Let her, then, be bored, as it would, indeed, follow that she should be, viz.: If a son, whose father is not permitted to sell him, is bored, how much more so a daughter, whose father is permitted to sell her! It is, therefore, written "And if a man sells his daughter"—He sells her, but she does not sell herself. If Scripture has excluded her from being sold (a second time), the more formidable (restriction upon her father), how much more so is she excluded from boring, the less formidable (restriction).
Let her, then, be bored, as it would, indeed, follow that
Curated by The Jewish Mythology Team
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