411 
Mr. A. V. Newton —F ive or six might not be able to run away, but 
a thousand would. 
Mr. Dibdin. — But a thousand would not be all the men who were there 
at the time— there would be many more than a thousand. Then there is the 
story of the foxes* and the story of the gates of Gaza. Almost all Samson’s 
doings are represented as extraordinary and miraculous. He was raised up 
for a special purpose, and was endowed with special powers to enable him to 
accomplish it. 
The Meeting, the last of the session, then terminated. 
* Boothroyd, Kitto, and other authorities, state that the Jackal is the 
animal whose name has been thus rendered in the translation. — Ed. 
