Isaiah
Isaiah 14:10ESV·traditional attribution

All of them will answer and say to you: ‘You too have become as weak as we! You have become like us!’

John Calvin Reformed @genevareformer

10. All shall speak and say to thee. These are taunts with which the dead jeer the tyrant who has joined them, as if they asked him what is the reason why he too is dead like other men. Struck with the singularity of the event, Isaiah pretends that they inquire with astonishment about it as something that could not be believed. Art thou become like unto us?

Matthew Henry Presbyterian @wholebiblehenry

The kings of Babylon, successively, were the great enemies and oppressors of God's people, and therefore the destruction of Babylon, the fall of the king, and the ruin of his family, are here particularly taken notice of and triumphed in. In the day that God has given Israel rest they shall take up this proverb against the king of Babylon.

Commenting on Isaiah 14:4-23

John Gill Reformed Baptist @doctorgill

All they shall speak, and say unto thee,.... So they would say, could they speak, and are here represented as if they did: art thou become also weak as we? who had been more powerful than they, had been too many for them, and had subdued them, and ruled over them, and was not only looked upon as invincible but as immortal, yea, as a...