Catholic Public Domain Version
"And Jonathan responded to Saul, “He petitioned me earnestly that he might go to Bethlehem, "
— 1 Samuel 20:28, Catholic Public Domain Version
“And Jonathan answered Saul, David earnestly asked leave of me to go to Beth–lehem:”
“And Jonathan answered Saul, David earnestly asked leave of me to go to Beth-lehem: ”
“Jonathan answered Saul, "David earnestly asked leave of me to go to Bethlehem.”
“Jonathan replied to Saul,“David urgently requested that he be allowed to go to Bethlehem.”
“And Jonathan answered Saul: He asked leave of me earnestly to go to Bethlehem.”
“And answering Saul, Jonathan said, He made a request to me that he might go to Beth-lehem,”
“And Jonathan answered Saul, David earnestly asked leave of me to go to Beth–lehem:”
And when the king had sat down on his chair, (according to custom) which was beside the wall, Jonathan rose up, and Abner sat beside Saul, and David’s place appeared empty.
And Saul did not say anything on that day. For he was thinking that perhaps something happened to him, so that he was not clean, or not purified.
And when the second day after the new moon had begun to dawn, David’s place again appeared empty. And Saul said to Jonathan, his son, “Why has the son of Jesse not arrived to eat, neither yesterday, nor today?”
And Jonathan responded to Saul, “He petitioned me earnestly that he might go to Bethlehem,
and he said: ‘Permit me. For there is a solemn sacrifice in the city. One of my brothers has summoned me. Now therefore, if I have found favor in your eyes, I will go quickly, and I will see my brothers.’ For this reason, he has not come to the table of the king.”
Then Saul, becoming angry against Jonathan, said to him: “You son of a woman wantonly seizing a man! Could I be ignorant that you love the son of Jesse, to your own shame, and to the shame of your disgraceful mother?
For all the days that the son of Jesse moves upon earth, neither you, nor your kingdom, will be secure. And so, send and bring him to me, here and now. For he is a son of death.”