Isaiah 16:10
And gladness is taken away, and joy out of the plentiful field; and in the vineyards there shall be no singing, neither shall there be shouting: the treaders shall tread out no wine in their presses; I have made their vintage shouting to cease.
Cross-reference
Isaiah 24:8 describes the end of gladness and music, mirroring the removal of joy and songs from the vineyard here.
Isaiah 24:9 says no wine with singing and bitter drink, directly paralleling the loss of wine and shouting in this verse.
Isaiah 15:6 continues Moab's desolation with withered grass and no green thing, paralleling the agricultural collapse.
Isaiah 24:7 mourns the languishing vine and wine, mirroring the silence where shouting had ceased in the vineyards.
Isaiah 9:3 uses harvest joy as a metaphor for rejoicing before God, contrasting with the removal of gladness in Moab's judgment.
Isaiah 32:10 warns of a failed vintage, echoing the loss of fruit harvest and wine here.
Jeremiah 48:33 quotes this very phrase—'gladness and joy are taken away'—applying it to Moab's judgment.
Habakkuk 3:18 contrasts directly: though joy in harvest ceases, the prophet vows to rejoice in the Lord regardless.
Zephaniah 1:13 uses the same judgment motif: planting vineyards but not drinking wine, echoing the removal of vintage joy.
Joel 1:12 explicitly ties dried vine to withered joy, directly echoing the removal of gladness from the fields.
Amos 5:11 threatens that vineyards planted will yield no wine due to oppression, similar to the end of wine-pressing here.
Judges 9:27 depicts the joyous treading of grapes and merrymaking that is entirely absent in Isaiah's judgment scene.
Habakkuk 3:17 shares the image of failed harvest and barren vineyards, but as a context for faith rather than judgment.