The Targum Pseudo-Jonathan on Exodus 10:19 records one of the most curious details in the entire plague narrative.
"The Lord turned a wind from the west of exceeding strength, and it carried away the locust, and bare him to the sea of Suph: there was not one locust left in all the borders of Mizraim. And even such as had been salted in vessels for needed food, those, too, the western wind bare away, and they went."
The Aramaic paraphrase, preserved in the Targum attributed to Yonatan ben Uzziel, adds a detail the plain Hebrew text does not mention. The Egyptians, facing a plague of locusts, had done what ancient peoples often did with unwanted insect swarms — they had caught them, salted them, stored them in jars as a food reserve. Locusts are kosher to certain species and were a recognized famine food in the region. Egypt's pantries were full of them.
But when the west wind came, the Targum says, it even carried away the salted ones in vessels. The locusts inside sealed jars were lifted out and blown to the Sea of Reeds. No trace remained.
The Maggid teaches: when the Holy One decides a plague is over, He does not leave a souvenir. Not one wing. Not one leg. Not one jar's worth. The judgment is finished, fully, and the evidence is removed so completely that Egypt cannot even eat the locusts that devoured their crops.
Total plague. Total removal. The signature of a precise God.