THE STORY OF AHIKAR
WE HAVE in The Story of
Ahikar one of the most ancient sources of human thought and wisdom. Its
influence can be traced through the legends of many people, including the
Koran, and the Old and New Testaments.
A mosaic found in Treves,
Germany, pictured among the wise men of the world the character of Ahikar. Here
is his colorful tale.
The date of this story has
been a subject of lively discussion. Scholars finally put it down about the
First Century when they were proved in error by the original story turning up
in an Aramaic papyrus of 500 B. C. among the ruins of Elephantine.
The story is obviously
fiction and not history. In fact the reader can make its acquaintance in the
supplementary pages of The Arabian Nights. It is brilliantly written,
and the narrative which is full of action, intrigue, and narrow escape holds
the attention to the last. The liberty of imagination is the most precious
possession of the writer.
The writing divides itself
into four phases: (1) The Narrative; (2) The Teaching (a remarkable series of
Proverbs); (3) The Journey to Egypt; (4) The Similitudes or Parables (with
which Ahikar completes the education of his erring nephew).
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