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diff --git a/30899-h/30899-h.htm b/30899-h/30899-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..9a3a226 --- /dev/null +++ b/30899-h/30899-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,990 @@ +<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"> +<html> +<head> +<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII"> +<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Man Who Did Not Die, by J. H. Willard</title> +<style type="text/css"> + body { margin-left:5%; margin-right:5%} + h1 { text-align:center } + h2 { text-align:center } + .indent {margin-left:12%} +</style> +</head> +<body> + + +<pre> + +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Man Who Did Not Die, by J. H. Willard + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Man Who Did Not Die + The Story of Elijah + +Author: J. H. Willard + +Release Date: January 9, 2010 [EBook #30899] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MAN WHO DID NOT DIE *** + + + + +Produced by Michael Gray + + + + + +</pre> + +<p align="center">THE MAN WHO DID NOT DIE</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/1.jpg" alt="Elijah denounces Ahab and Jezebel"></p> +<table border="1" align="center"> +<tr> +<td> +<p align="center">ALTEMUS' BEAUTIFUL STORIES SERIES</p> +<hr> +<hr> +<h1>THE MAN WHO DID NOT DIE</h1> +<h2>THE STORY OF ELIJAH</h2> +<p align="center">BY</p> +<h2>J. H. WILLARD.</h2> +<hr> +<hr> +<p align="center">ILLUSTRATED +<hr> +<hr> +<p align="center"> +PHILADELPHIA<br> +HENRY ALTEMUS COMPANY +</p> +</table> +<br><br> + + +<table border="1" align="center"> +<tr> +<td> +<h1>Altemus'</h1> +<p align="center">Illustrated</p> +<h1>Beautiful Stories Series</h1> +<hr> +<hr> +<p>THE FIRST CHRISTMAS.<br> +THE FIRST EASTER.<br> +ONCE IN SEVEN YEARS.<br> +<span class="indent">The Story of the Jubilee</span><br> +WITH HAMMER AND NAIL.<br> +<span class="indent">The Story of Jael and Sisera</span><br> +FIVE KINGS IN A CAVE.<br> +<span class="indent">The Story of a Great Battle</span><br> +THE WISEST MAN.<br> +<span class="indent">The Story of Solomon</span><br> +A FARMER'S WIFE.<br> +<span class="indent">The Story of Ruth</span><br> +THE MAN WHO DID NOT DIE.<br> +<span class="indent">The Story of Elijah</span><br> +WHEN IRON DID SWIM.<br> +<span class="indent">The Story of Elisha</span><br> +WHAT IS SWEETER THAN HONEY.<br> +<span class="indent">The Story of Samson</span></p> +<hr><hr> +<p align="center">Twenty-five Cents Each</p> +<hr><hr> +<p align="center">Copyright, 1906</p> +<h2>By Henry Altemus</h2> +</table> +<br><br> +<p align="center"><img src="images/2.jpg" alt="Elijah ponders"> +<h1>THE MAN WHO DID NOT DIE.</h1> + +<p><font size="+3">A</font>FTER the death of King Solomon, his son Rehoboam became ruler +of the Israelites. The prodigality and magnificence of +Solomon's court, and his lavish way of living had been met by +heavy taxation. Seeing the vast revenues of the kingdom +employed in this way, the people had grown discontented, and +then disloyal. +</p><p> +After Rehoboam had become king, the Israelites appealed to him +to lighten the taxes and other heavy burdens which oppressed +the poor. Instead of following the advice of his older +counsellors, and releasing the people from some of their +burdens, the new king hearkened to the counsel of the younger +men who had grown up with him and scornfully rejected the +petition of his subjects. +</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/3.jpg" alt="The king scornfull rejected their petition"> +<br>THE KING SCORNFULLY REJECTED THEIR PETITION.</p><p> + +A very ambitious man named Jeroboam presented the petition to +Rehoboam, and upon its rejection, ten tribes revolted and made +Jeroboam their ruler under the title of King of Israel. +</p><p> +The remainder of the Israelitish nation from this time were +known as the Kingdom of Judah. Jerusalem remained its capital, +and God was worshipped in the magnificent temple built by King +Solomon. It also maintained the regular priesthood, its +officers descending as formerly from father to son. +</p><p> +Among the twenty sovereigns of Judah, there were a few who +served God sincerely. The best four of the kings were Asa, +Jehosaphat, Hezekiah and Josiah. Asa fought against the +worship of idols which had corrupted the people, yet he made +an alliance with the King of Syria, who was an idolater. +Jehosaphat, his son, ruled the kingdom of Judah for twenty- +five years, and, although he did not always do right, his +reign was a quiet one. +</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/4.jpg" alt="Asa read the Law of God to the people"> +<br>ASA READ THE LAW OF GOD TO THE PEOPLE.