Job 3:14
With kings and counsellors of the earth, which built desolate places for themselves;
Cross-reference
Job 30:23 acknowledges God will bring him to death — the same universal end that Job in 3:14 wishes to share with kings.
Isaiah 14:10-16 depicts dead kings rising in Sheol to greet a fallen tyrant — the very company Job wished to join in death.
Psalm 49:14 describes the powerful being herded into Sheol — the very realm Job wishes to join.
1 Kings 2:10 records King David's death and burial — exactly the kind of royal rest Job wishes to join.
1 Kings 11:43 records King Solomon's death and burial — another example of the royal rest Job envies.
Psalm 49:6-10 declares even the wealthy cannot escape death — reinforcing Job's point that kings and counselors all die.
Psalm 89:48 asks who can escape death and Sheol — underscoring the universal fate that Job longs for.
Ecclesiastes 8:8 states no one has power over death — confirming Job's observation that even the mighty die.