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Miriam's
Well
THE
LEGENDS OF THE JEWS
IN 4 VOLUMES
By Louis Ginzberg
(Baltimore,
The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998)
VOLUME-3
-- MIRIAM'S WELL
Relieved
as they were of all the cares of subsistence through the
gift of manna, it was plainly the duty of the Israelites
to devote themselves exclusively to the study of the Torah.
When, therefore, they slackened in the performance of this
duty, punishment in the form of lack of water immediately
overtook them. This was the first time that they actually
experienced this want, for at Marah nothing more than alarm
that this need might come upon them, had caused them to
murmur and complain. In their distress they once more unreasonably
cast reproaches upon their leader, and disputed with him,
saying: "Wherefore is this, children, that thou hast
brought us up out of Egypt, to kill us, and our children,
and our cattle with thirst?" Moses replied: "As
often as you quarrel with me, you tempt God, but God performeth
wonders and excellent deeds for you, as often as you dispute
with me, that His name may sound in glory throughout the
world."

In
spite of the injury they had done him, Moses prayed to God
that He might aid them in their distress and also stand
by him. "O Lord of the world!" said he, "I
am surely doomed to die. Thou biddest me not to be offended
with them, but if I obey Thy words, I shall certainly be
killed by them." God, however, replied: "Try thou
to act like Me; as I return good for evil, so do thou return
to them good for evil, and forgive their trespass; go on
before the people, and We shall see who dares touch thee."
Hardly had Moses shown himself to the people, when all of
them rose reverently from their seats, whereupon God said
to Moses: "How often have I told thee not to be angry
with them, but to lead them, as a shepherd leads his flock;
it is for their sake that I have set thee on this height,
and only for their sake wilt thou find grace, goodwill,
and mercy in My sight."

Then
God bade him go with some elders to the rock on Horeb, and
fetch water out of it. The elders were to accompany him
there, that they might be convinced that he was not bringing
water from a well, but smiting it from a rock. To accomplish
this miracle, God bade him smite the rock with his rod,
as the people labored under the impression that this rod
could only bring destruction, for through its agency Moses
had brought the ten plagues upon the Egyptians in Egypt,
and at the Red Sea; now they were to see that it could work
good also. Upon God's bidding, Moses told the people to
choose from which rock they wished water to flow, and hardly
had Moses touched with his sapphire rod the rock which they
had chosen, when plenteous water flowed from it. The spot
where this occurred, God called Massah, and Meribah, because
Israel had there tried their God, saying, "If God is
Lord over all, as over us; if He satisfies our needs, and
will further show us that He knows our thoughts, then will
we serve Him, but not otherwise."

The
water that flowed for them on this spot served not only
as a relief for their present need, but on this occasion
there was revealed to them a well of water, which did not
abandon them in all their forty years' wandering, but accompanied
them on all their marches. God wrought this great miracle
for the merits of the prophetess
Miriam, wherefore also it was called "Miriam's
Well." But his well dates back to the
beginning of the world, for God created it on the second
day of the creation, and at one time it was in the possession
of Abraham. It was this same well that Abraham demanded
back from Abimelech, king of the Philistines, after the
king's servants had violently taken it away. But when Abimelech
pretended not to know anything about it, saying, "I
wot not who hath done this thing," Abraham said: "Thou
and I will send sheep to the well, and he shall be declared
the rightful owner of the well, for whose sheep the water
will spout forth to water them. And," continued Abraham,
"from that same well shall the seventh generation after
me, the wanderers in the desert, draw their supply."

This
well was in the shape of a sieve-like rock, out of which
water gushes forth as from a spout. It followed them on
all their wanderings, up hill and down dale, and wherever
they halted, it halted, too, and it settled opposite the
Tabernacle. Thereupon the leaders of the twelve tribes would
appear, each with his staff and chant these words to the
well, "Spring up, O well, sing ye unto it; nobles of
the people digged it by the direction of the lawgiver with
their staves." Then the water would gush forth from
the depths of the well, and shoot up high as pillars, then
discharge itself into great streams that were navigable,
and on these rivers the Jews sailed to the ocean, and hauled
all the treasures of the world therefrom.

The
different parts of the camp were separated by these rivers,
so that women, visiting each other, were obliged to make
use of ships. Then the water discharged itself beyond the
encampment, where it surrounded a great plain, in which
grew every conceivable kind of plant and tree; and these
trees, owing to the miraculous water, daily bore fresh fruits.
This well brought fragrant herbs with it, so that the women
had no need of perfumes on the march, for the herbs they
gathered served this purpose. This well furthermore threw
down soft, fragrant kinds of grass that served as pleasant
couches for the poor, who had no pillows or bedclothes.
Upon the entrance to the Holy Land this well disappeared
and was hidden in a certain spot of the Sea of Tiberias.
Standing upon Carmel, and looking over the sea, one can
notice there a sieve-like rock, and that is the well
of Miriam. Once upon a time it happened
that a leper bathed at this place of the Sea of Tiberias,
and hardly had he come in contact with the waters of Miriam's
well when he was instantly healed.

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