</p><p> + +Hezekiah waged a vigorous war against the worship of idols, +and, as far as he was able, restored the worship of God in the +temple. The Bible says of everything he undertook for the +glory of God that <i>"he did it with all his heart, and +prospered."</i> +</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/5.jpg" alt="Hezekiah destroyed the idols in the temple"> +<br>HEZEKIAH DESTROYED THE IDOLS IN THE TEMPLE.</p><p> + +Hezekiah was a very brave man, and when Sennacherib, the King +of Assyria, sent an army against Jerusalem, his speech to the +people, telling them to be strong and courageous, for God +would help them and fight for them, was not unlike that of +Joshua when he exhorted the Israelites to trust in God, at the +time when they were about to enter the land of Canaan. +</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/6.jpg" alt="Sennacherib, King of Assyria"> +<br>SENNACHERIB, KING OF ASSYRIA.</p><p> + +The prophet Isaiah lived during the reign of Hezekiah. At one +time when the king was very sick he prayed to God that his +life might be spared. God told Isaiah to tell him that He had +heard his prayer, and that He would heal him, and prolong his +life for fifteen years. +</p><p> +When Isaiah had delivered God's message, Hezekiah asked for a +sign that these things should be done, and Isaiah said that he +might decide whether the shadow upon the sundial should go +forward ten degrees or go backward ten degrees. +</p><p> +Hezekiah replied that it was an easy thing for the shadow to +go forward ten degrees, and asked that it might go backwards. +God moved the shadow as the king had asked, and he accepted it +as a sign that his life was to be spared and his days +lengthened. +</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/8.jpg" alt="God moved the shadow backwards"> +<br>GOD MOVED THE SHADOW BACKWARDS.</p><p> + +Josiah was only eight years old when he came to the throne of +Judah. He served God while yet a child, and devoted his life +to His service. He reigned for more than thirty years, and was +killed at last by an arrow while defending his kingdom against +Necho, King of Egypt. +</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/7.jpg" alt="Josiah was only eight years old"> +<br>"JOSIAH WAS ONLY EIGHT YEARS OLD."</p><p> + +<p align="center"><img src="images/9.jpg" alt="Josiah was killed by an arrow"> +<br>JOSIAH WAS KILLED BY AN ARROW.</p><p> + +In spite of the repeated warnings of God's prophets, the +people continued to worship idols, until as a punishment the +kingdom was entirely broken up. After a siege lasting sixteen +months, Nebuchadnezzar, King of Babylon, took the city of +Jerusalem, burned the Temple, and carried away as prisoners +all the inhabitants who had survived the horrors of the siege. +This was the end of the Kingdom of Judah, and the beginning of +the period known as "the captivity." +</p><p> +For some time after the separation of Israel from Judah, there +was war between the two kingdoms, but later they formed an +alliance to prevent the King of Syria from encroaching upon +them. Still later the old enmity broke out again. There were +nineteen Kings of Israel in all, and city after city became +the capital of the kingdom, until in the time of its sixth +king Samaria became the seat of government. +</p><p> +Omri was the King who built Samaria, The monarchs who preceded +him were conspicuous for evil doing, but Omri exceeded them in +wickedness. The reign of his son Ahab was still worse, and of +this King of Israel the Bible says, <i>"Ahab did more to provoke +the Lord God of Israel to anger than all the Kings of Israel +that were before him."</i></p> + +<p align="center"><img src="images/10.jpg" alt="Ruins of Samaria"> +<br>RUINS OF SAMARIA.<br>From a photograph.</p><p> + +Ahab married Jezebel, a Phœnician princess, and this was the +crowning point of his sinful career. Jezebel was unprincipled +and intolerant, and as Ahab was a weak man, he became little +more than a tool in her hands. She introduced at once the +worship of Baal and Ashtoroth, the male and female gods of her +own country. She caused a great temple to be built on the brow +of a hill, and there the worship of these idols was carried +on. Four hundred and fifty priests and attendants administered +the services of Baal, and four hundred those of Ashtoroth. +</p><p> +Not content with introducing this heathen worship, Jezebel +persecuted the few among the nation who remained faithful to +the worship of God. She caused their altars to be destroyed, +and to save their lives they fled to the wildest