She images her sorrows under a variety of metaphors (cf. ch. iii. HS); ascribing all her woes to Yahweh's righteous wrath, provoked by her sins, and crying for vengeance on the malicious rivals who had rejoiced at her overthrow.
The text has suffered much. Verse 56 read: ':w: (v. 18), “into captivity, ” nos (v. 7), “ adversaries.” For verse 7, see Budde, V. 14: wpwi, read WPJ, “ was bound.” Verse 19c read: wp: 'J mm R51:vm 3't5'H$ Sax “ For they sought food to restore life, and found it not: ” cf. Septuagint; and verses 11, Verse 20: the incongruous 'n'~r: rv: ':°, “For I grievously 16.
re-
belled, ” should be 'nn-a 1°r:>:u, “My inwards burn”; Hos. xi. 8. Verses 21 f.: “All my foes heard, rejoiced That IT" (cf. Psalm ix. 13), “Thou didst. Bring Thou” ('m;r=:1C|), “ the Day Thou hast proclaimed; Let them become like me! Let the time " (mu see Septuagint) “ of their calamity come! " Chapter ii.-“Ah how in wrath the Lord I Beclouds Bath-Sion!” The poet laments Yahweh's anger as the true cause which destroyed city and kingdom, suspended feast and Sabbath, rejected altar and sanctuary. He mentions the uproar of the victors in the Temple; the dismantling of the walls; the exile of king and princes (verses 1-9). He recalls the mourning in the doomed city; the children dying of hunger in the streets; the prophets deluding the people with vain hopes. Passers-by jeered at the fallen city; and all her enemies triumphed over her (verses ro-17). Sion is urged to cry to the Lord in protest against His pitiless work (verses I8-22).
Here too emendation is necessary. Verse 4a: isn msn, “ He fixed His arrow, " sc. on the string (Septuagint, éarepéwaeu); cf. Psalm xi. 2. Add at the end IDN (nn) n5:, “He spent His angerz” see iv. II; Ezek. v11. 8, xx. 8, 21. Verse 6: uzam -vu Vasa, “And He broke down the wall of His dwelling place” (Septuagint 16 mdyvwna ab-roi; cf. Psalm lxxxiv. 7f., where Is. v. 5; Psalms lxxx. 13, lxxxix. 41.
2, 17. But Septuagint Kal 6te1ré-ra<1ev(iv. 4) or even f"D'T. Verse 9, perhaps:
gates in the ground, -He shattered her
wars follows, as here).
Perhaps D'IFl'1, verses
www (i. 13, 17)=o1s~1
“He sunk (van) her
bars; He made her king and her 'princes wander (BN, Jer. xxiii. I)1AmOHg the nations without orah " (cf. Ezek. vii. 26 f.). Verse 18: “Cry much” (NIU: or bitterly, 12, Zeph. i. 14) “ unto the Lord, O Virgin Daughter of Zion! ” Verse IQ is metrically redundant, and the last clauses do not agree with what follows. “ For the life of thy children ” was altered from “ for what He hath done to thee ” (15 551W '71'); and then the rest was added. The uniform gloom of this, the most dirge-like of all the pieces, is unrelieved by a single ray of hope, even the hope of vengeance; cf. chapters i. iii. iv. adjin.
Chapter iii.-Here the nation is personified as a man (cf. Hos. xi. 1), who laments his own calamities. In view of i. 12-22, ii. 2o-22, this is hardly a serious deviation from the strict form of elegy (Klagelied). Budde makes much of “the close external connexion with ch. ii.” The truth is that the break is as great as between any two of these poems. Chapter ii. ends with a mother's lament over her slaughtered children; chapter iii. makes an entirely new beginning, with its abruptly independent “ I am the Man! ” The suppression of the Divine Name is intentional. Israel durst not breathe it, until compelled by the climax, verse 18: cf. Am. vi. ro. Contrast its frequency afterwards, when ground of hope is found in the Divine pity and purpose (verses 22-40), and when the contrite nation turns toits God in prayer (verses 5 5-66). The spiritual aspect of things is now the main topic. The poet deals less with incident, and more with the moral significance of the nation's sufferings. It is the religious culmination of the book. His poem is rather lyrical than narrative, which may account for some obscurities in the connexion of thought; but his alphabetic scheme proves that he designed twenty-two stanzas, not sixty-six detached couplets. There is something arresting in that bold “ I am the Man ”; and the lyrical intensity, the religious depth and beauty of the whole, may well blind us to occasional ruggedness of metre and language, abrupt transitions from figure to figure and other alleged blemishes, some of which may not have seemed such to the poet's contemporaries (e.g. the repetition of the acrostic word, far more frequent. in Psalm cxix.); and some disappear on revision of the text.
Verse 5, perhaps: "He swallowed me up ” (Jer. li. 34) “and begirt my head ” (Septuagint) “ with gloom " (n'>sx Is. lviii. 10, cf. verse 6, yet cf. also HN511, Neh. ix. 32). Verse I4: “all m people, ” rather all peoples (Heb. MSS. and Syr.). Verse 1617, rd!
