in Canaan
134
and
he
since, as an old
man
knew the character of his people, and no one was perceived, who could entirely fill his plan, what remained for him in his perplexity ? With what could he sustain himself, but with the hope, that God himself would raise up another man like him, who should carry forward his designs to their completion,
and
to
whom
Israel
Such
a
it
man
was
could not and would not destroy the work of Moses, for
peared in that
first
age, on
was merely a hero, and Eleazor a priest. The power was divided, and the rude tribes abandoned the fundamental princiWhether in later times, and ples of the Mosaic economy. after the period of the captivity, there were Prophets like Moses, we shall see hereafter enought, that whoever has a human heart, and feels what pain and what anxious longings
;
lifa^
awa-
kens
legislator so patriIt
life.
was
"But why," it is asked, "did Moses give out his code of work of God, and his tables for the hand-writing of Jehovah, and why did he implant in the minds of his peolaws
for the
And
them out as such did he not act wisely in doing so ? What Let one read what other means had he of attaining his end? he endured
for forty years,
all
the mira-
name
strain
of God.
and judgments, which he performed in the How then would he have succeeded had he
dim
light
of political philosophy to
re-
and convince his 600,000 rebels. Laws must be held sacred, and for a rude people, such as
were, they could become
as
sacred in their
best
divine.
135
laws are wanting in sacredness and impressiveness in their
relation to the
upon them
as
may
to
venture' to break
transgress.
It
first to
rules, which they and the lawgiver himself is the The economy of Moses was designed not
and conventional
over,
be thus.
was
to
God
and as such
is it
Consider
it
Moses For the good of his people he erected an ever enduring monument, and yet his own name was not to receive the glory of it; the presiding Genius of the nation was its author. Such is the answer, which I would give on the supposition,
dence and humility
lawgiver,
that
the laws of
were not
of Divine
But why need we make this supposition? What greater work has Providence to accomplish among men, than to form and promulgate law and order, light and truth, among
the nations?
And was
ever so
much
code of Moses?
according
to the
And
conception of
souls of
all
nations
is
there a
nobler work of
men, than the divine thoughts, impulses, aims and energies, which he sometimes
in the
God
man
thousands
Those ancient
of the
their
human
at so early a period as
Moses?
determine,
when
in the soul
of such a man,
ends, and
the
human
tl^e
136
tables, his finger
In the
grammatical sense, we
know what
is
is
meant by
sjjin't
and
a historical relation of
what
see in our
Nor must we judge of such matters according to what we own times. We live in the midst of scattered ruins,
arts
amid
and implements of
all
kinds.
Every thing
for
us
is
become a familiar tale, and a matter of Our most familiar and intimate thoughts are deviown.
But
in the
deep
to
stillness, in
the
descent
who
of us
can
in a soul
of energy?
decide
why
should
ef-
we attempt
fects of the
etry, to
it ?
which
the effect
avaiaaiv,
j/ie
exarjTU diagx^Tai
7]ie
xgatsiiai.
enemy of
all
God had
given to
the
wisdom of heaven
to
lay hidden,
to the
He
hastened
therefore,
137
" Earth where hast thou the law, which God hath given thee 1" And the Earth said, " The Lord knoweth the ways of his
wisdom,
The
to
He went to the sea, and to sea and the abyss said, " It is not in
and the dead
said,
afiir."
me."
"
He went
We
came into the Arabian deand saw a man with a shining countenance it was Moses. He approached him in the garb of hypocrisy, being clothed as an angel of light, and with flattering address offered himself as his scholar. " Man of God," said he, " who
all
sert,
possesses! the
all
the
" silence
the law
is
With him
is
wis-
dom and
him."
man
the fear
for
of the Lord
wisdom, and
to avoid evil
is
understanding
man
The
ser-
my
me
him
for his
own
possession.
12*
VI.
Why go
painful a neces-
time of Moses.
Jehovah.
Whether
title
Poetical
of
gift,
What
how
Explanaimported.
it
short history of
what
it
Where probably
was
Dan
should dwdl.
Difference between these and those of JaStriking position of the land of Judaea.
Particular illustrations.
Its poetical
renown.
a wise conception
Appendix.
of
Moses.
When Jacob
conceived, that they must conquer with the edge of the sword
the land, which he promised them.
it,
He
it
as his father-land,
rest.
where even
to
in death
his
This he divided
his sons
according to the
for
IS
herdsmen.
Of a
He looked with horror upon the found in his benediction. deed of Simoon and Levi in destroying a Canaanitish town
and family, who yet had insulted his race.
He probably
sup-
139
posed, that his sons would soon range over the country again, and establish themselves here and there, as he had pointed
out to them.
But it was destined to be otherwise. Four hundred years the nation lingered in Egypt, and had no national leader. It sunk under oppression, till finally, awakened
by
distress,
it
received a deliverer,
whom
yet
it
followed with
difficulty.
What
In
Canaan
itself
Immediately on his
willingly yield
this unwillingly
we
whole account of his march. He chose not the shortest and most direct routes to Canaan, because he must have forced his passage through a nation of Egyptian origin, and he was
chiefly careful
for
the
safe
return
as the
Edomites he supposed
was
to
first
range
for thirty
young be formed
manner, that
circumstances permitted.
among
the inhabitants of
Canaan the
Moses.
A part of the
Nomade
tribes.
The
Who
Moses.t
Deut.
18. tLev.xviii 2430. Num. xviii. 23. 29. ii. 1013. ix. 2. Wisdom of Sol. xii. 36,
140
cuous intercourse of the sexes, and other vices among them.
The Hamitish superstition however was the blackest of all, for human sacrifices existed among them, and how could this
consist with the Mosaic economy and political constitution? Only one means too remained of attaining the end, the sad
but
common
right of war, as
it
They
He commanded
the seat of war.
it
even
to
country
made
sad necessity, or as
an
What
it?
holy war of
modern times
fearfully
And
yet
i.
how
for
has
name
for
of Jehovah,
e.
ancient pos-
sessions
aris et focis
a grove,
and
altar,
sacred to the
God of
fathers;
every thing,
which among ancient nations was denominated the family The nation moreover In the short space of 40 could not remain in the desert.
years 600,000 had died, and they were not formed to live like
the predatory hordes of the Ishmaelites.
A race of
They feed
shepherds
if
must have
their
a place of rest,
not to
own
fatherland.
This
the hereditary
right
of
all
dwellers in tents
among
the Orientals.
their flocks,
where
the
and
way
of resort.
know we should
141
by our notions of property, or to judire them by our most modern international laws, of both which they were wholly ignoThe testaments and transmitted rights of their ancestors rant. recorded in written formularies, but preserved in not were
traditions, in songs, in
tended as
of
for their
honour
God and of their race. Instead of juridical formularies let us now examine a poetical title of gift and inheritance, which we have reserved for this connextion. It is the blessing of Jacob, who had, as it were, a map of Canaan before
him, and distributed the country
ty.
We
shall notice
how he
their entering
upon
their
way
of contrast treat of the blessing of Moses; as aside from that So far m^ consideration this would be the place for doing so.
the benediction unfolds personal traits of the sons of Jacob,
I
it;*
here
it is
before us only as a
map
of Canaan, in
same time see, what the patriarch produced on the spirit of the
which we
nation.
JACOB'S
IN
TESTAMENTARY WILL
I
may
declare
What
And hearken
when
its
accomplishment.
after the
He
wished
perhaps, that
might be soon
to
be out of Egypt.
was at variance with the period of 400 years in that dream of Abraham, in which servitude and affliction were exhibited
Briefe, das studium derTheologie betreffcd Th.
I.
142
therefore
as the
and
fix it in
might always
feel
With-
out doubt this song, like the older traditions of their fithers,
contributed
much
to preserve
they
for
in
which
Reuben, thou
my
first
born son,
of
firstling
my
strength
Thy
Thou
farther
and son.
Reu-
and
from him, and given, as we shall see, to two of his brethren. Judah obtains the precedence in rank and dignity, the scepThe tre of command, and Joseph the two fold inheritance. priesthood, (of which Jacob however knew nothing), afterwards fell to Levi. Reuben must receive but a common in*I offer
it
for consideration,
whether this
common
construction
levity
does violence
to it?
What
away with
sarcasm
and that too respecting the misfortunes of his son, the recol,
which must so deeply affect him ? Could the last clause of the preceding verse moreover stand alone ? Obviously it belongs to the
lection of
following
plete,
is
rendered cqri*
143
heritailce
'
this particular
definite
the tribes, and the command of Jacob in was followed. The patriarch assigned him no boundaries, and he afterwards received his inheritance
among
How
sad,
and
at
same time
beautiful
is
abundant dignity and power which belonged to him, now sweeps by him like a proud wave, and his hopes are annihilated by his guilt.]
in revenge destroyed a noble ox,* Cursed be their revengeful anger. Cursed be their cruel hatred,
And
scatter
them
in Israel.
fulfilled,
Simeon was
in little estimation,
ted
him
in
could find
according to
this
ancient oracle no
ed boundaries.
It afterwards to
by giving
ing
Qfi
which are of a melancholy character. With the blessthe princely Judah we are at the same time conducted
*Ox and man are here S3Tionymous. The parallelism shows this, and we know, that, even in the poetry of the Greeks, a stately ox was the image to represent a brave man. and
at the
[This
is
which
it is
litterally,
Tr.]
144
Judah, thou art he,
"Whom thy brethren (as a leadef) shall praise. Thy hand shall be upon the neck of thine enemies, Thy father's children shall bow down before thee.
Judah
is
young
lion
By spoils, my
He
lieth
down, he croueheth as a
As a strong lion, who will rouse him up? The sceptre shall not depart from Judah, Nor the commander's st iff from his march,*
Until he
comes
And nations
For he bindeth
*I venture to retain the
Samaritan copy.
ilitary standards,
How could the patriarchal shepherd be thinking of milwhile his sons were standing before him as shepherds,
and when all the other images possess the corresponding simplicity. Judah's hand is clenched upon the neck of his enemies, he seizes his prey like a lion, he marches forth as a conqueror, and complacently and proudSuch are the images, which the ly satiates himself with wine and milk.
picture presents, and
how came
warlike banners
among them
Besides
Judah
always
of
office,
march toward Canaan or Shiloh, the place of rest, the sense " Judah in his march, and his pursuit of his enemies is never to lay down the staff of a commander, till peace is secured, and That the original Mord here means the nations brought in subjection." not only a commander, but the commander's staffof office, is plain from Num. xxi. 18. as well as from the parallelism. The word corresponds with "sceptre" as "his march" must also with "Judah." This again according to what follows can only mean the going, the steps, the march of Judah. That the original admits of this s6nse, and that indeed the name of the foot in Hebrew was derived from its motion, its step, needs
relates to a
becomes
clear.
no proof.
in
new and
fertile
country.
In this feeling he dismounts, and binds his ass by the rich clusters, washes his garment in wine, cleanses his mouth with milk &c.
sense
cite
it
is
Judah
He
145
His
ass's colt to the
choice vine.
His mantel in the blood of the grape. His eyes are sparliling with wine,
[Every one
a march, or progress of a
to the dignity in
Nomade
Judah
he
first in
is
preferred
firstborn, that
may march
the neck of
advance of
that his
hand may be
may be
down
is
Canaan
in
The
course
to-
wards Shiloh, and Jacob perhaps named that place, because it was in his own peculiar region of country, between Sichem
at the
down
he reached the
the
in-
he|j|;ance of his
The
parallelism in
mean time
than the
name
hi.s
and wash
mantle
in the blood
of the grape,
a measure,
the
nations quietly
fully,
obey him.
Judah
in
though not
He
did
levite
came and
effected
banner of a
lion,
first
portion
of the conquered country, though the nations inhabiting the land were not, as the same authority required,
all
of them yet
He, indeed, was now supplied with a land rich in vineyards and pasturage, but a large part of his brethren were destitute, and when afterwards it was enquired
brought in subjection.
of the sacred oracle, " 13
who
shall
146
answer could be expected, (according to this same blesSiflg of Jacob,) than " Judah shall be the leader." For this was a
duty pertaining to his rank, by right of Which,
vid the most
also,
he
baid at
After Da-
renowned of
their kings
to be applied
more
salem
is
God^ and
now
had
di*:)ped
it
the grape.
David, and
finally,
they
were
all
and the
ass's colt.
The whole
itself the first
The
tribe of
always maintained
in
Juoah Even
and Zerubabel of that tribe was their guide in the return from Thus one thing is connected with another by the captivity.
relations of time,
we
shall
soon
more
at large.*]
Zebulon
shall dwell
by the sea,
Sidon.
At
And
to
way the literal sense of the' The word " forever" which
probably belonged to the second clause, was referred to the first. " For. ever shall the sceptre not depart from Judah," and thus the second clause
acquired an entirely
ten on this passage.
will
have
147
[It was propably Jacob's intention, that when Judah had taken the lead as far as Shiloh, the heritage of his father, ZebuIon should fall to the West, and seek his dwell iug place by the sea; and though they came to Shiloh, and divided the land under other circumstances, than were contemplated, the command was too distinct not to direct Zebulon for his residence to the bay of Acco, which nature herself has marked with
its
coast.
He
this district
is
mentioned
in
Josh.
Issachar
is
That
lieth
hills.
He
pleasant,
The
beautiful,
[He was
to
choose
is,
the delightful
valley
between Tabor and Hermon, and there dwell in There he would find a beautiful country, and
suited to his peaceful character.
tranquilityfine
views,
There among
the rivers
and
manner become
This
and simple
relates to tribute, for how would image of a beast of burden, the comparison,
with which is yet obviously continued in the representation of bearing upon the shoulder. The word in the original meant, undoubtedly, a bottle
or leather bag, and the notion of tribute
Issa(^ar
mim, small streams and torrents, which were swollen in time of rain, and here according to his patient nature he was to divide the water to his brethren, the roving herdsmen, and obtain from it his own advantage. That in this region there were assemblages of herdsmen for the dis,
ftribution
of >vater,
wp
Jud
v. 11,
148
sense of the passage, and
we
shall see,
to apply
ed
but the passage in the blessing of Jacob was too plain, for
fail
Issachar to
which Jacob
to
The
tribe pro-
number of
its
long and beautiful valley was But this tribe was strong in the population, and even in Egypt had increased to
its
a great extent.*]
Dan also shall be the leader of his As one of the tribes of Israel,
tribe,
way,
That biteth the heel of the horse, So that his rider falleth backward.
[By the
first
first
among
among
his other
sons to
be altered,
when
since he was the seventh in order, he was set far back and
among
Ac-
cording
to the intention
ance
fall
in a region, where from narrow mountain passes he might upon the rear of an enemies' cavalry in their incursions,
and make
tribe of
their riders
fall
backwards.
Dan
by the language
in the original,
may
as the]term used
means both
heap and an
ass.
The former
notion
may
have led
to the latter.
149
of Jacob. All incursions into Judnea came from Syria through
the valleys of Libanus.
thither very appropriately, if
its
That was the way of the nations, and we judge it by the character of
To
the Philistines he
was
itself
By
craft
and a
skilful
when he could
On
Dan had
of
itself
distinguished by the
artifi-
hope
in thy salvation,
O Jehovah.
so variously interpreted,
[These words, which have been thought so obscure, and been seem to me to derive a pretty clear
On
was exposed to the most power ful and dangerous attacks, as has been shown by the history' of the various conquests and desolating incursions, which it has experienced. And there must Dan have his dwelling place There must Jehovah bring deliverance to the nation In such deliverance the patriarchal or they must perish. Prophet confided, and by this expression showed how deeply he looked into the condition and wants of the country, which
!
his sons
were
Gad
to inhabit.*]
him,
The
This
in all his
difficulties
it
for
He hoped
for
when he was
gerous assaults.
planation,
This seems
to
me
Every other
is
13*
150
[In the original a fourfold play on words.
We
to dwell, for
have referred
to the
Gad
actually inhabited.
Gad had
that is rich,
He
it is,
intelligible not to
be obeyed, especially
the interpretation.*
fruits,
Asher obtained
and
a spreading terebinth,
He
[This tribe received a mountainous tract, covered with forests, on the Northern border of Canaan, where it flourished like a And now Jacob turned to terebinth with its luxuriant top.
his
family,
who
stood there as a
He
did in fact,
crown him among them by giving him in his two sons the second prerogative, which he had taken from Reuben, the twofold inheritance and more than this, because he had been his benefactor, he gave him his more special paternal blessing,
;
The son of a fruitful mother is Joseph, The branch of a fruitful tree by the well, Whose branches shoot over the wall. They were embittered and shot at him, And hated him, who are skilful with arrows, Yet his bow abode in its strength,
* Deut.
x.xxiii.
24. 25.
151
His arms and hands moved quickly.
From the hands of the mighty God of Jacob, From his name, who guarded me upon my rock,* From thy father's God he stood by thee, From the Almighty he^will still bless thee. The blessings of heaven above,
is
beneath.
womb. The blessings of thy father prevail Above the blessings of my mountains.
To
They
Of him
[So
far as
that
which
as a
for the
map
two
The
Patriarch describes
it
* This passage, also, Moses explains, (Deut. xxxiii. 16.) of a watchman over the stone of Israel places the God,
him
guardian
God
of his
life in
as Jacob here
names
The
we regard
as
it
viated
name
of the
names of God,
xxviii.
Gen.
xxii. 14.
&c. the
God
is
mouth of a shepherd.
has understood by the term here used mountains, (Deut. xxxiii. 15.) and
the parallelism also requires
tains of Canaan,
it.
The
reference
is to
the smaller
land,
moun-
his
own
and above
The
ae
spices and balsamic odours for crowning the head of Joseph are, in
the language of poetry, the blessingsof the mountains, their costly glory,
xxxiii. 15.
1.
152
in a picture of the
life
of Joseph.
He
is
enemies.
He
is
What then aspires even to the heights of the primitive world. were these ancient mountain heights?. Moses explains the
matter in his benedictions.
to the extremity
He
of the land.
Here was Phiala, the fountain of the river fair fruit tree was to be nourished, and here it might shoot its branches upon the wall, and beyond the wall or boundry of the land, and exhibit the active and untiring boldness, for which the father of the tribe was renowned.
Jordan, by which the
Mount Lebanon.
hills, the mounwhich were to be brought spices and precious things, as a diadem and an unction for the head of him, that was crowned among his brethren. In this way every particular in this pregnant benediction becomes not only consistent but picturesque and local, As Lebanon,
like a
mountain of the primeval world, overlooks the land of Canaan, crowned with white, and lifts itself to the clouds as the everlasting cedars, Dhe trees which the Lord hath planted,
;
stand upon
it,
and
its
deep
vallies
beneath are
filled
with vine;
and
lively
as the vine
upon
Lebanon,* as a fruit tree by the fountains of water. The mountain abounds in trees, which yield odorous gums, (from which the Greek name was taken,) spices for the head of Jo* Hos. xiv. 8.
153
seph, balsams for the head of him, that
was crowned.
The
smell of
Lebanon occurs
in the
The
pass of
Hamath,
in
which Joseph
is
is
emit
in these
The
this
most
he furnished with
upon them
all
Israel
upon
his
rocky pillow.
There,
lion, the
was
also,
to stand
And
Benjamin
of Joseph.]
Benjamin
shall ravin as a wolf,
in the
East go out
for
plundcF,
He
also
was
This arrangement, too, we know was not adhered to. When Judah had taken his portion, Ephraim the tribe second in power sought to do the same, and took what was neither destined for him, nor satisfied him,
* Hos. xiv.
tains, the
7.
when
obtained.
Benjamin
Song of
S.
iv. 11.
The
in like
manner praised
in
Nahum,
i,
4,
Jsa.
jcl.
16.
Song of S.
iv. 15.
&c,
154
remained by
his side.
The
his benefactor
mean
espe-
ment
cially
still
remained
in Israel.
The
Prophet,
who most
boughs
of Lebanon.
His roots
shall
branch out,
his
shall
He
shall flour-
remembrance be vivifying like the of Ephraim also are united with the Northern region of Dan, which lay at the foot of Lebanon, (Jer. iv. 15. 16.), and thus Joseph becomes peculiarly the crown of the land.
wines of Lebanon.
The mountains
Thus
been invincible,
Lebanon, Jordan, the sea, and the desert, well guarded, had encompassed it. His benediction rises like
if
till it
becomes
at
length as a cedar of
earlier,
at
God upon
the mountains.
Had
Israel
gone thither
degrees, or
when
they
came
come
to
be a resident
in the desert,
and which
later tradition
;
combined
into
images
We
who
come now
Moses
a father,
could look over the land with a peaceful and tranquil eye,
it
and divide
as his
own among
arj
his
shepherd sons.
It
was the
tribes
wearied lawgiver, who saw his grave opening before him, and
had spent
his life
among
qrideserving people,
Two
155 and a half had already violated the plan of Jacob, and of the
rest
es,
he could expect but little good. He clothed his last wishtherefore, in the form of a prayer, and his admonitory and
encouraging proposals in the form of a benediction, which however, should be considered no less an earnest injunction,
than the
last will
of Jacob.
The
piece
is
composed of definite
testament of a
political
He
said,
Jehovah came from Sinai, Went forth to them from Seir, Shone forth from Mount Paran.
He came
And
How
All the
pomp of his
glory
is
around him.
And
*
it
does not
God comes V.
2. 3.
his
utterance of the
is
the
more
hand.
dignified image,
I prefer rather
than
when God
is
in his
hand
in the
3d verse, as placed
expression described
in the
second, and
pomp and
Habakkuk
by radiant
fire,
were converted
gels,
t
into the
shooting rays. In later times these images diaTayai ayyslcDV, the ranks and orders of an-
and
meaning.
here of fearful majesty and condescendOnly Moses could thus have spoken of the giving of the law. The word used in the 3d verse means plainly, not angels, but the assembled tribes which had been already named, and are again referred to
contrast have
How fine a
we
ing grace.
