The biblical histories do not linger over the rift that separated the families of Saul and David. For them, the superiority and durability of the Davidic monarchy over the false start that was Saul are self-evident.
Yet life on the ground was more complex, a fact that is recognized in the brief, stone-throwing cameo of Shimei. What this Saulide partisan lacked in self-preservation skills he made up for in valor or, perhaps, daring. He nearly pays with his head the satisfaction of cursing David the Saul-killer—for surely David was seen as such by Shimei’s people—as the king and his entourage flee Absalom’s conspiracy.
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