﻿ADDITIONS TO ESTHER.
Chapter 11.
In the fourth year, when Ptolemy and Cleopatra reigned, Dositheus, that said himself to be a priest and of the kin of Levi, and Ptolemy, his son, brought this epistle of lots or Purim into Jerusalem, which epistle they said, that Lysimachus, the son of Ptolemy, translated. This is a rubric; for this beginning was in the common translation, which beginning is not told in Hebrew, neither at any of the translators, or This forsooth was the beginning in the common translation, that neither in Hebrew, nor with any of the interpreters is told. 
In the second year, when Artaxerxes the most reigned/the mightiest king reigned, Mordecai, the son of Jair, the son of Shimei, the son of Kish, of the lineage of Benjamin, saw a dream in the first day of the month Nisan, that is, June; 
and Mordecai was a man a Jew, that dwelled in the city of Susa, a great man, and among the chief men or the first men of the king’s hall. 
And he was of that number of prisoners or captives, which Nebu-chadnezzar, the king of Babylon, had translated or brought over from Jerusalem with Jeconiah, king of Judah. And this was his dream. 
He saw that voices, and noises, and thunders, and earth-movings or earthquakes, and great troubling or disturbing appeared upon the earth. 
And lo! two great dragons, and they were made ready against them-selves into battle; 
at whose cry all nations were stirred together, to fight against the folk of just or rightwise men. 
And that was a day of darknesses, and of peril, of tribulation, and of anguish, and great dread or great fear was then upon the earth. 
And the folk of just or rightwise men, dreading their evils, was disturbed, and made ready to death. 
And they cried to God; and when they cried, a little well increased or waxed into a full great flood, and it turned again into full many waters. 
And then the light and the sun rose up; and meek men were enhanced, and devoured noble men. 
And when Mordecai in his sleep had seen this thing, and had risen from his bed, he thought, what God would do, and he had fast set or fixed in his soul this vision, and coveted to know, what the dream signified. 
