Chapter 1
1:
The Jewish brethren in Jerusalem and those in the land of Judea,
To their Jewish brethren in Egypt, Greeting, and good peace.
2: May God do good to you, and may he remember his
covenant with Abraham and Isaac and Jacob, his faithful
servants.
3: May he give you all a heart to worship him and to do
his will with a strong heart and a willing spirit.
4: May he open your heart to his law and his
commandments, and may he bring peace.
5: May he hear your prayers and be reconciled to you, and
may he not forsake you in time of evil.
6: We are now praying for you here.
7: In the reign of Demetrius, in the one hundred and
sixty-ninth year, we Jews wrote to you, in the critical distress
which came upon us in those years after Jason and his company
revolted from the holy land and the kingdom
8: and burned the gate and shed innocent blood. We
besought the Lord and we were heard, and we offered sacrifice
and cereal offering, and we lighted the lamps and we set out the
loaves.
9: And now see that you keep the feast of booths in the
month of Chislev, in the one hundred and eighty-eighth year.
10: Those in Jerusalem and those in Judea and the senate
and Judas, To Aristobulus, who is of the family of the anointed
priests, teacher of Ptolemy the king, and to the Jews in Egypt,
Greeting, and good health.
11: Having been saved by God out of grave dangers we
thank him greatly for taking our side against the king.
12: For he drove out those who fought against the holy
city.
13: For when the leader reached Persia with a force that
seemed irresistible, they were cut to pieces in the temple of
Nanea by a deception employed by the priests of Nanea.
14: For under pretext of intending to marry her,
Antiochus came to the place together with his friends, to secure
most of its treasures as a dowry.
15: When the priests of the temple of Nanea had set out
the treasures and Antiochus had come with a few men inside the
wall of the sacred precinct, they closed the temple as soon as
he entered it.
16: Opening the secret door in the ceiling, they threw
stones and struck down the leader and his men, and dismembered
them and cut off their heads and threw them to the people
outside.
17: Blessed in every way be our God, who has brought
judgment upon those who have behaved impiously.
18: Since on the twenty-fifth day of Chislev we shall
celebrate the purification of the temple, we thought it
necessary to notify you, in order that you also may celebrate
the feast of booths and the feast of the fire given when
Nehemiah, who built the temple and the altar, offered
sacrifices.
19: For when our fathers were being led captive to
Persia, the pious priests of that time took some of the fire of
the altar and secretly hid it in the hollow of a dry cistern,
where they took such precautions that the place was unknown to
any one.
20: But after many years had passed, when it pleased God,
Nehemiah, having been commissioned by the king of Persia, sent
the descendants of the priests who had hidden the fire to get
it. And when they reported to us that they had not found fire
but thick liquid, he ordered them to dip it out and bring it.
21: And when the materials for the sacrifices were
presented, Nehemiah ordered the priests to sprinkle the liquid
on the wood and what was laid upon it.
22: When this was done and some time had passed and the
sun, which had been clouded over, shone out, a great fire blazed
up, so that all marveled.
23: And while the sacrifice was being consumed, the
priests offered prayer -- the priests and every one. Jonathan
led, and the rest responded, as did Nehemiah.
24: The prayer was to this effect: "O Lord, Lord
God, Creator of all things, who art awe-inspiring and strong and
just and merciful, who alone art King and art kind,
25: who alone art bountiful, who alone art just and
almighty and eternal, who dost rescue Israel from every evil,
who didst choose the fathers and consecrate them,
26: accept this sacrifice on behalf of all thy people
Israel and preserve thy portion and make it holy.
27: Gather together our scattered people, set free those
who are slaves among the Gentiles, look upon those who are
rejected and despised, and let the Gentiles know that thou art
our God.
28: Afflict those who oppress and are insolent with
pride.
29: Plant thy people in thy holy place, as Moses
said."
30: Then the priests sang the hymns.
31: And when the materials of the sacrifice were
consumed, Nehemiah ordered that the liquid that was left should
be poured upon large stones.
32: When this was done, a flame blazed up; but when the
light from the altar shone back, it went out.
33: When this matter became known, and it was reported to
the king of the Persians that, in the place where the exiled
priests had hidden the fire, the liquid had appeared with which
Nehemiah and his associates had burned the materials of the
sacrifice,
34: the king investigated the matter, and enclosed the
place and made it sacred.
35: And with those persons whom the king favored he
exchanged many excellent gifts.
36: Nehemiah and his associates called this
"nephthar," which means purification, but by most
people it is called naphtha.
Chapter 2
1: One finds
in the records that Jeremiah the prophet ordered those who were
being deported to take some of the fire, as has been told,
2: and that the prophet after giving them the law
instructed those who were being deported not to forget the
commandments of the Lord, nor to be led astray in their thoughts
upon seeing the gold and silver statues and their adornment.
3: And with other similar words he exhorted them that the
law should not depart from their hearts.
4: It was also in the writing that the prophet, having
received an oracle, ordered that the tent and the ark should
follow with him, and that he went out to the mountain where
Moses had gone up and had seen the inheritance of God.
5: And Jeremiah came and found a cave, and he brought
there the tent and the ark and the altar of incense, and he
sealed up the entrance.
6: Some of those who followed him came up to mark the
way, but could not find it.
7: When Jeremiah learned of it, he rebuked them and
declared: "The place shall be unknown until God gathers his
people together again and shows his mercy.
8: And then the Lord will disclose these things, and the
glory of the Lord and the cloud will appear, as they were shown
in the case of Moses, and as Solomon asked that the place should
be specially consecrated."
9: It was also made clear that being possessed of wisdom
Solomon offered sacrifice for the dedication and completion of
the temple.
10: Just as Moses prayed to the Lord, and fire came down
from heaven and devoured the sacrifices, so also Solomon prayed,
and the fire came down and consumed the whole burnt offerings.
11: And Moses said, "They were consumed because the
sin offering had not been eaten."
12: Likewise Solomon also kept the eight days.
13: The same things are reported in the records and in
the memoirs of Nehemiah, and also that he founded a library and
collected the books about the kings and prophets, and the
writings of David, and letters of kings about votive offerings.
14: In the same way Judas also collected all the books
that had been lost on account of the war which had come upon us,
and they are in our possession.
15: So if you have need of them, send people to get them
for you.
16: Since, therefore, we are about to celebrate the
purification, we write to you. Will you therefore please keep
the days?
17: It is God who has saved all his people, and has
returned the inheritance to all, and the kingship and priesthood
and consecration,
18: as he promised through the law. For we have hope in
God that he will soon have mercy upon us and will gather us from
everywhere under heaven into his holy place, for he has rescued
us from great evils and has purified the place.
19: The story of Judas Maccabeus and his brothers, and
the purification of the great temple, and the dedication of the
altar,
20: and further the wars against Antiochus Epiphanes and
his son Eupator,
21: and the appearances which came from heaven to those
who strove zealously on behalf of Judaism, so that though few in
number they seized the whole land and pursued the barbarian
hordes,
22: and recovered the temple famous throughout the world
and freed the city and restored the laws that were about to be
abolished, while the Lord with great kindness became gracious to
them --
23: all this, which has been set forth by Jason of Cyrene
in five volumes, we shall attempt to condense into a single
book.
24: For considering the flood of numbers involved and the
difficulty there is for those who wish to enter upon the
narratives of history because of the mass of material,
25: we have aimed to please those who wish to read, to
make it easy for those who are inclined to memorize, and to
profit all readers.
26: For us who have undertaken the toil of abbreviating,
it is no light matter but calls for sweat and loss of sleep,
27: just as it is not easy for one who prepares a banquet
and seeks the benefit of others. However, to secure the
gratitude of many we will gladly endure the uncomfortable toil,
28: leaving the responsibility for exact details to the
compiler, while devoting our effort to arriving at the outlines
of the condensation.
29: For as the master builder of a new house must be
concerned with the whole construction, while the one who
undertakes its painting and decoration has to consider only what
is suitable for its adornment, such in my judgment is the case
with us.
30: It is the duty of the original historian to occupy
the ground and to discuss matters from every side and to take
trouble with details,
31: but the one who recasts the narrative should be
allowed to strive for brevity of expression and to forego
exhaustive treatment.
32: At this point therefore let us begin our narrative,
adding only so much to what has already been said; for it is
foolish to lengthen the preface while cutting short the history
itself.
Chapter 3
1: While the
holy city was inhabited in unbroken peace and the laws were very
well observed because of the piety of the high priest Onias and
his hatred of wickedness,
2: it came about that the kings themselves honored the
place and glorified the temple with the finest presents,
3: so that even Seleucus, the king of Asia, defrayed from
his own revenues all the expenses connected with the service of
the sacrifices.
4: But a man named Simon, of the tribe of Benjamin, who
had been made captain of the temple, had a disagreement with the
high priest about the administration of the city market;
5: and when he could not prevail over Onias he went to
Apollonius of Tarsus, who at that time was governor of
Coelesyria and Phoenicia.
6: He reported to him that the treasury in Jerusalem was
full of untold sums of money, so that the amount of the funds
could not be reckoned, and that they did not belong to the
account of the sacrifices, but that it was possible for them to
fall under the control of the king.
7: When Apollonius met the king, he told him of the money
about which he had been informed. The king chose Heliodorus, who
was in charge of his affairs, and sent him with commands to
effect the removal of the aforesaid money.
8: Heliodorus at once set out on his journey, ostensibly
to make a tour of inspection of the cities of Coelesyria and
Phoenicia, but in fact to carry out the king's purpose.
