The first part of our story concludes with Elisha's mourning. The second half of our story begins with the opposite action: the lifting and taking of Eliyahu's mantle.  The contrast seems to be an expression of the ambivalent nature of the situation. On one hand there is sorrow and mourning. At the same time, Elisha feels joy at the privilege of being Eliyahu's heir and successor as prophet in Israel. The apprentice prophets see Eliyahu's mantle, with all that it implies, in Elisha's hand, and they see what Elisha does with it, repeating the miracle of crossing the Jordan River as Eliyahu had previously done. Despite the tension that prevailed between Eliyahu and Elisha after the mantle was cast for the first time, and before it falls for the second time, the transfer of the mantle from master to disciple is what ultimately defines the nature of the bond between them.

Courtesy of the Virtual Beit Midrash, Yeshivat Har Etzion