7, 8. Joseph saw his brethren, and he knew them, . . . but
they knew not him--This is not strange. They were full-grown
men--he was but a lad at parting. They were in their usual garb--he was
in his official robes. They never dreamt of him as governor of Egypt,
while he had been expecting them. They had but one face; he had ten
persons to judge by.
made himself strange unto them, and spake roughly--It would be
an injustice to Joseph's character to suppose that this stern manner
was prompted by any vindictive feelings--he never indulged any
resentment against others who had injured him. But he spoke in the
authoritative tone of the governor in order to elicit some
much-longed-for information respecting the state of his father's
family, as well as to bring his brethren, by their own humiliation and
distress, to a sense of the evils they had done to him.
JFB.
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