9: When he had arrived at Jerusalem and had been kindly
welcomed by the high priest of the city, he told about the
disclosure that had been made and stated why he had come, and he
inquired whether this really was the situation.
10: The high priest explained that there were some
deposits belonging to widows and orphans,
11: and also some money of Hyrcanus, son of Tobias, a man
of very prominent position, and that it totaled in all four
hundred talents of silver and two hundred of gold. To such an
extent the impious Simon had misrepresented the facts.
12: And he said that it was utterly impossible that wrong
should be done to those people who had trusted in the holiness
of the place and in the sanctity and inviolability of the temple
which is honored throughout the whole world.
13: But Heliodorus, because of the king's commands which
he had, said that this money must in any case be confiscated for
the king's treasury.
14: So he set a day and went in to direct the inspection
of these funds. There was no little distress throughout the
whole city.
15: The priests prostrated themselves before the altar in
their priestly garments and called toward heaven upon him who
had given the law about deposits, that he should keep them safe
for those who had deposited them.
16: To see the appearance of the high priest was to be
wounded at heart, for his face and the change in his color
disclosed the anguish of his soul.
17: For terror and bodily trembling had come over the
man, which plainly showed to those who looked at him the pain
lodged in his heart.
18: People also hurried out of their houses in crowds to
make a general supplication because the holy place was about to
be brought into contempt.
19: Women, girded with sackcloth under their breasts,
thronged the streets. Some of the maidens who were kept indoors
ran together to the gates, and some to the walls, while others
peered out of the windows.
20: And holding up their hands to heaven, they all made
entreaty.
21: There was something pitiable in the prostration of
the whole populace and the anxiety of the high priest in his
great anguish.
22: While they were calling upon the Almighty Lord that
he would keep what had been entrusted safe and secure for those
who had entrusted it,
23: Heliodorus went on with what had been decided.
24: But when he arrived at the treasury with his
bodyguard, then and there the Sovereign of spirits and of all
authority caused so great a manifestation that all who had been
so bold as to accompany him were astounded by the power of God,
and became faint with terror.
25: For there appeared to them a magnificently
caparisoned horse, with a rider of frightening mien, and it
rushed furiously at Heliodorus and struck at him with its front
hoofs. Its rider was seen to have armor and weapons of gold.
26: Two young men also appeared to him, remarkably
strong, gloriously beautiful and splendidly dressed, who stood
on each side of him and scourged him continuously, inflicting
many blows on him.
27: When he suddenly fell to the ground and deep darkness
came over him, his men took him up and put him on a stretcher
28: and carried him away, this man who had just entered
the aforesaid treasury with a great retinue and all his
bodyguard but was now unable to help himself; and they
recognized clearly the sovereign power of God.
29: While he lay prostrate, speechless because of the
divine intervention and deprived of any hope of recovery,
30: they praised the Lord who had acted marvelously for
his own place. And the temple, which a little while before was
full of fear and disturbance, was filled with joy and gladness,
now that the Almighty Lord had appeared.
31: Quickly some of Heliodorus' friends asked Onias to
call upon the Most High and to grant life to one who was lying
quite at his last breath.
32: And the high priest, fearing that the king might get
the notion that some foul play had been perpetrated by the Jews
with regard to Heliodorus, offered sacrifice for the man's
recovery.
33: While the high priest was making the offering of
atonement, the same young men appeared again to Heliodorus
dressed in the same clothing, and they stood and said, "Be
very grateful to Onias the high priest, since for his sake the
Lord has granted you your life.
34: And see that you, who have been scourged by heaven,
report to all men the majestic power of God." Having said
this they vanished.
35: Then Heliodorus offered sacrifice to the Lord and
made very great vows to the Savior of his life, and having
bidden Onias farewell, he marched off with his forces to the
king.
36: And he bore testimony to all men of the deeds of the
supreme God, which he had seen with his own eyes.
37: When the king asked Heliodorus what sort of person
would be suitable to send on another mission to Jerusalem, he
replied,
38: "If you have any enemy or plotter against your
government, send him there, for you will get him back thoroughly
scourged, if he escapes at all, for there certainly is about the
place some power of God.
39: For he who has his dwelling in heaven watches over
that place himself and brings it aid, and he strikes and
destroys those who come to do it injury."
40: This was the outcome of the episode of Heliodorus and
the protection of the treasury.
Chapter 4
1: The
previously mentioned Simon, who had informed about the money
against his own country, slandered Onias, saying that it was he
who had incited Heliodorus and had been the real cause of the
misfortune.
2: He dared to designate as a plotter against the
government the man who was the benefactor of the city, the
protector of his fellow countrymen, and a zealot for the laws.
3: When his hatred progressed to such a degree that even
murders were committed by one of Simon's approved agents,
4: Onias recognized that the rivalry was serious and that
Apollonius, the son of Menestheus and governor of Coelesyria and
Phoenicia, was intensifying the malice of Simon.
5: So he betook himself to the king, not accusing his
fellow citizens but having in view the welfare, both public and
private, of all the people.
6: For he saw that without the king's attention public
affairs could not again reach a peaceful settlement, and that
Simon would not stop his folly.
7: When Seleucus died and Antiochus who was called
Epiphanes succeeded to the kingdom, Jason the brother of Onias
obtained the high priesthood by corruption,
8: promising the king at an interview three hundred and
sixty talents of silver and, from another source of revenue,
eighty talents.
9: In addition to this he promised to pay one hundred and
fifty more if permission were given to establish by his
authority a gymnasium and a body of youth for it, and to enrol
the men of Jerusalem as citizens of Antioch.
10: When the king assented and Jason came to office, he
at once shifted his countrymen over to the Greek way of life.
11: He set aside the existing royal concessions to the
Jews, secured through John the father of Eupolemus, who went on
the mission to establish friendship and alliance with the
Romans; and he destroyed the lawful ways of living and
introduced new customs contrary to the law.
12: For with alacrity he founded a gymnasium right under
the citadel, and he induced the noblest of the young men to wear
the Greek hat.
13: There was such an extreme of Hellenization and
increase in the adoption of foreign ways because of the
surpassing wickedness of Jason, who was ungodly and no high
priest,
14: that the priests were no longer intent upon their
service at the altar. Despising the sanctuary and neglecting the
sacrifices, they hastened to take part in the unlawful
proceedings in the wrestling arena after the call to the discus,
15: disdaining the honors prized by their fathers and
putting the highest value upon Greek forms of prestige.
16: For this reason heavy disaster overtook them, and
those whose ways of living they admired and wished to imitate
completely became their enemies and punished them.
17: For it is no light thing to show irreverence to the
divine laws -- a fact which later events will make clear.
18: When the quadrennial games were being held at Tyre
and the king was present,
19: the vile Jason sent envoys, chosen as being
Antiochian citizens from Jerusalem, to carry three hundred
silver drachmas for the sacrifice to Hercules. Those who carried
the money, however, thought best not to use it for sacrifice,
because that was inappropriate, but to expend it for another
purpose.
20: So this money was intended by the sender for the
sacrifice to Hercules, but by the decision of its carriers it
was applied to the construction of triremes.
21: When Apollonius the son of Menestheus was sent to
Egypt for the coronation of Philometor as king, Antiochus
learned that Philometor had become hostile to his government,
and he took measures for his own security. Therefore upon
arriving at Joppa he proceeded to Jerusalem.
22: He was welcomed magnificently by Jason and the city,
and ushered in with a blaze of torches and with shouts. Then he
marched into Phoenicia.
23: After a period of three years Jason sent Menelaus,
the brother of the previously mentioned Simon, to carry the
money to the king and to complete the records of essential
business.
24: But he, when presented to the king, extolled him with
an air of authority, and secured the high priesthood for
himself, outbidding Jason by three hundred talents of silver.
25: After receiving the king's orders he returned,
possessing no qualification for the high priesthood, but having
the hot temper of a cruel tyrant and the rage of a savage wild
beast.
26: So Jason, who after supplanting his own brother was
supplanted by another man, was driven as a fugitive into the
land of Ammon.
27: And Menelaus held the office, but he did not pay
regularly any of the money promised to the king.
28: When Sostratus the captain of the citadel kept
requesting payment, for the collection of the revenue was his
responsibility, the two of them were summoned by the king on
account of this issue.
29: Menelaus left his own brother Lysimachus as deputy in
the high priesthood, while Sostratus left Crates, the commander
of the Cyprian troops.
30: While such was the state of affairs, it happened that
the people of Tarsus and of Mallus revolted because their cities
had been given as a present to Antiochis, the king's concubine.
31: So the king went hastily to settle the trouble,
leaving Andronicus, a man of high rank, to act as his deputy.
32: But Menelaus, thinking he had obtained a suitable
opportunity, stole some of the gold vessels of the temple and
gave them to Andronicus; other vessels, as it happened, he had
sold to Tyre and the neighboring cities.
33: When Onias became fully aware of these acts he
publicly exposed them, having first withdrawn to a place of
sanctuary at Daphne near Antioch.
34: Therefore Menelaus, taking Andronicus aside, urged
him to kill Onias. Andronicus came to Onias, and resorting to
treachery offered him sworn pledges and gave him his right hand,
and in spite of his suspicion persuaded Onias to come out from
the place of sanctuary; then, with no regard for justice, he
immediately put him out of the way.
35: For this reason not only Jews, but many also of other
nations, were grieved and displeased at the unjust murder of the
man.
36: When the king returned from the region of Cilicia,
the Jews in the city appealed to him with regard to the
unreasonable murder of Onias, and the Greeks shared their hatred
of the crime.
