Daisy In The Field - Page 158/231

"What is a figure?" said Mr. Dinwiddie. "And if you take away

the literal, where will the spiritual be?"

"True," said papa. "These are things I have not studied."

And then we mounted to the height of Neby Samwil and sat down

for a good long look. Mr. Dinwiddie was here as elsewhere

invaluable. He told us everything and pointed out everything

to us, that we ought to see or know. The seacoast plain lay

below; - spread out for many a mile, with here a height and

there a cluster of buildings, and the blue sea washing its

western border. We could easily see Jaffa, Ramleh and Lydda;

we picked those spots out first which we knew. Then Mr.

Dinwiddie pointed us to Ashdod, and to Ekron, a little to the

left of Ramleh.

"And that is where Nebuchadnezzar was with his army, before he

went up to Jerusalem," I said.

"The first time," said Mr. Dinwiddie. "Yes; there his hosts of

Chaldeans lay in the plain; and there after the place was

taken he impaled the chiefs of the town; and then flushed with

power, came up to Jerusalem and cast banks against it. So he

says; and we know that so Isaiah prophesied he would do; and

we know that Hezekiah bought him off."

"Did he come up this way of the Beth-horons?" I asked.

"I suppose so. And down this way, Joshua chased the fleeing

kings and their followers and overthrew them as they fled down

the pass - what a rush it must have been! - and down there,

down where the green sweeps into the hills from the plain,

there is Ajalon."

"Papa, do you see?"

"I see; but I do not understand quite so well as you do,

Daisy, what you are talking about."

"It is Miss Randolph's own country," remarked Mr. Dinwiddie.

"She is not a Jewess," said papa.

"Pardon me - we have it on authority that 'he is a Jew which

is one inwardly;' - an Israelite indeed," Mr . Dinwiddie

muttered to himself.

I saw papa was puzzled and half displeased. I hastened to turn

the conversation, and showed him where Bethel lay and the

mountains of Ephraim; and finally ordered our luncheon basket

to be brought forward. But we had to leave our position and

choose a shaded place, the sun was growing so hot.

"How long do you expect to remain here - in Palestine, Mr.

Dinwiddie?" something prompted me to ask. He hesitated a

moment or two and then replied "I cannot tell - probably as long as I stay anywhere on this

scene of action."

"You do not mean ever to come home?" I said.

"What is 'home,' Miss Daisy?" he replied, looking at me.

"It is where we were born," said papa.