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 before Zebulun and Issachar, but still more decidedly by the introduction of Gilead beyond Jordan in connection with Reuben, in Jdg 5:17, which can only signify Gad and eastern Manasseh. Hence the two names Machir and Gilead, the names of Manasseh's son and grandson, are poetically employed to denote the two halves of the tribe of Manasseh; Machir signifying the western Manassites, and Gilead the eastern. “From Zebulun marchers (משׁך, to approach in long processions, as in Jdg 4:6) with the staff of the conductor.” ספר, writer or numberer, was the technical name given to the musterer-general, whose duty it was to levy and muster the troops (2Ki 25:19; cf. 2Ch 26:11); here it denotes the military leader generally.

Verses 15-16
Jdg 5:15-16 שׂרי, “my princes,” does not furnish any appropriate meaning, as neither Deborah nor Barak was of the tribe of Issachar, and it is not stated anywhere that the Issacharites gathered round Deborah as their leaders. The reading שׂרי (stat. constr.), adopted by the old versions, must be taken as the correct one, and the introduction of the preposition בּ does not preclude this (compare בגּלבּע הרי,   2Sa 1:21, and Ewald, §289, b.). עם, which is used to denote an outward equality, as in 1Sa 17:42, and is substantially the same as the כּן which follows (“just as”), is construed without כּ in the first clause, as in Psa 48:6. בּעמק: into the valley of Jezreel, the plain of Kishon. בּרגליו שׁלּח, as in Job 18:8, to be sent off, i.e., incessantly impelled, through his feet; here it is applied to an irresistible force of enthusiasm for the battle. The nominative to שׁלּח is Issachar and Barak. 15b At the brooks of Reuben were great resolutions of heart. 16  Why remainest thou between the hurdles, To hear the piping of the flocks? At the brooks of Reuben were great projects of heart. 17  Gilead rests on the other side of the Jordan; And Dan ... why tarries he by ships? Asher sits on the shore of the sea, And by his bays he reposes. 18  Zebulun, a people that despises its soul even to death, And Naphtali upon the heights of the field. In this strophe Deborah first of all mentions the tribes which took no part in the conflict (Jdg 5:15-17), and then returns in Jdg 5:18 to the Zebulunites, who staked their life along with Naphtali for the deliverance of Israel from the yoke of the enemy. The enumeration of the tribes who remained at a distance from the conflict commences with Reuben (Jdg 5:15 and Jdg 5:16). In this tribe there did arise a lively sympathy with the national elevation. They held