37: Therefore Antiochus was grieved at heart and filled
with pity, and wept because of the moderation and good conduct
of the deceased;
38: and inflamed with anger, he immediately stripped off
the purple robe from Andronicus, tore off his garments, and led
him about the whole city to that very place where he had
committed the outrage against Onias, and there he dispatched the
bloodthirsty fellow. The Lord thus repaid him with the
punishment he deserved.
39: When many acts of sacrilege had been committed in the
city by Lysimachus with the connivance of Menelaus, and when
report of them had spread abroad, the populace gathered against
Lysimachus, because many of the gold vessels had already been
stolen.
40: And since the crowds were becoming aroused and filled
with anger, Lysimachus armed about three thousand men and
launched an unjust attack, under the leadership of a certain
Auranus, a man advanced in years and no less advanced in folly.
41: But when the Jews became aware of Lysimachus' attack,
some picked up stones, some blocks of wood, and others took
handfuls of the ashes that were lying about, and threw them in
wild confusion at Lysimachus and his men.
42: As a result, they wounded many of them, and killed
some, and put them all to flight; and the temple robber himself
they killed close by the treasury.
43: Charges were brought against Menelaus about this
incident.
44: When the king came to Tyre, three men sent by the
senate presented the case before him.
45: But Menelaus, already as good as beaten, promised a
substantial bribe to Ptolemy son of Dorymenes to win over the
king.
46: Therefore Ptolemy, taking the king aside into a
colonnade as if for refreshment, induced the king to change his
mind.
47: Menelaus, the cause of all the evil, he acquitted of
the charges against him, while he sentenced to death those
unfortunate men, who would have been freed uncondemned if they
had pleaded even before Scythians.
48: And so those who had spoken for the city and the
villages and the holy vessels quickly suffered the unjust
penalty.
49: Therefore even the Tyrians, showing their hatred of
the crime, provided magnificently for their funeral.
50: But Menelaus, because of the cupidity of those in
power, remained in office, growing in wickedness, having become
the chief plotter against his fellow citizens.
Chapter 5
1: About this
time Antiochus made his second invasion of Egypt.
2: And it happened that over all the city, for almost
forty days, there appeared golden-clad horsemen charging through
the air, in companies fully armed with lances and drawn swords
--
3: troops of horsemen drawn up, attacks and
counterattacks made on this side and on that, brandishing of
shields, massing of spears, hurling of missiles, the flash of
golden trappings, and armor of all sorts.
4: Therefore all men prayed that the apparition might
prove to have been a good omen.
5: When a false rumor arose that Antiochus was dead,
Jason took no less than a thousand men and suddenly made an
assault upon the city. When the troops upon the wall had been
forced back and at last the city was being taken, Menelaus took
refuge in the citadel.
6: But Jason kept relentlessly slaughtering his fellow
citizens, not realizing that success at the cost of one's
kindred is the greatest misfortune, but imagining that he was
setting up trophies of victory over enemies and not over fellow
countrymen.
7: He did not gain control of the government, however;
and in the end got only disgrace from his conspiracy, and fled
again into the country of the Ammonites.
8: Finally he met a miserable end. Accused before Aretas
the ruler of the Arabs, fleeing from city to city, pursued by
all men, hated as a rebel against the laws, and abhorred as the
executioner of his country and his fellow citizens, he was cast
ashore in Egypt;
9: and he who had driven many from their own country into
exile died in exile, having embarked to go to the Lacedaemonians
in hope of finding protection because of their kinship.
10: He who had cast out many to lie unburied had no one
to mourn for him; he had no funeral of any sort and no place in
the tomb of his fathers.
11: When news of what had happened reached the king, he
took it to mean that Judea was in revolt. So, raging inwardly,
he left Egypt and took the city by storm.
12: And he commanded his soldiers to cut down
relentlessly every one they met and to slay those who went into
the houses.
13: Then there was killing of young and old, destruction
of boys, women, and children, and slaughter of virgins and
infants.
14: Within the total of three days eighty thousand were
destroyed, forty thousand in hand-to-hand fighting; and as many
were sold into slavery as were slain.
15: Not content with this, Antiochus dared to enter the
most holy temple in all the world, guided by Menelaus, who had
become a traitor both to the laws and to his country.
16: He took the holy vessels with his polluted hands, and
swept away with profane hands the votive offerings which other
kings had made to enhance the glory and honor of the place.
17: Antiochus was elated in spirit, and did not perceive
that the Lord was angered for a little while because of the sins
of those who dwelt in the city, and that therefore he was
disregarding the holy place.
18: But if it had not happened that they were involved in
many sins, this man would have been scourged and turned back
from his rash act as soon as he came forward, just as Heliodorus
was, whom Seleucus the king sent to inspect the treasury.
19: But the Lord did not choose the nation for the sake
of the holy place, but the place for the sake of the nation.
20: Therefore the place itself shared in the misfortunes
that befell the nation and afterward participated in its
benefits; and what was forsaken in the wrath of the Almighty was
restored again in all its glory when the great Lord became
reconciled.
21: So Antiochus carried off eighteen hundred talents
from the temple, and hurried away to Antioch, thinking in his
arrogance that he could sail on the land and walk on the sea,
because his mind was elated.
22: And he left governors to afflict the people: at
Jerusalem, Philip, by birth a Phrygian and in character more
barbarous than the man who appointed him;
23: and at Gerizim, Andronicus; and besides these
Menelaus, who lorded it over his fellow citizens worse than the
others did. In his malice toward the Jewish citizens,
24: Antiochus sent Apollonius, the captain of the
Mysians, with an army of twenty-two thousand, and commanded him
to slay all the grown men and to sell the women and boys as
slaves.
25: When this man arrived in Jerusalem, he pretended to
be peaceably disposed and waited until the holy sabbath day;
then, finding the Jews not at work, he ordered his men to parade
under arms.
26: He put to the sword all those who came out to see
them, then rushed into the city with his armed men and killed
great numbers of people.
27: But Judas Maccabeus, with about nine others, got away
to the wilderness, and kept himself and his companions alive in
the mountains as wild animals do; they continued to live on what
grew wild, so that they might not share in the defilement.
Chapter 6
1: Not long
after this, the king sent an Athenian senator to compel the Jews
to forsake the laws of their fathers and cease to live by the
laws of God,
2: and also to pollute the temple in Jerusalem and call
it the temple of Olympian Zeus, and to call the one in Gerizim
the temple of Zeus the Friend of Strangers, as did the people
who dwelt in that place.
3: Harsh and utterly grievous was the onslaught of evil.
4: For the temple was filled with debauchery and reveling
by the Gentiles, who dallied with harlots and had intercourse
with women within the sacred precincts, and besides brought in
things for sacrifice that were unfit.
5: The altar was covered with abominable offerings which
were forbidden by the laws.
6: A man could neither keep the sabbath, nor observe the
feasts of his fathers, nor so much as confess himself to be a
Jew.
7: On the monthly celebration of the king's birthday, the
Jews were taken, under bitter constraint, to partake of the
sacrifices; and when the feast of Dionysus came, they were
compelled to walk in the procession in honor of Dionysus,
wearing wreaths of ivy.
8: At the suggestion of Ptolemy a decree was issued to
the neighboring Greek cities, that they should adopt the same
policy toward the Jews and make them partake of the sacrifices,
9: and should slay those who did not choose to change
over to Greek customs. One could see, therefore, the misery that
had come upon them.
10: For example, two women were brought in for having
circumcised their children. These women they publicly paraded
about the city, with their babies hung at their breasts, then
hurled them down headlong from the wall.
11: Others who had assembled in the caves near by, to
observe the seventh day secretly, were betrayed to Philip and
were all burned together, because their piety kept them from
defending themselves, in view of their regard for that most holy
day.
12: Now I urge those who read this book not to be
depressed by such calamities, but to recognize that these
punishments were designed not to destroy but to discipline our
people.
13: In fact, not to let the impious alone for long, but
to punish them immediately, is a sign of great kindness.
14: For in the case of the other nations the Lord waits
patiently to punish them until they have reached the full
measure of their sins; but he does not deal in this way with us,
15: in order that he may not take vengeance on us
afterward when our sins have reached their height.
16: Therefore he never withdraws his mercy from us.
Though he disciplines us with calamities, he does not forsake
his own people.
17: Let what we have said serve as a reminder; we must go
on briefly with the story.
18: Eleazar, one of the scribes in high position, a man
now advanced in age and of noble presence, was being forced to
open his mouth to eat swine's flesh.
19: But he, welcoming death with honor rather than life
with pollution, went up to the the rack of his own accord,
spitting out the flesh,
20: as men ought to go who have the courage to refuse
things that it is not right to taste, even for the natural love
of life.
21: Those who were in charge of that unlawful sacrifice
took the man aside, because of their long acquaintance with him,
and privately urged him to bring meat of his own providing,
proper for him to use, and pretend that he was eating the flesh
of the sacrificial meal which had been commanded by the king,
22: so that by doing this he might be saved from death,
and be treated kindly on account of his old friendship with
them.
23: But making a high resolve, worthy of his years and
the dignity of his old age and the gray hairs which he had
reached with distinction and his excellent life even from
childhood, and moreover according to the holy God-given law, he
declared himself quickly, telling them to send him to Hades.
24: "Such pretense is not worthy of our time of
life," he said, "lest many of the young should suppose
that Eleazar in his ninetieth year has gone over to an alien
religion,
25: and through my pretense, for the sake of living a
brief moment longer, they should be led astray because of me,
while I defile and disgrace my old age.
