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[322]
But then, as to the sacred images, he bid him search for them; and
when Laban accepted of the offer, Rachel, being informed of it, put those
images into that camel's saddle on which she rode, and sat upon it; and
said, that her natural purgation hindered her rising up: so Laban left
off searching any further, not supposing that his daughter in such circumstances
would approach to those images. So he made a league with Jacob, and bound
it by oaths, that he would not bear him any malice on account of what had
happened; and Jacob made the like league, and promised to love Laban's
daughters. And these leagues they confirmed with oaths also, which the
made upon certain as whereon they erected a pillar, in the form of an altar:
whence that hill is called Gilead; and from thence they call that land
the Land of Gilead at this day. Now when they had feasted, after the making
of the league, Laban returned home.
1
1 CONCERNING THE MEETING OF JACOB AND ESAU.
Flavius Josephus. The Works of Flavius Josephus. Translated by. William Whiston, A.M. Auburn and Buffalo. John E. Beardsley. 1895.
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