The Wars of the Jews, 1.261

Flavius Josephus  translated by William Whiston

« J. BJ 1.260 | J. BJ 1.261 | J. BJ 1.262 | About This Work »

2616. In the meantime, the cup-bearer was sent [back], and laid a plot how to seize upon Herod, by deluding him, and getting him out of the city, as he was commanded to do. But Herod suspected the barbarians from the beginning; and having then received intelligence that a messenger, who was to bring him the letters that informed him of the treachery intended, had fallen among the enemy, he would not go out of the city; though Pacorus said very positively that he ought to go out, and meet the messengers that brought the letters, for that the enemy had not taken them, and that the contents of them were not accounts of any plots upon them, but of what Phasaelus had done;

« J. BJ 1.260 | J. BJ 1.261 | J. BJ 1.262 | About This Work »

Table of contents