Isaiah 19:10

10 And its foundations have been smitten, All making wages [are] afflicted in soul.

Isaiah 19:10 Meaning and Commentary

Isaiah 19:10

And they shall be broken in the purposes thereof
Meaning either the persons that work in flax, or in making nets; who shall be disappointed in their views, expectations, and designs, in bringing them to a good market, since there will be no buyers. The word for "purposes" signifies foundations, as in ( Psalms 11:3 ) and may design dams and banks, that are made to keep in the water, which shall be broken down, and be of no service to answer the end; but Kimchi observes, that the word in the Talmudic language signifies "nets", as it does F14; and this seems to be most agreeable to the context; and then the words may be rendered, "and its nets shall be broken" F15; shall lie and rot for want of use:

all that make sluices [and] ponds for fish;
or, "all that make an enclosure of ponds of soul" F16; or for delight and pleasure; that is, not only such shall be broken in their purposes, ashamed and confounded, and be dispirited, mourn and lament, whose business and employment it is to catch fish, or make nets for that end, and get their livelihood thereby; but even such who enclose a confluence of water, and make fishponds in their fields and gardens for their pleasure, will be disappointed; for their waters there will be dried up, and the fish die, as well as in the common rivers. The Septuagint version renders it, "and all they that make zythum shall grieve"; "zythum" was a sort of malt liquor of the ancients; and the word for "sluices" is of affinity with a word that is often used for strong drink; and so the Syriac version here,

``and all they shall be humbled that make strong drink, for the drink of the soul;''

or for men to drink for pleasure.


FOOTNOTES:

F14 T. Bab. Sabbat, fol. 124. 2. Bava Kama, fol. 117. 1.
F15 "Et erunt retia ejus contrita", Pagninus, Montanus.
F16 (vpn ymga rkv yvwe lk) "omnes facientes clausuram stagnorum animae", Montanus.

Isaiah 19:10 In-Context

8 And lamented have the fishers, And mourned have all casting angle into a brook, And those spreading nets on the face of the waters have languished.
9 And ashamed have been makers of fine flax, And weavers of net-works.
10 And its foundations have been smitten, All making wages [are] afflicted in soul.
11 Only, fools [are] the princes of Zoan, The counsel of the wise ones of the counsellors of Pharaoh hath become brutish. How say ye unto Pharaoh, `A son of the wise am I, a son of kings of antiquity?'
12 Where [are] they now, thy wise ones? Yea, let them tell to thee, I pray thee, And they know what Jehovah of Hosts hath counselled against Egypt!
Young's Literal Translation is in the public domain.