When thy brother is waxed poor and hath sold away
of his possession: if any of his kin come to redeem it, he shall
buy out that which his brother sold. And though he have no man to
redeem it for him, yet if his hand can get sufficient to buy it
out again, then let him count how long it hath been sold, and
deliver the rest unto him to whom he sold it, and so he shall
return unto his possession again. But and if his hand can not get
sufficient to restore it to him again, then that which is sold
shall remain in the hand of him that hath bought it, until the
horn year: {jubilee} and in the horn year {of Jubilee} it shall
come out, and he shall return unto his possession again. If a man
sell a dwelling house in a walled city, he may buy it out again
any time within a whole year after it is sold: and that shall be
the space in which he may redeem it again. But and if it be not
bought out again within the space of a full year, then the house
in the walled city shall be stablished for ever unto him that
bought it and to his successors after him and shall not go out in
the trompet year. {of jubilee} But the houses in villages which
have no walls round about them, shall be counted like unto the
fields of the country, and may be bought out again at any season,
and shall go out free in the trompet year.
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