Job 27:15
Those that remain of him shall be buried in death: and his widows shall not weep.
Cross-reference
1 Kings 14:11 adds that the dead are eaten by dogs and birds, reinforcing Job's theme of dishonorable death with no mourning.
1 Kings 16:4 repeats the fate of dogs and birds eating the dead, echoing Job's theme of dishonorable death and no mourning.
1 Kings 21:21-24 combines cutting off males and dogs eating the dead, directly mirroring Job's depiction of the wicked's survivors meeting a dishonorable end.
Psalm 78:64 describes priests killed by sword and widows not lamenting, directly echoing Job's statement that the wicked's widows do not weep.
Jeremiah 22:18 says Jehoiakim will not be lamented, paralleling Job's claim that the wicked's widows do not weep—both depict absence of mourning.
1 Kings 14:10 describes cutting off every male from Jeroboam's house, similar to Job's picture of the wicked's survivors being destroyed and unmourned.
Ezekiel 24:22 describes a commanded lack of mourning — echoing Job 27:15 where widows do not weep for the wicked's survivors.
1 Kings 16:3 pronounces sweeping judgment on Baasha's house, paralleling Job's fate of the wicked's survivors being destroyed.