V.
5.
They
sit at
who
them
as children.
The
terpretation.
156
Received thy commandment,
Moses enjoined on
us the law,
And the
tribes of Israel.
[Thus was
and reverence
their
for the
law as
Moses was
also,
among
and
free state.
at the
In this character,
he uttered his
last Avords,
same time connected with them the reverence, which he gave to the Divine Being, the dignity and love.]
Let Reuben
live,
and not
die,
His people
shall be multiplied.
[A
small blessing
is this,
which
is
first
Simeon
is
passed by,
To Judah
he
said,
Hear,
O Jehovah,
will
And
His arm
contend bravely.
And, when
his
Thou
[The blessing conferred upon Judah, also, is small compared Yet he is not undistinguished
reminded of
his
To
*
Levi he said,
people, to
The
whom Judah
Here
is to
be conducted,
is
of which Jacob had assured him, Gen. xlix. 10. his distinguished and pri-
mary
inheritance.
slept the
He was
as
its
to
give his
name
to the nation,
and
this
was
to
adhere
to
him
leader.
Hence
the expression.
157 Thy light and right thou confidest To the true, the devoted man,
Whom
And
" I
trials
strive
He
know you
And remembered
So
Nor acknowledged
shall they also
And
And Israel thy law. They shall burn incense before thee, And sacrifices upon thine altar.
Bless,
down him,^that riseth against them, And him that hateth them, that he rise not
Strike
again*
own
his
tribe.
He
memory, not only by recollecting, that God had bestowed upon him the highest judicial authority,
who
first
man
Almost he
fault
murmurs
py
and
trifling
it
he
had contended
with him.
He
calls
an unhap-
which
doomed
and
at the
excuses his
own
conduct.
For he,
xx.
too,
also,
1
he
approaching death.
(Num.
S and Deut.
Aaron
51.)
*
The
of
The
to the Levites,
example of impartiality
in giving
adherence
to
God their
rightful Lord.
14
158
his tribe, is very beautiful.
The memorial
of him,
who
first
during model.
is
ny enemies.
conceived, but
we have
he
already spoken of
it
at large.]
To Benjamin
said,
The beloved of Jehovah shall dwell safely, The Most high hovereth over him daily,
And
[This blessing
is
The
ravening wolf
is
here
whom
from
and carefully commended to the So Moses commends him to the protecting care of Jehovah under the frequent and favourThis bird hovers over its yonng, supite image of an eagle.*
guardianship of his brethren.
ports them,
its
when about
to
fall,
to rest
upon
its
wings.
To
Joseph he
said,
is
Blessed of Jehovah
thy land,
With precious
And
bosom beneath.
With precious
*Gen.
tit is
xliii.
not
shown
that shoulders
God
or Benjamin)
means
Between the mountains Moriah and There was a cleft between them, but the temple stood upon the mountain. The Hebrew text here must be read as the 70 read it.
Zion, even had they belonged to Benjamin, Jehovah never dwelt.
159
And The
The
from ancient
hills.
And
the favor of
him
that
appeared
in the bush.
his brethren.
His glory is like that of the firstborn bullock. His horns as the horns of a wild ox.
With them he pusheth the nations, Even to the extremity of the land. This will the ten thousands of Ephraim
do.
And
[The
tive.
blessing of
tribes is rich
and instrucit
He
to
his age,
and
own
views.
The
fertil-
moon
The
everlasting
&c.
The
took in the sense of a bullock, and invests Ephraim in the heroic stateliness of a firstborn of the species.
ten thousands of
Ephraim the
ing
is
expressed
with instructive
It
reference to
more
since
ancient document.
fulfilled,
Ephraim did not receive the extremities of the land for his which Moses has here devoted to him and Benjamin, contributed to prevent the fulfilment of the direction which it contains. Benjamin plapossession, and perhaps the very passage,
160
of
Ephraim
at
To Zebulon
he
said,
commerce,
And, Issachar,
in thy tents.
The tribes shall proclaim your mountain,* Where rightful sacrifices shall be offered,
For there can they draw the
influx of the sea.
And
much
it
to
defer
for
an appendix
to this chapter,
and
To Gad
he
said,
Blessed be God,
He
The
spoil of conquest
It
literal one.
is
means
tains
the tribes,
shown
mentioned must be near these tribes, is shown by the local circumstances which follow, which refer to the harbour near Acco, as well as
to the place to
first
made.
Of
to
a mountain
of Judah, in order
tThe blessing bestowed upon Gad contains both praise and censure; since Gad was the first of the three tribes, which joined his troop. Hence he calls him the leader, and sa^ that like a lion
praise for heroism,
fair inheritance,
he dwells
in
wander
in tents.
promise made
still
in future to
go forward
did so, p.n^
all
In the
expedition the
(Jos. iv. 13,)
tribe
Gad
went
in
advance of the
host.
161
Because the portion of his princes was then Yet will he inarch onward witli the host,
safe.
To Dan
he said,
also
is
Dan
young
lion,
He
[where
at that
The
pur-
pose of Moses
therefore to call
upon the
tribe,
and excite
,
them
To
Naphtali he said,
O Naphtali,
And
filled
[that
bly,
is
at the
according to the
command
of Jacob.]
To
Asher he
said,
tribes,
brethren.
bolts.
And
more
is
shall
also shall
he be
again
The
blessing of Jacob
and
fine oil,
Thus Moses
aimed to animate the whole in their various residences with one paternal impulse, with one self-improving spirit of Industry and national feeling.]
*14
162
There
is
none,
larael, like
God,
Who
A-tid in his
Thy protector is the eternal God,* Thou art beneath his everlasting arm,
He
enemy
I
Yea
The eye
of Jacob looketh upon a land, That is full of corn and wine, On which the heaven droppeth dew,
And
the
of his people.
With such words of golden richness does Moses take leave He builds their hopes on God, represents their land as the object of his love, that land, from which they Here looked down from the heights of Bashan and Gilead.
shut out from the nations, secure
dwell, nourished, not as
Egypt by the
the
immediately
hand of Jehovah. A bold mountain race should Jeshurun become, and though the crafty wiles of their enemies were unceasing, should proceed,
by the
till
all
Would
Moses had been accomplished! The counsurrounded and limited by mountains, seas, riv-
this is the most emphatic word used by Moses to express the and inviolable truth of God we know from Ps. xc. 1. By the words here used and the triumphal march of God in the clouds he re-
*That
eternity
minds us of
163
ers and
deserts
;
Asia,
at the foot
is
world, and
their outlet
and haven.
situation
is
concerned,
it
and
remained true
to the
spirit
Poor, and
now
which
misfortune and
folly,
we know
hill,
eve-
in the history of
man-
for superstition,
fruitiful,
doomed henceforth to
perpet-
To Zebulon
And,
he said,
Issacliar, in thy tents.
The tribes shall proclaim your mountain, Where rightful sacrifices shall be oflered,
For there can they draw the
influx of the sea,
And the
He
himself explains,
would proclaim
ular sacrifices
;
for here,
he proceeds,
will
joy the influx of the sea, and to behold, to acquire, and use,
164
rare and beautiful productions, the secret treasures of the sand,
the glass
made
in that vicinity.
He
allures
them, therefore,
by the influence of
not, indeed, enIt
and
curiosity.
What mountain
other than Tabor.
then was
it,
which he did
?
them
as a free people
could be no
Tabor
of
lies
tribes. It lies directly against the bay Acco, the most natural harbour on the whole coast. The lake Cendevia, where glass was most anciently produced, is not far from it, and the river Belus, so well known on account
its
The
and
literally
point
it
out.
The
mounplace
desert
somewhere and
at a distance
from these
proclaim a mountain
for the
How judicious,
we
in
consider
it,
how
to
This was
name
the umbili-
was
In choosing Zion
for the
to the necessity
The consequence
difficulty,
fell
and on the
this
first
favoura-
off
from
sanctuary, and
chose
Bethel.
for
Dan and
Had
Mount Lebanon,
Mount Tabor.
165
This mountain,
out as a place
for
too,
by
its
a national assemblage.
midst
of a very
of
its
fertile plain,
and
all
account
all
Apart from
other
,
mountains,
round, as
cent,
if
its
It
is difficult
of asfor
Romans
at the
it is
and other
fruit
wide and beautiful prospect, and Jeremiah says of a hero he shall move with dignity, like Tabor among the mountains.
Its
sunnnit
is
an
elliptical
plain,
two
in length.
how
beautifully
was
it
fitted
mountains
would here have been celebrated by the sacred poets, than scenes, in those around the small and barren Mount Zion which .the fertility of the country, the view of tribes happi;
ly
descriptions.
The
this
mountain,
now
Such was this mountain, as to its natural form and position, nor was it less eligible from its relation to the political divisions of the country. It was situated between two tribes, winch were not the most ambitious, but the most industrious and most profitably employed, and belonged exclusively to These were more than any others able to furnish neither.
provision and entertainment for the national assemblies.
its fruitful |ii)d
From
soil,
166
Zebulon
lay
upon the
sea,
profitable trade
Here no
rivalship between the tribes was were sons of the same virtuous mother,
and second
to
none
in dignity
at
the
same
precedence
in rank.
They
on
ter
to
neighbouring herds.
which had the patient beast of burden of the Patriarch side, and the dealer in foreign merchandize on the other, on both sides means for accommodation and interesting excitement. Where were these to be found in the deserts of the tribe of Judah ? and yet we know the national festivals were designed for national amusement and for trade. Its vigion,
on the one
cinity to
one of the
to
finest
brought
Mount Tabor,
would have awakened industry and promoted the interchange For on the one hand of commodities throughout the land, was AcGO, on the other Gennesareth, flourishing communities
on
all sides,
all at
the point
Yet
alas!
legislator
pld,
167
of the necessary influence.
fell
into the
hands
until
fixed
it
perma-
nently upon
his
By
dence and the tabernacle of God, this monarch, no doubt, added both power and glory to his reign. The circumstances
of his
own life, and of the tribe from which he sprung, and in which he could most fully confide, made this choice moreover necessary for him. Yet it is none the less true, and the result clearly proved it, that the more enlarged plan of Moses for
uniting
all
more
free
and more
was
ar-
rangement which David adopted, was thrown among the tribes Ephraim and Judah were rivals for to their final separation.
precedence in rank, because in the blessing of the Patriarch
both were invested with a crown.
And
undue share of power and honour, Ephraim combined with the other tribes, and chose along with their own king their separate places,
also, for their
sacred assemblies.
was built upon mountains belonging to them in common, held them together a proof, that, had this been placed elsewhere,
it
fine influence
upon
all,
which
in-
was now
its
The
balance
If
we
we
find
it
indeed, in a
source of
From
dah he had given to these two sons, prerogatives, which were abused by their weaker posterity. It was the injunction of
16g
Moses, that the country should not be divided, until the whole'
was
in their possession,
The command
was reasonable and necessary, for if the more powerful tribes seized upon their portion before this, who was to support the weaker and aid them in securing theirs 1 And how, too, in that case, would an equitable apportionment of the whole be possible 1 Yet the injunction was not carried into effect. Moses was already before his death compelled to give some of the
tribes
their portion
beyond the
river Jordan.
We
know
still
that
he did
this unwillingly,
to
go
as
Canaan.
It
So soon
mean time
wandered about and made terms with the Canaanites as they best could. The division was three times repeated before all the tribes were able to find their posSome of them, indeed, were still inadequately provisessions.
the weaker tribes
ded and compelled to seek for new dwellings. Those which were treated with neglect by Jacob, obviously suffered by it, and it was not without reason, that Moses so often impressed
it
visits
to the third
For what
fault
was had
done a
How was Dan to blame, that foolish and rash deed 1 he was born of a concubine, and almost forgotten in the distriIn short, the land was divided without bution of blessings ?
system or equality, the Northern part not wholly conquered, and what was worse the most warlike tribes were settled, where there was the least danger of assault, in the middle of
the country.
trary,
The
on the con-
were apportioned
From
169
Egypt, Canaan had nothing to
to defend itself against the
fear, and every tribe was able Arabian hordes but on the North,
;
was otherwise, and there Jacob and Moses had assigned to Ephraim, Manasseh, and Benjamin their several portions. Here the frontier was now left unprotected, and hence the hostile assaults, in which, first Israel, and finally Judah was destroyed, came in that direction. The nation, indeed, was exposed to ruin even from the Canaanites, because they were divided,^and did not prosecute the war, till their conquest was completed. There was, no general supervision, and no wise apportionment of the whole was any longer possible. Of the sanctuary, which Moses had carefully placed rather to the North than the South, no thoup-ht was taken, no bond of union was preserved among the tribes, and tliey became one by one the prey of the most despicable
it
enemies.
In the
mean time
its
the beautiful
it
was, and in
Indeed,
became
first
and hence
lib-
erty, in the
song of Deborah.
* Jud.
iv. 5.
15
ViL
Influence ol Moses against this. Design of the song of the well, which he introduces. Dreams, trances and visions of the Prophet and soothsayer. Vision of Balaam. Its purpose. Probability of it in the mind of an Eastern conjurer. The language of benediction and triumph uttered by Balaam. Of whom it was spoken. How they
came
and
in
Book
of the
wars of Jehovah.
Poetical
Whether Amalek or Moses raised his hands towards the throne of God. Song of triumph over the Amalekites. Poetical passages in the Books of Joshua and Judges. Of the standing still of the sun and moon. Of the sound of the trumpets at Jericho. Age of poetry in the Book of Judges. Difference
explanation of the altar of Moses.
political order
Tone
Animation
in
Example
in the store-
ry of Sampson.
In the foregoing section I have treated of two blessings pronounced upon Israel, from different periods in their history, and in different styles of expression I shall now add to them another, more strongly marked, than either, in the boldness
;
of
its
It is the pro-
phecy of Balaam, when he saw the camp of Israel. But the history, which precedes, is the subject of so many contradictory opinions, that
it
will
be necessary to exhibit
it
with some
171
care in the light which seems to
me most
natural
with refer-
ence
to
When
people
felt
kinor
of this
for a
himself too
weak
to
nothing strange in
if
we take
into
we
learn
them from
They
attached
blessings of
much importance to the imprecations and their soothsayers. They believed that misfortune
if
awaited them,
curse
all
or of the
blessing.
The
history
of superstition
among
That
nothing peculiar.
he
tolerate
The song
od,
this
Spring up,
well,
it.
Sing ye unto
*Num. tNum.
xxii. 1.
tTlie latter
it is
well
known had
in the
their incantatores.
to
xxi. 16.
believe
they call to
come!) and precisely these are the first buhrs Reisen Th. 2) Among other nations also I have read of similar words of enchantment, by which they believed, that water could be made to flow up from the earth,
tal
172
The princes digged the well, The nobles pointed it out,
With their scepters. With their staves.
to
of the leaders, that no enchanter's rod might be permitted to approach it. Balaam himself was obliged to confess, " that en-
Israel,
could prevail
against
Jacob."
this
Moses
this art,
how
to the control of
God, was
The messengers
Balaam had
the people,
the journey.
strange.
sent by Balak
whom
he was
Here
to
Were
and permitted
all
nations?
Was
who as he
says,
Who listened
And saw
to the
words of God,
Who
fell in a
trance but
saw
clearly,
was not the mind of such a man, who believed, that even wastill more likely to see
not
God
him most accordant with the laws of nature, as he gave commands in dreams, or awakened conceptions, in the minds of Abimelech, of Nebuchadnezzar and other pagans. The result was, that Balaam, daunted by the
to
guardian
of Balak.
God
still
greater presents,
173
The
to
God
permitted him
to say
Still
(TO.
thino-
Yet however with the express prohibition else, than that, which he put in his mouth.
any
more
to
ed
alarm the dealer in benedictions, that fearful vision appearThe to him in the way, of which so much has been said.
it is
vision,
to
The
went out of the way, pressed against the wall, fell upon her knees; and now the vision began to appear in the mind of
ass
the soothsayer.
He
and
finally
he hears a voice.
The messenger
of Jehovah,
who
stood before
him
in the
way,
ass,
less
He
threatens to slay
him
finally
God
Thus impressed
Let one read acwhere such still exist, and he will see with astonishment of what vehement excitements of the imagination they are capable. Their souls wander from their bodies, which in the mean time lie apparently lifeless, and bring accounts of what they have seen in this and that place, to which they have just been. So too of their divinations which are confided in by the people, and at which the
countries,
All in fact
look with wonder upon the feats of these men, and the unnatural
not the
way, which was the most customary and most effectual upon
the
mind of *lo
the diviner.
fearful
phaenomenon was
to
meet
174
He actually heard and saw, in a waking the way. what is here related, and how trifling for us to enquire, whether the ass actually spoke ? and how ? whether and in what way God gave her reason and human organs of speech
him
in vision,
&.C.
To the diviner
is,
he heard
a voice
to us, unless
we would
also
From
They
man
of such imagination
we
piousness of imagery.
There
is
little
and nothing
this respect.
in the discourses of
the
duced, with
max
parts, that
to that for
we seem
to
magic ladder,
made.
Called
Come Come
and curse
me
Jacob,
curse
denounce
cursed
not denounced?
From the rocky summit I behold the nation, From the Mountain tops I survey them.
Behold a people, thatdwelleth alone,
And
Who
Or number
175
Let
me
let
And
my
last
end be
like bis.
The
kino-
is
and as
if this
where perhaps no
sacrifices
would
avail, or
mount Pisgah.
Seven
altars
are built, seven offerings brought, and Balak with the princes
Moab remained
says.
by the O-Tering.
and
Stand up,
O
to
Hearken
God Nor
is
the son of
said,
Hath he
Behold
I
make
it
good ^
He
cannot reverse
it.
God
is
with him,
The God
his strength.
No
According
to the
times
it
shall be
toldhim^
resolved to be done.t
this people,
they rise up as a
lion,
And lift themselves up as a young lion. He lieth not down, till he eat the prey, And drink the blood of the slain.
*Jeshurun seems
sense of
of Israel,
to
ayadog
and
in the
It often
occurs as a
name
m the
song of Solomon
the lovers of
Solomon ar&
tA
fiao distinction
176
Now
if
he
he
shall at least
and the
no farther
to
seek
for auguries.
encamped by
his parable,
upon
Israel
and
Thus Thus
He
Balaam, the son of Beor, man, whose eyes are open, saith it, who heareth the words of God,
saith the
Who
How
Jacob,
And thy dwelling places, O Israel, As rivers spread themselves abroad, As gardens by the river's side, As aloes, which God hath planted. As cedar trees, beside waters.
Waters run from
His king
their fountains.
shall be his offspring.
'
Agag,
And his kingdom shall be exalted. God hath brought him out of Egypt, As of a wild bullock is his race,
He He
bones.
them with his arrows. He coucheth and lieth down as a lion, As a young lion, who shall rouse him up
Blessed
is
And
And
cursed
commands him
to his
its
own
place.
Balaam
in
him
ple
farther, in
later
however, what
times.
do
own peohighest
point of sublimity.
Thus saith Balaam, the son of Beor, Thus saith the man, whose eyes are open,
177
He
saith,
who heareth
the
And knoweth
Who
I
saw
is
not yet,
yet afar
off.
is
There cometh a
Which
And
He
and
said,
Amalek
His end
the
first
among
to
the nations,
shall be
perish forsver.
He
Thou
Yet
Till
Again he took up
and
said,
this ?
Who
shall live,
Ships from
Italia's coasts.
And humble
He
The
Moab."
towers
is
on these, or the
men who
garrison them.
Children of Seth
have no meaning
178
And Balaam
Balak
own
place,
and
also arose
up and went
his way.
What a crown of triumph for Israel a crown of laurel, becomes continually more precious with age. And was
!
that
this
?
an
artifice
of the Moabites
?
own
injury
and
If
it
be an
artifice, it
must be
to
later
1
Hebrew
poet.
And
whom
be ascribed
What
it
later
sayer uttered curses or blessings upon Israel?" Let us considthey were uttered not for effect upon us, but upon Is-
rael
and Moab,
The
the
more discouraged, had a soothsayer so famous as Balaam imprecated evil upon them as on the other hand it failed to raise the courage of the Moabites, when they heard such destinies announced. Thus Jehovah here adapted himself to the weakness of the host of Israel, and seized upon the device of the enemy, which was to have rendered them hopeless, and converted it into a means of inspiwar, would have been, perhaps,
;
ring
" But
Israelites ?"
In
answer
enquire,
will
the Israelites
the mountains of the East, he must have passed by or through the hosts of the Israelites.
The
were
place.*
3.nd
which several poetical'extracts and songs are introduced in this Thus we can at least conjecture, whence it came,
how
it
was preserved.
*
Let us look
xxi.
at
Num.
1430.
179
When
began a book of the wars of Jehovah, that was afterwards conOnly a few poetical passages of it, however, remain. tinued. A passage from the triumph of Moses over Amalek.*
I will blot out, utterly blot out
The memory
of
The
altar,
which Moses
my
in like
manner
to
a poetical explana-
tion.
Jehovah's throne,
From
It
generation to generation.
was was supported by a stone, and this suggested the idea of an altar, which was called the " banner of victory." Asa conqueror Moses had raised his hand to the throne of Jehovah. We find afterwards other poems from this book.t The song of the well was before introduced, and a triumphal ode over
that of Moses, that
It
the Amorites
he;-
follows.
A SONG OF TRIUMPH OVER THE AMORITES, WHO HAD BEEN THE CONQUERORS OF MOAB.I
Come
ye into Heshbon,
Build and strengthen Sihon.
Woe
Thou art undone, people of Chemosh, Thy sons must be fugitives. Thy daughters become captives To Sihon, King of the Amoritee.
* Ex. xvii. 14.
+
Num.
xxi. 14.
Num.
xxi. 27.
ISO
Their yoke
is
now broken
unto Dibon.
