Aminadab, general and marshall of King David, went with a vast army of men by order of King David to a city of the Philistines.[1]
Aminadab hearing that the city would not resist long, and would soon be his, sent to King David, asking if it were his pleasure to come to the field of battle with many men, for he feared the issue of the battle.
King David started out hurriedly and went to the battlefield, and asked his marshall Aminadab: why have you made me come here?
Aminadab answered: Sire, since the city [[65]]cannot resist longer, I wished that the glory of the victory should come to your person rather than that I should have it.
He stormed the city, and conquered it, and the glory and honour were David’s.[2]
[1] The city was Rabba and belonged to the Ammonites. [↑]
[2] See Kings II, chap xii. The compilator has mixed up the names, confounding Aminadab with Joab. The errors or variations occuring in the Biblical themes treated in the Novellino have given rise to the conjecture that the stories were taken from a book of Jewish legends, the Midras Rabbolh written not later than the VIIIth century. [↑]