Page:PracticalCommentaryOnHolyScripture.djvu/139

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Fig. 11. Gathering grapes.

Then the chief baker, seeing that Joseph had so wisely interpreted the dream, said: “I, also, dreamed a dream that I had three baskets of meal upon my head; and that in one basket which was uppermost I carried all kinds of pastry, and that the birds ate out of it.”

Fig. 12. Treading the grapes.

Joseph said to him: “This is the interpretation of the dream: The three baskets are yet three days, after which Pharao will take thy head from thee and hang thee[1] on a cross, and the birds shall tear thy flesh.” The third day after this was the birthday of Pharao.

At the banquet[2] he remembered the chief butler and chief baker. The former he restored to his place; the latter[3] he caused to be hanged on a gibbet. The chief butler rejoiced in his good fortune, but he thought no more of Joseph.

COMMENTARY.

Fig. 13. Wine-press. Fig. 11 — 13. Wine-making in Egypt. Ancient Egyptian wall-paintings.

The object of suffering. Joseph really had a great deal to endure. At home, after being derided by his brethren, he was sold to be a slave in a strange land. Then, though innocent, he was thrown into prison and bound with chains, as if he were the worst of criminals.

  1. Hang thee. In olden times a criminal was first beheaded, and then his body was hung on a gibbet, as a warning to others.
  2. Banquet. At the feast, given by Pharao on this occasion.
  3. The latter. Apparently, the chief butler’s offence was not so great as that of the chief baker, and therefore the king pardoned him on his birthday.