From Heshbon
conquered Hesh-
They
conquered enemies.
Of such
much
in
interest
few bold features in the narrative, seem, howsongs, and in the boldest of
still,
refer-
ence
is
expressly
it
made
to
and hence
is
in the
morning, and
it,
therefore,
therefore,
till
were witnesses
All nature
of his deeds.
They seemed
till
to stand
with astonishment
in the heavens,
the victory
was completed.
appeared
*
for
command
word
sig-
was
a book of
Hebrew
heroic poetry,
it
probably
began with the song at the Red Sea, and from the first word in that, perhaps, acquired its name. Or Jasher was equivalent to the book of heroes, because it was the heroic designation of this people as Jeshurun, avadot, as we have seen above. Both amount to the same thing, if we
translate Jasher, the
it
was such
its
contents
show,
181
lo
it,
e.
enemy,
lar
when they
if
fled
also,
storm of hail, as
foundation of
Simi-
The
narrative proceeds
And as they fled before Israel,* The way that leadeth to Bethhoron, Then cast Jehovah mighty stones Upon them out of heaven, Along the way unto Azekah, and they
fell,
of Israel,
Israel,
And thou moon in the valley Then the sun stood still. And the moon was stayed.
Until the victory
was completed.
The war
For
is it
"The sun stood still in the midst of heaven, And went not down, although the day was ended. And never was a day like that day,
Neither before
it
nor after
it.
to the
voice of a hero,
for Israel."
Who
if
does not see, that here is the costume of poetry, even no book of heroes were referred to ? To the language of Israel such expressions were not foreign, nor was their boldness unusual.
How
often
is it
ry,
"
God
Josh. X. 11.
16
1S2
become combatants. The sun and moon and eleven dream of a youthful shepherd, as bowing down before him. The Sun has its place of rest, and knows the time of its retiring to repose.*
the stars
So
it is
Judges.
When
down
smile.
at the
the account be
read in the
it
will
cease to excite a
With
For
six
bidden the assault, and on the seventh, when the enemy were
put off their guard, by the
the walls at the early nal for the war-cry, that
idle
and
the sig-
for
city.
is
of Judges
spirit
of
who indeed
want of organization and government among themselves, but whose heroism and love of liberty now and then kindled up in the heroick soulg I might denominof individuals, and broke out into a flame.
were often subdued and oppressed
for
* It
may be
that
prolonged, (for do not Homer's heroes express wishes of the same sort,
battle ?)
and do they not correspond with the spirit, that prevails in the heat of and when the event corresponded with his wishes, and the light
cotinued unusually long, and the very heavens seemed to come to his aid
by a storm of
hail,
should compose the picture of a day unlike to any other, should represent
the hero as speaking, employing Jehovah himself as a coadjutor, and
make
moon
and wonder
at tb
183
ate this the poetical age of Israel,
and
will
explain myself on
nation, but not the most favourable for producing poetry, that
with
life
and
action.
in bold
and
in
and of
liberty.
"At
was no king
and every
man
own
eyes,"
and
see from
many
traces of their
He
acted according
in relatliat
tion to
is,
all
heroic deeds
Lord,
national
began
to drive
there," even
when
the actor
was
by no means a
man
of moral worth.
It is painful to
read the
which
it
was
written.
ancient
and deception
all
rude nations do so
where
force.
in other respects
magnanimity
exists,
power exists only in individual enterprize, have more especial need of such weapons. For how can an individual even the
strongest and bravest,
if
we mean
?
to
vantage by the
skilful artifices
arts of
?
war
is
And what
Or
mouth of
and
cannon
Let
Ehud
go, then,
excited by Jehovah,
184
with his dagger pierce the foreign tyrants of his country.
It
was more decicive than a victory with us, which is purchased by the blood of thousands. Every thing then depended on individual heroism and prowess. The rude dweller in tents,
Jael the wife of Eber, who,
could
little
claim
to
rank
in
spirit
the
We
must
first
Qualem ministrum
fulminis alitem,
in
aves vagas,
Ganymede
flavo,
Venti paventem
mox
in ovilia
Nunc
in reluctantes
dracones
Thus do
prolonged
deeds of Deborah, of
I
Gideon, of Jephthah,
hold no more
vindication of particular
circumstances on the
to be necessary.
The
whole stands
forth,
even
in respect
Some
of the narra*
lives,
Samson
lah, are
Individual ex-
i.
e.
of enthusiasm, resolution
185
and boldness.
The annunciation of some of them before appearance of an angel, or a nameless Prophet, the singular proofs, whetlier of the calling or of the courage of these men, the riddles, the play upon words, the youthful
all
the enterprises of
narratives
more
poetry, than
all
fabulous machinery.
Each of
of his history,
it
he
Samson.
Good humour,
to love,
levity
life,
Wine and
at
more devotedly
will
and
length deprived him of his prowess, his liberty, and his eyes.
"I
of a
my
enemies that
and yet
them" was
to direct
foolish
thought,
occasion against
in the spirit
how The
In opposing
as
men he was
man,
in
opposing
women
he was
but a
woman,
forth
with levity
many similar heroes in history have been. He answers those, who through his own means had solved his riddle,
thirty Philistines,
goes
and slays
might receive their prize, deserts his wife, and returns with a kid
present, and
ber.
as if nothing
to
her cham-
When
he learns, that she has become the wife of another, he says have just cause against the Philistines,
I will
"now
at length I shall
do
them mischief,"
is
it
as if he
for
such an occasion.
The
hundred foxes with the firebrands between their tails manner; and the objections, that have been made to
The
to
and an idle, frolicksome advenengage merry accomplices enough to rarry it into effect. They had the sport. He looked to the result. So also with the gate of Gaza, which to the reproach of the Gazites he
would not
fail
ass, the
pun
strictly in
The
place
where b*
186
To
this poetical
finest heroic
song of
will ap-
The
68th Psalm
proach nearest
to
it,
is still
far
behind.
In the song of
made
the attack
was
He
was a narrow pass, a sort of hollow shaped had made an arrangement with his countrywhich
their
men,
that
lo take, of binding
to his
And
when
in
passing he
came
into this
Lechi, he
chose his opportunity, seized upon the jaw-bone of an ass, which lay
there, and accomplished his work.
He
specting
that
it
in a
another
is
added,
God showed
fainting warrior,
who
in
adventure
the
The
day the caller's fountain or the fountain of invocation. (Here too the fountain could not have flowed from the jaw-bone, which he wielded in his hand, but from something that remained to aftertimes, obviously the winding rock, Lechi,
brevity,
v. 14.)
All this
is
told with an
is
animated
The same
true of the
of Delilah,
For he knew nothGod, whose strength would remain so long as he kept his inviolable vow. This he knew from his name, his education and mode of life, which might perhaps be
was dedicated
to his national
sufficiently self-denying.
Suddenly he
lost his
courage,
when
his
vow
was broken and felt that the assistance of God was withdrawn from hira. But as his hair grew he found his cheerfulness and courage revive. His enemies knew this, and when he was to furnish them with amusement,
probably
ship,
in
an
old,
He
died as he
,
had
lived,
an irreconcilable
enemy
whether
a narrative so
fiction ?
work of
it is
told.
surdly defended,
the finest.
And
187
Deborah
all is
present, living
is
action.
In that of David an
to
ceremony which
palms, that
in feeble tones
On
Give ye praise
the Lord,
That Israel hath taken her revenge. That tlie people came freely to battle. Here ye kings, give ear ye princes,
I will sing, I will sing I will sing unto
unto Jehovah.
Jehovah,
God
of Israel.
And marchedst from the hills of Edom, Then the earth quaked, the heavens dropped, The clouds poured streams of water, The mountains melted before Jehovah, Sinai before Jehovah God of Israel. In the days of Shamgar son of Anath,
In the days of Joel the highways were empty,
And travellers sought the winding paths. The assemblies of Israel were no more, They ceased, until I Deborah arose,
I have
will not
der Theo-
logie betrefierd
Th.
1.
S. 111.
and accompanied
to
it
now
repeat.
I
me new views ou
was
a chorus to
it
must refer
Whether
there
xxxiii. 2.
and with which David began the 68ih psalm, and Habakkuk, cap. 3. It seems to have been a customary beginning of Hebrew songs of tri-
all
follow
Moses
as their
Homer.
188
Till I arose the mother of Israel.
They had chosen them new Gods,* Then war was raging at the gates,
seenf
of Israel.
My
And
me
to
Jehovah.
||
Yo
that ride
sit
That
on costly coverings.
An
Who
this idea,
and
to this caDse,
country.
The
ori.
fNot
that there
was no
forth,
was no ens
who
called
them
ttes to the
war.
led,
all
tThose who
in praise
;
and those
who
all to
units
they
There
is
hardly to be expected
age,
sit
Persona of
distinction.
Those who
the streets,
who walk
common
All enjoy th
(j
The
commends
battle
itself, I
think, by
lis facility,
occurred among
v. 21.
and chap.
iv. 6-
forever to be celebrated.
The
battle
was fought
when
were swollen, and according to v. 21. swept away the Canaanites. On account Deborah begins with the dropping heavens, introduces th constellations, which bring rain as combatants. In like manner are th narrow passes of Tabor conceived, in which the people were placed, ao4
this
is
accurately defined.
189
His goodness
to the
people of Israel,*
straits.
For there the people of Jehovah were in Arouse thee arouse thee, Deborah t Awake awake give a song of triumph,
!
Thou
son of Abinoam.
Jehovah with me against the mighty. From Ephraim came the first to Amalek,
Then earnest thou Benjamin with thy people, From Machir came over the leaders, From Zebulon those tl^at muster for battle.t The princes of Issachar were with Deborah,
Issachar, in bravery like Barak,
||
Sprang
By Reuben's brooks was much consulting. IT sittest thou there among the stalls ? To hear the bleating of the herds ?
Why
The
is
particularly concerned,
that the people of the country should never forget the victory
and deliver-
ance of Israel.
t
By
this
circumstance, perhaps
!
it
was preserved.
that
rouse up
excite thyself,
v.
11
15.
proceeds
order
of battle.
Barak (chap. iv. 6. 14.) is the beginning, and then follows the order of march, as the tribes assemble and follow her. She was from the mountains of Ephraim, (iv. 5.) and there also,
to
Her admonition
was
still
the
Perhaps the
many mountaina
times.
Those
that bore the rod for mustering, plainly representing, that the
tribe,
to others,
foU
lowed her
in the enterprise.
Hit is a special
honour
to this tribe to be
equal in bravery.
Tabor
lay
This
is
on the broad
IT
Tabor.
Here begins
the sarcasm
upon the
tribes,
wbichjeiJiained behind to
V. 17,
190
By Reuben's brooks
is
great consulting.
Dan also,
or
why
should he dwell
in ships,
Asher was
And
And
But the kings they came and fought, There fought the kings of Canaan, At Tanach by the waters of Megiddo,
But money,
From heaven they fought (against them), The stars from their courses fought with Sisera. The river Kishon swept them away. The winding river, the river Kishon. March on my soul in thy might, t Then stamped the hoofs of the horses,
In the fleeing,
in the fleeing of heroes.
[)
Curse Meroz, said the angel of Jehovah, Utter curses upon the inhabitants thereof.
They came
To
Blessed above
women
be Jael,
The
wife of
Heber
the Kenite,
in tents.
They were the first, whom Deborah committed to Barak, (iv. 6.) nni whose heroism she confided, and who are here also honoured with tho last and highest praise. They with the Northern tribes of Judsa wer heroic mountaineers. Zebulon it seems is contrasted with Asher and Dan, because like them it was by the sea, and yet joined the expedition.
in
this
description there
that she
is
sarcastic raillery.
Sbo
titles,
may
what
is
said of the
to
God
is
Jehovah.
(Chap.
ii.
4. vi.
first
12
22. xiii.
21.)
The denomination
here
is
which appeared there, commanded to conquer the land. The song 8peakl> in the name of God, i. e, as the voice of the nation.
idi
He asked water, she gave him milk,* She brought curdled milk in a lordly dish. She seized with her hand upon the nail, With her right hand the heavy hammer. And with the hammer she smote Sisera, She smote him through the head, She pierced and struck through his temples.
Under her
feet
he bowed himself,
He
fell,
he lay down.
At her
feet
he bowed, he
fell.
he
fell
down
dead.
?
coming
Her wise
ladies
answered
her.
to herself.
"Are they not then to find and divide To every man a damsel or two, And variegated garments for Sisera,
the spoil,
The triumphal
So
But
let all
thine
enemies perish,
O
||
Jehovah,
let
Whenhegoeth
This, too, is irony
of
The
That
was
intoxicating milk,
is
plain
He
in
concealed himself in
gynacaeumof the
tent,
and there
death.
t
The
t This wise lady of the harem was not desirous, that Sisera shonld acquire any damsels. She wished only for variegated garments and
ehowy trappings
Q
her lord.
as
it
howB
as methodically arranged, aa
is
and sailed
to the people
Brown, an English writer, has hazarded the hypothesis,* and dancing never have a more powerful
influence, than
when
united, that
among
still
all
nations in a state
on
this
Had
he
satisfi-
ed himself with
his theory to
times
left
it
The union
proved
;
of these arts
know among
of no objection to
all
rude nations
is
pretty clearly
accompanied
That
and
three natu-
least
combined together, cannot be denied, for some poetry at is lifeless without tones to accompany it, and the most simple and natural musick has no animating effect without
poetry.
defined emotions, which require to be rendered clear and distinct by words, or they at length,
London, 1763.
193
ear of a mere
artist,
That both
their effect
we
;
see by
on
all
children.
animated
language
sion
its
highest effect.
Thus
truth
in the
of Milton.
Blest pair of Syrens, pledges of Heaven's joy,
Wed your
With
saintly shout,
soul,
why must
Why
inward eye, which contemplates the visions of heaven, be accompanied and confirmed by the inward ear, which listens to
And why should not both, its harmonies ? most animated expression, employ gestures
In poetry as well as musick of the dance.
in order to
to
their
illustrate
the
?
rhythm
rhythm
is
but the
movement
liv-
The images
Thus
the
is
must be a point of would necessarily give to them their greatest power. It must act, that is, at the same time upon all the powers of sense, and either inIf this, then, cannot be denied, there
if skilfully attained,
it
by force through
all its
organs.
It
and excites it 17
194 This view of the matter, however, shows of itself, that such is of rare and delicate attainment. Not all the images of poetry express themselves by gestures, nor do
a point of union
all
is
awaken
what
same degree lose their influence, and the harmonic proportion, that becomes beautiful only by such an illusive correspondence of all, as to produce a perfect unity of effect, may well be considered a prodigy and it was perhaps best, that each art should follow its own independent course.
others in the
;
This they,
from
of
its
its
in
fact, did at
art.
it
the
What each
its
by being severed
companions,
own
peculiar character,
its
it
unfolded
ing upon
to the utmost,
effects
by
rely-
its its
own power,
had necessarily
modified
It
therefore, manifest,
art, in
it
its
is
objective existence,
as an organ of nature
power of
would seem, moreover, that there are only certain perithese arts could be united in their due proportions. ods, It could be only when no one of them is yet become a distinct,
It
when
when
its
where neither dance nor song can follow it, nor musick become so artificial, that it would require the voice of birds to accompany its tones and movements with verbal signs;
when
too, the
dance
is
not so
much
a labyrinth of art, as a
ture.
guided by musick, as the animated expressive language of gesBut suppose the separation once made, and each art to
have advanced
while the
for centuries
human organs
in the
upon its own solitary course, mean time have been cultivated
19a
and
refined,
and
their reunion
becomes
difficult, or rather at
artificial
once impossible.
dance of
a sensuous people, even the Grecian dithyr ambus itself, and our ear is unaccustomed to combine what is so manifold into one momentary impression. We distinguish and trace each
several
art
by
itself,
and judge
it
by
itself
We
fail
of that
power of enchantment lies. This period, in which such a union may exist, falls, therefore, in nations, whose feelings are yet fresh and lively, whose life is marked by few but strong impulses of emotion, and who
from their infancy have been accustomed to enjoy bined together.
be the e.xpression
many com-
Among
own
and actions of their own exclusive mode of life, and who have been accustomed from childhood
to
all
in their natural
whose niusick was, therefore, at an early period adapted to the choral song, and ventured but little beyond the sphere of this, finally, whose gestures are determined, not by
the rules of a science, but by a healthful state of the passions,
tions
and conventional principles of intelligibility, among such naand such only is found a theatre, in which these magic
harmonies.
tion
advances
their
enchantment had
raised, vanishes of
its
own
accord.
The Hebrews,
which have a
taste for
musick
had reached
is
its
highest point.
syllables,
196
nied with choral song, and here and there with mimic rep-
The adufa was the musical instrument of the dancing women, and the obscure monosyllabic words employed as terminations are probably the echo of the men for in
resentation.
;
this
way we
song.
They
in with the
last
word
when they
pronounce
The
for
od
f-ong of
Deborah seems
to be the
marked
in
it
the
in-
battle, the
naming of the
tribes
here and there accompanied with mimicry in the expression, 12 27. and finally, the derision cast upon the triumph of
we
As
all
here
same
to
thing.
On
this
of po-
degree of
art.
was
a representation in
was by means of
such, that the Prophets wrought upon Saul, and David also
In our
own
There
scarcely any
man
whom some
strains of
more vivid, often uncontrolable. How many singular pha;nomena of this sort might be adduced When
!
skillful
197
with their highest influence, it is known what striking efFeots In nations unsophisticated by they can produce upon them.
refinement such tones are given by national songs, which,
with certain favourite objects of national pride and ancestral
power over the heart and head of every individand when afterwards these tones recur in connexion with such objects and on solemn occasions, they renew as it were the youth of every one, and reproduce the
glory, gain a
glow of
magic
Every one knows what a mere coming together, still more the harmony of sentiment of a great multitude produces. Not merely that community of outward circumstances excites a common feeling and hurries the soul, which feels itself but as a drop in
their earliest enthusiasm.
effect the
it,
um,
If
at
scoffs,
philosopher equally
explain.
we look
history,
at the
He-
what themes do most of them furnish for the simplest poetical effusions, combined with the most natural brew
rausick, in short for the pictures of lyric poetry
!
Look
at the
daughter of Jcphthah, as she goes to her death with a chorus She goes as an offering of maidens lamenting around her
!
shadows of death. She bewails her youth, takes a farewell of all that was dear to her in life, and prophesies perhaps upon the altar what a touching
to the altar, as a bride to the
picture,
in
its
Again take
avail-
David
in the presence
of Saul,
ed himself of the beauty of this situation, but no one to my knowledge has yet stolen the harp of David, and produced a
poem, such even as Dryden's ode in the composition of Handel, where Timotheus plays before Alexander. Samsori has
furnished the tuneful Milton with a subject for a very musici
al
in
the desert
is
known
poem,
to us all.
into a
as
good
at
198
least as that,
for
at the
Panathenaea in Greece;
the subject
the
same.
accents of fame.
when they slew the tyrant Hipfreedom. The song in which yet extant, and their memory lives It is a matter of regret that we
to
Germans
in celebrating these
wonderfid
events of antiquity
for
most
them more
character of lyric expression, where they are more impressive, and more affecting. The opinions also of the age in question abound in materials for poetry. Whoever has read the summoning of the ghost of Darius in the Persce of j^schyhU, where the deceased king appears in
to
the
brief,
may prophecy
at
concern-
ing the destiny of his unhappy kingdom, will have his mind, in
cupied than
in speculating
the sorceress.
The shade
kingdom, and the near approach of the Why should not the numerous
prophecies in their dying moments,
who
uttered
remind us of Hector, of Patroclus, of Cassandra, whom ^Eschylus and Homer have represented as prophecying in the
last
moments of
life ?
Finally the
life
friendship of Jonathan,
of David
what pictures
!
for
the
In short the
blooming youth of the Hebrew muse falls within this period of The wonders of the desert were so far
to
withdrawn, as no longer
delight the imagination.
overpower, but
still
to elevate
and
They had
awaken
spirit
not yet
It
become
lifeless
fitted to
of Jehovah.
199
the ancient miracles,
whose
fruits
many deeds
as the
five
pages respect-
ing the history of Samson, which the editor inserted from the author's
manuscripts.
the
in
it
Even
Tr.
VIII.
ADDITIONAL FRAGMENTS
FROM THE YOUTHFUL PERIOD OF HEBREW POETRY.
Jotham's fable.
Of
the spirit
Samson's
Fondness of children and of nations in an early period of cultivation for this kind of fiction. Samson's play upon words. Of verbal conceits among the Hebrews generally. Causes of the frequent occurrence of these among this people and in their language. Of the purpose and value of such, as a gratification Fondness of the Hebrews for to the ear, or an aid to the memory.
riddle, with that of
Agur.
clothing
new
change of times.
they were.
Merit of Samuel.
Prophets.
What
Friendship of
Jonathan,
Lamentation of David
ovei;
To
Like the fables of ^'Esop and Menenwas spoken to the people for their instruction respecting an actual event, and such is the truest and best origin and aim of fabulous compositions. In this fable trees speak and act, for Israel then lived beneath the trees the life of herdsmen or cultivators of the soil. The youngest son of a worthy father, who alone was left after the murder of all his brothers, goes upon the top of the mountain, raises his
tiful fable
of Jothani.
it
ius Agrippa,
voice,
and addresses
in the fbllowing
had made the oppressor of his family and the murderer of his brothers their chosen king.
Hearken unto me, ye men of Shechem, That God may hearken unto you. The trees went forth upon a time
To
201
They
"
said unto the olive tree, us."
'
to
them,
my
oily sap,
And go Then
"
to
wave above
the trees
Come
I
But the
" Shall
answered them,
give up
my sweetness,
?"
Come
The
vine
I
" Shall
my
wine.
?"