solitudes, +and hid in caves, as their forefathers had done in the days of +the Judges. +</p><p> +While all this was taking place, and while Ahab was occupying +himself with the building of a splendid palace at Jezreel, a +new and startling figure appeared upon the scene. None knew +whence the mysterious stranger came, as, wrapped in a rough +cape, or mantle, of sheepskin, he confronted the astonished +king. +</p><p> +The name of this strange visitor was Elijah, a man of whom it +has been said that he was "the grandest and most romantic +character that Israel ever produced." His long, thick hair +indicated remarkable powers of endurance, and in addition to +his sheepskin mantle he wore a girdle made from the skin of +some animal, which in the fashion of the day he tightened when +about to move quickly. +</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/11.jpg" alt="The name of the strange visitor was Elijah"> +<br>THE NAME OF THIS STRANGE VISITOR WAS ELIJAH. +</p><p> +Elijah was one of God's prophets, and his mission was to +announce to Ahab that a judgment was about to fall upon the +land, because the people had forsaken the worship of God, and +bowed down to idols instead. This punishment was to be in the +shape of a drought, at all times a terrible infliction, but +especially so in Eastern countries where all vegetation +quickly dries up when there is a scarcity of water. +</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/13.jpg" alt="The result of a drought in Palestine"> +<br>RESULT OF DROUGHT IN PALESTINE.<br>From a photograph.</p><p> + +Elijah's message was very brief, and before the king had +recovered from his astonishment, the prophet had departed as +abruptly as he had appeared. +</p><p> +We have no record that Elijah had any settled home. The wild +paths of the wilderness and the mountains were familiar to +him, and he dwelt where some spreading tree would afford him a +leafy shelter. He moved from place to place, according to +God's commands. Now, as he left the presence of Ahab, God's +word came to him, directing him to turn to the eastward, and +hide by the brook Cherith. +</p><p> +Elijah stayed in this retreat as long as the falling stream +afforded water to quench his thirst, and during this time he +was fed by ravens, who, twice each day, brought him bread and +meat. After a while the brook dried up, and the leaves which +had protected him from the fierce sun shriveled and fell to +the ground, for the promised drought was upon the land. +</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/12.jpg" alt="Elijiah was fed twice each day by ravens"> +<br>"ELIJAH WAS FED TWICE EACH DAY BY RAVENS."</p><p> + +Again the word of God came upon Elijah, telling him what road +to take to his next shelter. Across the mountains of Lebanon, +where the brooks were as dry as that of Cherith, the prophet +made his way. Descending their further slopes, he crossed the +plains at their feet, and with his face still towards the sea, +approached the village or town of Zarephath. The modern +village of Sura-flud is supposed to occupy its site, and the +ruins of the ancient town are to be seen there. +</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/15.jpg" alt="The site of Zarephath"> +<br>THE SITE OF ZAREPHATH.<br>From a photograph.</p><p> + +Elijah was now in Phœnicia, the native country of Jezebel, the +wife of King Ahab. It would seem to be the last place in which +an enemy of Baal would seek refuge, but Elijah knew that God +had a purpose in sending him there. Ethbaal, the father of +Jezebel, was the King of Phœnicia, and the famine which +followed the drought had reached that country, and was causing +terrible suffering. +</p><p> +Just outside Zarephath, Elijah found a woman gathering sticks +for firewood. She was a widow, and in such poverty that all +the food she had in the world was a handful of meal and a +little oil in a bottle or jar. Consumed with thirst, Elijah +asked her for water, and, as she turned to bring it, he asked +her also for a piece of bread. +</p><p> +Sadly the woman told him she had no bread. She was gathering +sticks to make a fire over which she would cook the handful of +meal and the little oil remaining in the bottle. When she and +her son had eaten this, they would have no more food, and in +consequence would die of hunger. +</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/14.jpg" alt="A woman gathering sticks for firewood"> +<br>"A WOMAN GATHERING STICKS FOR FIREWOOD."</p><p> + +It is probable that this woman was an Israelite, and not a +worshipper of Baal, for, when Elijah told her to mix the meal +and oil into a cake and bake it for him, adding, <i>"For thus +saith the Lord God of Israel, the barrel of meal shall not +waste, neither shall the cruse of oil fail, until the day that +the Lord sendeth rain upon the earth,"</i> the woman did as she +was told, evidently recognizing him as a prophet of God. She +fed him before she and her son tasted of food, and gave him +the shelter of her house as well; and during all the time of +drought and famine, the supply of meal and oil never failed. +</p><p> +After a while, trouble came upon the little household. The +widow's son suddenly became very sick and then died. The +heart-broken mother demanded of Elijah why he had come to them +only to slay her son. The prophet replied, <i>"Give me thy +son,"</i> and taking the boy from his mother's arms, carried him +into his own chamber and laid him on the bed. +</p><p> +Then Elijah called upon God, and prayed that the child might +be made alive again, and God heard his prayer, for the boy sat +up alive and well. Taking him in his arms, the prophet carried +the child to his mother, who was so happy that she exclaimed, +<i>"Now by this I know that thou art a man of God, and that the +word of the Lord is in thy mouth."</i> +</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/16.jpg" alt="Elijiah carried the child to his mother"> +<br>"ELIJAH CARRIED THE CHILD TO HIS MOTHER."</p><p> + +The drought continued, and the horrors of famine caused by the +failure of all crops, was felt in Samaria. Ahab was in +despair. Everywhere horses and other animals were dying, for +there was not the scantiest grass or herbage of any kind for +them to eat, and everywhere the streams were dry. +</p><p> +The chief officer of Ahab's household was a man named Obadiah. +He was a faithful servant of God, and during the bitter +persecutions of Jezebel, had hidden an hundred persons who +worshipped God, in a cave and fed them there. Ahab now took +Obadiah, and set out on a desperate search for pasturage and +water for the animals, the king going one way and his servant +the other, on what seemed a hopeless errand. +</p><p> +Before Obadiah had gone very far, Elijah suddenly stood before +him. Quickly the prophet told him to go to Ahab and tell him +<i>"Elijah is here."</i> Obadiah feared that Elijah would disappear +before he could bring the king to him, but, reassured by +Elijah, he set forth to find Ahab. +</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/17.jpg" alt="A field in Palestine to-day"> +<br>A FIELD IN PALESTINE TO-DAY.<br>From a photograph.</p><p> + +Now Ahab had been searching throughout his kingdom for the +mysterious stranger who had warned him of the coming drought, +three years before; so, as soon as he learned from Obadiah +that the stranger had reappeared, he went to meet him. When he +saw the prophet, he asked him, <i>"Art thou he that troubleth +Israel?"</i> Elijah answered that he had not troubled Israel, but +that Ahab's evil reign, and that of his father before him, had +been the cause of the drought. +</p><p> +Then Elijah denounced the idolatry of Ahab, and followed this +with a command to assemble his people on Mount Carmel, and +bring also all the priests and attendants of Baal and +Ashtoroth. Ahab did not dare to disobey, and a great, weary, +listless crowd assembled on the sun-burned slopes of the +mountain. The priests were there in gorgeous vestments, and +the king, himself, all eager and expectant. A spring of water, +apparently undiscovered before, flowed not far away. +</p><p> +Elijah appeared with only one attendant, and soon his voice +rang out. <i>"How long halt you between two opinions? If the +Lord be God, follow him; but if Baal, then follow him."</i> +</p><p> +The amazed people stood speechless. Then Elijah spoke again, +saying he was hut one prophet, while before him were four +hundred and fifty of Baal's prophets. Then he proposed a test +of powers. +</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/18.jpg" alt="Cultivating the land in Palestine to-day"> +<br>CULTIVATING THE LAND IN PALESTINE TO-DAY.<br>From a +photograph.</p><p> + +He asked that two bullocks might be provided. The priests of +Baal should take one, and prepare it for sacrifice by laying +it on the wood upon the altar to their god, but they were to +put no fire tinder it. The other bullock he would prepare in +the same way. +</p><p> +Then the priests of Baal were to call upon their god, and he +would call upon his God, and the God, that answered by sending +fire to consume the sacrifice offered to him, was to be the +God of the people. The answer of the people, dejected with +long endurance of misery, was ready, and as one man they +shouted, "It is well spoken." +</p><p> +The altar to Baal was prepared, with the sacrifice arranged +upon it in proper form. Only fire was lacking. Loudly the +priests of Baal prayed. Wildly they leaped around the altar, +crying again and again, <i>"O Baal, hear us."</i> The morning wore +away, and there was no response; no fire appeared to consume +the sacrifice. +</p><p> +About noon, Elijah mocked the frantic priests, saying to them, +<i>"Cry aloud, for he is a god; either he is talking, or he is +pursuing, or he is in a journey, or peradventure he sleepeth, +and must be awakened."</i> +</p><p> +The priests of Baal accepted this advice in earnest. They +supplicated and raved more wildly, and wounded themselves in +their frenzy, continually calling on Baal to hear them. And so +the afternoon passed. +</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/19.jpg" alt="Summit of Mount Carmel to-day"> +<br>SUMMIT OF MOUNT CARMEL TO-DAY.<br>From a photograph.</p><p> + +As the sun was sinking, Elijah came near the altar which he +had built with twelve stones—one for each of the tribes of +Israel. The sacrifice, carefully prepared, lay upon the wood. +All around the altar a trench had been dug, and it was now +filled with the water which had been poured upon the +sacrifice. +</p><p> +Then Elijah prayed to God, asking him to let the people know +that day that He was the God of Israel, and that it was by His +command that he had done these things. At the close of his +prayer, fire unkindled by mortal hands broke out. Unchecked by +the water, it wrapped sacrifice and altar in flames and +consumed them, even licking up the water in the trench with +its heated breath. At this sight the people prostrated +themselves as they cried out, <i>"The Lord, he is the God, the +Lord, he is the God."</i> +</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/20.jpg" alt="Elijah's sacrifice on Mount Carmel"> +<br>ELIJAH'S SACRIFICE ON MOUNT CARMEL.</p><p> + +The priests of Baal, who were largely responsible for the +idolatry of the nation, stood trembling and confounded. +Quickly Elijah ordered them to be destroyed, and this was +done. Next he turned to Ahab, and told him to eat and drink in +haste, for the long deferred rain was at hand, although no +sign of its approach was in sight. +</p><p> +Attended only by his servant, Elijah then went to the top of +Mount Carmel, and crouched upon the ground in the position of +meditation commonly assumed in Eastern countries. He sent his +servant to a spot which commanded a view of the Mediterranean +Sea, bade him look around, and bring him word of what he saw. +</p><p> +Six times the servant returned with the word that he saw +nothing. The seventh time his report was that he could see a +little cloud, not larger than a man's hand, coming out of the +sea. Sending the man to warn Ahab that the rain was fast +approaching, and that he must start at once for home, Elijah +then hastened down the mountain to meet the king at its foot. +</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/21.jpg" alt="A little cloud coming out of the sea"> +<br>A LITTLE CLOUD COMING OUT OF THE SEA.</p><p> + +With all the speed he could command, Ahab barely reached his +palace at Jezreel in time to escape the fury of the storm. +Elijah ran before the royal chariot the entire distance of +sixteen miles, but he did not enter the palace. +</p><p> +Thus far the triumph was with Elijah. The people were +convinced, the priests of Baal were dead, the king was awe- +struck. But Jezebel was relentless in her hatred of the +prophet. So furious was she when Ahab told her what had been +done that day, that she sent a message to Elijah, telling him +that before another day had passed she would have his life. +Prophet though he was, Elijah quailed before the threat of the +idolatrous queen, and fled for his life. +</p><p> +Leaving his servant at Beer-sheba, Elijah went a day's journey +into the wilderness, threw himself down under a solitary bush, +and in a fit of despair, prayed that he might die. Worn out +with excitement and fatigue, he fell asleep, but woke to find +food and water beside him, and an angel who told him to +refresh himself with the provisions God had sent him. +</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/23.jpg" alt="Elijah woke to find an angel beside him"> +<br>ELIJAH WOKE TO FIND AN ANGEL BESIDE HIM.</p><p> + +Twice Elijah ate and drank of the miraculous food, and then in +its strength traveled forty days and forty nights until he +came to Mount Horeb, the place where Moses received the divine +command to rescue the Israelites from Pharaoh. +</p><p> +Elijah found shelter in a cave, and there he heard the voice +of God, asking, <i>"What doest thou here, Elijah?"