[The King’s Cup-Bearer by Amy Catherine Walton]@TWC D-Link bookThe King’s Cup-Bearer CHAPTER VI 5/18
That was the first class of complainants. (2) But amongst the weepers Nehemiah found a second class, those who had once been somewhat better off, and had, in happier days, owned a little property, and had some means of their own, but who, at the time of the late famine, had got into difficulties.
'I,' said one, 'had a little farm in a village near Jerusalem.' 'I,' said another, 'was the owner of a nice little vineyard or oliveyard on the hill side,' 'I,' said a third, 'built a house in the city on my return from captivity, and hoped to leave it to my children.' 'But so terrible was our distress in the famine,' say these men, 'that we were obliged to borrow money of our neighbours the rich Jews in Jerusalem.
They were willing to lend the money, but they required security for it, and we were compelled to pledge or mortgage our little property to these men, and now times are still bad, and we see no hope whatever that we shall be able to buy our little possessions back again' (ver.
3). (3) But the shrillest cries of all came from the third class of complainants.
These were men who, up to a certain point, resembled the second class.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|