And
"
go
to
Then
Come
The bramble
me
over you,
Come and
But
Let
if it
my
shadow.
be not so,
fire
come
And devour
the cedars of
Lebanon
!"
The
lives
wholly in the
In the
spirit
and feeling
of such freedom
eral fruitful
it
and luxuriant
the
proposed elevation.
clearly
the
gifts
and
It
qualifications, by
proposal
it is
conscious in itself
and
joyless, to
relates
the
first
the
shadow of the
202
bramble, or be consumed by
it
with
fire.
Beautiful fable!
full
of sad truth
for
is
The
entals
East
What
the
historians of
clothe
The
tyrant,
at least
who
them their fables, their proverbs, their wild and romantic These not only commended themselves to the minds of the common people, but sometimes ventured in humble Thus Nathan reguise to approach the ear of the monarch.
leave
tales.
the one
ewe lamb of
the poor
man.*
is
which
an
the
latter,
Lord of the vineyard threatens with immmediate destruction. Prophets paint symbols upon the wall, or themselves become symbols, living fables, and when curiosity prompted the enquiry, what is this? what does this witless figure mean?
The
its
pregnant import.
id.
What
"A
For
Thou sawest
I will
watch over
it,
my word
Till I accomplish
paronomasia.
What
torical
monuhi-.
And
as the
riddles
it
may, perhaps, be
in Oriental poetry.
i Isa. v._\.
203
When Samson
knew
which he propounded
Samson.
in verse.*
now
a riddle to you,
it>
if
And
Answer.
Put
ye shall interpret
Samson.
Out of the eater came forth meat, Out of the strong came forth sweetness.
Answer.
Nothing
is is
Nothing
Samson.
If ye had not ploughed with
my
heifer,
Ye had
All these
my
riddle.
a word, rhymes.
The
question
is
mally answered.
and a
liberal
reward offered
solution
clear proofs of
We
books.
and fondness
for riddles
even in later
to test the
mon by
man
to Itheil
spake,
To
Itheil
thus.
More
brutish surely
call
am
I
than a man.
not.
What men
Jud. xiv.
prudence
have
1218.
+ ProT. xxr.
204
I
And
know
the
knowledge of
the
Holy
Who up to heaven ascended or came down ? Who gathered up the wind within his fist ? Who bound the waters in a garment ? Who gave the earth its several bounds ?
What
is
his
name
if
it*
Inform me,
I
thou knowest?
perhaps, more
apt at
first to
is
we
to discover the
it.
meaning,
in fact, that
we
for
The
sage
Agur
is
to discourse lofty
sentiments to his
may
How
shall he,
his
who
in
un-
inferior to
race,
and con-
he
is
not versed in
human wisdom, be supposed to who are enof God, to the holy ones. The wisdom
of
men
;
is
science
his questions.
The
true
must know the depths of creation, and understand the whole compass of the world, or he deserves not the name.t "And what," asks Agur, " is the name of the man, who can venture
to say this of himself
?
Where
does he
Tell
live,
disciples
er words,
whom
is
he hath taught.
is
me
his
name
1"
In oththis
none such
mencement
where
in the
found on earth.
Obviously
Th.
1.
said of
betreffend,
S.
184
see from
That
iii.
of wisdom
Prov.
iii.
among
20.
the Orientals,
we
Gen.
Job. xxviii.
8.
viii.
2231.
205
said, that
God
alone
is
wise,
To man
wisdom, and
ceeds on.
it is
Agur
gives.
He
pro-
What God enjoins is wisdom pure as gold, He is a shield to them, who trust in him. Add nothing to the words of God,
Lest he reprove, and thou be found a
liar.
The same sentiment, which Job also expresses, that In the fear of God is for man the only divine wisdom."
" the
intro-
is
nothing enigmaticalso.
Some
asked of thee,
Deny me
Put
far
Allot
from me idolatry and lying, me neither poverty nor riches, But give me food in just allowance,
Lest
I,
too
full,
become
a
?
liar,
And
Or
say,
who
is
Jehovah
of
lest,
And
take the
name
God
in vain.
How
other in
ing
beautifully
life
!
how
true
them
a race,
who
And
A race, A race,
And
18
own eyes
forever pure,
filth.
loftily,
A race, whose
206
And
forward teeth, like knives
Devour the poor from off the land, The needy from among mankind.
The two
er
last lines
That cry "bring hither, bring hither." Three things are never satisfied.
And four say not " it is enough." The realm of death, The womb, that never bears,
The^earth, insaturate with water, And fire, that never saith, " enough."
The Halukah
is
mother of the realm of death, and the abyss, which according to Prov. xxvii. 20. are never satiated.*
as
It
is
here placed
things,
which
like
to,
it
In the passage
above referred
the eyes of
men
The eyes
of
men
me.
And four I cannot comprehend. The way o^an eagle in the clouds, The way of a serpent on the rocks. The way of a ship amid the waves. The way of a man with a maiden.
* In several poetical passages they are placed together aa pereonified
IL
Job. xxvi.
6.
xxviii.
22.
lukah as the
800.
207
The
last.
three
first
manner of the Oriental enigma, thus to prepare the way for a sentiment. But since the fourth has an ambiguity in the translation, which does not belong to the Hebrew, I will add here a kindred passage,* which will remove the
It is the
ambiguity.
As thou knowest not the way of the wind, Nor how the bones are formed within the womb,
Even so thou Itnowest not Which he performeth.
the
works of God,
The manner,
ble enigma,
in
which man
not so
is
formed
in the
womb, was
to
and
is it
among
present hour?
To
this, then,
the proposition
It
with
its
far-sought comparisons.
a fifth.
And
saith,
humourous conceit of arranging together come under some one general conception. The more diverse they are, according to the taste of the Orientals, the more acuteness do they show, and
see here the
We
are, therefore, so
much
the better.
And
when he becomes a king. The fool, when filled with meat, An odious woman, when she's married. The maid, who is her mistress's heir,
*Eccles.
xi. 5.
The
208
on the earth,
The
meat
in
summer.
The
Yet
houses
in the rocks,
The
Yet
The
lizard
it
And
yet
it
when an animal of
;
mates
pearance
for
(which in warm cliand are very annoying,) made its apthe Orientals are fond of such conceits, and
that sort,
involved propositions,
especially in
company
as they often
indeed assembled
for the
A lion,
enemy,
A cock, that proudly treads his dunghill,* A ram, that moves before his flock, A king, when marching with his people.
But enough on the subject of these conceits. We see what is their aim to seize upon the resemblances of things, and unite them under a moral or artificial point of view. All
;
nations in the early stages of their cultivation are fond of enigmatical conceits, as children are also upon the same grounds.
their
powers of ob-
in the
ftre
The second and third I have supplied from the ancient versions, for Hebrew text the subject of the second and predicate of the ttiir4
wanting.
209
servation
in
this
way respecting
and the praise,
facility,
good riddle
in his
own
circle, is to
them
as
I
it
we
the ac-
and examples of
these
and For
rid-
we
of their peculiar
I
ev-
whose records
am
acquainted, exfa-
own
We
which belong
as difficult to
be understood, as
We come now from riddles to puns. Of these the jovial Samson seems to have been peculiarly fond, and makes three or more of them on a single occasion.*
With jaw-bone of an
ass a mighty heap,t
I
How
idle
and
cate every point of such a punning conceit in the lighthearted hero intoxicated with victory
!
mouth of
The word
thou-
When
in
his
to die.
same word
in the original.
18*
210
with his enemies, he embraced the pillars of the house and
said,*
yet
for ray
The
sions
bitterest
was the
been formed on account of the name, "pun" or verbal conceit we shall follow the subject a little farther. Verbal
;
conceits pervade
all
Isaiah es-
also.
For
many of
w'holly untrans-
latable.
that the
term "pun"
(wortspiel)
may be
we
By
we understand
knew
nothing.
names, me-
of the language.
rally into the
1.
From
sphere of poetry.
From
among
the
Hebrews
was dependant upon names. These involved their history, the memorials of the remembered past, the tradition of the
patriarchal blessings.
If one received his
name from
life,
the cirfol-
cumstances of
there
we
choose, a play of
its
relation to history.
211
We find examples of
2.
When
these
life
from Adam downward. All the Panames in this way. names were changed, or modified from incithis
dents in the
new
play of
was impoi'tant to the meThus were the names of Abraham, Sarah, and Jacob mory. changed,* and perhaps those of Cain, of Noah and many others. Reference is often made to this in giving an account of their lives. Thus Isaac sported with his wile Rebecca.t So Ephraim, by a slight change, signified either a fruitful
words, as agreeable to the ear, as
branch, or a savage.^
3.
of the sons, on
whom
Seth,
names Shem,
a
Japheth, Judah, Gad, Ephraim, Dan,|| &c. include their blessings in the signification of the words.
With
the
name of
him.
When
the race
fell
All this
for those, to
whom
it
applied.
is true of names holds also of monuments, and of Remarkable incidents gave them their names, new Bct/ul, the house events changed them, as the case might be. of God^ where Jacob slept, became Bcth-aven;^ the great stone (1 Sam. vi. 18) a stone of sorrow by a slight inflection of the name. So it was with the heap, which was to be a witness, (Gen. xxxi. 52.) Laban and Jacob gave it different names on the same grounds. How variously were the names of cities and nations changed and applied by the Prophets, who prophecied respecting them. Babel, Edom, Canaanites, Kenites, Ekron,Gaza, &c. 5. The same was true in regard to occurring events, wheth-
What
cities.
er in derison or
Gen.
commendation.
t
thirty
52.
v. 5.
Gen.
xli.
Hos.
xiii.
11.
Gen.
iv.
Amos
212
05SC5, acquired thirty cities*
signified.
Nabal was a fool, as his name Samuel was a gift of God, by a slight transformation of the word, because he had been asked of him in prayer. t To
all this
it
does to so few radical words, and these so like each other, and by the uniform inflections of these effecting so many changes.
have cited
in the note,|
has
names and
the struc-
benedictions,
their ancestral
ter,
and the honour of the race as associated with names, what could the poets do other and betthis
in the
than
to
characteristic
to the
memory and
the ear.
From
down we find
He
be shed.
idols, &LC.
The Gods
Isaiah
is
tences.
Leaders are
stubborn,
refuse
to be led, the
law
is
beauty
is
Among
un-
and
stri-
king antitheses, which impress the sentiment of the Prophet A part of the Proverbs of Solomon deeply upon the mind.
it
were
or
show
as
it
were
*Judg.
t
X. 4.
tl Sam.
27. 28.
See
also Ver-
schuir de paronomasia in
213
out of their mouths,
find
the most artless and apt paranomasia, though for the most part
incapable of translation.
So
is it
miah,
of the
li.
20
places.
were
be wished, that
where they
in the translation.
From what has been said it seems to me clear, that the Hebrew paranomasia is not so ridiculous a matter, as we are apt to infer from the place and character of such things in modern languages. That language was of a wholly difterent
construction, and these verbal conceits had an entirely ditfer-
ent aim.
sonances and
led them.
Which
then
is
is
merely
Pope expresses
is
it,
the effect,
when even
becomes an echo to the sense. How fine in our rhymes or in Proverbs, antiimages,
the
theses, metaphors,
resemblances or diversity of
also
the thoughts
in
an unsought but
corresponding word.
Even
in philosophy
happy expressions
home
to the
mind
more
and so long
as a nation
its
mouth
sounds
na-
and the
ear,
and not
Hence among
all
same fondness for assonance and verbal conceit. Hence among them especially that emphatic and legitimate brevity, that rapid and memor
214
orable expressiveness, which the tracer of letters can never
attain.
it
would be
different
to imitate the
is
taste of the
Hebrew language
in our
own, which
of a
dif-
upon a
grade of
culti-
not to
in
make allowance
and the correspondence between their outward sense and the inward
character of their minds.
which they
nomasia, and,
if
they have
meaning,
in
They show,
that he,
thinks in and by
means
Mo-
(which
is itself
one
also)
A voice
They shout not victory one to another, They shout not overthrow one to another, The voice of those that sing I hear.*
Among
the
Hebrews
history
and poetry
rest in a great
mea-
come
to
an intimate ac-
spirit
of the language.
is
And
this
acquaintance
the
own
any choose to call it so, is a playing upon words, yet such as even the refined Greeks
peculiar style.
This, too,
if
It
was a
them
to ex-
own
Homer and
other
gratified
by
it ?
gratified, the
former
new
friend in an old
215
thought in a known and approved form of exptesslon,
benedictions and the Psalms.
ploy the words of
all
So
the
some sense,
!
to
words
but
how
it
refined
how
which
in
reappear, as
that
I could wish,
my
opinion concerning
topics
;
would be sus-
That
was
Frequent
collision
at
with the
length an
extir-
Famine
upon
us the
was
at its lowest
pitch.
The
sanctuary
itself,
High
Priest
came
to a miserable
end.
was not wholly silenced but assumed rather a new tone. Heroic songs were no longer heard, but the voice of the Prophetic muse] returned. Jehovah 'fulfilled his Word, and gave to the oppressed people a^leader with a portion
at least of the spirit of
Moses.
is
The
calling of
Samuel
in the
and
er
his mother's
Deborah, though
216
My
Through Jehovah is my horn of joy exalted. My mouth is opened wide in songs of triumph, For I exult in thy salvation.
There's none
that's holy like
!
Jehovah!
I
No God but
Why
Away with arrogance from out your mouths. Jehovah knoweth and will weigh your deeds. The bows of the mighty are broken.t
And
they, that wavered, are girded with strength. Those, that were full, are begging for bread,
now
at rest,
fruit.
many
down
sons, is
now
bereft of help.
alive.
Jehovah
killeth,
and he maketh
to the grave,
He
bringeth
Jehovah maketh poor and maketh rich. He bringeth low and lifteth up again.
He
And
up the beggar from the dunghill, That he may seat them with the princes. And make them heirs to princely thrones.
lifteth
The world hath he established thereon. The footsteps of the faithful hath he assured, But the wicked are dumb in obscurity,
For not by strength do heroes triumph. Jehovah's adversaries shall be dashed in pieces, When he from heaven shall thunder on them, Jehovah shall judge the whole ofhisland,
*
in these,
and became
self-confident.
Asaph
as well as the
t
whole song.
is
A new
period of tranquillity
This she
illustrates
of the nation.
Tho
following lines
are very applicable to him, and the family of Eli, though I would not restrict their
217
Shall give hi8 king heroick strength,
And
power of
his anointed.
this song, or
it
is
merely represent-
it is
enough, that
The
storms
The
power and
privilege,
was
an end
Freed
at
The
By him Jehovah
its
means,
too,
Such
is
song, and
it
it
for
il.
many
Psalms, resembling
for
at least prospectively.
He was
influ-
ence on the
nified to
political
God
called
him not by a vision, but by a distinct voice, in which he sighim the downfall of the vicious and indolent family His answers were alof priests, which had hitherto ruled. ways distinct and determinate, and hence he was denominated a Seer, instead of a Prophet.
in
The
expression continued
commencing
He
wn
The word
used, 3
Sam.
vii. 8,
we know
lived in the
19
218
need not adopt the extravagant conceptions sometimes formed of them, yet their organization by Samuel was marked with
wisdom.
He
then consisted of musick and poetry, from the exclusive pos" The hill of God"* session of a single tribe into general use.
i.
e.
the pupils of a
and wisdom.
They dwelt
which have been very incorrectly translated schools, and conveyed the notion of something corresponding to our own schools of learning. They were simply assemblages of young men, or thoseof raaturer age, practising themselves under the direction of Samuel, who was the judge
in simple cottages,
state, in
to national cul-
When
continued only
his regal
power
was
established.
own
tion
;
humble herdsman
first felt
himself in-
spired
and even
in later times,
when
in
pursuit of David,
he
e. in
naments, and touched the strings of his own forgotten harp. Would that some specimens, at least, remained to us from
these
hills
lost in oblivi-
The
Sam.
X. 5.
tThe
It
was
not by the sound of their instruments, that they gave Saul the
219
and the temple of David soon rendered these hills silent and within a narrow compass, and those ancient songs of war and victory, those fables, and un-
were
lost forever.
David
The
and by these he
gained access
to the
But
characterised
more
all
his
and
for
after a
David appears before Jonathan a youth, deed of daring enterprize, which the latter could
" His soul was knit with
his
him
a sentiment of aflfection.
own
soul."*
He
him.
entirely true,
upon
his
own
head).
He
set
honour and
stake
his father;
seem even now to see them, as before the face of heaven, with kisses and tears, they confirm by an oath their perpetual covenant,! and Jonathan, as, after a long absence, he comes to his friend in the desert, encourages him, and says,| " fear not David, the hand of my fiither shall not find thee. Thou shalt be king
he was indeed a true and genuine hero.
I
What
to
heroick
He
offered
up the throne
jhis
him, that
person.
Only an
Jona-
age of poetry, and souls like "Jonathan's, but rarely found, are
capable of such a covenant of love and
fidelity.
When
left
him
for all
Sam.
.wiii. 1.
Sam.
x.x.
41.
Sam.
xxiii. 16.
220
but an elegy upon his tomb
beautiful as
it is,
the
lire united, as
if
it
know, indeed,
for
was written
it
might be written
David and
for
son Mophibosheth
what
and,
And
for
his
apology
can be found
David,
that he so readily sacrificed this son of the friend of his youth to a false accusation,
when
it
was proved
to
be
false, in-
And
too, that
To me
name
and may
his
DAVID'S
LAMENTATION
Thus
Chorus.
How
Tfill
ye
it
not in Gath,
Publish
Ye mountains of Gilboa, on you henceforth Let no more rain nor dew descend forever.
No more
For there
* 2 Sam.
t
i.
Sam,
xvi. 4.
xix. 29.
2 Sam.
xxi. 8
10.
where the
is
Every one
ijk
is
reminded by
it
221
The shield of Saul, as of one unconsecrated with oil. From the blood of the slain, from the fat of the strong, The bow of Jonathan never turned backward. The sword of Saul returned not empty. (It reached the
the slain.)
blood of
to
each other
in life,
in love to the
realm of shades.
weep ye
in
for Saul,
No more
Chorus.
will
he clothe you
garments of purpk,
Ah
am
.'
how
my
brother Jonathan,
Yea,
Chorus.
my
women.
Ah! how are the heroes fallen, And their weapons of war perished.
Note. I have omitted a more literal version of the lamentation of David inserted by the German Editor. The sense as given by him, where it differs from the above agrees with the version of the English Bible. That version, is indeed, very true to the original, and not the less
poetical
on that account.
Tr.
19*
IX.
How
this
it
kind of poetry
came
them,
usina;
into
In what relation
in the
stood to the
more
of
for
ancient poetry.
common
use
made
The
Rules
higher,
common
division of the
Psalms
into
ment or
trasted
Examples.
Psalms expressive of
Services of a
German
poet in transferring the poetical tone of the Psalms into our language.
The scattered wild flowers of now gathered and planted, as a royal garland, upon Mount Zion. From his youth upward the mind of Dat
tained
its
highest splendour.
vid
to
He
had spent
There he had gathered those flowers of which often adorn, also, his heroick Psalms, and even those expressive of sadness and affliction. By musick, with which was then combined not only poetry, but whatever of cultivation belonged to the age, he had first found This circumstance, qnaccess to the person of the king. doubtedly, contributed to make him cultivate and strengthen
their rural haunts.
pastoral poetry,
more the powers of his Muse. Soon after, as if the same was to be for him the occasion both of good and evil fortune, in consequence of the triumphal song of the women, who went out to meet him, he was regarded as the rival ol Saul, and in several instances scarcely escaped, with his harp
still
art
223
in his
flight,
He
betook himself to
and
for years
a few companions,
wandered about the deserts of Judaea, and was like a bird upon the mountains, Here his harp became his comforter
and
friend.
To
it
calmed
his fears,
made him
Froni
it
forget
once
it
and
made him
drew
forth
forget
his
he
now
in
tones,
his feelings
among
tri-.
hope confirmed,
over
all.
the providence of
God he
umphed
Now
his
Not merely
he or-
own
distress
and deliverance
in a far greater
Four
ar-.
ranged
are
in classes
known
to us
by specimens of their
to the
middle
David em-
Every impor-
tant
Mount Zion, was brought into general notice, and placed in a clear light by his own poetical effusions, and those of the
poets employed under his patronage. In his Psalms his whole
kingdom still lives. These were sung at the publick festivals. Dazzled with the magnificence of the king and the royal city^
224
the people sung them with enthusiasm.
They were
;
treasur-
ed up and preserved
as
royal
Psalms
The
poets pat-
and why
why
should
Even
people, because his Psalms were the song book of the nation,
wherever
ry.
it
Not all are his or of his Only an individual song of Moses, however, is from more ancient times, and later writers obviously followed him
age. as their model, even
when
himself
it
The
superscription ascribing
them
to
David, where
in
In short, this greatest and most renowned king of Israel succeeded in uniting the garland of lyrick poetry with the triumphal and regal crown, and among the Hebrews a beautiful song is synonymous with a
correspond with his character.
song of David.
It
is,
therefore,
Hebrews.
Instructive ex-
human
nature, of indi-
vidual virtues and vices, of the happiness of the upright, and the misery of the wicked,
commenced with
the la> of Moses and in the wild and uncultivated period of The warlike the Judges they had scarcely found a place.
225
trumpet was softened to a milder tone by the song of the shepherd's flute, and the more touching harp of the mourner
harsh as the sentiments are, which still occur in some of the warlike Psalms, yet the general tendency is undeniably to
for
The pomp
government, were
be celebrated,
Muse.
The
history
for song,
tranquillity
The
Solomon and the Prophets. it must he acknowledged, that while these advantages were gained, the rude strength, the animated movement, and the lofty sound, of the ancient poetry was We seek ia vain in the Psalms for songs in some measure lost.
for
like those of
figurative
around Mount
of thought,
his
style
That
hill
of the Prophets,
full
nature, was now silent and desolate. The Seers of David were no poets, the regularly commissioned Asaph prophesied only upon his harp, and it was not till centuries had passed
different sides of
political,
good and
What
religious,
and
lyric
cultivation,
it
perhaps in
No
its
226
original sense, as the book of Psalms.