26: For even if for the present I should avoid the
punishment of men, yet whether I live or die I shall not escape
the hands of the Almighty.
27: Therefore, by manfully giving up my life now, I will
show myself worthy of my old age
28: and leave to the young a noble example of how to die
a good death willingly and nobly for the revered and holy
laws." When he had said this, he went at once to the rack.
29: And those who a little before had acted toward him
with good will now changed to ill will, because the words he had
uttered were in their opinion sheer madness.
30: When he was about to die under the blows, he groaned
aloud and said: "It is clear to the Lord in his holy
knowledge that, though I might have been saved from death, I am
enduring terrible sufferings in my body under this beating, but
in my soul I am glad to suffer these things because I fear
him."
31: So in this way he died, leaving in his death an
example of nobility and a memorial of courage, not only to the
young but to the great body of his nation.
Chapter 7
1: It happened
also that seven brothers and their mother were arrested and were
being compelled by the king, under torture with whips and cords,
to partake of unlawful swine's flesh.
2: One of them, acting as their spokesman, said,
"What do you intend to ask and learn from us? For we are
ready to die rather than transgress the laws of our
fathers."
3: The king fell into a rage, and gave orders that pans
and caldrons be heated.
4: These were heated immediately, and he commanded that
the tongue of their spokesman be cut out and that they scalp him
and cut off his hands and feet, while the rest of the brothers
and the mother looked on.
5: When he was utterly helpless, the king ordered them to
take him to the fire, still breathing, and to fry him in a pan.
The smoke from the pan spread widely, but the brothers and their
mother encouraged one another to die nobly, saying,
6: "The Lord God is watching over us and in truth
has compassion on us, as Moses declared in his song which bore
witness against the people to their faces, when he said, `And he
will have compassion on his servants.'"
7: After the first brother had died in this way, they
brought forward the second for their sport. They tore off the
skin of his head with the hair, and asked him, "Will you
eat rather than have your body punished limb by limb?"
8: He replied in the language of his fathers, and said to
them, "No." Therefore he in turn underwent tortures as
the first brother had done.
9: And when he was at his last breath, he said, "You
accursed wretch, you dismiss us from this present life, but the
King of the universe will raise us up to an everlasting renewal
of life, because we have died for his laws."
10: After him, the third was the victim of their sport.
When it was demanded, he quickly put out his tongue and
courageously stretched forth his hands,
11: and said nobly, "I got these from Heaven, and
because of his laws I disdain them, and from him I hope to get
them back again."
12: As a result the king himself and those with him were
astonished at the young man's spirit, for he regarded his
sufferings as nothing.
13: When he too had died, they maltreated and tortured
the fourth in the same way.
14: And when he was near death, he said, "One cannot
but choose to die at the hands of men and to cherish the hope
that God gives of being raised again by him. But for you there
will be no resurrection to life!"
15: Next they brought forward the fifth and maltreated
him.
16: But he looked at the king, and said, "Because
you have authority among men, mortal though you are, you do what
you please. But do not think that God has forsaken our people.
17: Keep on, and see how his mighty power will torture
you and your descendants!"
18: After him they brought forward the sixth. And when he
was about to die, he said, "Do not deceive yourself in
vain. For we are suffering these things on our own account,
because of our sins against our own God. Therefore astounding
things have happened.
19: But do not think that you will go unpunished for
having tried to fight against God!"
20: The mother was especially admirable and worthy of
honorable memory. Though she saw her seven sons perish within a
single day, she bore it with good courage because of her hope in
the Lord.
21: She encouraged each of them in the language of their
fathers. Filled with a noble spirit, she fired her woman's
reasoning with a man's courage, and said to them,
22: "I do not know how you came into being in my
womb. It was not I who gave you life and breath, nor I who set
in order the elements within each of you.
23: Therefore the Creator of the world, who shaped the
beginning of man and devised the origin of all things, will in
his mercy give life and breath back to you again, since you now
forget yourselves for the sake of his laws."
24: Antiochus felt that he was being treated with
contempt, and he was suspicious of her reproachful tone. The
youngest brother being still alive, Antiochus not only appealed
to him in words, but promised with oaths that he would make him
rich and enviable if he would turn from the ways of his fathers,
and that he would take him for his friend and entrust him with
public affairs.
25: Since the young man would not listen to him at all,
the king called the mother to him and urged her to advise the
youth to save himself.
26: After much urging on his part, she undertook to
persuade her son.
27: But, leaning close to him, she spoke in their native
tongue as follows, deriding the cruel tyrant: "My son, have
pity on me. I carried you nine months in my womb, and nursed you
for three years, and have reared you and brought you up to this
point in your life, and have taken care of you.
28: I beseech you, my child, to look at the heaven and
the earth and see everything that is in them, and recognize that
God did not make them out of things that existed. Thus also
mankind comes into being.
29: Do not fear this butcher, but prove worthy of your
brothers. Accept death, so that in God's mercy I may get you
back again with your brothers."
30: While she was still speaking, the young man said,
"What are you waiting for? I will not obey the king's
command, but I obey the command of the law that was given to our
fathers through Moses.
31: But you, who have contrived all sorts of evil against
the Hebrews, will certainly not escape the hands of God.
32: For we are suffering because of our own sins.
33: And if our living Lord is angry for a little while,
to rebuke and discipline us, he will again be reconciled with
his own servants.
34: But you, unholy wretch, you most defiled of all men,
do not be elated in vain and puffed up by uncertain hopes, when
you raise your hand against the children of heaven.
35: You have not yet escaped the judgment of the
almighty, all-seeing God.
36: For our brothers after enduring a brief suffering
have drunk of everflowing life under God's covenant; but you, by
the judgment of God, will receive just punishment for your
arrogance.
37: I, like my brothers, give up body and life for the
laws of our fathers, appealing to God to show mercy soon to our
nation and by afflictions and plagues to make you confess that
he alone is God,
38: and through me and my brothers to bring to an end the
wrath of the Almighty which has justly fallen on our whole
nation."
39: The king fell into a rage, and handled him worse than
the others, being exasperated at his scorn.
40: So he died in his integrity, putting his whole trust
in the Lord.
41: Last of all, the mother died, after her sons.
42: Let this be enough, then, about the eating of
sacrifices and the extreme tortures.
Chapter 8
1: But Judas,
who was also called Maccabeus, and his companions secretly
entered the villages and summoned their kinsmen and enlisted
those who had continued in the Jewish faith, and so they
gathered about six thousand men.
2: They besought the Lord to look upon the people who
were oppressed by all, and to have pity on the temple which had
been profaned by ungodly men,
3: and to have mercy on the city which was being
destroyed and about to be leveled to the ground, and to hearken
to the blood that cried out to him,
4: and to remember also the lawless destruction of the
innocent babies and the blasphemies committed against his name,
and to show his hatred of evil.
5: As soon as Maccabeus got his army organized, the
Gentiles could not withstand him, for the wrath of the Lord had
turned to mercy.
6: Coming without warning, he would set fire to towns and
villages. He captured strategic positions and put to flight not
a few of the enemy.
7: He found the nights most advantageous for such
attacks. And talk of his valor spread everywhere.
8: When Philip saw that the man was gaining ground little
by little, and that he was pushing ahead with more frequent
successes, he wrote to Ptolemy, the governor of Coelesyria and
Phoenicia, for aid to the king's government.
9: And Ptolemy promptly appointed Nicanor the son of
Patroclus, one of the king's chief friends, and sent him, in
command of no fewer than twenty thousand Gentiles of all
nations, to wipe out the whole race of Judea. He associated with
him Gorgias, a general and a man of experience in military
service.
10: Nicanor determined to make up for the king the
tribute due to the Romans, two thousand talents, by selling the
captured Jews into slavery.
11: And he immediately sent to the cities on the
seacoast, inviting them to buy Jewish slaves and promising to
hand over ninety slaves for a talent, not expecting the judgment
from the Almighty that was about to overtake him.
12: Word came to Judas concerning Nicanor's invasion; and
when he told his companions of the arrival of the army,
13: those who were cowardly and distrustful of God's
justice ran off and got away.
14: Others sold all their remaining property, and at the
same time besought the Lord to rescue those who had been sold by
the ungodly Nicanor before he ever met them,
15: if not for their own sake, yet for the sake of the
covenants made with their fathers, and because he had called
them by his holy and glorious name.
16: But Maccabeus gathered his men together, to the
number six thousand, and exhorted them not to be frightened by
the enemy and not to fear the great multitude of Gentiles who
were wickedly coming against them, but to fight nobly,
17: keeping before their eyes the lawless outrage which
the Gentiles had committed against the holy place, and the
torture of the derided city, and besides, the overthrow of their
ancestral way of life.
18: "For they trust to arms and acts of
daring," he said, "but we trust in the Almighty God,
who is able with a single nod to strike down those who are
coming against us and even the whole world."
19: Moreover, he told them of the times when help came to
their ancestors; both the time of Sennacherib, when one hundred
and eighty-five thousand perished,
20: and the time of the battle with the Galatians that
took place in Babylonia, when eight thousand in all went into
the affair, with four thousand Macedonians; and when the
Macedonians were hard pressed, the eight thousand, by the help
that came to them from heaven, destroyed one hundred and twenty
thousand and took much booty.
21: With these words he filled them with good courage and
made them ready to die for their laws and their country; then he
divided his army into four parts.
22: He appointed his brothers also, Simon and Joseph and
Jonathan, each to command a division, putting fifteen hundred
men under each.
