Commentaries:
Adam Clarke
    He  rent  his  clothes - He was penetrated with sorrow, and that evidently unfeigned.
    Put  sackcloth  upon  his  flesh - He humbled himself before God and man.
    And  fasted - He afflicted his body for his soul' s benefit.
    Lay  in  sackcloth - Gave the fullest proof that his repentance was real.
    And  went  softly - Walked barefooted; so the Chaldee, Syriac, and Arabic. The Vulgate has  demisso capite  , "with his head hanging down." Houbigant translates  went groaning . Jarchi says that the word at , used here, signifies to be unshod. This is its most likely sense. All these things Proverbs that Ahab' s repentance was genuine; and God' s approbation of it puts it out of doubt. The slow and measured pace which always accompanies deep and reflective sorrow is also alluded to by Aeschylus, where the Chorus are thus shortly addressed on the defeat of Xerxes. - Aesch. Pers. 1073.
 \ri720 ' ̔ 
 "With light and noiseless step lament." 
 
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