As David
in his
own
own
his
;
feelings
predominant one in the songs was destined to become the book of devotional song for every age, for all nations, and all hearts, though they had no connexion either with the spirit or the
style the
and rendered
own
of the temple
so the book
deeds of David.
What
else
could
result
from
this,
but a
different
from
which
it
originally designated?
and on
his
this
ground adapted
church.
every
to
all
the
singing
and reading of
own
In that
member of
the
tains of Judah,
They sung
in
the
nor threatening
Let one read the most individualized, the most characteristically beautiful songs of Da*id, of Asaph and of Korah, in
many
will
versifications of them,
to the original
situations
and sources of the feelings which they depict, and he find them always retaining even a shadow of their
?
ancient forni
ems of
1.
pensable.
That we
times.
forget
all
modern
imitations,
tors,
own
at
They
own
age,
Our aim
is
to see
it
in its
227
ces of times and place, and in these the heart, and under-
first
inquiry should be
to
which these head of many of the Psalms: in others they are determined by the contents, and in others still it must be left undetermined. Two things here, however, must be guarded against. In the firsf place, that we do not insist upon finding a Psalm for evefor the objects
and
situations,
in reference
These
life
The
first
as in relation to
other lyric
locality
is
sought for
every event.
In pursuit of
indeed might
ly
know something,
knew
3.
nothing.
We
his
That the
;
royal poet
had
all
his favourite
"The Lord is my shield, he is on my right hand, he setteth me in a Avide place, he leadeth me to high places," &lc., are of
this kind,
and a
series of others,
which
all
in
part with
some
we
Old Testament.
We
They
as
men, and
model of holy
men.
David had
his peculiar
238
feelings
as an exiled wanderer,
and as a kingy
We
whom we
we must
same
it
The
Scrip-
commentary on the
subject, for
does not disguise the character of David, even in regard to The man who sinned against Uriah and Bathhis failings.
sheba,
may
also
He was rash,
own
coun-
He
all
and
pretation of his songs; but he, that aims to see every where
nothing
distinctly.
Again, in studying these as specimens of art, we must examples from other nations and languages, as models, no take by which to judge of them for the composition of such effu;
oTown.
To what
Psalm
lofty
does
is
it
this or that
Pindaric
merely that
historical
it
contains bold
allusions
?
transitions,
sentiments,
and
and
?
in all laudatory
odes
Yet, in regard to the art of composition, David has nothing more than this in common with Pindar. The language of
Pindar's lyrick poetry, his periods, and metrical arrangement,
the
mode of treating
mythology and
we are sure to draw false when we suffer ourselves to be blinded by tha word chorus. A Hebrew is by no means the same thing with
hardly admit of a comparison, and
conclusions,
a Grecian chorus.
6.
Still less
229
of lyrick poetry formed in our
own
age,
even to
for the
all
professedly abstracted.
The
critick,
most
part,
who formed them, had was not extensively acand by these framed
quainted with the lyrical treasures of different languages, confined himself to a few favourite specimens,
his general rules.
to
How
more simple
tions,
an entirely different age? to situations and languages far ? Where the rules are true, they occasion no
The
The
rules, therefore,
but par-
who
vv'ould
not rather,
by his own original experience, than borrow them from foreign models and arts of poetry, and thus violate the primitive simplicity
artificial
subtleties of
invention.
sical
Whoever
it
is
modern munev-
er learn to feel
7.
We must
Hebrew
is
lyrick poetry.
The
teach-
scholar to observe
objects represented
what,
what
is its
particular
it
what manner it is presented -what feeling prevails in the what style and movement it holds into what train of piece sentiment it expands itself how it begins, proceeds and ends. The more simply and impressively this is pointed out to the youthful reader, without the technicalities of art, and with-
in
way
to his heart.
What
;
is
beautiful
in
it
he
commendation
20
230
passioned feeling will of themselves
make
their impression
in his
if
bosom,
will give
him
it
inspiration.
In
it,
Hebrew
lyrick poetry,
is
especially necessary,
was least constructed by rule, and as a work of art, and was rather poured forth spontaneously, as genuine feeling wells up from a heart filled with lively emotions. Would that we had an edition of the Psalms, in which David was treated merely as Horace is in which, without casuistick subtleties, the poet should be shown as a poet, his beauty not indeed, cried into our ears, but at the same time not defaced by the patchwork of languages and versification foreign to its nature. In higher criticism upon the poetry of the Hebrews
poetry
!
we
are
still
but children.
We
either
stifle
modem
the
languages.
Book of Psalms, in order to mark some of the chief varieties of their lyrical style. To do it fully would not accord with my present plan, and no one will
expect
now go through
me
in a
to
songs.
It is
customary
to divide the
very well,
if
the
Any
way
always remains to be
longs.
settled,
Now,
them.
let
with reference
cases,
to this division,
to place
and he
be at a loss in
many
where
The
so numerous,
and the tones so near together, or rather so flow it would be difficult to apply such a printo the whole number of Psalms, and after arrangement ciple of
(
231
all
of what use
is
Let
us, then,
endeavour
Some Psalms
are short.
They
age in a simple 'and uniform tone of feeling, and terminate I might call with a beautiful completeness in the expression.
them
odc.^,
fl8i], if
the last
word
Of this
sort
is
the beautiful
as a rose.
BROTHERLY UNION.
Behold,
how
lovely and
how
pleasant,
!
When
Thus breathed its fragrance round The precious ointment on the head, That ran adown the beard of Aaron, And reached the border of his garment. So descends the dew of Hermon,
Refreshing Zion's mountains,*
The
which
union of brothers, of
tribes,
and families
is
here com-
an animating fragrance.
is
diffused,
and honour. So the dew of Hermon descends to water the parched mountains of Zion, and make them productive of blessings.
As
it
has a perfect
and beautiful
From
is
comes
to the
liere
but falling, as
dew
or rain.
From
It
the
nus and Hermon, and from the sea, ascended the vapours, which came
down upon
the parched
seems
to
should be mentioned.
Hence
There seemj
to
232
descending dew, and from this to the invocation of blessings upon Zion the true compass of an ode. Aaron's name itself
whom
his
own
God and
the glory of
A SHEPHERD'S SONG.
THE 23d psalm.
Jehovah
is
my
shepherd,
He maketh me
Upon
lie
down
He
leadeth
me
still
Beside the
Restoring
waters.
my
life.
He leadeth me
And though
Through
I fear
I
in a straight path.
name.
walk
no
For thou
art with
me.
Thy
Thou
hast prepared
my eyes. my table.
In presence of
my
foes.
My My
Through
the days of my
life.
house of God,
\s long as
I live.
From
the close
in exde.
it
is
plain,
Psalm was
composed
The commencement
is
a quiet pastoral,
but his feelings lead him to drop the image of his sheep, and
a table, a royal feast,
sors.
spread before the eyes of his oppresrises to a full conviction, that success:
lives.
This
joyful
hope
will attend
him, as long as he
The sudden
transition'
233
from one image to another,
is
Yet but one feeling pervades the whole. Those who would examine more specimens of this sort may read the 15th, 29th, 61st, 67th, 87th, 101st, 150th, and other I could wish that I were able to translate all these, Psalms.
so
much am
2.
So soon
its
siveness of
comes extended, it requires variety, contrasts, a manifoldness of parts, which in the former kind we perceive only in the
bud, in a
trifling variation
of the image.
is
Here, according to
produced by change of
highest perfection.
It has, in this
way, a begin-
the flight, in
which
it
strays,
but
is
first, and what the the ambitus, of the Ode, never lost. The whole
This
is
full
of living action,
No
word can be taken awiiy, no strophe change its place. The beginning and the end are necessary to the middle, and the middle remains impressed upon the memory. Perfect odes of
this sort, are
few in number in
all
are few subjects, that admit of being treated in this way, but
brance.
where they are found they should be kept in perpetual rememTo -the class of songs composed of several members I reckon among the Psalms, the 8th, 20th, 21st, 48th, 50th,
76th,
96th99th,
11 1th 113th,
120th 129th.
I
Among
the
perfect specimens,
name
the 2d,
45th 47th,
God
20*
80th,
110th,
Some
voice of
234
latter,
but
no ground.
The
and cannot come from outward geographical relations. But few of all these can be introduced here, and the choice is difficult.
ZION.
it it
He
hath established
upon the
floods.
Who shall ascend the mountain of Jehovah ? Who dare to stand in his most holy place ?
2.
He
That hath not bound his soul with Nor ever sworn deceitfully.
He
from Jehovah,
The
This
Chorus
Lift
up your heads,
And
come
in.
Who
2.
is
(/HORUS
O ye
will
?
gates,
And
1.
be ye
lifted up,
ye everlasting doors,
come
is
in.
Who
is
Chorus,
Jehovah,
God of Gods! he
* Political crimes
were very properly named here, since he must be his national God. The blessin<^
which he was
to receive, is in like
e.
manner of
a civil nature.
The word
and be, cause this involved the keeping of the law of God, and was enjoyed by such as had access to him, it became in the Psalms synonymous with
happiness, grace.
means properly
235
The change
and
it
is
is
a progressive transition of
It
is
thought, in
economy
full
commences
Jehovah's."
He
is to
dwell
The
mountain is very becomes a holy mountain, because Jehovah dwells upon it, and that both in a moral and a civil sense for as nothing impure in sacrifices could be brought before God, It seems so no impure worshipper could appear before him.
little
;
here, as
Jewish State.*
The remainder
itself,
God, as the founder and protector of the of the Psalm is full of action.
multitude presents
himself, the ark of the covenant, over wliich dwelt their an-
He, who
in ancient
many
renowned
and shown
to
be mighty
The
in
How
God
entered in-
built for
him by
In
David, so that
but what
is
its
who
its
only casual, and they could not always be sunff together, became a nation,
song by
itself, (Ps.
.xv,)
as
it
236
in the 68th Psalm, are here passed over.
By comparing them
a picture
full
of the same
sort,
the most
THE ROYAL
BRIDE.
A SONG OF LOVE.*
My heart is uttering words of gratulation, My worii is consecrated to the king. My tongue is like a ready writer's pen,
Lo, thou
art fairer
is
And
grace
Therefore,
God
And in
Because of truth and the oppressed's right, And fearful deeds shall thy right hand perform,
The arrows
of thy quiver
(even now
They pierce, O king, the hearts of thine enemies, Thy throne, Lord, is forever and ever. The sceptre of thy kingdom is a right sceptre. Thou lovest righteousness, and hates iniquity,
Therefore hath God, thy God, anointed thee
With
oil
Thy garments
fragrant
aloes,
and cassia.
But
at thy side,
Thy queen
is
'Hearken,
* Ps. xlv.
237
So shall ihe king desire thy beauty, For he is now thy lord, incline to him. The daughters, too, of Tyre with presents
Shall
come
to thee
the rich
among
the people
The
king's bride
Is beautiful exceedingly
More beautiful, than her attire of gold. And now shall she be brought unto the
Adorned with garments of needle work.
her.
And
now
And And
I
thou shalt
I will
make them
But
have not
felt at liberty, in
its
delightful simplicity of
this simplicity,
On
and
its
relation
then,
first,
ornaments of beauty, grace, heroick and regal costume, and makes him worthy of reverence and love, before it
The ode
is
omon.
This
is
whom
to
are heaped
the lineage of
David.
As
a hero
and king he
upon
his
All these
who was
ly
238
dom
ness,
rights of the
to
oppressed be vindicated.
bride.
transition
is
then made
the
Kings'
As
him clothed
in
purest gold.
The
song, then,
from her
veil
to forget
in
accordance with Oriental customs, where the bride was little more than a child, and the superiour power and influence of
the husband over her
was very
costly
great.
all
wait
bridal presents,
shall
sue to
still
In language
is
flattering
it is
beau-
own
is
beauty
attire.
;
to the palace
may
enjoy the
The song
closes in a lofty
as
it
had begun
in
We proceed
now
to other
239
Had
(May Israel now say) Had not Jehovah been with us, When men rose up against us, Then iiad they swallowed us up,
In their fierce wrath against us.
Then had the waters overwhelmed us, The waves had gone over our souls. The swelling flood passed over our life. Blessed be God He gave us not To become a prey to their teeth.
!
Our
As a bird from the snare of the fowler, The snare is broken and we are escaped.
Our help
is in
the
name of Jehovah,
Who
is
me
me
from from
my
my
youth,
(May
Israel
now
say,)
youth,
The plowers plowed upon my back. They made their furrows long. The righteous God hath cut the cords of the wicked. The foes of Zion shall return confounded. As grass upon the housetops must they be.
That before
it is
Wherewith the mower filleth not his hand. Nor the binder of sheaves his arm.
Where none that pass by say, " The blessing of God be on you.
We bless
you
in the
name of Jehovah,"
* Fs. cxxiv.
240
Similar to these
is
126.
When God
We
were
like
them
that
dream.
with laughter,
Then was
our mouth
filled
Our tongue with songs of joy.f Then said they among the nations.
The Lord hath done great The Lord hath done great Whereof we are glad
I
captivity,
Lord
As thou turnedst the streams in The sower soweth in tears. And reapeth with songs of joy.
the South.
He He
his sheaves.
Can
tional songs?
find
among
the
He-
cannot deny myself the pleasure of closing this class of the Psalms with an elegy, that belongs indeed to a late age, but is not on that account less beautiful.
brews?
From Egypt.
[This reference of
it
to
Egypt
is
Moses could
The
pected joy of
The Psalm refers properly only to the Babylonish we could scarcely conceive the unexdeliverance from Babylon, we thought it a dream. &c.
also to other notes of the author on this psalm. J.]
t
Ex.
15.
Ejc.
XV.
14.
a clear,
beautiful import,
when
givee
understood of the
its
That
is in
the
Red
Sea.
Ex.
14.
241
By the rivers of Babylon we sat down, And wept, when we remembered Zion.
We hanged
For
Required of us a song,
Our oppressors required of us mirth. "Sing us one of the songs of Zion." How shall we sing Jehovah's song
In a foreign land
!
If I forget thee,
Jerusalem
Let
Let
of ray mouth.
If I do not
children of
Edom.
In the day of Jerusalem's affliction. When they cried, " raze it.
Happy
shall
little
ones,
And
I
casteth
do not join
but
if*
the
Babylonish
must be
is
felt,
as touching
and natural
in the
its
its
may be contemplated
rest,
as a whole.
The
which exausts
and sinks
to
21
242
an ecstacy, and the rapture, which sinks again into calm contemplation
every
efFection has
its
own
determinate course,
and gives consequently, a corresponding ambitus to the lyrick I must expression of it, in which we feel its completeness. go through nearly all the remaining Psalms, if I would arrange
them according
feeling.
all
few examples.
6th, 22d,
many
others.
spirit is raised,
till
remembrance of God.
7th,
10th, 13th,
52d59th,
61st,
64th,
69th 71st,
too, are very
109th,
140th 142d.
is
These,
numerous.
expressed through-
3d 5th,
&c.
these several
Let the teacher point them out to his hearers, and those most uniform in their tone, when psychologically conOf these referred to, I can sidered, will be found beautiful.
kinds.
O
,
Lord, rebuke
me
Nor chasten me in thy fierce anger. Be merciful tome, O Jehovah for I am weak*
!
Heal me, O Jehovah, for my bones tremble; My whole soul is in terrors. And thou, Jehovah T O how long
,
243
Return,
Jehovah, deliver
for thy mercies'
is
my
soul.
save
me
sake.
no remembrance of thee,
give thee thanks
?
who shall
am wearied with my groaning. All night my bed is wet with tears. With tears I make my couch to swim.
Mine eye
It
is
mine enemies.
I
'
For God hath heard the voice of my weeping. Jehovah hath heard my supplication, Jehovah hath accepted my prayer. Ashamed, confounded, shall be my enemies.
They
Unsuitable as this
its
may be
for a
generalprayer of penitence,
strikingly beautiful, con-
is still
The
till
languish-
feels his
grief,
misfortunes
as the chastisement of
he sinko to
word " enemies" is uttered from his lips, his emotions change, his courage and hope return. As most of the Psalms are an artless representation
the brink of the grave, but,
when
the
of particular situations,
much
still
remains
lyrical
to
be learned from
In
many
Of these,
the 14th,
worthy of attention.
Asaph generally may be named, as particularly In the 9th Psalm, some have attempted
do not discover
it.
From
God
in
nature, where
every object praises him and obeys his commands, the poet
comes
to the
ivhich he represents as
more intimate relation of God to his people, more secure apd j^ffectionate, in the
is
more
its
limited
is
and confiding.
The movefirst
is
therefore,
antithetic.
raised to
greatest dignity,
The when it
image
interrupt-
and confiding, till it expresses the near friendship of God, and his communion with the individual, human soul. The
most secret and hidden God, and he causes the
faults
be
Such
is
the beautiful
contains.
ever,
we
same progressive
action, as in
and goes
directly to
its
purpose.
for
betical
no
artificial
structure in the
logical connexion.
They
of learning them.
The
many
many examples,
them
since
variations.
even of children.
dactick, that
it is
most beautiful
test
of the di-
instructive to children.
91st Psalm.
2.
He that dwelleth under the care of the most Higli, And abideth under the shadow of the Almighty, He saith to Jehovah, " Thou art my refuge," My fortress, and my God, in thee will I trust." He will deliver thee from the snares of death,
of
A ground
many
is
the taking
law, word, judgment, testimony in the modern, and not in the ancien^
political sense,
to the
To
these refer, also, the duties and benefits, which/he Psalms celebrate.
245
He He
His
And under
and buckler.
A
But
thousand shall
thy side.
Ten thousand
it
at thy right
hand.
thee.
shall not
come nigh
With
And
1.
2.
O Jehovah! is my refuge." So thalt thou dwell securely and on high." There shall no evil befal thee.
" In thee,
thy dwelling.
for thee.
Lest thou dash thy foot against a stone. Thou shalt tread upon the lion and adder,
the young lion and the dragon. " Because he trusted in me, I deliver him, " I exalt him because he honoureth my name. " When he calleth upon me, I will answer,
"
When
I will
in trouble, I will
be with hmi,
"
" With long life will I satisfy him, " And will show him my salvation."
Can
God be taught with a sense of more more tenderness of feeling I There is here no chorus, indeed, but the change of speakers produces It makes the whole a fatherly lesson, prothe finest effect. gressing and rising higher to the end, where the Supreme
the providence of
or with
cordial trust,
But enough of examples. In order to feel the beauty even we must transport ourselves into the age, in which they were written, and return to its simplicity of As most of the Psalms are prayers, so that childlike feeling.
of the finest Psalms,
is
ceremo-
246
tiies
silent
admiration of
God and
his
The song
to
hurries
It
from thought
to thought,
as from
mountain
mountain.
is
fond
its
eft'ect
scoffing one.
calm
As the heaven pictures itself only we see th.e gentle wave of emotion
to
describe
ita
Here
it
would be unjustifiable
name
of the man,
who
Many
artless
language a simplicity and truth of lyric expression, which we from the most successful in this departs
the neigbbouriijg nations.
^ent of
X.
Of
mind
ated.
the
in
character of David.
The
His confidence
it origin-r.
What
of his Psalms.
feelings excited
sincerity,
which
characterise them.
His
warm
by the persecution of his enemies. Passages in the Psalms relative to Divine retribution and justice. A peculiarity of David in promising songs to God, as the best offering, which he
could bring.
Of the
How we
Of
of the wicked.
of Korah.
III.
affecting elegy.
What
Examples and proofs from what is contained in them. General view of the whole book of Psaims. V. Of the musick of the Hebrews. Their various instruments of muof degrees probably were.
sick.
What
is
We
it
were ex-
ternally, let us
their authors.
I.
now
The
"^
of his character
life,
is
truth.
his feelings,
and
Hence
248
where
all
beautiful flowers
and
fruits flourish,
at times the
earnest,
to
we
do but
Now we
picture
may
derive
instructions from
his
writings, by the
which they present both of good and evil.* 1. In David is manifested throughout a tender
soul full of sensihiUty.
heart,
and a
this
He
corresponding.
and
many
{the
others.
He
is
afflicted either
reign
how
is
his
spirit
bowed!
How does
and
2. tears.
his
harp complain
He
These
trust, courage, or
submission.
tained
him
most faithful and theme of his songs. they utter the feelings of personal confidence and friendship in his communion with God,t and hence they have been so higlily prized by all great and noble minds, who have placed
best friend,
is
the
For
hearts,
all
own
more
strikingly
than our
his
*For Proofs
3G. 63.
of his earnestness and sincerity see Ps, 5> 17. 26. 32. 34.
&c.
11. 18. 21. 27. 31. 40. &c.
tSee Ps.
249
of Psalms, and applied
it
to
his
own
times,
whenever and
wherever he could do
istick in a
so.
It is
man to believe in a particular providence. All, who have been exposed to severe and numerous trials, and been proved upright, have had this faith. They knew God not from books, but from the truth of their own hearts, the experience of their own lives. No topic in relation to God is unfolded in the Psalms with a scientific or theoretical purpose. God is he, who every where looks through the
soul of the Psalmist,
knows
and necessities.
This occa-
sions
grief, inspires
mility.
3.
Thus
heart.
What
us seems
pathy,
repeat
it
coldly,
stances, in
His enemies calumniated and persecuted him, he on the contrary washed his hands in innocency they were stained with no blood of his persecu;
tors.
This he represented
justly
to
would deal
gentleness
with
David,
songs.*
find the
If
we
same
and
heartfelt
sincerity also,
characteristics
of his reign.
for
even against his conquered foes he proceeded with all the magnanimity, which the times permitted, and against his domestic foes he wished never to be obliged to use severity.