- w"::an, “He made me bore” (Le. grovel) “ in the ashesz"
cf. ]er. vi. 26; Ezek. xxvii. 30. Verse 17a should be: mm
- was n'>1y'> “ And He cast off my soul for ever:” see verse
31; Psalm lxxxviii. 15. Verse 26: “ It is good to wait " (!?'nr|5) “ in silence ”(Cl'21'1 Is. xlvii. 5); or “ It is good that he 'wait and be silent” (nop Sun* 2; cf. verse 27). Verse 31, add 12/sz, “his soul.” The verse is a reply to I7l1. Verses 34-36 render: “ To crush under His feet . . . Adonai purposed not " (Gen. xx. IO; Psalm lxvi. 18). Verse 39, 'n (Gen. v. 5; or n'n Neh. ix. 29) is the necessary second verb: “ Why doth a mortal complain?" (or “ What . . . lament? ). “ Doth a man live by his sins? ”: Man “lives by " righteousness (Ezek. xxxiii. 19). For the wording, cf. Psalm lxxxix. 49. Verse 43a: “Thou didst encompass with' (rg. mmap; Hos. xii. 1) 'f anger and pursue us." Syntax as verse 66a. Verse 49, rd. ngann (cf. ii. 18 also). Verse 51: “ Mine eye did hurt to herself " (mr/s::'7), “By weeping over my people:" Verse 48: ch. i. 16; Jer. xxxi. 15. Verse 52: “They quelled my life in the pit " (Sheol; Psalms xxx. 4, lxxxviii. 4, 7; verse 55); “They brought me down to Abaddon” (max ~m-wn; cf. Psalm lxxxviii. 12). Verse 58: “ O plead, Lord, the cause of my soul! O redeem my life! "; cf. Psalm cxix. 154. If the prayer for vengeance begins here, Budde's “ deep division in the middle of an acrostic letter-group ” vanishes. Verse 59, rd. WSJ, “ my perverting; " inf. pi. c. suff. obj.; cf. verse 36. Verse 6111 repeated by mistake from 6017. Perhaps: “ Wherewith they dogged my steps: ” 'nary nsmnw; Psalm. lxxxix. 51 f. Verse 63, rd. ramp, as usual, and annum, as in verse 14 and Job xxx. 9. Verse 65: “ Thou wilt ive them madness ” (cf. Arab. gumin; magmin, m-ad) “ of heart; Thou wilt curse, and consume them! " (r::'7:n mn), Chapter iv. “ Ah, how doth gold grow dim, - The finest ore change hue! ”
The poet shows how famine and the sword desolated Zion (verses 1-Io). All was Yahweh's work; a wonder to the heathen world, but accounted for by the crimes of prophets and priests (Jer. xxiii. 11, 14, xxvi. 8, 20 ff., xxix. 21-23), who, like Cain, became homeless Wanderers and outcasts (verses 11-16). Vainly did the besieged watch for succours from Egypt (Jer. xxxvii. 5 ff.); and even the last forlorn hope, the flight of “ Yahweh's Anointed, ” King Zedekiah, was doomed to fail (verses I7-20; ]er. xxxix. 4 ff). Edom rejoiced in her ruin (Ezek. xxv. 12; xxxv. 15; Obad.; Psalm cxxxvii. 7); but Zion's sin is now atoned for (cf. Is. xl. 2), and she may look forward to the judgment of her foe (verses zr-22).
Verse 6d, perhaps: “ And their ruin tarried not ” (5:17 N51 awe); cf. Pro. xxiv. 22. Verse 7d: “Their body" (rd. nrvn) “ was a sapphire: ” see Ct. v. 14; Dn. x. 6. Verse 9: “Happier were the slain of the sword Than the slain of famine! For they " (Septuagint om.), “they passed away " (u:5n Septuagint; Psalm xxxix. 14) “with a 'stab ” (ju. ix. 54; Is. xiii. 15; Jer. li. 4), “ Suddenly, in the field " ('w: mms; Jer. xiv. 18). Verse 13, add NW after fl'N'JJ; cf. Ju. xiv. 4; Jer. xxii. 16. Verse I7c.: “ While we watched ” (Septuagint) “ continually: ” wnxunwssn. Verse 18: “Our steps were curbed ” (ras MSS.; see Pro. iv. 12; ]ob xviii. 7) “from walking In our open places” (before the city gates: Neh. viii. 1, 3); “ The completion of our days drew nigh ” (u'r:' nm'>r: rn* awp; cf. Lev. viii. 33; job xx. 22), “For our end was come ” (Ezek. vii. 2, 6, &c.). Verse 21, Septuagint om. Uz (dittogr.?); “ Settler in the Land! ” (i.e. of Judah; cf. Ezek. xxxv. 10, xxxvi. 5. Perhaps 'nn 'hL'/'|1'" Seizer of the Land ”). Chapter v.-A sorrowful supplication, in which the speakers deplore, not the fall of Jerusalem, but their own state of galling dependence and hopeless poverty. They are still suffering for the sins of their fathers, who perished in the catastrophe (verse 7). They are at the mercy of “ servants ” (verse 8; cf. 2 Kings xxv. 24; Neh. v. 15: “ Yea, even their ' boys ' lorded it over the people ”), under a tyranny of pashas of the worst type (verses II f.). The soil is owned by aliens; and the Jews have to buy their water and firewood (verses 2, 4; cf. Neh. ix. 36 f.). While busy harvesting, they are exposed to the raids of the Bedouins (verse 9). Iackals prowl among the ruins of Zion (verse 18; cf. Neh. iv. 3). And this condition of things has already lasted a very long time (verse zo). Verses 5 f. transpose and read: “To adversaries” (o'~|s5) “ we submitted, Saying” (amniv), “ 'We shall be satisfied with bread ' ” (cf. ]er. xlii. I4)3 “ The yoke of our neck they made heavy” .(Neh. v. 15: DWI 59 WISH); “We toil, and no rest is allowed us." Verse 13: “ Nobles endured to grind, And princes staggered under logs” (ewan for n"1m:, which belongs to verse
14;:aww for D“1yJ. Eccl. x. 7; Is. xxxiv. 12; Neh. iv. 14;