23: Besides, he appointed Eleazar to read aloud from the
holy book, and gave the watchword, "God's help"; then,
leading the first division himself, he joined battle with
Nicanor.
24: With the Almighty as their ally, they slew more than
nine thousand of the enemy, and wounded and disabled most of
Nicanor's army, and forced them all to flee.
25: They captured the money of those who had come to buy
them as slaves. After pursuing them for some distance, they were
obliged to return because the hour was late.
26: For it was the day before the sabbath, and for that
reason they did not continue their pursuit.
27: And when they had collected the arms of the enemy and
stripped them of their spoils, they kept the sabbath, giving
great praise and thanks to the Lord, who had preserved them for
that day and allotted it to them as the beginning of mercy.
28: After the sabbath they gave some of the spoils to
those who had been tortured and to the widows and orphans, and
distributed the rest among themselves and their children.
29: When they had done this, they made common
supplication and besought the merciful Lord to be wholly
reconciled with his servants.
30: In encounters with the forces of Timothy and
Bacchides they killed more than twenty thousand of them and got
possession of some exceedingly high strongholds, and they
divided very much plunder, giving to those who had been tortured
and to the orphans and widows, and also to the aged, shares
equal to their own.
31: Collecting the arms of the enemy, they stored them
all carefully in strategic places, and carried the rest of the
spoils to Jerusalem.
32: They killed the commander of Timothy's forces, a most
unholy man, and one who had greatly troubled the Jews.
33: While they were celebrating the victory in the city
of their fathers, they burned those who had set fire to the
sacred gates, Callisthenes and some others, who had fled into
one little house; so these received the proper recompense for
their impiety.
34: The thrice-accursed Nicanor, who had brought the
thousand merchants to buy the Jews,
35: having been humbled with the help of the Lord by
opponents whom he regarded as of the least account, took off his
splendid uniform and made his way alone like a runaway slave
across the country till he reached Antioch, having succeeded
chiefly in the destruction of his own army!
36: Thus he who had undertaken to secure tribute for the
Romans by the capture of the people of Jerusalem proclaimed that
the Jews had a Defender, and that therefore the Jews were
invulnerable, because they followed the laws ordained by him.
Chapter 9
1: About that
time, as it happened, Antiochus had retreated in disorder from
the region of Persia.
2: For he had entered the city called Persepolis, and
attempted to rob the temples and control the city. Therefore the
people rushed to the rescue with arms, and Antiochus and his men
were defeated, with the result that Antiochus was put to flight
by the inhabitants and beat a shameful retreat.
3: While he was in Ecbatana, news came to him of what had
happened to Nicanor and the forces of Timothy.
4: Transported with rage, he conceived the idea of
turning upon the Jews the injury done by those who had put him
to flight; so he ordered his charioteer to drive without
stopping until he completed the journey. But the judgment of
heaven rode with him! For in his arrogance he said, "When I
get there I will make Jerusalem a cemetery of Jews."
5: But the all-seeing Lord, the God of Israel, struck him
an incurable and unseen blow. As soon as he ceased speaking he
was seized with a pain in his bowels for which there was no
relief and with sharp internal tortures --
6: and that very justly, for he had tortured the bowels
of others with many and strange inflictions.
7: Yet he did not in any way stop his insolence, but was
even more filled with arrogance, breathing fire in his rage
against the Jews, and giving orders to hasten the journey. And
so it came about that he fell out of his chariot as it was
rushing along, and the fall was so hard as to torture every limb
of his body.
8: Thus he who had just been thinking that he could
command the waves of the sea, in his superhuman arrogance, and
imagining that he could weigh the high mountains in a balance,
was brought down to earth and carried in a litter, making the
power of God manifest to all.
9: And so the ungodly man's body swarmed with worms, and
while he was still living in anguish and pain, his flesh rotted
away, and because of his stench the whole army felt revulsion at
his decay.
10: Because of his intolerable stench no one was able to
carry the man who a little while before had thought that he
could touch the stars of heaven.
11: Then it was that, broken in spirit, he began to lose
much of his arrogance and to come to his senses under the
scourge of God, for he was tortured with pain every moment.
12: And when he could not endure his own stench, he
uttered these words: "It is right to be subject to God, and
no mortal should think that he is equal to God."
13: Then the abominable fellow made a vow to the Lord,
who would no longer have mercy on him, stating
14: that the holy city, which he was hastening to level
to the ground and to make a cemetery, he was now declaring to be
free;
15: and the Jews, whom he had not considered worth
burying but had planned to throw out with their children to the
beasts, for the birds to pick, he would make, all of them, equal
to citizens of Athens;
16: and the holy sanctuary, which he had formerly
plundered, he would adorn with the finest offerings; and the
holy vessels he would give back, all of them, many times over;
and the expenses incurred for the sacrifices he would provide
from his own revenues;
17: and in addition to all this he also would become a
Jew and would visit every inhabited place to proclaim the power
of God.
18: But when his sufferings did not in any way abate, for
the judgment of God had justly come upon him, he gave up all
hope for himself and wrote to the Jews the following letter, in
the form of a supplication. This was its content:
19: "To his worthy Jewish citizens, Antiochus their
king and general sends hearty greetings and good wishes for
their health and prosperity.
20: If you and your children are well and your affairs
are as you wish, I am glad. As my hope is in heaven,
21: I remember with affection your esteem and good will.
On my way back from the region of Persia I suffered an annoying
illness, and I have deemed it necessary to take thought for the
general security of all.
22: I do not despair of my condition, for I have good
hope of recovering from my illness,
23: but I observed that my father, on the occasions when
he made expeditions into the upper country, appointed his
successor,
24: so that, if anything unexpected happened or any
unwelcome news came, the people throughout the realm would not
be troubled, for they would know to whom the government was
left.
25: Moreover, I understand how the princes along the
borders and the neighbors to my kingdom keep watching for
opportunities and waiting to see what will happen. So I have
appointed my son Antiochus to be king, whom I have often
entrusted and commended to most of you when I hastened off to
the upper provinces; and I have written to him what is written
here.
26: I therefore urge and beseech you to remember the
public and private services rendered to you and to maintain your
present good will, each of you, toward me and my son.
27: For I am sure that he will follow my policy and will
treat you with moderation and kindness."
28: So the murderer and blasphemer, having endured the
more intense suffering, such as he had inflicted on others, came
to the end of his life by a most pitiable fate, among the
mountains in a strange land.
29: And Philip, one of his courtiers, took his body home;
then, fearing the son of Antiochus, he betook himself to Ptolemy
Philometor in Egypt.
Chapter 10
1: Now
Maccabeus and his followers, the Lord leading them on, recovered
the temple and the city;
2: and they tore down the altars which had been built in
the public square by the foreigners, and also destroyed the
sacred precincts.
3: They purified the sanctuary, and made another altar of
sacrifice; then, striking fire out of flint, they offered
sacrifices, after a lapse of two years, and they burned incense
and lighted lamps and set out the bread of the Presence.
4: And when they had done this, they fell prostrate and
besought the Lord that they might never again fall into such
misfortunes, but that, if they should ever sin, they might be
disciplined by him with forbearance and not be handed over to
blasphemous and barbarous nations.
5: It happened that on the same day on which the
sanctuary had been profaned by the foreigners, the purification
of the sanctuary took place, that is, on the twenty-fifth day of
the same month, which was Chislev.
6: And they celebrated it for eight days with rejoicing,
in the manner of the feast of booths, remembering how not long
before, during the feast of booths, they had been wandering in
the mountains and caves like wild animals.
7: Therefore bearing ivy-wreathed wands and beautiful
branches and also fronds of palm, they offered hymns of
thanksgiving to him who had given success to the purifying of
his own holy place.
8: They decreed by public ordinance and vote that the
whole nation of the Jews should observe these days every year.
9: Such then was the end of Antiochus, who was called
Epiphanes.
10: Now we will tell what took place under Antiochus
Eupator, who was the son of that ungodly man, and will give a
brief summary of the principal calamities of the wars.
11: This man, when he succeeded to the kingdom, appointed
one Lysias to have charge of the government and to be chief
governor of Coelesyria and Phoenicia.
12: Ptolemy, who was called Macron, took the lead in
showing justice to the Jews because of the wrong that had been
done to them, and attempted to maintain peaceful relations with
them.
13: As a result he was accused before Eupator by the
king's friends. He heard himself called a traitor at every turn,
because he had abandoned Cyprus, which Philometor had entrusted
to him, and had gone over to Antiochus Epiphanes. Unable to
command the respect due his office, he took poison and ended his
life.
14: When Gorgias became governor of the region, he
maintained a force of mercenaries, and at every turn kept on
warring against the Jews.
15: Besides this, the Idumeans, who had control of
important strongholds, were harassing the Jews; they received
those who were banished from Jerusalem, and endeavored to keep
up the war.
16: But Maccabeus and his men, after making solemn
supplication and beseeching God to fight on their side, rushed
to the strongholds of the Idumeans.
17: Attacking them vigorously, they gained possession of
the places, and beat off all who fought upon the wall, and slew
those whom they encountered, killing no fewer than twenty
thousand.
18: When no less than nine thousand took refuge in two
very strong towers well equipped to withstand a siege,
19: Maccabeus left Simon and Joseph, and also Zacchaeus
and his men, a force sufficient to besiege them; and he himself
set off for places where he was more urgently needed.
20: But the men with Simon, who were money-hungry, were
bribed by some of those who were in the towers, and on receiving
seventy thousand drachmas let some of them slip away.
