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Esther 11
In the fourth year of the reign of Ptolemy and Cleopatra,
Dositheus, who said he was a priest, and of the Levitical
race, and Ptolemy his son brought this epistle of Phurim,
which they said Lysimachus the son of Ptolemy had interpreted
in Jerusalem.
In the second year of the reign of Artaxerxes the great,
in the first day of the month Nisan, Mardochai the son
of Jair, the son of Semei, the son of Cis, of the tribe
of Benjamin:
A Jew who dwelt in the city of Susan, a great man and
among the first of the king's court, had it dream.
Now he was of the number of the captives, whom Nabuchodonosor
king of Babylon had carried away from Jerusalem with
Jechonias king of Juda:
And this was his dream: Behold there were voices, and
tumults, and thunders, and earthquakes, and a disturbance
upon the earth.
And behold two great dragons came forth ready to fight
one against another.
And at their cry all nations were stirred up to fight
against the nation of the just.
And that was a day of darkness and danger, of tribulation
and distress, and great fear upon the earth.
And the nation of the just was troubled fearing their
own evils, and was prepared for death.
And they cried to God: and as they were crying, a little
fountain grew into a very great river, and abounded
into many waters.
The light and the sun rose up, and the humble were exalted,
and they devoured the glorious.
And when Mardochai had seen this, and arose out of his
bed, he was thinking what God would do: and he kept
it fixed in his mind, desirous to know what the dream
should signify.
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