_To. Hebrew is more expressive. (Calmet) --- "Who will give my head
waters, (Haydock) or change it into water, and my eyes into a
fountain." (Calmet) --- Protestants, "Oh that my head were waters."
(Haydock) --- The miseries of my people are so great, (Calmet) a few
tears would not suffice to bewail... [ Continue Reading ]
_Men. Why cannot I retire (Menochius) from this scene of misery, or
afford some consolation to the captives? Septuagint, "Who will give me
the last station in the desert?" (Haydock)_... [ Continue Reading ]
_Lies. They are bent on deceit (Calmet) and murder, (Haydock) ver. 8.,
and Psalm lxiii. 4., and cxix. 2._... [ Continue Reading ]
_Deceitfully. A man must guard against his relations and domestics,
Micheas vii. 5., and Matthew viii. 35. (Calmet)_... [ Continue Reading ]
_Iniquity. It is become natural to them. (St. Jerome) --- They cannot
lay the blame on the violence of passion. They sin on purpose.
(Calmet) --- Septuagint, "they have not left off, (6.) in order to be
converted. Usury upon usury; fraud upon fraud; they," &c. (Haydock)_... [ Continue Reading ]
_Try them in the crucible of war, chap. vi. 27. (Calmet)_... [ Continue Reading ]
_Owner. Hebrew mikne, "cattle," or (Haydock) "substance." (St. Jerome)
--- Departed. Beasts and birds will not continue long after men cease
to cultivate the country. (Theodoret) (Chap. iv. 25., and xii. 4., and
Sophonias i. 3.)_... [ Continue Reading ]
_Sand. The stones were burnt to dust, 2 Esdras iv. 2. (Calmet)_... [ Continue Reading ]
_Gall. Hebrew rosh, "poison," &c., Deuteronomy xxix. 18. (Haydock)_... [ Continue Reading ]
_Consumed. Chap. xliv. 27. No country shall afford them protection.
(Calmet) --- The richer sort were made captives, and most of the
people destroyed, but not all, chap. iv. 25. (Worthington)_... [ Continue Reading ]
_Wise, in composing or singing the Nænia, or mournful songs,
recording the praises of the deceased. (Calmet) --- "This custom still
subsists in Judea: women go about with dishevelled hair and naked
breasts, with mournful tunes, exciting all to tears." (St. Jerome) ---
Music was also used, Matthew ix... [ Continue Reading ]
_For. This was the song. (Calmet) --- Streets. Death spares none. The
least suspecting fall. (Haydock) --- It enters by the windows, if the
doors be shut, Joel ii. 8._... [ Continue Reading ]
CHAPTER IX.
_ Speak. Our editions of the Septuagint omit this word, though St.
Jerome found it in his copies, (Calmet) and in Theodotion, expressed
by "death;" while others rendered it, "speak," as the same letters
dbr, may have both meanings, according as people may please to
pronounce them. (St.... [ Continue Reading ]
_Me. Virtue will save, when riches, &c., will prove useless.
(Menochius) --- Phocilides, a pagan, said, (Calmet) "Boast not of
wisdom, strength, or riches great. One God is wise, and potent too,
and rich." (Haydock)_... [ Continue Reading ]
_Egypt. the uncircumcised shall be punished as well as Juda, if they
transgress. Only the Jewish nation properly observed the right of
circumcision generally, or at first. Others imitated them, but with
various ceremonies. (Calmet, Diss.) (Ezechiel xxxi. 18., and Judith
xiv. 6.) --- Hyrcan obliged t... [ Continue Reading ]