This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1877 Excerpt: ...would have remained.--The thought that the Lord had brought her to meet him is here completed by the parenthetic declaration: God the Lord has here Himself interfered with my purpose, and through thee prevented the execution of the wicked deed.--Ver. 35. David accepts the present, and dismisses Abigail with the assurance that her request is granted. "To accept the pcraon" (D'JS KW) = "to have regard to," Gen. xix. 21. Vers. 36-38. NabaTi death.--Ver. 36. Abigail. Const. Hlph. from y?. "3 is dependent on a verb of affirmation which is to be supplied from the connection. The repetition of the '3 is occasioned by the parenthesis "unless thou." The strange form "riK'an. Impf-with termination of Perf., is either a clerical error for K'ri, perhaps arisen from the following word, In which the final '3 Is preceded by X (Then.); comp. Olsh. Or, pp. J52,625; or, according to Ew. J191 c, a strengthened form of 2 fern. Impf. as nnxtojl, Deut. xxzilL 18 (Keil). finds Nabal in the revel of a feast.--Like a king's feast, as rich and luxurious. Compare the description of the rich man, Luke xix. "Merry on account of it," that is, the feast. The reference (in vSjlp to the feast (Maur., De W., Kcil), as in Prov. xxiii. 30, answers better to Nabal's thorough self-abandonment to pleasure than the reference to his person: 'within him" so Eng. A. V.; and this view is confirmed by the following words: he was very drunken. Ver. 37. Not till next morning, when the wine was gone out of him, that is, not by vomiting, but by the gradual passing off of the debauch, can Abigail tell him what has happened. The choleric man is so affected by it that he has an apoplectic stroke. The cause of this is neither horror at his loss (Then.), f...
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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1877 Excerpt: ...would have remained.--The thought that the Lord had brought her to meet him is here completed by the parenthetic declaration: God the Lord has here Himself interfered with my purpose, and through thee prevented the execution of the wicked deed.--Ver. 35. David accepts the present, and dismisses Abigail with the assurance that her request is granted. "To accept the pcraon" (D'JS KW) = "to have regard to," Gen. xix. 21. Vers. 36-38. NabaTi death.--Ver. 36. Abigail. Const. Hlph. from y?. "3 is dependent on a verb of affirmation which is to be supplied from the connection. The repetition of the '3 is occasioned by the parenthesis "unless thou." The strange form "riK'an. Impf-with termination of Perf., is either a clerical error for K'ri, perhaps arisen from the following word, In which the final '3 Is preceded by X (Then.); comp. Olsh. Or, pp. J52,625; or, according to Ew. J191 c, a strengthened form of 2 fern. Impf. as nnxtojl, Deut. xxzilL 18 (Keil). finds Nabal in the revel of a feast.--Like a king's feast, as rich and luxurious. Compare the description of the rich man, Luke xix. "Merry on account of it," that is, the feast. The reference (in vSjlp to the feast (Maur., De W., Kcil), as in Prov. xxiii. 30, answers better to Nabal's thorough self-abandonment to pleasure than the reference to his person: 'within him" so Eng. A. V.; and this view is confirmed by the following words: he was very drunken. Ver. 37. Not till next morning, when the wine was gone out of him, that is, not by vomiting, but by the gradual passing off of the debauch, can Abigail tell him what has happened. The choleric man is so affected by it that he has an apoplectic stroke. The cause of this is neither horror at his loss (Then.), f...
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