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1 Samuel 25:23-42

When Abigail saw David, she hurried and alighted from the donkey and fell
before David on her face, bowing to the ground.  She fell at his feet and
said, "Upon me alone, my lord, be the guilt; please let your servant speak
in your ears, and hear the words of your servant.  My lord, do not take
seriously this ill-natured fellow, Nabal; for as his name is, so is he;
Nabal is his name, and folly is with him; but I, your servant, did not see
the young men of my lord, whom you sent.

"Now then, my lord, as the LORD lives, and as you yourself live, since the
LORD has restrained you from bloodguilt and from taking vengeance with
your own hand, now let your enemies and those who seek to do evil to my
lord be like Nabal.  And now let this present that your servant has
brought to my lord be given to the young men who follow my lord.  Please
forgive the trespass of your servant; for the LORD will certainly make my
lord a sure house, because my lord is fighting the battles of the LORD;
and evil shall not be found in you so long as you live.  If anyone should
rise up to pursue you and to seek your life, the life of my lord shall be
bound in the bundle of the living under the care of the LORD your God; but
the lives of your enemies he shall sling out as from the hollow of a
sling.  When the LORD has done to my lord according to all the good that
he has spoken concerning you, and has appointed you prince over Israel, my
lord shall have no cause of grief, or pangs of conscience, for having shed
blood without cause or for having saved himself.  And when the LORD has
dealt well with my lord, then remember your servant."

David said to Abigail, "Blessed be the LORD, the God of Israel, who sent
you to meet me today!  Blessed be your good sense, and blessed be you, who
have kept me today from bloodguilt and from avenging myself by my own
hand!  For as surely as the LORD the God of Israel lives, who has
restrained me from hurting you, unless you had hurried and come to meet
me, truly by morning there would not have been left to Nabal so much as
one male."  Then David received from her hand what she had brought him; he
said to her, "Go up to your house in peace; see, I have heeded your voice,
and I have granted your petition."

Abigail came to Nabal; he was holding a feast in his house, like the feast
of a king.  Nabal's heart was merry within him, for he was very drunk; so
she told him nothing at all until the morning light.  In the morning, when
the wine had gone out of Nabal, his wife told him these things, and his
heart died within him; he became like a stone.  About ten days later the
LORD struck Nabal, and he died.

When David heard that Nabal was dead, he said, "Blessed be the LORD who
has judged the case of Nabal's insult to me, and has kept back his servant
from evil; the LORD has returned the evildoing of Nabal upon his own
head."  Then David sent and wooed Abigail, to make her his wife.  When
David's servants came to Abigail at Carmel, they said to her, "David has
sent us to you to take you to him as his wife."  She rose and bowed down,
with her face to the ground, and said, "Your servant is a slave to wash
the feet of the servants of my lord."  Abigail got up hurriedly and rode
away on a donkey; her five maids attended her. She went after the
messengers of David and became his wife.