How
was he
he spare Shimei!
sed to
after
at the death of Absalom and how did Even Abner, the leader of the party oppohim, and who had been craftily murdered, be honoured
afflicted
!
his death
with
hero.t
*Ps.
vii
xxvi. &c.
+2 Sam.
iii.
33.
250
And David said to Joab, And to all the people with
" Rend your garments,
hira,
And gird you with sackcloth, And mourn for Abner." And the king himself followed And when they buried Abner, He lifted up his voice, And wept at Abner's grave. And all the people with him.
And
said,
the bier,
not bound.
Nor thy feet put in fetters. As one falleth before wicked men, So fellest thou."
And
all
the people
wept aloud.
The
far
reign of the peaceful Solomon was in many respects more severe and despotick, than that of the vs^arlike and
conquering David.
4.
As a necessary consequence,
to his (patience.
therefore, since he
was
more trying
even where
The
feelings,
which
it
awaken-
and
find
an expression,
praise or thanksgiving.
undeserved neglect
if
at
to
which
we
all
under the
first lively
unjust suffering.
Though,
251
8th, 19th, 23d, 104th,
he had
before
God
in this, as
in
its
other
traits.
Yet
or without occasion^
must be admitted,
upon
his enemies,
These same
of
occasion to
God
as
and more
fully
In the conception
of Moses,
God was
a national God,
who
exercised retributive
whole nation
in their
still
general fortunes.
finer traits of the
Da-
Divine
Asaph
David as an experienced hero and many of their expressions are now, after the lapse of three thousand years, the most suitable for giving a moral view of God
as a teacher
;
;
In
many
of the
;
Psalms
it
might appear, as
if
their
model
but
own
a remarkable circumstance in
regard to David,
Ms
God.
lips,"
of which the
may be
ter of David, and the age in which he lived. In our lips the words are often misapplied. With David the most appropriate and best offering, which he could make to God was his
songs of praise.
They were
for
To
offer
would be
far easier
252
sent these cheaper offerings,
and chose
to
among
Calves,
bullocks, we should not offer to God, new and original songs we cannot offer, as David did and from whom, moreover, does God require such poetical expressions of penitence? Thus these words are for us lifeless and unmeaning.
;
6.
David reigned
in
was
ance with
and was under the necessity of governing himself in accordits ancient economy, the established constitution of
This gives
to his songs
the country.
throughout a spiritual
He
;
sat as
a prince or vicegerent of
God upon
Mount Zion
his
in righteousness
and judgment
servant,
all
no
less
When,
power,
therefore,
God, boasts of
his
expressions per-
When
i.
e.
and excellence of the Mosaick laws, and so often binds himself to rule in accordance with them, he was in so doing no indolent youth kneeling at his harp, as he is sometimes represented. Even in those Psalms, in which he speaks of his love to
the law of God, he speaks also of his diligence in business, of
his watchfulness of his
own
heart, that he
arbitrary
and unbridled,
his
and usages of
felt
That he was bound to do so he when he had transgressed, and the chastisements of God were upon him. " I have sinned against Jehovah, my nation's God, but what hare these
country.
sheep done
V
traits
These few
may
2.53
liberal spirit the
if
they are to
too,
be
for
Here,
the
rule of
Young may be
we
to
often approach
most
when we seem
and
all
be farthest removed
from them.
The
ornament
may
and
tion
may
also,
become
ours, if our
But
blind imita-
sions
Only
find
become
when we
life,
beautiful, elevated,
and
own
souls.
The
best
name
harp.
of a Prophet,
i.
e.
must
suffice.
Psalm.
God
is
good
to
to the upright,*
To
him with pure heart My feet indeed were almost gone, My steps were already slipping,
such as cleave
For
was envioUs
at the foolish,
And jealous
* In many passages the word Israel is taken and the notion of uprightness, contained in it is
pregnans
itself.
be interpreted by
22
264
No
snare of death
is
They know not the troubles of life, The scourge of misfortune reacheth them
Like other men.
not,
Therefore their pride adorneth them with chains. Their violence decketh them with rich attire,
Their eyes look out from amidst fatness, t Their devices flow forth from their hearts.
They scoff, they speak evil of a friend, They speak with arrogance. They place their mouth, as Gods in the heavens, And their tongue must be obeyed on earth. They satisfy their thirst from solid rocks, If They press from them abundant water, And say, how ? doth God know this ?
||
Hath the Most High knowledge of us? These are the thoughts of the ungodly,
*
Death
is
persons spoken of here, have made a covenant with him,, and a leage with the grave, so that he spreads no nets for them. t It is not said merely they are rich and proud, but oppression has
mortals.
The
of others.
no objec.
an opposite image.
Their eye
too, the de-
its
visions
must be accomplished, so
II
1.
20.
They raise their heads Heavens and earth are here contrasted. even to the heavens, and their word goes forth over the earth, and is ev
ery where obeyed.
If
Compare
that the
do not correspond.
the
The second
words differently, and there is not only sense and It is parallelism, but we see a paronomasia with the following words. an image of the severest oppression, and happily introduces what follovrs.
I divide the
The Masoretic
255
And And
these are they, that prosper in the world,*
that increase in riches.
I iiept
pure
my
heart,
in
innocence,
For every day have I been scourged. And every morning chastened with affliction.t
I said, I will declare,
how
it
is
with
it.
My
\
word was
to
false
thought
understand
it
But was
in painful doubt.
God,
And
On slippery places hast thou set them, And into deep abysses are they falling.
How
moment,
!t
And
Now
For thou didst hold me by my right hand. Guide me always, even as thou wilt,
*
The
who
live in
abundance, the
beati,
fortunate
t
men.
new
calamity
The words
I]
centcxt.
here.
He was at
first
e.
he understood nothing
away from
differit
him and
a,
8.)
Now
he judges
with
256
And
then receive
me
with honour.
For whom have I in heaven but thee, And vyhom on earth do I desire beside thee My flesh and heart are wasted away, But thou art the strength of my heart, Thou art my portion, O God, forever.
away from
to
thee,
for
me
is
drawing near
I put
God.
my
trust.
thy works.
How
beautiful are
tlie
It
begins
many
reflections,
with which
it
also closes.
how he
fell
makes
He
is
to
God (having
till
a
in
Both
sentiments and
its
arrangement
his views
it is
a beautiful didactick
their proper bounds.
it
Psalm.
We
beyond
prosperity of the
vanish
away, while the happiness of the upright is true and abiding this is the extent of his view. Neither future retribu-
tion
of the
his ode.
in several
We
views. ^f
* V. 1.
I-
V. 1216.
^ Vol,
I.
II
V. 2326.
V.
2728.
p.
180.
257
and beautiful
style, like all
Here
is
same theme.
be watchful
all
my
life,
That
sin.
I will restrain
my mouth
in silence,
was musing
I
And then
Jehovah,
spake with
my
tongue.
end.
How
That
short
I
my
life is.
frail I
am.
Behold,
my my
of
life is
but a hand-breadth.
man
is
That thinks itself enduring.t Yea, man goeth forth a shadowy image. Yea, he disquietch himself in vain. He gathereth and knoweth not for whom. On what then do I place my hope ?
In thee,
Lord,
is all
my
hope.
So
will I
keep
silence,
my mouth.
For thou
I faint
Remove
thy stroke
For when thou dost rebuke severely Even the strong man for his iniquity,
How
how
true
off
find vent
they
more
bitterly^
tThe
is
JTbou
22*
258
His beauty
Yea, man
is
consumed as by
the moth,
is
altogether vanity.
prayer, Jehovah,
supplication.
I
Hear then my
Give ear unto
my
Be
I
not silent,
when
all
weep before
thee.
am
A
O
wanderer, as
my
fathers were.
may
recover strength,
Before
A song
wholly in David's
abounding
in
fine
personal feeling.
One, who
is
fond of
who seek
instruction,
who
delight in lyrical
invention,
the ode
fate
same
subject.
There
(Com.
Ps.
is
78. &lc.)
To compare them
compo-
together
a very pleasing task, which illustrates the characwell as their peculiar styles of
III.
his
Were these songs written by David ? name attached to them? since to him,
songs are ascribed,
why was
not
as well as to Asaph,
to later
other
times.
choir
and
author
may
lyric
poet of
all
in the collection.
His national songs are brief, full and animated. The 45th Psalm is one of the most beautiful bridal songs, the 42d one
of the finest elegies ample.
The
latter is
inserted here
as an ex-
259
my
God.
My soul
When
thirsteih for
God, the
living
God,*
shall I
My
tears
were long
my meat
said to
me.
Where now
I
is
my
tears)
went with many to the house of God, With joy and praise in a rejocing throng.
As
Why
down,
O my
soul.
And why
me
Hope thou in God, for I shall yet praise him. Him, my deliverer and my God.
And
yet,
God,
I
my
soul
is
grieved,
Therefore will
remember
thee.
By Jordan, and the hills of Libanus. As there wave rusheth upon wave. They rush upon me like thy billows,
For
all
thy
waves and
rivers
And And
Upholdeth
in the
me by
day.
is
with me,
living
God.
Wherefore dost thou forget me, Wherefore go I mourning. For the oppression of my enemies?
It
pierceth through
my
bones,
When my
me,
?
Where now
*
is
The
"
'
living
God
is
Here
too
it
has a
beaui'
260
Why
down
O my soul,
me
?
Hope thou in God, for I shall yet praise him. Him, my deliverer and my God,
Judge me,
Deliver
God, maintain
my
right,
me from a
art the
merciless nation,
From
a deceitful
For thou
Why
God me
in
whom
I trust,
off?
send out thy light and thy truth,* That they may lead me and guide me,
And to thy tabernacle. Then will I go unto the altar of God, To God, who is my joy and rejoicing.
With
the harp will I sing praise to thee,
God,
my God.
art thou cast
Why
down
O my
soul,
me ? Hope thou in God Jor I shall yet praise him^ Him, my deliverer, and my God.
And why
pathos.
ful
must not analyze this delightful picture, so full of lyric For those, who do not of themselves feel the beautitransitions, the gentle movement, and dream as it were of
them by the
fullest exposition.
As every
first
one,
who
They
rush with a
falls upon the rushing which flow out from the lake Phiala. mournful sound, and bring before his mind
an image of the
*
to
affliction,
why David
referred
them.
261
his soul
;
till
it
he
reflects,
full
that his
harp
still
remains
faithful,
and with
he again,
becomes a present
reality to his
IV. Songs of
anonimous authors.
We
name
later
attached to them,
times, but
In some
of them
we
the age of David, and shall embellish our third part with several of the
number.
At present
Some
an ascent.
ods,
Many
are at
Babylon
directly to
the journey
toward Jerusalem.
it
Does the word ascent mean nothing else not the expression commonly used of
Jerusalem, and especially to the nationnot suppose then these songs of
others from David, Asaph, and the sons
plainly are, and
for the
to
Why may we
many
degrees to be only the same sort of travelling festival and national songs, as
of Korah.
Such they
most part
has
very
in
which
it
was com-
posed, and
entation.
my distress
I call
upon Jehovah,
I cry unto
262
Deliver me,
lips,
And free me from a deceitful tongHe. What doth it to thee, the deceitful tongue What doth it to thee ?
It
It
Alas that
And
.
men,
Who are
I am They
enemies of peace.
when
I speak,
The
speaker
is
a sojourner,
who complains
of the intolerable
He
He
at
wishes the
which he
is
to
an end, and
they enthe na-
is all
we
Were these tents moving toward Jerusalem ? Did camp without the city, as they often must do, during
tional festival.
These questions
are
more
easily
asked than
answered.
The
thing in
of Babylon, but
it
exhibits a
121st Psalm.
my
My
*
skin,
name.
says "it
with him, as
in
if
he lived with
They
only figuratively,
shows.
263
Who made
the heavens
and the
earth.
He will not suffer thy foot to slide, He that keepeththee will not slumber.
Behold he, that keepeth
Israel,
Jehovah
will
be thy keeper,
Jehovah
Who goeth
Nor the mooH afflict thee by night. The Lord preserve thee from evil. The Lord preserve thy soul. The Lord shall guard thy going out,
And
thy
coming
in
who
like
new
fledged
is
placed,
to see
who
on him
ed.
and so
It
it
will
It is
who
which cannot find a last word, and satisfy itself with the bestowment of blessings. The song might also be sung on the' way by individuals or in choirs. They congratulated each other on their journey.
That
raelite,
who has
at the
is
now
rejoicing
already remarked.
The
The
124th,
129th are
songs of thanksgiving
for
were sung
at national
festivals,
and such as we
find
among
is
The
126th
as a national song, as a
memorial of
The 133d
264
and
families, the 128th the happiness of domestic life, the 127th the blessing of a numerous family, though their educa-
and care
all
an assembled people.
of the
Would
adapt-
life,
as concise, as
spirit
rael.
The
130th
ligious sacrifice,
of guilt.
when one felt himself oppressed with a sense The 132d commends to God the family of the king,
for the
beautiful songs
temple
festivals.*
we
we may
the Jew-
easily arrange
for ourselves,
especially if
we take
books
to aid us.
The
is
national psalms
it-
but in small
collections.
Here
arrangement.
Ps.
1.
The
crown of the book. 3-40 Mostly Psalms having personal reference to David. These include the first book according to the Jewish division. 49. Songs of the sons of Korah, composed on a Ps. 41 Most of them are national songs, and variety of subjects.
Ps. 2.
Ps.
Ps. 51
Ps.
65
64.
to
David.
fol-
68. National
low,
till
the
book.
Ps.
70
*The book
lections,
265
Here closes the third book, greater part of them national. which was wholly from poets connected with the temple musick, and probably was at a later period appended to the Psalms of David, which closed with the second book. Ps. 91107 and to the end Ps. 90. The song of Moses.
of the book psalms of plain and general import; plainly a
contribution from the temple, and for the use of the national
festivals.
The
fifth
book
is
collection.
Ps.
108
Ps. Ill
a collection
110 Songs of David, or having reference him. The 119 118 Psalms the temple and 120 134 the songs of of moral
to
for
festivals.
precepts.
Ps.
degrees, which are closed with songs of praise, and Ps. 138
also
closed
with songs of
We
see
how they
all
fall
into groups,
and an
editor,
who
the
them
V.
Of the musick
of the Psalms
this
we obtain few results from them in regard to the poand economy of the Psalms. Nothing is so difficult to
to another, as
and country
upon the
air,
and are
fleeting as the
and modern musick, the musick of the East and of the West, are so different from each other, that, even if we knew more of them there would be found but little, which our ears would relish. I remark only briefly.
1.
The
named
in the
Psalms, are
accompanying instruments. The accompanying are obviously the common ones, which therefore do not occur in any of the inscriptions. They belong to the
23
266
full
of the temple.
court,
or un-
der the open sky, the multitude of singers and plain instruments
is
readily accounted
To
this class
the
many kinds of trumpets and flutes. It was kind of military musick, because the God of Zion was
adufa,
i.
Lord of Sabaoth
the sentiments of
e.
When
named
it is
said, that
castanets, this
not
e.
his inventive
ment of
2.
his
musick.
musick, accompanying the language of poetwas formed by single instruments; hence one song is referred to the flute, one to the guitar and harp, another to the
softer
ry,
The
horn, &LC.
etry
It
whom
po-
designating by
it
the character of
the poetry
for
its
it
ment with
were, a peculiar
its
fitted to
produce
effect.
Hence we have
airs
striking examples of
what
effects
certain
As
all
simplicity,
the
artist
with the simple tones of his instrument has the heart of one,
with
whom
all
it is
it
were
immediately upon
roar of
instruments, the
becomes a
who wishes
only to have
his
Should the
267
sisters,
who have been separated by art, musick and poetry, once become again more intimately united, we should again hear of" a song for the harp," and " a song for the flute," as in
the songs of
By
it awakens, and more deeply the tone of feeling, which it excites and he, that can happily express this in the lanin the heart guage of lyric poetry, will accomplish more than can be done
by
all
art.
3.
nothing of our
free
little
attempts
in vain.
that, or
that
by ours, are
float
in the air.
feeling determine
rythmical
is
balance only
in the
in
very general
manner.
This
shown
If
"Selah."
we compare
mean change of
which
is
ex-
and mode.*
The
subject
of the song, or
its
tone of emotion change, and since the melody was not very
definitely
marked
commonly have
still
especially
changed.
loftier tone,
which are
Where
From
all
books of travels we know, that the Orientals are fond of a it appears to the Europeans, a very doleful sort of
in certain
This
it
in the
Psalms
designated by "Selah."
268
it
it
may show,
as
it is
undeniable, that
fond of thus linking together and associating sevThe Greeks translate " Selah by eral different psalms.*
they were
which Suidas and others explain by fielcadiag svalIt shows therefore, that such songs were set to musick throughout, only however after the
diayjaluu,
^}''/,
concentus mutatio.
change
find
in the
song which
it
accompanied.
On
the whole
we
that
we have indeed
which
recital, is
far
A SONG OF PRAISE
TO GOD AND HIS RIGHTEOUS PROVIDENCE. The 92d
Psalm,
t
It is
good
to give
thanks to Jehovah,
To sing praises to thy name, O Most High. To show thy loving kindness in the morning, Thy faithfulness every night,
Upon the len-stringed harp, and the The guitar of the sounding strings.
Thou,
I will
lute,
me with
!
thy work,
How How
When
And
* 1 Chron. 16
xxxiii.
all
the
wicked spring
is
made up of
also
Ps. xxxii-
were probably
this
Probably
sung together, and so of others. Psalm, the author of which is unknown, was designed
in the temple.
to
269
They
yet shall perish at the last.
But thou,
Behold,
Jehovah, abidest
thine enemies,
O Jehovah,
But
my
exalt.
oil.
Mine eye looks with courage on my Mine ear receives the tidings of evil.
foes.
To the wicked, that rise up against me. The righteous flourish like the palm tree. And grow up like the cedar of Lebanon.
Those
that are planted in the
They still shoot forth in old age, They are full of sap, and their leaf green, To show that Jehovah is upright.
And
* That
is,
there
is
no unrighteousness
in
him.
my courage,
and increase
my strength. The
wild ox
is
his horn.
Hence,
his
horn
is often mentioned, as the symbol of strength So Moses speaks of Joseph. Deut. xxxiii. 17.
23*
270
XL
O^the king
as a repre-
him.
Of the king as covenanted with Jehovah, The llOth Psalm, with remarks. Of the pro-
The
mises respecting the lineage of David. Their influence on the Psalms. The times of Solomon, a Psalm. Celebralast Psalm of David.
tion of
Mount Zion
in the
am
means exhausted
do so an
But
in order to
would be
requisite,
and
for that, I
present work.
The
God,
his attri-
which he extends
worth of prayer,
and of uprightness in his sight, are so well known to us through the Psalms and the applications made of them, that a
collection of
I venture, therefore,
only to indicate certain leading points of vieio, which exhibit the subject matter of some of the Psalms, in its proper relation
to the age, in
1.
Psalms,
we must
271
that, especially in those of the
his temple.
much
contemplated
God
individual fortunes
Hence we
of in the temple,
many
oi the
to niy cry,
Hear my
my right,
it
Thou Thou
For
In
I
provest
triest
my
heart, searches!
evil in
by night, me.
purposed, that
I
my mouth my
lips
When
all
things I guarded
From
I
So now
and hear.
judge.
As
for
me
in
my
innocency
I shall
my
* Ps. xvii.
t
(my
This seems to me, the sense of the words, " to the worksof of men> subjects) by the word of thy lips, (the judgments and ordinances,
I
which
in the
gave as king
in the
name of God)
The
suppli-
ant e.^pects justice from God, since he has not knowingly said or done
evil to any.
272
My
That
all
wishes
thine
will
be
satisfied,
When
is,
image awakes.*
In
the
East the judge was approached in plain terms, and with a loud
cry of complaint, and
when he showed himself, when his " likeness" awoke publicly, or he appeared in publick for the
administration of justice, he was the helper of the oppressed.
Thus
it is
said,
seek
my
face,
seek
it
Lord, hide
it
publick national
When, therefore,
is
in triumphal
hovah
for the
most part
Not unto us, O Jehovah, not unto us, To thy name alone be the glory, For thy mercy and thy truths sake.
Let the nations say,
"Where
is
now
your
God?
Our God
is in
the heavens,
will.
And
Are
doeth whatsoever he
idols, silver
But their
the
and gold,
not,
have mouths, and speak have eyes, and see not, have ears, and hear not.
have noses, and smell not. have hands, and handle not,
have
feet,
and walk
not,
context and parallelism require, that the " awaking of the liketo God, and correspond with " face." preferred be ness" t Ps. cxv.
The
273
Nor do they speak through their throat. Like them are they that made them,
And every
O
He
Jehovah, Jehovah,
is
He He
If
Ye, that fear Jehovah, trust in him, is your help, and your shield.
we take from these Psalms the peculiar national feeling, which accompanied them, we deprive them of a great part of their force, and of their original import.
In Judah
God
is is
is
known,*
His name
In
great in Israel,
Salem
his tabernacle,
And The
There brake he
shield,
(Change of
tone.)
mountain.
They stand despoiled of themselves. Even the brave they have slept their sleep. And none of the men of might find their hands. At thy rebuke, O God of Jacob, The rider and horse are in a dead sleep.
!
Thou didst thunder judgment from heaven, The earth feared, and was silent.
When
To save
The wrath of mangiveth thee but praise. The remainder of it thou girdest to thee, As the symbol of thy taiumph. Make thy vows, and brmg triumphal gifts To Jehovah your God,
* Ps. IXKVI
274
,
gifts
To him that is to be feared. He bindeth the pride of heroes, He is terrible to the kings of the
earth.