21: When word of what had happened came to Maccabeus, he
gathered the leaders of the people, and accused these men of
having sold their brethren for money by setting their enemies
free to fight against them.
22: Then he slew these men who had turned traitor, and
immediately captured the two towers.
23: Having success at arms in everything he undertook, he
destroyed more than twenty thousand in the two strongholds.
24: Now Timothy, who had been defeated by the Jews
before, gathered a tremendous force of mercenaries and collected
the cavalry from Asia in no small number. He came on, intending
to take Judea by storm.
25: As he drew near, Maccabeus and his men sprinkled dust
upon their heads and girded their loins with sackcloth, in
supplication to God.
26: Falling upon the steps before the altar, they
besought him to be gracious to them and to be an enemy to their
enemies and an adversary to their adversaries, as the law
declares.
27: And rising from their prayer they took up their arms
and advanced a considerable distance from the city; and when
they came near to the enemy they halted.
28: Just as dawn was breaking, the two armies joined
battle, the one having as pledge of success and victory not only
their valor but their reliance upon the Lord, while the other
made rage their leader in the fight.
29: When the battle became fierce, there appeared to the
enemy from heaven five resplendent men on horses with golden
bridles, and they were leading the Jews.
30: Surrounding Maccabeus and protecting him with their
own armor and weapons, they kept him from being wounded. And
they showered arrows and thunderbolts upon the enemy, so that,
confused and blinded, they were thrown into disorder and cut to
pieces.
31: Twenty thousand five hundred were slaughtered,
besides six hundred horsemen.
32: Timothy himself fled to a stronghold called Gazara,
especially well garrisoned, where Chaereas was commander.
33: Then Maccabeus and his men were glad, and they
besieged the fort for four days.
34: The men within, relying on the strength of the place,
blasphemed terribly and hurled out wicked words.
35: But at dawn of the fifth day, twenty young men in the
army of Maccabeus, fired with anger because of the blasphemies,
bravely stormed the wall and with savage fury cut down every one
they met.
36: Others who came up in the same way wheeled around
against the defenders and set fire to the towers; they kindled
fires and burned the blasphemers alive. Others broke open the
gates and let in the rest of the force, and they occupied the
city.
37: They killed Timothy, who was hidden in a cistern, and
his brother Chaereas, and Apollophanes.
38: When they had accomplished these things, with hymns
and thanksgivings they blessed the Lord who shows great kindness
to Israel and gives them the victory.
Chapter 11
1: Very soon
after this, Lysias, the king's guardian and kinsman, who was in
charge of the government, being vexed at what had happened,
2: gathered about eighty thousand men and all his cavalry
and came against the Jews. He intended to make the city a home
for Greeks,
3: and to levy tribute on the temple as he did on the
sacred places of the other nations, and to put up the high
priesthood for sale every year.
4: He took no account whatever of the power of God, but
was elated with his ten thousands of infantry, and his thousands
of cavalry, and his eighty elephants.
5: Invading Judea, he approached Beth-zur, which was a
fortified place about five leagues from Jerusalem, and pressed
it hard.
6: When Maccabeus and his men got word that Lysias was
besieging the strongholds, they and all the people, with
lamentations and tears, besought the Lord to send a good angel
to save Israel.
7: Maccabeus himself was the first to take up arms, and
he urged the others to risk their lives with him to aid their
brethren. Then they eagerly rushed off together.
8: And there, while they were still near Jerusalem, a
horseman appeared at their head, clothed in white and
brandishing weapons of gold.
9: And they all together praised the merciful God, and
were strengthened in heart, ready to assail not only men but the
wildest beasts or walls of iron.
10: They advanced in battle order, having their heavenly
ally, for the Lord had mercy on them.
11: They hurled themselves like lions against the enemy,
and slew eleven thousand of them and sixteen hundred horsemen,
and forced all the rest to flee.
12: Most of them got away stripped and wounded, and
Lysias himself escaped by disgraceful flight.
13: And as he was not without intelligence, he pondered
over the defeat which had befallen him, and realized that the
Hebrews were invincible because the mighty God fought on their
side. So he sent to them
14: and persuaded them to settle everything on just
terms, promising that he would persuade the king, constraining
him to be their friend.
15: Maccabeus, having regard for the common good, agreed
to all that Lysias urged. For the king granted every request in
behalf of the Jews which Maccabeus delivered to Lysias in
writing.
16: The letter written to the Jews by Lysias was to this
effect: "Lysias to the people of the Jews, greeting.
17: John and Absalom, who were sent by you, have
delivered your signed communication and have asked about the
matters indicated therein.
18: I have informed the king of everything that needed to
be brought before him, and he has agreed to what was possible.
19: If you will maintain your good will toward the
government, I will endeavor for the future to help promote your
welfare.
20: And concerning these matters and their details, I
have ordered these men and my representatives to confer with
you.
21: Farewell. The one hundred and forty-eighth year,
Dioscorinthius twenty-fourth."
22: The king's letter ran thus: "King Antiochus to
his brother Lysias, greeting.
23: Now that our father has gone on to the gods, we
desire that the subjects of the kingdom be undisturbed in caring
for their own affairs.
24: We have heard that the Jews do not consent to our
father's change to Greek customs but prefer their own way of
living and ask that their own customs be allowed them.
25: Accordingly, since we choose that this nation also be
free from disturbance, our decision is that their temple be
restored to them and that they live according to the customs of
their ancestors.
26: You will do well, therefore, to send word to them and
give them pledges of friendship, so that they may know our
policy and be of good cheer and go on happily in the conduct of
their own affairs."
27: To the nation the king's letter was as follows:
"King Antiochus to the senate of the Jews and to the other
Jews, greeting.
28: If you are well, it is as we desire. We also are in
good health.
29: Menelaus has informed us that you wish to return home
and look after your own affairs.
30: Therefore those who go home by the thirtieth day of
Xanthicus will have our pledge of friendship and full permission
31: for the Jews to enjoy their own food and laws, just
as formerly, and none of them shall be molested in any way for
what he may have done in ignorance.
32: And I have also sent Menelaus to encourage you.
33: Farewell. The one hundred and forty-eighth year,
Xanthicus fifteenth."
34: The Romans also sent them a letter, which read thus:
"Quintus Memmius and Titus Manius, envoys of the Romans, to
the people of the Jews, greeting.
35: With regard to what Lysias the kinsman of the king
has granted you, we also give consent.
36: But as to the matters which he decided are to be
referred to the king, as soon as you have considered them, send
some one promptly, so that we may make proposals appropriate for
you. For we are on our way to Antioch.
37: Therefore make haste and send some men, so that we
may have your judgment.
38: Farewell. The one hundred and forty-eighth year,
Xanthicus fifteenth."
Chapter 12
1: When this
agreement had been reached, Lysias returned to the king, and the
Jews went about their farming.
2: But some of the governors in various places, Timothy
and Apollonius the son of Gennaeus, as well as Hieronymus and
Demophon, and in addition to these Nicanor the governor of
Cyprus, would not let them live quietly and in peace.
3: And some men of Joppa did so ungodly a deed as this:
they invited the Jews who lived among them to embark, with their
wives and children, on boats which they had provided, as though
there were no ill will to the Jews;
4: and this was done by public vote of the city. And when
they accepted, because they wished to live peaceably and
suspected nothing, the men of Joppa took them out to sea and
drowned them, not less than two hundred.
5: When Judas heard of the cruelty visited on his
countrymen, he gave orders to his men
6: and, calling upon God the righteous Judge, attacked
the murderers of his brethren. He set fire to the harbor by
night, and burned the boats, and massacred those who had taken
refuge there.
7: Then, because the city's gates were closed, he
withdrew, intending to come again and root out the whole
community of Joppa.
8: But learning that the men in Jamnia meant in the same
way to wipe out the Jews who were living among them,
9: he attacked the people of Jamnia by night and set fire
to the harbor and the fleet, so that the glow of the light was
seen in Jerusalem, thirty miles distant.
10: When they had gone more than a mile from there, on
their march against Timothy, not less than five thousand Arabs
with five hundred horsemen attacked them.
11: After a hard fight Judas and his men won the victory,
by the help of God. The defeated nomads besought Judas to grant
them pledges of friendship, promising to give him cattle and to
help his people in all other ways.
12: Judas, thinking that they might really be useful in
many ways, agreed to make peace with them; and after receiving
his pledges they departed to their tents.
13: He also attacked a certain city which was strongly
fortified with earthworks and walls, and inhabited by all sorts
of Gentiles. Its name was Caspin.
14: And those who were within, relying on the strength of
the walls and on their supply of provisions, behaved most
insolently toward Judas and his men, railing at them and even
blaspheming and saying unholy things.
15: But Judas and his men, calling upon the great
Sovereign of the world, who without battering-rams or engines of
war overthrew Jericho in the days of Joshua, rushed furiously
upon the walls.
16: They took the city by the will of God, and
slaughtered untold numbers, so that the adjoining lake, a
quarter of a mile wide, appeared to be running over with blood.
17: When they had gone ninety-five miles from there, they
came to Charax, to the Jews who are called Toubiani.
18: They did not find Timothy in that region, for he had
by then departed from the region without accomplishing anything,
though in one place he had left a very strong garrison.
19: Dositheus and Sosipater, who were captains under
Maccabeus, marched out and destroyed those whom Timothy had left
in the stronghold, more than ten thousand men.
20: But Maccabeus arranged his army in divisions, set men
in command of the divisions, and hastened after Timothy, who had
with him a hundred and twenty thousand infantry and two thousand
five hundred cavalry.
