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[293]
This is the account Cheremon gives us. Now I take it for granted
that what I have said already hath plainly proved the falsity of both these
narrations; for had there been any real truth at the bottom, it was impossible
they should so greatly disagree about the particulars. But for those that
invent lies, what they write will easily give us very different accounts,
while they forge what they please out of their own heads. Now Manetho says
that the king's desire of seeing the gods was the origin of the ejection
of the polluted people; but Cheremon feigns that it was a dream of his
own, sent upon him by Isis, that was the occasion of it. Manetho says that
the person who foreshowed this purgation of Egypt to the king was Amenophis;
but this man says it was Phritiphantes. As to the numbers of the multitude
that were expelled, they agree exceedingly well 1
the former reckoning them eighty thousand, and the latter about two hundred
and fifty thousand! Now, for Manetho, he describes those polluted persons
as sent first to work in the quarries, and says that the city Avaris was
given them for their habitation. As also he relates that it was not till
after they had made war with the rest of the Egyptians, that they invited
the people of Jerusalem to come to their assistance; while Cheremon says
only that they were gone out of Egypt, and lighted upon three hundred and
eighty thousand men about Pelusium, who had been left there by Amenophis,
and so they invaded Egypt with them again; that thereupon Amenophis fled
into Ethiopia. But then this Cheremon commits a most ridiculous blunder
in not informing us who this army of so many ten thousands were, or whence
they came; whether they were native Egyptians, or whether they came from
a foreign country. Nor indeed has this man, who forged a dream from Isis
about the leprous people, assigned the reason why the king would not bring
them into Egypt. Moreover, Cheremon sets down Joseph as driven away at
the same time with Moses, who yet died four generations 2
before Moses, which four generations make almost one hundred and seventy
years. Besides all this, Ramesses, the son of Amenophis, by Manetho's account,
was a young man, and assisted his father in his war, and left the country
at the same time with him, and fled into Ethiopia. But Cheremon makes him
to have been born in a certain cave, after his father was dead, and that
he then overcame the Jews in battle, and drove them into Syria, being in
number about two hundred thousand. O the levity of the man! for he had
neither told us who these three hundred and eighty thousand were, nor how
the four hundred and thirty thousand perished; whether they fell in war,
or went over to Ramesses. And, what is the strangest of all, it is not
possible to learn out of him who they were whom he calls Jews, or to which
of these two parties he applies that denomination, whether to the two hundred
and fifty thousand leprous people, or to the three hundred and eighty thousand
that were about Pelusium. But perhaps it will be looked upon as a silly
thing in me to make any larger confutation of such writers as sufficiently
confute themselves; for had they been only confuted by other men, it had
been more tolerable.
1 By way of irony, I suppose.
2 Here we see that Josephus esteemed a generation between Joseph and Moses to be about forty-two or forty-three years; which, if taken between the earlier children, well agrees with the duration of human life in those ages. See Antheat. Rec. Part II. pages 966, 1019, 1020.
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