We
know
but
every
trait
and Jehotri-
from
my
heart
is
ready,
I will sing
Awake, my
1 will
awake,
awake
early,
Lord
is
great,
Thy
covenanted truth
O Lord,
right hand,
and hear.
I
God
Therefore will
For already
I divide
Shechem
rising
as mine,
In
X
and freeing itself from clouds. morning light. common expression of the favour of Jehovah. (See Ps. Ixxxv. 9.)
allusion to the
+
morning sky
An
allusion to the
The
275
And measure
Gilead
is
mine, Manassah
Iielmet,
mine,
in
Ephraimniy
war.
Moab is my wash-pot, Upon Edom I cast my shoe, And treat the Philistines with
scorn.
Who brought us into the strong city? Who guided us into Edom ? Was not thou, O God, who also didst cast
it
us
off,
And
didst not
Help us again in our necessities, For vain is the help of man. Through God we yet shall do valiantly, He treadeth the enemy under our feet.
I
know no
people, in
so gentle as
entation
we find here. The most feeling prayer and lammay be nearly connected with feelings of the greatand warlike sternness.
It was obviously the rewhich gave even to the milder and gentler tone. The
est bravery
them belongs
tenderness and
refinement
3.
is
Hence, we
bility, relating to
like descriptions,
senti-
ments there
is
a transition to the
The
former
The
first
king.
These He
to
inheritance, which
God had
given him.
Here begins
276
again from speakieg of enemies turns suddenly to the prosperity of Judaea.
That our sons, like vigorous trees, May grow up in the beauty of youth
And
pillars.
;
full,
Yea
Our oxen be
No damage,
Happy Happy
whose God
Jehovah.
is
How
is
beautiful
for
the image,
when
the shepherd of
who
invoked
a shepherd.
ear, O Shepherd of Israel, That leadest Joseph like a flock. Thou, that art throned above the cherubim,
Give
Let the
light of thy
countenance shine.
Awake
us.
Revive us again
God,
to shine,
and
God
of Sabaoth,
'
How
Thou feedest them with the bread of tears, And givest tears for drink in a full cup. Thou has made us a reproach to our neighbours,
Revive us again,
O God of
Sabaoth,
shall be saved.
to shine,
and we
Thou broughtest a vine out of Egypt, Thou didst cast out the nations and plant
Give
it
it,
it
to take root.
277
That it filled the land. shadow covered the
cedars of
sentest
Jts
hills
its
around,
And
Its
God were
branches
boughs,
Thou
its
to the sea,
Why
So
down
its
it ?
walls.
that
who
The boar from the wood doth waste it, The wild beast doth devour it. O God of Sabaoth, return to us again, Look down from heaven and behold. And visit again thy vine,
Whicli thy right hand hath planted
It IS
It is
burned with
withered
fire, it is
cut down,
at the
Thy
So
right
whom
thou hast
made
strong;
we never revolt from Revive us, and we will rejoice Jehovah, God of Sahnoth,
shall
thee,
in thee.
Revive us again,
to shine,
and we
shall be saved.
its
recurring chorus,
is
wholly theto-
ward the end (v. 18.) do we discover the continuous allegory of the man and hero, who is now to act in the name of Jehovah.
4.
As
Israel
was
of,
a theocratic state,
ler
the language,
when
Even
his representative
on earth.
in the
is
word son
Hebrew language.
called the
The
*1 Chron.
xxix, 23.
His kingdom
kingdom of Jeho-
ah.
Chron.
xxviii. 5.
24
278
connexion of simple domestic relations with ancient govern' cultivation rendered it a favourite expression. In
calling kings the sons of
ment and
ion
God*
it
common
tions have
gone
I
I
oil*
With him
my hand
be mighty,
Him
also shall mine arm strengthen, That no enemy may terrify him.
I will beat
down
And
My
And
truth
in
my name
horn be exalted,
sea,
That his hand maybe stretched to the His right hand to the river Euphrates.
He
my father,
My God
and the rock of my salvation. I make him also my first born, Exalted above all the kings of the earth.
The
last
lines explain
horn of Jehovah, so clearly, that I venture to add here the 2d Psalm, as of the same character, and authentically elucidated
by
this
song of Heman,
The 2d
What
Psalm.
*The JtoyevEtg
iThey
1
of
Homer
are
known
to
every one,
<fee.
call
279
Why
The iiings of the earth rise up, The princes build projects togethert
Against Jehovah and his anointed.^
"Let
"
from us."
He, that is throned in heaven, shall laugh, Jehovah holdeth them in derision. He speaketh to them in his wrath. And scattereth them in his fierce anger. " I have set my king upon my throne,
||
Upon my
I will also
'Thou
" So be
art
it
my
son,
this
from
day forth."**
which translate
also cor-
The verb
empty uproar of a multitude. The poet has here in a single word imaged the import of the whole ode, which only unfolds this lofty sentiment with which it begins. tl have preserved the metaphor of the original, which is here indeed only an incidental import of the word, because the idea of the whole
responds well with
this,
and
signifies the
to the history in
Gen.
xi.
Jehovah and
his
and as
the for-
The
in
latter is
here only
"iw
the
name of
He
speaks to them
them.
The
the following verses are the brief and sublime sentence of Jehovah, uttered in the thunder,
in
using the
first
God
as the
parallel passages
ment. Henceforth God will reign through him, as his representative. ** These two lines are parallel, the sense of the latter the same as that
of the I'ormer.
The same
xiii,
new
king,
280
The uttermost parts of the earth thy possession.* Thou shalt smite them with an iron sceptre, And dash them as a potters vessel. Be wise now, therefore, Oye kings, Be instructed, ye judges of the earth. Obey Jehovah with fear.t And honour him with trembling.
Do homage to the son, lest he be angry, And bring destruction on you by the way,t
For soon his wrath will be kindled, And happy they, who are faithful to
him.||
lyrical progress begins boldly and abruptly with " a quo ? quo
scelesti ruitisl"
of their tumult,
ven renders
He
It
speaks to them in
thunders, and one lightning flash drives them asunder. poet hears and interprets the voice.
tick,
The
utter,
who
throned in heaven.
He
of
the land.
*I leave
to the
Psalm here
its
boundaries, the
age.
The
was
to
point,
king.
literally as
meaning
circuire.
The
vassals of
Oriental kings stood in a circle around the throne, and going round the
was a common
As much
as to say,
to deliberate.
The image
is
mean
fidelity,
as of subjects to
their sovereign.
281
For
I
whom was
not, if
for
a picture so
know
we would judge
what other
per-?
son
it
Who dwelt upon Mount Zion Whom did God set as his son
time of
its
composition
this
mountain according to other Psalms of plain import? had as many enemies as he, both in and out of Judaea ?
Who
And
Half
this,
who triumphed
the Psalms are
so gloriously over
full
all
these enemies
we proceed
sions,
as if
which occur here, are elsewhere also applied to David, and the whole view presented by the ode is obviously correspondent, both in place and time, to the purpose for which it
was composed.
The
They
is
made
to
bow
drawn for aiming at a present object. Place the object aimed at the distance of a thousand years, and the arrow flies
in vain.
The
finest lyrical
it
ode
is
lost,
we deprive
is
of
local nation
and
origin, of
its
introduced in the
the king,
to sit
New
Testament."
to
Psalm for
Him,
who
upon the throne of David. know how David was enthroned there?
than from the circumstances
own songs ?
The
appli-
Testament so far from excluding, confirms rather its original meaning as descriptive of David. 5. As David, therefore, was enthroned upon the same holy mountain with God, that is, upon a mount of kingly majesty in his place, aqd on his throne, so expressions came into use, which celebrate him, as the covenanted ally and friend oi
24*
New
282
God.
He
my
house,
of rest,
no sleep
to
to
mine eyes,
Jehovah,
Nor slumber
mine eyelids,
mighty one of Jacob.
Ephrata,
A habitation
Lo we heard
for the
of
it
in
We
found
it
Jaar
Let us enter
tabernable,
footstool.
to
thy rest.
Thy Thy
priests shall be clothed with judgment, saints shall shout for joy.
David performed
requited him.
this
vow, and
we know how
richly
God
He
him
a perpetual lineage,
The king
belong to historical narrative, t and the original local import of the following Psalm, therefore, would seem also to be
placed beyond question.
The
110th Psalm.
Jehovah said to the king, Sit thou upon my right hand.t Till I make thine enemies thy footstool. From Zion now Jehovah reaches forth
* Ps. cxxxii.
+
X
2 Sam.
vii. 1. 18.
Chron.
xvii. 16.
At the
right
at the side
7. xvi.
God
'
gives
him a place of
till
and honour on
for
his temple,
he has subdued
him
all
his
283
The
sceptre of his power abroad,* " Be thou king amidst thine enemies.f
11
y holy mountain.
the
I
bosom of
dew,
not,||
my
priest fowever,
my
Melchisedek.
hand, IT
Jehovah,
at thy right
*The sceptre of the king. Jehovah now stretches it out in his name and as his ally upon mount Zion. + Most of the enemies of David were still unconquered, when he went to Zion, and carried thither the ark of Jehovah. tThe author has a long note on this passage, which I venture chiefly to omit, as I believe his conjectures have met with no favour among the critics. His rendering is defended mainly by a conjectural alteration of
the text.
II
Tr.
inviolable covenant,
vii.
which God made with David, is in 2 Sam. where the words " forever and ever," are often repeated. David himself regards it as a covenant obligation, 2 (Sam. vii. 19.) and so speaks of it in his last words. (2 Sam. xxiii. 5.) It is well known, that the word here rendered " priest" designates one who might approach near loGod, and it would stem, that the nearness of David to God led to its use. But the parrallelism A'j'no- of righteousness, shows clearly enough its meaning. Such originally the priests were to be, and when David brought the ark to Zion he sought to invest them again with that character. (See Pe. cxxxix. 9. How far it was carried we know not, it is enough, that 2 Sam. viii. 18. the sons of David were priests, i. e. judges, and David therefore the highest priest of righte-
The
where David
been a
priest
of righteousness and king of peace. But what is the expression " after the order"
The
parallellisra
shows, that
it is
the oath,
is
Ps
xci. 7.
side.
284
Shall sit as judge among the nations Then shall the land be full of dead bodies, And wounded heads lie far around,
beautiful ode
the plan of
It says to
unintelligible to us.
God
is
now
covenanted
forth for
judgment among the nations. Clothed dignity, he now dwells near to God, who stretches him a sceptre, which all obey. He is now King of
will sit in
righteousness, a priest of
are to Horace, the
God
in
Salem.
What
the
musea
to the
Hebrew
poet.
militia simu!
et datis et data
New
Testament,
also, this
toil
As
is
introduced in the
Psalm ex-
and suffering,
now
he shall
in
hand of his heavenly father, until judgment among the nations, and bring all
to
it
God
should establish
its
it
upon the
its
and that
prosperity should be
We
find
this
occasion of
historically
related, |
and observe
same
*The image
is
Ode
4.
2,
Sam,
vii.
285
time
in
how eminent
it
He
last
looked upon
as a family league, as a
to
God
celebrated
it,
as a covenant respecting
This
fair
is
God
often
reminded of
is
his
promise, David
covenant, and
tured with
all
Let us
look at a proof of
7.
So spake David, the son of Jesse, The man, whom God exalted.
The anointed of the God of Jacob, And the sweet Psahiiist of Israel. The Spirit of God speaketh in me, His word is on my tongue.
For thus spake
Israel's
God,
Israel.
||
Thus
"
said to
me
the
Rock of
ruler of
men,
a just prince,
A king
And
And
God,
It scattereth the
clouds away,
My
with God.
He made
me
all
a covenant forever.
salvation,
and
all
my
desire,
root,
*2. Sam. vii. 18. t2Sam. vii. 19, 12 Sam. xxiii. 1. See Briefe das Studium der Theologie betreffend, Th. 1. S. 135. The word usually here read as a particle, is a noun or verb recte rgo disposite, facto confirmata Stat domus mea, With God is David's frequent and favourite expression.
11
286
They
shall
That cannot be taken by the hand. The man, that will touch them, Must arm his hand with sword and spear. The fire shall burn them and their dwelling.
Thus
rebels,
and dissatisfied spirits of his kingdom, whom Solomon also removed out of the way. But the reign of his offspring was not to be wholly in the spirit of revenge. It was rather
to diffuse
new
life
in
the
72d
sun,
which occurs
in these last
Psalm.
God,
And
He
And
The mountains shall speak peace to the people, The hills proclaim to them righteousness, That he may aid the oppressed of the people, That he may save the sons ot" the needy,
And
break
in pieces the
oppressor.
generations.!
He shall come down. As rain upon the mown As showers, that water
And
grass,
the earth.
moon endureth.
first,
*The
+
is
the king.
Mountains and
line.
hills as Ps.
ii.
ex.
The verb
is
second
t
to be
The
picture pre-
sented
S Sam.
vii.
287
His dominion
l^rom the river
is
from sea
to sea,*
to the
bow
before him,t
And his enemies lick the dust. The kings of Tarshish and the isles
Bring presents
to him,t
The kings of Sheba and of Seba, Pay their homage with gifts. All kings fall down before him, And all nations serve him.
||
that crieth.
And the oppressed, who hath no helper. He spareth the weak and the needy. He saveth the life of the distressed. He delivereth it from deceit and violence.
For
his blood
shall live,
is
precious
in his sight.
He
They
him
continually,
And
corn.
As the rustling trees of Libanus. The cities shall flourish with people.
Like the grass-covered His name
It shall
field.
shall
endure forever.
Men
shall bless
themselves
in his
name,
close with
Psalms of David close, and they could none better. In it the blessings of Abraham, Judah, and David are brought together, and the ideal concepthis the first
*
With
The
is
the Mediterranean.
t
X B
tribes,
subdued.
history of the
queen of Sheba
is
known. 4 That is, when they would speak of happy them the reign of Solomon,
288
tions of the Prophets respecting a future reign, like that
of
In the
is
represented, the
name
Mount Zion
as
it
David, accompanied
was,
it
in like
manner
to later times.
;
Small
dry and
was
to
become
it
parched as
it
was, from
were
From
to pre-
Zion was
bless
all
to
nations.
this
mountain was
foundation
is in
More
than
all
thou city of God.* (Change of tone,) " Egypt and Babylon will be counted
the nation, that acknowledgeth
To
me,
Philistia, Ethiopia,
and Tyre
To
Zion
it
shall be said.
This and that man were born in her. The Highest himself hath founded
her,
to
"This and
that
man was
born there."
The
All rejoice
m her.t
with which in lyric garlands, this city All shall come together is adorned!
What
here,
praise
is this,
as to its proper
home.
In
it
are
jubilant dances, in
*
which
The
oracle
t
is
The
289
chorus.
We
is
may
call to
in
which
Salem
J.
NoTK. The author inserts here a piece of poetry of several pages, by H. Schmid, a German, which I venture to omit, Tr.
25
Xli.
What we have
Influence of these on
phets was
Isaiah.
alty.
By what causes the spirit of the Proawakened and animated. Proofs in respect to Hosea and The new lineage of David and Son of God. Images of roy-
How
the fortunes of
How Jerusalem
in their figurative
language. Specimens.
raises
Principle on
and
er
economy of God.
as a
Under the reign of David and Solomon Judaea, considered kingdom, was in the most flourishing condition, which it
It
ever attained.
Mount Libato
com-
The
names of
for all suc-
these kings
became
and poetry
ceeding times.
For these it was now their highest upon the throne of David, and were priv-
and
successors.
Such they
were indulged, and by no means to the ideal of the 72d Psalm) the kingdom of David, as a whole, soon went down. It was divided after the death of Solomon, and the
tions, that
fell
Both kingdom?
291
were the theatre of commotion and anarchy, and subject to the frequent incursions of their neighbours, until all was lost
in
the captivity.
The
is
for
its
produc-
to the
The
to us,
bridal
because
and was
^of
Solomon and the Proverbs would not have been preserved, had they not been adorned with the name of Solomon, and had not the later age, when these writings were collected, found in the former already a
favourite mystical sense, a description of a future period like
The Song
As
We
have, there-
names of
their ancient
The
so often
e.xtant.
The
silent,
and
all
the
As an emerald
heard no more.
The
are swept
away from
vii.
t
their fields,
* Jer.
34.
xii. 4.
+ Isa. ix. 3.
11
EccL
Sirach xxvii.
292
hedad, the jubilant cry of the wine treader in his song.*
unfair
is it
How
or
lost.
But
these,
had
a great influence
later times.
They were
(pro-
bably at
first
In look-
we
shall see
how
how
It will
and them in their animated appeals. now be my purpose only to show in general the influence
which the so called Messiah or royal psalms have had on the voices of the Prophets; and I say in a word, that these, together with the ancient prophecies, have not only awakened
the voice
of
To
new
establishment of it, and a ininre period of great happiness and prosperity As then the kingdom, through the fault of Sol.
omon, Rehoboam, and other kings, was sunk into a low condition, when God at length awoke thev oice of the Prophets, what could they say to the people other than "ye are fallen and debased." What else could Hosea say to the kingdom of Israel, but "turn again to the righteous Jehovah, for ye have
gone
will
astray.
erts of
to the temple of him to whom ye belong, he meet you, and receive you graciously. "t
Judah,
me
ii.
forever.t
* Jer.
xlviii.
33.
tHos.
14. xiv.
ii.
tHos.
ii.
19.
293
I will betroth thee unto
me
in righteousness,
In judgdment,
in loving
I
In faithfuless will
betroth thee.
And
It is the
under the symbol of a marriage. This sentiment pervades his whole Prophecy, and is of political import. He allures thera
with a voice of friendship back to the wilderness of Judah,
to the
may
For all the more ancient blessings of Abraham, of Judah, and Moses, were confirmed by the divine declarations
kings.
to the offspring
of David.
He
foresees, also,
which
The
Add seek Jehovah, their God, and David, their king. And honour Jehovah, and his fatherly kindness,
In the latter days.
of Judah must
kingdom more clearly unfold their views concerning these ancient blessings, and ordinances of the realm. When Jsrael was often laid waste, and even now was on the point of being carried away captive, God awoke in the scarcely more happy Judah the voices of many Prophets at once, which the spirit of Isaiah was probably instrumental, if not in originally calling forth, at least in animating and encouraging. They saw the fate of their sister kingdom, the greatest part of the nastill
So spake
own
encouragement
*Hosea
ii.
11. vi. 1.
25*
294
faith in the inviolable
had sworn
and
first
to
new
its root,
to that
they applied
God had
pronounced
images,
in ancient times.
This
is
off ike
branch with
'"earful
crash,
The lofty trunks are hewn down. The proudly exalted are humbled, The thick forest is cut down with the axe, The groves of Libanus by a mighty arm.
But
anew
And the spirit of Jehovah shall rest upon him, The spirit of wisdom and of understanding, The spirit of prudence and of heroism, The spirit of knowledge and of the fear of Jehovah, And cause him to breath in the fear of Jehovah.
He
Nor decideth by
He
And
With the breath of his lips he slayeth the wicked. With righteousness he girdeth his loins,
And And
faithfulness
is
Become
And
It
count
it
gives.
would be stranwe,
if
* Isa. X. 33.
xi.
110.
295
pressions and images.
blessing of Jacob, and
The
grew
staff'
of Judah
is
Now
it is
The
nations
it,
and consider
its
depend on Judah monarch are from the history of Solomon, and the blessings pronounced upon him. He was renowned for his wisdom, and the future Solomon is to excel him sevenfold in wisdom and divine gifts. The picas formerly the nations
were
to
for support.
the Psalms,
which
relate to
which
Even
the pecul-
"to breath or smell in the fear of Jehovah," seems to have been occasioned by the oracular language in the last words of David.* The Prophet unfolded the ancient oracles, and combined them into an image, that might awaken and confirm the faith of his people. I add here in like
or
and
historical incidents
They
And And
in their
hunger
fret
themselves,
king.
curse their
God and
They
God.
Isaiah
who
is
like words.
7.
296
Thick darkness, and redoubled night.* No dimness now, where late thick darkness reigned,
Like those old
ti:7:es,
when he
in
Zebulon
And Naphthali at first threw off the yoke. He renders glorious in the latter days The country by the sea beyond the Jordan,
The anarchy of nations. The people that were walking
Behold
a great light.
in
'
in
darkness,
The
dwellers
On them
The people are increased, and great tools their They joy before thee like the joy of harvest. As men rejoice when they divide the spoil.
For thou
didst break their
heavy yoke,
The rod which smote their shoulders, The sceptre of their oppressors, As in the time of Midian,
The
at
what he
aimed
drawn.
every
thing,
his
images were
These were from the times of Midian, and therefore At that period in the North part of the country a great deliverance was wrought. J Then in the obscure forests of Naphthali and Zebulon the So now also in light of freedom went forth over all the land. in the way along the sea of this Northern press of nations Galilee, where now the hostile Syrians are exercising their oppressions, the light of freedom is going forth, and there
from the victorious times of the Judges.
;
shall *
It is
method of Isaiah
with the
.'jture
to contrast the present and melancholy and happy condition, and these must be taken together
here, tlijaf^h indifferent chapters. 1 1 take liie particle here for the interjection, expressing a wish, and a
feeling of joy, utinam,
t
sil
as
it
i.
often occurs.
e.
Jud.
iv.
5.
In Harosheth
now n
Galilee, in
tiio
from above
297
For
all all
the
And
Shall
now
flame
'
For unto us
born,
And unto
The
His name
us a son
given.
staff shall
is
The
My
The
prince of peace.
his
purpose
in
He
his son, as if he
who
should bear
the
names and
i.
He
The
is
called
and begotten,
e.
which Judah bore before his feet, he lays iqwn his shoulder and thus in him revives Judah, the ancient prince of the tribes. His name is called rconderful ! and so David often called himself, when as the stone, that was rejected, he had
corner stone.*
himself,
He
is
called coun-
and mighty
to
My
calls
him
change the grammatical peculiarity of person, which often stands in the Psalms and benedictions, " he shall call me, my father! and I will establish his kingdom forever. "J Finally prince of peace, as tlie name of Solomon imports, and as the Psalms explain it.
also,
The
all
which he could
Sam.
rii 14.
