Isaias

Septuaginta

Septuaginta. The Book of Isaiah According to the Septuagint (Codex Alexandrinus). Ottley, Richard, Rusden, editor. Cambridge: C.J. Clay and Sons, 1904.

15 For I am thy God, which disturbeth the sea, and maketh her waves to sound; the Lord of Hosts is my name.

16 I will put my words in thy mouth, and under my right hand will I shelter thee; wherewith I set up the heaven, and laid the foundation of the earth; and he shall say to Zion, Thou art my people.

[*](11. Omit. ‘exultation and...’)[*](12. ‘learn who thou art, that thou didst fear ’ (lit. being who thou didst fear) B (so Theod. and Aq. Symm. nearly).)[*](13. ‘remove’: Α by clerical error reads ‘to please thee.’)[*](15. ‘maketh . . . sound’: the verb is not usually usually trans.: but can take an acc. of the sound or instrument. See Theocr. Id. 11. 36.)[*](16. ‘under the shadow of my ’ ℵBQ. The words might hear the meaning, ‘and Zion shall say...’ (cf. xl.)
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17 Awake, awake, stand up, Jerusalem, that hast drunk the cup of wrath from the hand of the Lord; for thou didst drink, and didst empty out the cup of falling, the goblet of (his)