21: When Timothy learned of the approach of Judas, he
sent off the women and the children and also the baggage to a
place called Carnaim; for that place was hard to besiege and
difficult of access because of the narrowness of all the
approaches.
22: But when Judas' first division appeared, terror and
fear came over the enemy at the manifestation to them of him who
sees all things; and they rushed off in flight and were swept
on, this way and that, so that often they were injured by their
own men and pierced by the points of their swords.
23: And Judas pressed the pursuit with the utmost vigor,
putting the sinners to the sword, and destroyed as many as
thirty thousand men.
24: Timothy himself fell into the hands of Dositheus and
Sosipater and their men. With great guile he besought them to
let him go in safety, because he held the parents of most of
them and the brothers of some and no consideration would be
shown them.
25: And when with many words he had confirmed his solemn
promise to restore them unharmed, they let him go, for the sake
of saving their brethren.
26: Then Judas marched against Carnaim and the temple of
Atargatis, and slaughtered twenty-five thousand people.
27: After the rout and destruction of these, he marched
also against Ephron, a fortified city where Lysias dwelt with
multitudes of people of all nationalities. Stalwart young men
took their stand before the walls and made a vigorous defense;
and great stores of war engines and missiles were there.
28: But the Jews called upon the Sovereign who with power
shatters the might of his enemies, and they got the city into
their hands, and killed as many as twenty-five thousand of those
who were within it.
29: Setting out from there, they hastened to Scythopolis,
which is seventy-five miles from Jerusalem.
30: But when the Jews who dwelt there bore witness to the
good will which the people of Scythopolis had shown them and
their kind treatment of them in times of misfortune,
31: they thanked them and exhorted them to be well
disposed to their race in the future also. Then they went up to
Jerusalem, as the feast of weeks was close at hand.
32: After the feast called Pentecost, they hastened
against Gorgias, the governor of Idumea.
33: And he came out with three thousand infantry and four
hundred cavalry.
34: When they joined battle, it happened that a few of
the Jews fell.
35: But a certain Dositheus, one of Bacenor's men, who
was on horseback and was a strong man, caught hold of Gorgias,
and grasping his cloak was dragging him off by main strength,
wishing to take the accursed man alive, when one of the Thracian
horsemen bore down upon him and cut off his arm; so Gorgias
escaped and reached Marisa.
36: As Esdris and his men had been fighting for a long
time and were weary, Judas called upon the Lord to show himself
their ally and leader in the battle.
37: In the language of their fathers he raised the battle
cry, with hymns; then he charged against Gorgias' men when they
were not expecting it, and put them to flight.
38: Then Judas assembled his army and went to the city of
Adullam. As the seventh day was coming on, they purified
themselves according to the custom, and they kept the sabbath
there.
39: On the next day, as by that time it had become
necessary, Judas and his men went to take up the bodies of the
fallen and to bring them back to lie with their kinsmen in the
sepulchres of their fathers.
40: Then under the tunic of every one of the dead they
found sacred tokens of the idols of Jamnia, which the law
forbids the Jews to wear. And it became clear to all that this
was why these men had fallen.
41: So they all blessed the ways of the Lord, the
righteous Judge, who reveals the things that are hidden;
42: and they turned to prayer, beseeching that the sin
which had been committed might be wholly blotted out. And the
noble Judas exhorted the people to keep themselves free from
sin, for they had seen with their own eyes what had happened
because of the sin of those who had fallen.
43: He also took up a collection, man by man, to the
amount of two thousand drachmas of silver, and sent it to
Jerusalem to provide for a sin offering. In doing this he acted
very well and honorably, taking account of the resurrection.
44: For if he were not expecting that those who had
fallen would rise again, it would have been superfluous and
foolish to pray for the dead.
45: But if he was looking to the splendid reward that is
laid up for those who fall asleep in godliness, it was a holy
and pious thought. Therefore he made atonement for the dead,
that they might be delivered from their sin.
Chapter 13
1: In the one
hundred and forty-ninth year word came to Judas and his men that
Antiochus Eupator was coming with a great army against Judea,
2: and with him Lysias, his guardian, who had charge of
the government. Each of them had a Greek force of one hundred
and ten thousand infantry, five thousand three hundred cavalry,
twenty-two elephants, and three hundred chariots armed with
scythes.
3: Menelaus also joined them and with utter hypocrisy
urged Antiochus on, not for the sake of his country's welfare,
but because he thought that he would be established in office.
4: But the King of kings aroused the anger of Antiochus
against the scoundrel; and when Lysias informed him that this
man was to blame for all the trouble, he ordered them to take
him to Beroea and to put him to death by the method which is the
custom in that place.
5: For there is a tower in that place, fifty cubits high,
full of ashes, and it has a rim running around it which on all
sides inclines precipitously into the ashes.
6: There they all push to destruction any man guilty of
sacrilege or notorious for other crimes.
7: By such a fate it came about that Menelaus the
lawbreaker died, without even burial in the earth.
8: And this was eminently just; because he had committed
many sins against the altar whose fire and ashes were holy, he
met his death in ashes.
9: The king with barbarous arrogance was coming to show
the Jews things far worse than those that had been done in his
father's time.
10: But when Judas heard of this, he ordered the people
to call upon the Lord day and night, now if ever to help those
who were on the point of being deprived of the law and their
country and the holy temple,
11: and not to let the people who had just begun to
revive fall into the hands of the blasphemous Gentiles.
12: When they had all joined in the same petition and had
besought the merciful Lord with weeping and fasting and lying
prostrate for three days without ceasing, Judas exhorted them
and ordered them to stand ready.
13: After consulting privately with the elders, he
determined to march out and decide the matter by the help of God
before the king's army could enter Judea and get possession of
the city.
14: So, committing the decision to the Creator of the
world and exhorting his men to fight nobly to the death for the
laws, temple, city, country, and commonwealth, he pitched his
camp near Modein.
15: He gave his men the watchword, "God's
victory," and with a picked force of the bravest young men,
he attacked the king's pavilion at night and slew as many as two
thousand men in the camp. He stabbed the leading elephant and
its rider.
16: In the end they filled the camp with terror and
confusion and withdrew in triumph.
17: This happened, just as day was dawning, because the
Lord's help protected him.
18: The king, having had a taste of the daring of the
Jews, tried strategy in attacking their positions.
19: He advanced against Beth-zur, a strong fortress of
the Jews, was turned back, attacked again, and was defeated.
20: Judas sent in to the garrison whatever was necessary.
21: But Rhodocus, a man from the ranks of the Jews, gave
secret information to the enemy; he was sought for, caught, and
put in prison.
22: The king negotiated a second time with the people in
Beth-zur, gave pledges, received theirs, withdrew, attacked
Judas and his men, was defeated;
23: he got word that Philip, who had been left in charge
of the government, had revolted in Antioch; he was dismayed,
called in the Jews, yielded and swore to observe all their
rights, settled with them and offered sacrifice, honored the
sanctuary and showed generosity to the holy place.
24: He received Maccabeus, left Hegemonides as governor
from Ptolemais to Gerar,
25: and went to Ptolemais. The people of Ptolemais were
indignant over the treaty; in fact they were so angry that they
wanted to annul its terms.
26: Lysias took the public platform, made the best
possible defense, convinced them, appeased them, gained their
good will, and set out for Antioch. This is how the king's
attack and withdrawal turned out.
Chapter 14
1: Three years
later, word came to Judas and his men that Demetrius, the son of
Seleucus, had sailed into the harbor of Tripolis with a strong
army and a fleet,
2: and had taken possession of the country, having made
away with Antiochus and his guardian Lysias.
3: Now a certain Alcimus, who had formerly been high
priest but had wilfully defiled himself in the times of
separation, realized that there was no way for him to be safe or
to have access again to the holy altar,
4: and went to King Demetrius in about the one hundred
and fifty-first year, presenting to him a crown of gold and a
palm, and besides these some of the customary olive branches
from the temple. During that day he kept quiet.
5: But he found an opportunity that furthered his mad
purpose when he was invited by Demetrius to a meeting of the
council and was asked about the disposition and intentions of
the Jews. He answered:
6: "Those of the Jews who are called Hasideans,
whose leader is Judas Maccabeus, are keeping up war and stirring
up sedition, and will not let the kingdom attain tranquillity.
7: Therefore I have laid aside my ancestral glory -- I
mean the high priesthood -- and have now come here,
8: first because I am genuinely concerned for the
interests of the king, and second because I have regard also for
my fellow citizens. For through the folly of those whom I have
mentioned our whole nation is now in no small misfortune.
9: Since you are acquainted, O king, with the details of
this matter, deign to take thought for our country and our
hard-pressed nation with the gracious kindness which you show to
all.
10: For as long as Judas lives, it is impossible for the
government to find peace."
11: When he had said this, the rest of the king's
friends, who were hostile to Judas, quickly inflamed Demetrius
still more.
12: And he immediately chose Nicanor, who had been in
command of the elephants, appointed him governor of Judea, and
sent him off
13: with orders to kill Judas and scatter his men, and to
set up Alcimus as high priest of the greatest temple.
14: And the Gentiles throughout Judea, who had fled
before Judas, flocked to join Nicanor, thinking that the
misfortunes and calamities of the Jews would mean prosperity for
themselves.
15: When the Jews heard of Nicanor's coming and the
gathering of the Gentiles, they sprinkled dust upon their heads
and prayed to him who established his own people for ever and
always upholds his own heritage by manifesting himself.
