Bible Commentary

Isaiah 5:28

The Pulpit Commentary on Isaiah 5:28

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

Whose arrows are sharp, and all their bows bent. The special weapon of the Assyrian soldiers is the bow. From the king in his chariot to the light-armed recruit just pressed into the service, all fight mainly with this weapon, more particularly in the earlier times.

Swords and spears are also known, but comparatively little used. Their horses' hoofs … like flint. Hard, strong, and solid, as was most necessary when shoeing was unknown. Their wheels like a whirlwind.

Sennacherib () is represented as boasting of the "multitude of his chariots;" and both the sculptures and the inscriptions of Assyria show that the chariot throe was numerous, and was regarded as more important than any other.

The king always went to battle in a chariot. For the comparison of the rush of chariot-wheels to a whirlwind, see below, ; and comp. ).

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