The Bible and its . ilk, ms^ iHosesi ^ramplefi tfje Croton AFTER THE PAINTING BY NICOLAS POUSSIN, TGREAT FRENCH MASTER OF THE SEVEN-TEENTH CENTURY. And the child grew, and she brought him untoPharaohs daughter, and he became her son.—Ex.,2, 10. FROM the moment of Moses formal installa-tion in the palace as the princess adoptedson, the Bible passes directly to the momentwlien, four decades later, he espoused his own peo-ples downtrodden cause. For the intervening por-tion of his life we must seek other sources. Josephus tells us the well-known legend illustratedin this picture. The prin


The Bible and its . ilk, ms^ iHosesi ^ramplefi tfje Croton AFTER THE PAINTING BY NICOLAS POUSSIN, TGREAT FRENCH MASTER OF THE SEVEN-TEENTH CENTURY. And the child grew, and she brought him untoPharaohs daughter, and he became her son.—Ex.,2, 10. FROM the moment of Moses formal installa-tion in the palace as the princess adoptedson, the Bible passes directly to the momentwlien, four decades later, he espoused his own peo-ples downtrodden cause. For the intervening por-tion of his life we must seek other sources. Josephus tells us the well-known legend illustratedin this picture. The princess Thermuthis one daybrought the child to her father; and he, consentingto the lads adoption, playfully took off liis crownand placed it upon Moses. Tlie child in the glittering thing suddenly placed it underhis feet and stood upon it. This was a most evilomen of what he might do in the future, especially?IS a soothsayer had some years before prophesied toPharaoh that a Hebrew babe was about to be bornwh


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhorn, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectbible