76Chapter XII.
In the mean time, affairs
having been well settled in Egypt to meet the famine, a grievous want
of corn began to distress the world. Jacob, constrained by this
necessity, sent his sons into Egypt, keeping only Benjamin with himself
at home. Joseph, then, being at the head of affairs, and having
complete power over the corn-supplies, his brothers come to him, and
pay the same honor to him as to a king. He, when he saw them, craftily
concealed his recognition of them, and accused them of having come as
enemies, subtly to spy out the land. But he was annoyed that he did not
see among them his brother Benjamin. Matters, then, are brought to this
point, that they promised he should be present, specially that he might
be asked whether they had entered Egypt for the purpose of spying out
the land. In order to secure the fulfillment of this promise, Symeon
was retained as hostage, while to them corn was given freely.
Accordingly, they returned, bringing Benjamin with them as had been
arranged. Then Joseph made himself known to his brothers to the shame
of these evil-deservers. Thus, he sent them home again, laden with
corn, and presented with many gifts, forewarning them that there were
still five years of famine to come, and advising them to come down with
their father, their children, and their whole connections to Egypt. So
Jacob went down to Egypt, to the great joy of the Egyptians and of the
king himself, while he was tenderly welcomed by his son. That took
place in the hundred and thirtieth year of the life of Jacob, and one
thousand three hundred and sixty years271271
after the deluge. But from the time when Abraham settled in the land of
the Canaanites, to that when Jacob entered Egypt, there are to be
reckoned two hundred and fifteen years. After this, Jacob, in the
seventeenth year of his residence in Egypt, suffering severely from
illness, entreated Joseph to see his remains placed in the tomb. Then
Joseph presented his sons to be blessed;272272
and when this had been done, but so that he set the younger before the
elder as to the value of the blessing given, Jacob then blessed all his
sons in order. He died at the age of one hundred and forty-seven years.
His funeral was of a most imposing character, and Joseph laid his
remains in the tomb of his fathers. He continued to treat his brothers
with kindness, although, after the death of their father, they felt
alarmed from a consciousness of the wrong they had done. Joseph himself
died in his one hundred and tenth year.