Stars (as σώματα ἐπουράνια) drop from heaven in the
form of beasts (Enoch lxxxvi. 1 f.) and men (_ibid._ lxxxviii.)
throughout Jewish apocalyptic (_cf. ibid_, xviii. 16, xxi. 1, 6, xl.
21, 24); even earlier (Judges 5:20; Job 38:7) they had been
personified. On falling stars, associated as evil porte... [ Continue Reading ]
Revelation 9:1-12 : _The fifth trumpet_.... [ Continue Reading ]
For the following description of this destructive horde of weird
locusts, see Joel 2. with Driver's notes and excursus (_C. B._) to
which add the famous description of a locust-plague in Newman's
_Callista_ (ch. 15). Naturally the sketch is far more idealised than
that given by Joel; it often recall... [ Continue Reading ]
The dense smoke resolves itself into a swarm of infernal demons in the
form of locusts but rendered more formidable by their additional power
of stinging like scorpions. Instead of preying on their natural food
(Exodus 10:15), already plagued (Revelation 8:7) they are let loose
upon men unmarked by... [ Continue Reading ]
παίσῃ here, like ἐπάταξεν James 4:7, represents LXX,
tr. of נכה in sense of reptile's bite; the scorpion with its
long-fanged tail stings the prey which it has already gripped with its
claws (_cf._ Sen. _Hercul._ 1218). Scorpions were a natural symbol for
vicious and dangerous opponents (_cf._ Ezeki... [ Continue Reading ]
The withholding of death, instead of being an alleviation, is really a
refinement of torture; so infernal is the pain, that the sufferers
crave, but crave in vain, for death (Sibyll. iii. 208: καὶ
καλέσουσι καλόν τὸ θανεῖν καὶ
φεύξετʼ ἀπʼ αὐτῶν). It is singular that suicide is
never contemplated, al... [ Continue Reading ]
Arabian poets compare locusts in head to the horse, in breast to the
lion, in feet to the camel, in body to the snake, in antennæ to a
girl's long, waving hair. The resemblance of the head in locusts and
in horses has been often noticed (_Cavalleta, Italian_), and their
hard scales resemble plates o... [ Continue Reading ]
A parenthetical remark of the author. ἔρχεται with plur. subj.
following is not an irregularity due to Greek neut. as equiv. to Heb.
fern. (Viteau, ii. 98 100), but an instance of the so-called
“Pindaric” anacoluthon (_cf._ Moult, i. 58).... [ Continue Reading ]
The golden altar of incense stands before God, as in the original
tabernacle and temple; the specially solemn invocation of the angel
shows that the Parthian-like invasion constitutes the climax of this
series of disasters. φωνήν as Revelation 1:10; Revelation 10:4,
etc., the “bath qol” (Gfrörer, i.... [ Continue Reading ]
_The sixth trumpet blast_.... [ Continue Reading ]
The sixth angel takes part in the action. The Euphrates had been the
ideal Eastern boundary of Israel's territory: it now formed the
frontier between Rome and her dreaded neighbour, the Parthian Empire
(Philo, _leg. ad_ _C_ [913] § ii.; Verg. _Georg_. i. 509; Tac.
_Hist._ iv. 51).
[913] _._ Codex E... [ Continue Reading ]
This quartette of angels (= complete ruin, Zechariah 1:18 f.) has been
kept in readiness, or reserved for this occasion, though they are not
to be connected (as by Spitta) with the four moments of time _hour,
day, month_, and _year_. Like the use of δεῖ, μέλλει, and
ἐδόθη, this touch of predestined... [ Continue Reading ]
The second woe is an irruption of fiendish cavalry.... [ Continue Reading ]
Here only the writer refers to his “vision”. ἔχοντας
(horse and rider regarded as one figure: in the Persian heavy cavalry
horses as well as men were clad in bright plate) κ. τ. λ., “they
wore coats of mail, the colour of fire and jacinth and brimstone,”
_i.e._, gleaming red, dark blue, and yellow,... [ Continue Reading ]
Heads attached to their serpentine tails are an allusion not only to
the well-known tactics of the Parthians (_cf. Parad. Regained_, iii.
323 f.) but to a trait of ancient Greek mythology; on the altar of
Zeus at Pergamos (_cf._ note on Revelation 2:12) the giants who war
against the gods are equipp... [ Continue Reading ]
The impenitence of the surviving two-thirds of men, who persist in
worshipping daemons and idols (Weinel, 3, 4). Hellenic superstition
(Plut. _de defectu orac._ 14) attributed to malignant daemons these
very plagues of pestilence, war, and famine. Plutarch is always
protesting against the excessive... [ Continue Reading ]