The palm tree . ^h ||a(m Crce oi And Deborah, a prophetess, the wife of Lapidotli, she judged Israel at that she dwelt under the palm tree of Deborah, between Earaah and Bethel InMount Ephraim, and Uie dilldren of Israel came up to her for judgment.—Judges iv. 4, 5, 1E more picture of a living palm tree as connectedwith the story of the Jewish people ere we turnto a closer and more individual contemplationof itself as a significant emblem in their poetryand their architectural representations. The four first scenes thus marked out for uson the pages of holy writ by the menti


The palm tree . ^h ||a(m Crce oi And Deborah, a prophetess, the wife of Lapidotli, she judged Israel at that she dwelt under the palm tree of Deborah, between Earaah and Bethel InMount Ephraim, and Uie dilldren of Israel came up to her for judgment.—Judges iv. 4, 5, 1E more picture of a living palm tree as connectedwith the story of the Jewish people ere we turnto a closer and more individual contemplationof itself as a significant emblem in their poetryand their architectural representations. The four first scenes thus marked out for uson the pages of holy writ by the mention ofthe palm tree, how complete a whole they epochs, and strongly contrasted. As if consciously and with intention, the palm tree, elo-quent in her beauty, stands prominently forward in thesefour successive scenes. It is as if she would point somelesson to be learned at each. At Succoth, on the borders of the land of bondage, thenewly-redeemed people,—frightened sheep plucked from thejaws of death just gathered into


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, bookidpalmtree00mo, bookyear1864