Ps,
Jud.
xiii.
18.
298
bring together concerning the blessings and the glory of the
offspring of David.
And And
Upon the throne of David in his kingdom, That he may order and establish it, With righteousness and judgment From henceforth and forevermore. The zeal of Jehovah Sabaoth
Will perform
this.
That
is
own honour,
for
all
promises of
God
here repeated.
I
in a description of the
golden age,
which the Prophets connect with the reign of this new king, the general amount of the whole is however, that he was to be
a shepherd like David, a peaceful prince like
Solomon, a right-
The presence
Jehovah our
helper.
errquire
among them,
tlie name of a king, of a new David, was used. Afterwards, when the government was divided between the prince and the
high-priest,
Now
became
also biform,
though
He was
tem-
in the
high priest.
He
was
to reign
also to
299
be a priest upon his throne, and peace was to be between them.*
Finally Malachi returns to the most ancient economy, and
who has established the covenant in their Thus the prophecy always clothed itself in
age
;
purifying
spirit.
it
adhered
for the
is
most part
to
the promise
in relation to a king,
which
celebrated in the
89th Psalm.
I sing the I will
proclaim with
my mouth
Thy faithfulness from age to age. And say, for us shall grace be ever sure, Thy words shall be established like the heavens. " For I confirmed a covenant with my chosen,
I
swore
to
David
my
servant.
Thy seed will I establish forever, And build thy throne form age to age." The heavens bear witness to thy wondrous work, The assembly of saints praise thy faithfulness.
This did the Prophets, they named the future king, the
imnt of God, David.
2.
Still farther,
ser-
David himself was much, before he could establish his extensive kingdom, and the other was to be chastened with the rod of men,f though the favour of Jehovah his father should not wholly depart from him, and both the suffering and triumph were applied by the Prophets, amidst all the calamities, which This is they witnessed, to the future king and his kingdom.
and of the seed, which was promised him.
to suffer
doomed
the key to the remarkable and apparently contradictory representations of the Prophets.
The
22d, and
all
the Psalms of
afflictions,
*2 Sam.
tZech.
vi.
12.
13.
800
ation, that, as
it
was the
fate
way
to attain his
elevation, so
which the Prophets gradually unfolded more .and more, and, with which they sought to comfort their depressed people the Psalm, with the first expressions of which the most exalted sufferer expressed his deep anguish upon the cross.
;
I.
THE SUFFERER.
XXII. 1
A LAMENTATION, Ps.
23.*
OP MOENING,
DAWN
A PSALM OF DAVID.
'
My God, my God wherefore dosl thou forsake me ? Why art thou far from helping me, and from my cry? My God, by day I call, but thou hearest not,
!
I cry
And
Who
In thee our fathers trusted, They trusted, and thou didst save them,
They
were delivered.
Trusted
But I am but a worm, and no man, Contemned of men, the people's scorn.
All they, that see me, scoff at me,
*
By
David, then Hezekiah, the whole Jewish nation, then again, an unknown king, or hero, unsuccessfully contending with barbarous foes, and finally the
Jewish Messiah.
last sufferings
some
Psalm.
I
This
is
may do
t
301
They pout
"
the lips, and shake the head,
He
calls
upon Jehovah,
didst take
let
him."
Yet thou
And
wast from
my hope
While
laid
upon the
hung on thee,
thou wast
And
Be
my
mother's
womb
my God
!
therefore, even
now, not
far
from me,
For trouble comes, and there is none to help Many bulls have compassed me about, Strong bulls of Bashan have beset me round.* They rushed with open mouth upon me, Like ravening and roaring lions.
Like water
am
poured
out.
And
all
my
My heart is melted like wax within me,t My strength dried up like a potsherd. My tongue too cleavethto the roof of my mouth,.
And thou
hast laid
me
enclose me,
feet.
pierce
my
hands and
all
my
bones,
They see it, and with joy they gaze upon me. They even now divide my garments. And cast lots upon my vesture.
||
far
from me.
My
*
The
A
An
vivid
all
the energies.
Dogs running
wolves.
more
bloodthirsty than
tl
They
are so sure of
my
my
possessions.
26
302
Deliver
sword,*
My
mouth,
And save me from the bullock's horns.l Among my brethren then will I extol thee, And praise thee in the congregation.
II.
2432.||
I
Ye,
that fear
And
The mournful cry of the afflicted. Nor hath he hid his face from him, But when he cried to him, he heard.
My
Ye,
Your
And
And
all
Remembering
all
Jehovah,
him.
the tribes of
men worship
And
*
he
is
ruler
is
among
the nations.
The
sufferer here
threatened, so wil-
My
darling,
my
dearest part,
buffalo, an
my
life,
my
soul.
ox or
enemies.
II
This second part of the Psalm has a very different tone and characfrom the
first,
ter
and
is
timent.
we
it
to be otherwise,
Psalm,
designed
to
accompany the
sacrificial feasts.
303
Let them that eat the
fat
And them,
bow
before him,
1*
Whose
The
souls are
And shall be counted as his people. They come to make his kindness known. And what he hath performed, to future times
3.
Prophets
in-
vested with the character, which had been given them in the
Psalms.
The
in Zion, as
cometh
If
Lo darkness covereth
!
the earth.
And deep
is
visible
upon thee.
thee.
And all the nations come to thy light, And kings to the brightness, that riseth on
Lift
They all assemble themselves, and come to Thy sons are come from far, From far they bring to thee thy daughters. Then shalt thou see, and rejoice. Thy heart shall leap, and be exalted.
When
And
They bring thee gold and incense, And praise the glory of Jehovah. The flocks of Kedar are assembled unto thee, The rams of Nebaioth are made to serve thee,
*
t
i.
e. all
By
304
'
They come
altar,
And
house of my glory.
as clouds,
?
Who
And
fly
my command,
And ships of Tarshish are made ready, To bring thy sons from distant lands.
Their
silver
Devoted
to the glory of
The holy God ot Israel, who glorifieth thee. The sons of strangers build thy walls.
Their kings
shall minister unto thee,
I
For But
in
in
my my
wrath
smote thee,
I
favour hava
mercy on
thee.
Thy gates shall be continually open, Nor day nor night shall they be closed. To bring to thee the riches of the nations, And that their kings too may be brought.
Let one read the 22d, 72d, 87th, 102d and other Psahns, this passage, and he will at once per-
for-
The
named by
in
the
which occur
the Psalm
concerning Solomon.*
culiar
is with Zion, the dwelling place of God, and the pecrown of the country. What the festival and national Psalms sung of present circumstances, the Prophets applied
So
i'
to
vah.
There,
its
in that
little
mountain was
to
be exalted,
parched desert.
It is
meant
if
all
this to
be taken in
Compare
with Ps.
305
silver. So we know, whence they derived these figurative representations, that they did not invent them themselves and to please their own fancy, but pictured their conceptions, and sketched their hopes in the ancient known language of national songs and national hopes, we shall cease to think of
::;oon
and
at the
same time
shall
be as
far
removed
We
shall see
how
they,
as
men
God
what
all
true philoso-
in nature.
laws,
the course,
in
manner they
hovah, their
on the covenant of Jeever true and faithful God, considered his decfixed their attention
to their
Jehovah was
unmeaning
raptures, but
prospective views, in
in higher dignity.
This seems
treasures.
to
me,
of connexion in the
images, for what end they used them, to what period, and under what
new
we draw,
as
it
fly'
26*
306
And when we
of
how always
the thoughts
mere human conceptions of even the wisest favourites of heaven how all these saw only in
God
their
own own
own
infinite designs,
and from
clearly
their
narrow minds
how
the higher economy and purposes of God, and that loioer econ-
omy, which falls under our immediate observation It is undoubtedly true, as expressed in the eulogy upon
!
Moses attached
history, that
"there arose
the Lord
whom
knew
him.
we have
;
passed through
we
find none,
who
will
Samuel had
power
it
he
to
much
less bring
back
David had
sensibility
and delicacy, uprightness and heroism; but he was a king. Instead of the publick good, the more limited good of his
own
mind.
He
perma-
less establish
it
The wisdom
economy of the state was in the mean tinae broken up. those, who came at a later period, Elijah had an arm
Moses, but his age was too deeply sunk
fire
;
Of
like
and the wind, but he could not give stability and life, Isaiah and other Prophets could speak like Moses they were
;
animated by his
spirit
and
where
is
307
which they
er tired.
left
behind them
Moses
to
left
it
in a
tinctly conceived
effect with
God an
was
the most simple and sublime, that has been found in any
forth only
to yield
for
a future age.
When
to his
who were throughout inclined to worship the golden how pure a conception did he produce in the tabernacle,
a wandering people!
its
The idea
law, which
^nbol,
is
so symply sublime,
can be altered or
Its
it.
holy place
had nothing but the shew-bread, the symbol of the most ancient family sacrifices, which were merely feasts. Here stood
the most simple feast before the eyes of Jehovah.
it
In front of
clouds of in-
the most
ancient times.
The blood of expiation, and that offered as an acknowledgment of tenure and allegiance, flowed only in
how
wisely were
all
How
improve them!
and
dis-
the
hindrances, which
might have
Even
at
the last he
collected
spirit,
knew
and
skilfully
How
wise and judicious too was the plan of his Exodous from
!
Egypt
Even
which served
at
308
the
same time
for a wall,
return.
to the
man, who in a barren desert could control, cultivate, and soften a rebellious multitude of 600,000 men Truly
!
the
arm of
the most powerful of them was but the finger of Moses, and
the most enlightened of them only reflected the glory of his
countenance.
Before thee only do
I
bow
more
nign
power.
didst
more powerful, as thou didst more conceal thy With twelve poor, rude and unlearned disciples thou accomplish more than Moses with his mighty host, and
the
found a kingdom of heaven, the only kingdom, that from its nature can endure forever. For the whole world it was dj^
tablished by thee, but only with the smallest beginning.
The
which Ento the
still is
growing, and
expanding
all
and
find the
with courage to
ty,
fulfil
this
way
fulfilled.
Moses and
upon
the holy mount, with thee the third, the greatest, and most be-
nign of
all.
Thou
and
work of its kind ever accomplished in the world, one which no sage, no mighty hero could ever accomplish, and whose consequences reach beyond
ever progressive.
The
way
kingdom, which he
are
we
now
advancing..
306
REMARK
OF THE FIRST EDITOR.
The
author deits
prosecution,
He
wished
for a
it, but it never came. Only comniencementof the third part were found among his papers, which however I would not willingly suffer to be lost, especially as they contain a recapitulation of what has been said in the previous parts, and a brief sketch of the remainder, which was to be concluded in the third
part.
The
following
is
to.
We
have
now
we may con-
flowers.
From
their pa-
Abraham downward,
all
The
shepherd race
went down
to dwell,
to
Egypt,
tlie
to the land,
it
and arranged as
prince
among
deall
The
own
much more
Moses
other nations.
His painful labours had been limited He was obliged to destroy a few in-
considerable states, but the world at large could not feel his
310
beneficial influence.
Israel, after
now
,by this,
Judah
umphs.
arose,
fruits
star
went
was raised up
in Israel,
So long
as he lived,
no one dared
in
fully
to arouse the
some degree
to
mind
in the anticipa-
was
filled
kingdom.
the promise,
upon
his throne,
undisturbed sway but that a successive series of his descendants should bear the sceptre.
last
With
vain,
hostile feelings
tents of his
kingdom, on
whom
and
whom
jects of farther
clemency.
own
family,
which God had established with him, from which the figurative expressions in this last song are taken, and which is celebrated also in the 72d, 89th and 122d, Psalms. Such were the germs, from which the tree of prophetic poetry
dah, and David, and since the two former seemed also coin-
* 2 Sara, xxiii.
1.
See above
in the
SI
sectioo.
311
cident to this most victorious, prosperous, and at the same
marked epoch,
Prophets,
these
it
was
in
the
especially as delineated in
his Psalms,
who formed themselves according to the spirit of songs, and for the people, who sung them, and recalled
that,
and model of
still
tured as
future.
;
The
Abraham was
only in ve-
ry general terms
Moses was
for
too far
removed
all
their use
the
with the Shechinah. David presented to them a character more glorious, and better known for the people were now accustomed to notions of royalty. The mu:
tual jealousies
when most of
David was
the
royal stock of
all
To
this therefore
The
views of
who
should succeed
all
He
is
first
enthroned near the dwelling place of God upon his holy mountain. He brought nations into subjection, had a cultivated
taste for
for right,
and spake
God with
ment.
to enjoy a
312
throughout
all
generations.
mon, and
Human
Even higher divine intuitions can be expressed by them only under known images and signs, and thus the poetry of the Jews naturally employed in
can operate
in
no other way.
its
it
had, and
at the
to enter.
characteristick spirit of
Hebrew
Prophets.
We
shall
them.
The
various and distinct colourings given to the impredictions relating to other nations will be
precations and
carefully considered.
We
shall
produced
appeared
in
their conceptions
now
and
so
down
these, as for
example the fourth book of Ezra, have the charFinally in the last book of the
acters of poetry.
New
Testa-
ment
and images of the ancient Prophets, a new poetical shoot springs up; and at
as if by regeneration of all the conceptions
tree,
INDEX
OF THE PASSAGES OF SCRIPTURE TRANSLATED AND EXPLAINED IN THIS
VOLUME.
Genesis
I.
P-
7.
12.
ExoD.
XXXIV.
XII XXI.
XXII.
PPPP-
37.
75.
II.
19
p.
14.
Num.
IX. 15-23
6
III. 1. 5.
p.
p.
p.
14.
17.
50.
24
IV. 5
16
171.
13. 12.
13.
14-30 24
21
PP-
179.
171.
10
VIII.
p.
p.
21
7
XXVII.
Deut.
VI.
PP-
104.
92.
XX.
XXII.
p.
49.
13.
4.5
p.
XI. 12-17
P- 127.
XLIX.ExoD.
- P- 138. 141
:
XVIII. 15-20
PPp.
50. 132.
III. 2. 4. 6: p.
36.
XX.
119. 140.
92.
14:
VII.
XIII.
1
:
PPP-
87. 49.
XXX. 11-14:
130.
75. 36.
74.
20.
150. 155.
50.
XIV.
"
-P:
XXXIV.
Josh
VI.
65.
10:
p.
19.24
14
8
p. p.
P:
182.
XV. 122
XVII.
26.
X. 11-14
P-
180.
p. 179.
p.
XIII
JuD.
6; P- 147.
XIX.
93. 130.
68.
IV.
P-
169.
68. 185.
20
p.
V.
IX.
P-
p. 168.
p,
715;
PP-
200.
104.
XIIIXVI.
XIV.
184.209.
203.
p.
214.
131.
36. 37. 74.
1
P-
p.
p, P'
XV.
Sam.
II.
P- 209.
34
110
PP-
120.212.
218.
XXXIII. 923
X. 10-13
27
314
1
INDEX.
XVII. 45 XIX. 23,24
I.
:
Sam.
Sajt.
p. p.
:
69.
Ps.
XCIV.
218.
XCV.
19-27
p. 220.
p. p. p. p. p.
XCIX
en.
CVIII.
12, 13. 19-
III.
31-34
8
250.
217.
VII.
XXIII.
1
Kings, XIX.
18 813
15
285.
39.
XXII. 22,23
2 Kings,
Job,
III.
50. 50.
CXIII.
p.
p.
XXX.
18
23
139.
20.
CXIV. CXV.
XXXIIL
Ps.
II.
p.
- p. 278.
- p.
-
CXX. CXXI.
CXXII.
VI.
242.
271.
XVII.
p.
XIX. XXII.
<(
- p. 243.
123 2432
p.
300.
p. p. p. p. p. p.
302
232.
234.
XXIII.
XXIV.
XXXIX.
XL. 610
XLII. XLIII.
257.
110.
259.
p. 260.
p. p. p.
XLV.
L.
236.
111.
LI.
109.
70. 68.
LXVIII.
18
p. p. p.
p.
LXXII. LXXIII.
286.
253.
LXXVI.
p. p.
p.
273. 276.
101.
LXXX.
LXXXII.
p.
p.
96.
288. 299.
89.
26
111: n-17:
p.
p.
p.
133.
p. 244.
p.
268.
XCIV.
p. 102.
INDEX.
Jer.
315
:
XXXI.
X.
22
3 9, 10 5
11.
:
:
p. p. p.
p.
///.
14 19 5
p.
p. p.
119. Hos. XIV. 2 p. 107. Amos, ///. 7 p. 41. 68.Hab. ///. p. 107. Mal. 7 //. p. 292. ///. 1 p. Song of Sol. IV. 11. 15: 293. Wisdom of Sol. XII. 3. 6 293.
: : :
152, 50.
77.
XI.
p.
63.
EccLEsiASTicus, L.
11:
106.
INDEX
TO THE CONTENTS OF THIS VOLUME.
Aaron
as
in the blessing of
Moses, 157.
Abraham
of,
33.
radi-
angel of Jehovah, 36 of presence, 37 68 107. ance Elders, 39 Appearance of God Moses, 36 40 39 Daniel, 41 Ezechiel, 41 the mode of Divine manifestation ages and persons, 42on Mount a Psalmist, 253. Asaph, Henian and Jeduthun, 223 Asaph 174 prophe172 upon Balaam, 175 concerning Moab and other
Angels, 20
his
personified,
as priests,
to
to the
to Eli-
jah,
to Isaiah,
to
to
different traits in
in
dif-
ferent
74.
to different
Sinai,
as
history of,
blessing
Israel,
cies
nations,
178.
of,
187.
19.
141
154of
its
Moses,
154163. Book of the wars of Jehovah, 179 181. Canaan indispensable to the Hebrews, 126
influence
uj).
on poetry,
128right
of the Israelites to
it,
140.
Circumcision as a national distinction, 94. Choral songs and dances, 26 their connexion, 192.
Daniel, vision
of,
41.
317
David, application to him of the blessing pronounced upon
Judah, 146
his Psalms,
history as
brings the Ark of the covenant Zion, 167224 lamentation over Jonathan, 220 Psalmist, 247 a Psalmist, 222 character 292 Zion and Jerusalem
to
his
his
as a
his
as
Fable,
its
spirit
of Oriental, 202.
Families united in a tribe, 123.
the symbol of
fire,
face and
87 enthroned on the book of the laws ideas of the 99 care of Canaan, 127 theocracy, 128 the laws
divinity,
in
37 and 42-word of, 43-guidance upon Sinai, 68 Jehovah Sabaoth, 68 in the desert, 60 his triumphal progress, 70 in the pillars of fire, 74 pure
of,
ot
Moses, 135.
Hannah song
Hebrews
and
as
of,
216.
herdsmen, 30
their separation
Heroick age of the book of Judges, 183. High Priest, his office and apparel, 104, 131. Jacob in Canaan, 138 his benedictions, 141
his
hopes un-
accomplished, 154.
Jephtha's daughter, 197.
139 right to
Canaan, 140
sorcerer,
prohibited
Korahites, 258.
early formation,
32of poetry
concern*
318
ing the dornestick relations, 117, 118.
it
by Moses.
Miracles attending
it,
89
offerings, 108.
Lebanon, 152.
Levi, ground of the choice of this tribe to the priesthood, 131.
Moses
as a Prophet, 43,
57
poetry,
CO
Psalm, 89, 133 founder of the national festivals, aimed not to form a comhis tabernacle, 129 mercial or warlike people, 123 his expectation of another
76, 133
his
99
his
song
at the
Red
Sea, 65
his journeying,
Prophet like himself, 134 why he represented his doings as the work of God, 134 necessity of making conquest of Canaan, 140 his benedictions, 154 the hopes expressed
in
them
delusive,
162
Mount Tabor,
163
306.
Musick combined with dancing in the national songs, 195 its effect upon Saul, 197 musick of the Psalms, 265 mu-
National
God
as expia-
109.
Paronomasia
Pillars of fire
in the East,
202
Passage of the
Red
origin,
20
its
personifications
and
of
itself free
28
outward circumstances
forming
it,
30
God and
morals,
90
mfluence
its
pure ideas of
their
its
and of the
state,
103, 130
319
word of God them, 43 messengers of conso44 signs and symbols, 47 imor wise men, 50 inspired of the name, 49 50 peculiar the Hebrews, 56 zealous against luxury, 126 difference between the Prophet 124 and soothsayer, 175 influence of the Messiah Psalms on the Prophets, 299. 222 purpose, 223 of David, 224 Psalms, 230, 233 of emotion, 241 didactick, 243 anonymous, 261 of degrees, 261 books, 264 265 Royal Psalms, 270 musick influence on times, 292. Riddles among Orientals and specimens of Hebrew, 202
Prophets, 35
lation
to
attire, 104.
and
affliction,
their
port
seers
poets,
to
their origin,
di-
vision,
of,
af-
ter
^206,
Realm of death
Sabbath,
its
Samuel,
42 215 Prophet founder of the schools of the Prophets, 217. conceived Satan Saul under the influence of Musick, 196 the
his history,
his calling,
first
after
Moses, 217
as
interrogates
dead, 198.
Selah,
its
import, 267.
Samson,
his character,
Sinai, 68,
74
Son of God,
import, 278.
Tabor, 163165.
Temple, 113.
Theocracy, 128132.
Tree of knowledge,
19.
320
Triumphal songs,179 J81of Deborah, 187. Urim and Thummim, 104, 132. Wife, her relations, 418 her virtues, 19 Lemuel's praise of a virtuous woman, 121. Word of God to the Prophets, 43-influence on Hebrew Poetry,
46.
Zion, 167
in poetry,
288.
Date Due
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