16: At the command of the leader, they set out from there
immediately and engaged them in battle at a village called
Dessau.
17: Simon, the brother of Judas, had encountered Nicanor,
but had been temporarily checked because of the sudden
consternation created by the enemy.
18: Nevertheless Nicanor, hearing of the valor of Judas
and his men and their courage in battle for their country,
shrank from deciding the issue by bloodshed.
19: Therefore he sent Posidonius and Theodotus and
Mattathias to give and receive pledges of friendship.
20: When the terms had been fully considered, and the
leader had informed the people, and it had appeared that they
were of one mind, they agreed to the covenant.
21: And the leaders set a day on which to meet by
themselves. A chariot came forward from each army; seats of
honor were set in place;
22: Judas posted armed men in readiness at key places to
prevent sudden treachery on the part of the enemy; they held the
proper conference.
23: Nicanor stayed on in Jerusalem and did nothing out of
the way, but dismissed the flocks of people that had gathered.
24: And he kept Judas always in his presence; he was
warmly attached to the man.
25: And he urged him to marry and have children; so he
married, settled down, and shared the common life.
26: But when Alcimus noticed their good will for one
another, he took the covenant that had been made and went to
Demetrius. He told him that Nicanor was disloyal to the
government, for he had appointed that conspirator against the
kingdom, Judas, to be his successor.
27: The king became excited and, provoked by the false
accusations of that depraved man, wrote to Nicanor, stating that
he was displeased with the covenant and commanding him to send
Maccabeus to Antioch as a prisoner without delay.
28: When this message came to Nicanor, he was troubled
and grieved that he had to annul their agreement when the man
had done no wrong.
29: Since it was not possible to oppose the king, he
watched for an opportunity to accomplish this by a stratagem.
30: But Maccabeus, noticing that Nicanor was more austere
in his dealings with him and was meeting him more rudely than
had been his custom, concluded that this austerity did not
spring from the best motives. So he gathered not a few of his
men, and went into hiding from Nicanor.
31: When the latter became aware that he had been
cleverly outwitted by the man, he went to the great and holy
temple while the priests were offering the customary sacrifices,
and commanded them to hand the man over.
32: And when they declared on oath that they did not know
where the man was whom he sought,
33: he stretched out his right hand toward the sanctuary,
and swore this oath: "If you do not hand Judas over to me
as a prisoner, I will level this precinct of God to the ground
and tear down the altar, and I will build here a splendid temple
to Dionysus."
34: Having said this, he went away. Then the priests
stretched forth their hands toward heaven and called upon the
constant Defender of our nation, in these words:
35: "O Lord of all, who hast need of nothing, thou
wast pleased that there be a temple for thy habitation among us;
36: so now, O holy One, Lord of all holiness, keep
undefiled for ever this house that has been so recently
purified."
37: A certain Razis, one of the elders of Jerusalem, was
denounced to Nicanor as a man who loved his fellow citizens and
was very well thought of and for his good will was called father
of the Jews.
38: For in former times, when there was no mingling with
the Gentiles, he had been accused of Judaism, and for Judaism he
had with all zeal risked body and life.
39: Nicanor, wishing to exhibit the enmity which he had
for the Jews, sent more than five hundred soldiers to arrest
him;
40: for he thought that by arresting him he would do them
an injury.
41: When the troops were about to capture the tower and
were forcing the door of the courtyard, they ordered that fire
be brought and the doors burned. Being surrounded, Razis fell
upon his own sword,
42: preferring to die nobly rather than to fall into the
hands of sinners and suffer outrages unworthy of his noble
birth.
43: But in the heat of the struggle he did not hit
exactly, and the crowd was now rushing in through the doors. He
bravely ran up on the wall, and manfully threw himself down into
the crowd.
44: But as they quickly drew back, a space opened and he
fell in the middle of the empty space.
45: Still alive and aflame with anger, he rose, and
though his blood gushed forth and his wounds were severe he ran
through the crowd; and standing upon a steep rock,
46: with his blood now completely drained from him, he
tore out his entrails, took them with both hands and hurled them
at the crowd, calling upon the Lord of life and spirit to give
them back to him again. This was the manner of his death.
Chapter 15
1: When
Nicanor heard that Judas and his men were in the region of
Samaria, he made plans to attack them with complete safety on
the day of rest.
2: And when the Jews who were compelled to follow him
said, "Do not destroy so savagely and barbarously, but show
respect for the day which he who sees all things has honored and
hallowed above other days,"
3: the thrice-accursed wretch asked if there were a
sovereign in heaven who had commanded the keeping of the sabbath
day.
4: And when they declared, "It is the living Lord
himself, the Sovereign in heaven, who ordered us to observe the
seventh day,"
5: he replied, "And I am a sovereign also, on earth,
and I command you to take up arms and finish the king's
business." Nevertheless, he did not succeed in carrying out
his abominable design.
6: This Nicanor in his utter boastfulness and arrogance
had determined to erect a public monument of victory over Judas
and his men.
7: But Maccabeus did not cease to trust with all
confidence that he would get help from the Lord.
8: And he exhorted his men not to fear the attack of the
Gentiles, but to keep in mind the former times when help had
come to them from heaven, and now to look for the victory which
the Almighty would give them.
9: Encouraging them from the law and the prophets, and
reminding them also of the struggles they had won, he made them
the more eager.
10: And when he had aroused their courage, he gave his
orders, at the same time pointing out the perfidy of the
Gentiles and their violation of oaths.
11: He armed each of them not so much with confidence in
shields and spears as with the inspiration of brave words, and
he cheered them all by relating a dream, a sort of vision, which
was worthy of belief.
12: What he saw was this: Onias, who had been high
priest, a noble and good man, of modest bearing and gentle
manner, one who spoke fittingly and had been trained from
childhood in all that belongs to excellence, was praying with
outstretched hands for the whole body of the Jews.
13: Then likewise a man appeared, distinguished by his
gray hair and dignity, and of marvelous majesty and authority.
14: And Onias spoke, saying, "This is a man who
loves the brethren and prays much for the people and the holy
city, Jeremiah, the prophet of God."
15: Jeremiah stretched out his right hand and gave to
Judas a golden sword, and as he gave it he addressed him thus:
16: "Take this holy sword, a gift from God, with
which you will strike down your adversaries."
17: Encouraged by the words of Judas, so noble and so
effective in arousing valor and awaking manliness in the souls
of the young, they determined not to carry on a campaign but to
attack bravely, and to decide the matter, by fighting hand to
hand with all courage, because the city and the sanctuary and
the temple were in danger.
18: Their concern for wives and children, and also for
brethren and relatives, lay upon them less heavily; their
greatest and first fear was for the consecrated sanctuary.
19: And those who had to remain in the city were in no
little distress, being anxious over the encounter in the open
country.
20: When all were now looking forward to the coming
decision, and the enemy was already close at hand with their
army drawn up for battle, the elephants strategically stationed
and the cavalry deployed on the flanks,
21: Maccabeus, perceiving the hosts that were before him
and the varied supply of arms and the savagery of the elephants,
stretched out his hands toward heaven and called upon the Lord
who works wonders; for he knew that it is not by arms, but as
the Lord decides, that he gains the victory for those who
deserve it.
22: And he called upon him in these words: "O Lord,
thou didst send thy angel in the time of Hezekiah king of Judea,
and he slew fully a hundred and eighty-five thousand in the camp
of Sennacherib.
23: So now, O Sovereign of the heavens, send a good angel
to carry terror and trembling before us.
24: By the might of thy arm may these blasphemers who
come against thy holy people be struck down." With these
words he ended his prayer.
25: Nicanor and his men advanced with trumpets and battle
songs;
26: and Judas and his men met the enemy in battle with
invocation to God and prayers.
27: So, fighting with their hands and praying to God in
their hearts, they laid low no less than thirty-five thousand
men, and were greatly gladdened by God's manifestation.
28: When the action was over and they were returning with
joy, they recognized Nicanor, lying dead, in full armor.
29: Then there was shouting and tumult, and they blessed
the Sovereign Lord in the language of their fathers.
30: And the man who was ever in body and soul the
defender of his fellow citizens, the man who maintained his
youthful good will toward his countrymen, ordered them to cut
off Nicanor's head and arm and carry them to Jerusalem.
31: And when he arrived there and had called his
countrymen together and stationed the priests before the altar,
he sent for those who were in the citadel.
32: He showed them the vile Nicanor's head and that
profane man's arm, which had been boastfully stretched out
against the holy house of the Almighty;
33: and he cut out the tongue of the ungodly Nicanor and
said that he would give it piecemeal to the birds and hang up
these rewards of his folly opposite the sanctuary.
34: And they all, looking to heaven, blessed the Lord who
had manifested himself, saying, "Blessed is he who has kept
his own place undefiled."
35: And he hung Nicanor's head from the citadel, a clear
and conspicuous sign to every one of the help of the Lord.
36: And they all decreed by public vote never to let this
day go unobserved, but to celebrate the thirteenth day of the
twelfth month -- which is called Adar in the Syrian language --
the day before Mordecai's day.
37: This, then, is how matters turned out with Nicanor.
And from that time the city has been in the possession of the
Hebrews. So I too will here end my story.
38: If it is well told and to the point, that is what I
myself desired; if it is poorly done and mediocre, that was the
best I could do.
39: For just as it is harmful to drink wine alone, or,
again, to drink water alone, while wine mixed with water is
sweet and delicious and enhances one's enjoyment, so also the
style of the story delights the ears of those who read the work.
And here will be the end. |