</i> The answer +of the prophet was one of bitterness and depression, but his +complaints were cut short by a command to come out of the +cave, and behold the wonderful works of God. Drawing his +mantle about him, Elijah went out on the mountain side to +watch. +</p><p> +As he stood there, a mighty wind roared among the rocks and +rent them to pieces. Then an earthquake shook the desert, +until the mountain itself trembled under the shock. Then fire +as mysterious as that which illuminated the bush in the days +of Moses, played about the lonely heights. After a pause, <i>"a +still, small voice"</i> whispered in the ear of the solitary +watcher a revelation conveying comfort, and pointing out +further duty. Strengthened and comforted, Elijah left the +lonely mountain behind him, and shortly came across the man +who was to cheer him as a companion, and succeed him as a +prophet. +</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/22.jpg" alt="A storm in Palestine"><br>A STORM IN PALESTINE.<br>From a photograph.</p><p> + +This man was Elisha, the son of Shaphat. He was ploughing the +fields around his home with twelve yoke of oxen. As he passed +him, Elijah cast his well-known mantle upon Elisha, who +recognized in the action that from that time he was to be the +attendant and friend of the prophet. Bidding his father and +mother goodbye, Elisha followed Elijah, thus beginning a long +period of service and intercourse with him. +</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/24.jpg" alt="Elisha was ploughing his fields"> +<br>ELISHA WAS PLOUGHING HIS FIELDS.</p><p> + +The disappearance of Elijah after his triumph over the priests +of Baal, probably caused Ahab and Jezebel to believe that they +had seen the last of the prophet. They certainly went on in +their wicked ways, for soon we read that Ahab coveted the +vineyard of a man named Naboth. This vineyard was quite near +the walls of Ahab's palace, and he wished to turn it into a +garden. +</p><p> +But Naboth would not sell his vineyard or exchange it for +another, because it had belonged to his family for a very long +time. His refusal made Ahab so angry and disappointed that he +threw himself upon his bed, and refused to eat or even to +speak. In this state Jezebel found him, and at once began to +comfort him, telling him he should have his vineyard. +</p><p> +The first thing this wicked woman did was to bribe witnesses +to say that Naboth had spoken evil of God and also of the +king. Naboth was condemned and stoned to death. Ahab then +took possession of the vineyard, and as he was walking in it +one day, he saw Elijah coming towards him. Tremblingly the +wicked king exclaimed, <i>"Hast thou found me, O my enemy?"</i> +Elijah replied that he had sought him, not because he was his +enemy, but to tell him he was to be punished, because all his +life he had done wrong. +</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/25.jpg" alt="False witnesses testified against Naboth"> +<br>FALSE WITNESSES TESTIFIED AGAINST NABOTH.</p><p> + +Ahab was killed in battle three years afterwards, and later, +Jezebel met with a terrible death, for she was thrown from a +window by her own servants, and crushed to death on the stones +below. +</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/28.jpg" alt="The death of Jezebel"> +<br>THE DEATH OF JEZEBEL.</p><p> + +When the time came for Elijah's work on earth to cease, he +took Elisha with him to a place called Gilgal. They crossed +the River Jordan in a manner as wonderful as that of the +passage of the Israelites into Canaan, many years before. +Elijah struck the waters with his mantle and they parted, +leaving; a pathway over which the two walked in safety. +</p> +<p align="center"><img src="images/26.jpg" alt="Elijah struck the waters with his mantle"> +<br>"ELIJAH STRUCK THE WATERS WITH HIS MANTLE."</p><p> + +There, while these two men of God were talking together, a +chariot of fire and horses of fire appeared, and parted them. +Elijah was swept up into the chariot, and was carried away +into heaven. But before he disappeared, his mantle fell from +him. Elisha took it up, and with it received the power of +performing miracles which God had given to Elijah, the man who +did not die.</p> + +<p align="center"><img src="images/27.jpg" alt="Elijah was swept up into the chariot"> +<br>"ELIJAH WAS SWEPT UP INTO THE CHARIOT."</p> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's The Man Who Did Not Die, by J. H. 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