Chap. 39. AnEo ofition upon theBook, of Jo s, rerf.3o . 487 vifibie, as Mofes did (Heb, a r. 27. ) Abeliever bath an Eagles eye ; his eyes, as hers, behold afar off; Verf. 3o. Her young ores a/fo fleck up blood, and where the flaitt are, there in fire. This verle holds out the fixt property of the Eagle; what kind of food (he and her young ones live upon is here exprefl. Her youngonts. Or her patters forth.Ry whichwe are to underfland fuch young ones as are ready to put forth feathers,but cannot yet fly abroad to D°!11ì13 fhift for themfelves ; or they are focalled,becaufe young ones are ei" quni put forthof the eggs. What do they ? they fuck upblood. The eJlotefuntC% word notes a verygreedy facking,it is a double word,& fo implies, enrol nt etc as it were,* double drinking,adrinkisg with filch haff,that theyare ovo,;Mete. ready tó choak ; and fo Matter Broughton trantlates it exprefly, Her ytung ores near choak fwallowing blood, they fwallow it fo greedily that they are ready to choak themfelves with it ; that's a good reading. The Septuagint, fay ber young ones are fprinkled cvpou,tt, with blood, as they that feed upon raw flefh, efpecially when new- confperguntur ly killed or torn, are fpecki'd or f rinkled with-blood :Her gun Sept a®lutnn- P puns tut. Aaiun. ones are rolled or wallowed in blood, faith another. All readings Phew what provifion (he makes for her youngones while under her keeping, and how they keep themfelves when gone off from her hand ; the brings up her young ones to her own trade, feed- ing them with flefh, and acquainting them with the fweet of blood; (he and her young ones are all of a diet. 'TisPaid of the Eagle, that the never drinks water, nor is at all thirfly ; but both the and her young ones lack up blood. Hencenote; what young ones are ufed to, thatthey will afterwards follow; Young Eagles are ufed to blood in the nett, and therefore de- light inblood all their days afterwards (Prov. a i. 6, ) Train up ;t Child in the way he fhould go, and when he is-old he will nit de- part from it. If a Child be trained up in a good way, he will not depart from it when he is old ; 'cis ufually fo, or probably it will be fo. Though the golden youth-age of force hath ended in a leaden old age, yet it is mofa probable, if a Child be bred fop in
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