Ezekiel 17:10
Yea, behold, being planted, shall it prosper? shall it not utterly wither, when the east wind toucheth it? it shall wither in the furrows where it grew.
Cross-reference
In Ezekiel 17:16, the fate of the vine is specified: the king who broke the covenant will die in Babylon, fulfilling the withering from the east wind.
Ezekiel 19:12-14 also describes a vine uprooted and withered by the east wind, the same lament for Judah's princes.
Hosea 13:15 uses the same east wind imagery for divine judgment, causing springs to dry up and withered plants — directly echoing this allegory.
Genesis 41:6 features thin ears of grain blighted by the east wind — the same destructive wind that causes withering here.
Jeremiah 4:11 speaks of a hot wind from the desert, a destructive wind of judgment parallel to the east wind here.
Habakkuk 1:9 describes the Babylonians coming for violence, mirroring the east wind as a symbol of destructive judgment from the east.
John 15:6 warns that branches not abiding in Christ wither and are burned — a parallel to this vine being withered by God's judgment.