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So for two years Absalom was in Jerusalem without sight of the king; (2 Samuel 14, 28)
Then, in the fortieth year of the reign,✻ Absalom said to David, Grant me leave to go to Hebron and pay a vow I made to the Lord. (2 Samuel 15, 7)
Berzellai of Galaad was an old man, eighty years old; he it was that brought the king provisions, while he lay at the Encampment, for he was a man of great riches. (2 Samuel 19, 32)
But Berzellai answered, What, a man of my years go up to Jerusalem with the king’s grace? (2 Samuel 19, 34)
I am eighty years old now; are my senses still keen, to tell sweet from bitter? Can thy servant take pleasure in food and drink? Can my ear catch the tone of songster and songstress? Nay, I would not be a burden to my lord the king; (2 Samuel 19, 35)
There was a famine in David’s reign that lasted three years continuously; and when David consulted the Lord’s oracle he was told, It is because of Saul; he slew the Gabaonites, and the guilt of blood still rests upon his line. (2 Samuel 21, 1)
So Gad went to David with the message: Wilt thou have seven years of famine in thy country, or three months of flight from the pursuit of thy enemies, or three days in which thy country is smitten with plague? Think well, and tell me what answer I shall make to him whose word I bear thee. (2 Samuel 24, 13)
he had ruled Israel forty years, seven at Hebron and thirty-three at Jerusalem. (1 Kings 2, 11)
Then, after three years, it chanced that some of his servants ran away, and took refuge with Achis son of Maacha, king of Geth. And when Semei was told that his servants were in Geth, (1 Kings 2, 39)
Solomon appointed twelve commissioners in the various parts of Israel to secure the maintenance of the king and his court, each of them providing the revenues needed for one month in the year. (1 Kings 4, 7)
while Solomon provided Hiram with forty thousand quarters of wheat to feed his household, and forty quarters of pure oil;✻ such was the payment he made each year. (1 Kings 5, 11)
It was in the four hundred and eightieth year after the Israelites left Egypt, in the second month (Zio, as it is called) of the fourth year of Solomon’s reign in Israel, that the building of the Lord’s house began.✻ (1 Kings 6, 1)
