26. they called these days Purim
after the name of Pur—"Pur," in the Persian language,
signifies "lot"; and the feast of Purim, or lots, has a
reference to the time having been pitched upon by Haman through the
decision of the lot. In consequence of the signal national
deliverance which divine providence gave them from the infamous
machinations of Haman, Mordecai ordered the Jews to commemorate that
event by an anniversary festival, which was to last for two days, in
accordance with the two days' war of defense they had to maintain.
There was a slight difference in the time of this festival; for the
Jews in the provinces, having defended themselves against their
enemies on the thirteenth, devoted the fourteenth to festivity;
whereas their brethren in Shushan, having extended that work over two
days, did not observe their thanksgiving feast till the fifteenth.
But this was remedied by authority, which fixed the fourteenth and
fifteenth of Adar. It became a season of sunny memories to the
universal body of the Jews; and, by the letters of Mordecai,
dispersed through all parts of the Persian empire, it was established
as an annual feast, the celebration of which is kept up still. On
both days of the feast, the modern Jews read over the Megillah
or Book of Esther in their synagogues. The copy read must not be
printed, but written on vellum in the form of a roll; and the names
of the ten sons of Haman are written on it a peculiar manner, being
ranged, they say, like so many bodies on a gibbet. The reader must
pronounce all these names in one breath. Whenever Haman's name is
pronounced, they make a terrible noise in the synagogue. Some drum
with their feet on the floor, and the boys have mallets with which
they knock and make a noise. They prepare themselves for their
carnival by a previous fast, which should continue three days, in
imitation of Esther's; but they have mostly reduced it to one day
[JENNINGS, Jewish
Antiquities].