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is grey hairs, if nothing else, stood in the way. "_How long have I to live_," he answered, "_that I should go up with the king unto Jerusalem_?" (verse 34). I am too old, that is, for such a life as would there be expected of me. And, after all, why should conduct such as mine meet with so great a reward? No! let me go a little way over Jordan with the king, and then "_Let thy servant, I pray thee, turn back again, that I may die in mine own city, and be buried by the grave of my father and of my mother_." "_But_," he hastened to add, as if anxious to show that he appreciated to the full the king's generous offer, and saw the advantages it presented to those who were able to enjoy them, "_behold thy servant Chimham_," my son, "_let him go over with my lord the king; and do to him what shall seem good unto thee_" (verse 37). With a plea so expressed, David could not but acquiesce: "_The king kissed Barzillai, and blessed him; and he returned unto his own place . . . and Chimham went on with him_" (verses 39, 40), to become famous as the founder of a caravanserai, or halting-place for pilgrims on the road between Jerusalem and Bethlehem, which for at least four centuries continued to bear his name (Jer. xli. 17) and which may even, it has been conjectured, have been the same which, at the time of the Christian era "furnished shelter for two travellers with their infant child, when 'there was no room in the inn.'"[2] Round Barzillai's own name no such associations have gathered. After his parting with David we do not hear of him again, if we except a passing reference in David's dying instructions to Solomon, to "_shew kindness unto the sons of Barzillai the Gileadite_" (1 Kings ii. 7), and the mention, as late as the return from Babylon, of a family of priests who traced their descent to a marriage with the Gileadite's daughter, and prided themselves on the distinctive title of "_the children of Barzillai_" (Ezra ii. 61). But in the absence of anything to the contrary, we may be allowed to conjecture that, full of years and experience, surrounded by all the love which his useful, helpful life had called forth, Barzillai died in peace among his own people, and was buried, as he had himself desired, by his parents' grave. Such, then, is the story of Barzillai's life, so far as the Bible reveals it to us. It is, as I have already said, as an old man that he is principally brought before us, and in thinking of his
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