Isaiah
Isaiah 14:17ESV·traditional attribution

who made the world like a desert and overthrew its cities, who did not let his prisoners go home?’

John Calvin Reformed @genevareformer

17. He made the world as a wilderness. He expresses the cruel and savage disposition of the tyrant, by saying that he brought desolation on the world, that he overthrew cities, that he did not release prisoners. It is sometimes the custom of conquerors to release prisoners, in order to win their hearts by kindness; but tyrants choose rather to be feared than to be loved.

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

That made the world as a wilderness,.... Both by destroying the inhabitants of it, and by laying waste cities, towns, villages, fields, vineyards, gardens, and all places improved and cultivated, wherever he came, as it follows: and destroyed the cities thereof; as the Assyrian kings had done, some of which are mentioned in Isa 10:9, that opened not the house of his prisoners; the prison...