Add parallel Print Page Options

Even jackals offer their breasts
    to nurse their young;
But the daughter of my people is as cruel
    as the ostrich[a] in the wilderness.(A)

The tongue of the infant cleaves
    to the roof of its mouth in thirst;
Children beg for bread,
    but no one gives them a piece.

Those who feasted on delicacies
    are abandoned in the streets;
Those who reclined on crimson[b]
    now embrace dung heaps.(B)

Read full chapter

Footnotes

  1. 4:3 Cruel as the ostrich: see note on Jb 39:14–16. Jerusalem, in her distress, has abandoned her children.
  2. 4:5 Crimson: a sign of luxury. Tyrian purple, a red-purple or blue-purple dye produced from shellfish, was very expensive and the only colorfast dye in the ancient Near East. Thus purple or crimson cloth was available only to the wealthy.