Chapter XVI.
When this became known to
Judith (a widow woman of great wealth, and remarkable for beauty, but
still more distinguished for her virtue than her beauty), who was then
in the camp, she thought that, in the distressed circumstances of her
people, some bold effort ought to be made by her, even though it should
lead to her own destruction. She therefore decks her head and
beautifies her countenance, and then, attended by a single maidservant,
she enters the camp of the enemy. She was immediately conducted to
Holofernes, and tells him that the affairs of her countrymen were
desperate, so that she had taken precautions for her life by flight.
Then she begs of the general the right of a free egress from the camp
during night, for the purpose of saying her prayers. That order was
accordingly given to the sentinels and keepers of the gates. But when
by the practice of three days she had established for herself the habit
of going out and returning, and had also in this way inspired belief in
her into the barbarians, the desire took possession of Holofernes of
abusing the person of his captive; for, being of surpassing beauty, she
had easily impressed the Persian. Accordingly, she was conducted to the
tent of the general by Baguas, the eunuch; and, commencing a banquet,
the barbarian stupefied himself with a great deal of wine. Then, when
the servants withdrew, before he offered violence to the woman, he fell
asleep. Judith, seizing the opportunity, cut off the head of the enemy
and carried it away with her. Being regarded as simply going out of the
camp according to her usual custom, she returned to her own people in
safety. On the following day the Hebrews held forth for show the head
of Holofernes from the heights; and, making a sally, marched upon the
camp of the enemy. And then the barbarians assemble in crowds at the
tent of their general, waiting for the signal of battle. When his
mutilated body was discovered, they turned to flight under the
influence of a disgraceful panic, and fled before the enemy. The Jews,
for their part, pursued the fugitives, and after slaying many
thousands, took possession of the camp and the booty within it. Judith
was extolled with the loftiest praises, and is said to have lived one
hundred and five years. If these things took place, as we believe,
under king Ochus, in the twelfth year of his reign, then from the date
of the restoration of Jerusalem up to that war there elapsed two and
twenty years. Now Ochus reigned in all twenty-three years. And he was
beyond all others cruel, and more than of a barbarous disposition.
Baguas, the eunuch, took him off by poison on an occasion of his
suffering from illness. After him, Arses his son held the government
for three years, and Darius for four.