Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- FOURTH PERIOD.—The Monarchy
- FIFTH PERIOD.—Babylonian Captivity
- SIXTH PERIOD.—Continuance of the Second Temple
- Chapter I
- Chapter II
- Chapter III
- Chapter IV
- Chapter V
- Chapter VI
- Chapter VII
- Chapter VIII
- Chapter IX
- Chapter X
- Chapter XI
- SEVENTH PERIOD.—Women of Israel in the Present, as influenced by the Past
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- FOURTH PERIOD.—The Monarchy
- FIFTH PERIOD.—Babylonian Captivity
- SIXTH PERIOD.—Continuance of the Second Temple
- Chapter I
- Chapter II
- Chapter III
- Chapter IV
- Chapter V
- Chapter VI
- Chapter VII
- Chapter VIII
- Chapter IX
- Chapter X
- Chapter XI
- SEVENTH PERIOD.—Women of Israel in the Present, as influenced by the Past
Summary
For about four years, Mariamne lived so far in peace, that no attack from the calumny of female hate, or from the violence of jealous passion, reached her individually. Her trials were from the sources to which we have already alluded. How fondly in this interim must her desolate heart have clung to her children, four of whom now called her mother. The very names given to her sons, reveal the love borne by her to her own race and family. All Herod's other children had names relative to his Idumæan descent, or in compliment to his Roman allies. It was not likely that he would have chosen the name of Aristobulus for one of his sons, laden as it was with the recollection of his murdered victim; but we may well imagine the feelings with which Mariamne bestowed it on her first-born—how, clinging to the memory of a brother so beloved, she should seek to continue the name in her own family, and in the caresses of an infant Aristobulus, struggle for forgetfulness of the agony which still lingered round the memory of her brother. Her second son, she named Alexander, in respectful recollection of her father. Her daughters, born afterwards, Salampsio and Cypros, do not appear to possess the same dear associations,—she had had no female relation to call for them; but we trace how her memory lingered with the dead, and how lonely she felt amid the living, in the simple fact of the names given to her sons.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Women of IsraelOr, Characters and Sketches from the Holy Scriptures, and Jewish History, pp. 313 - 332Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1845