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Job 6
- 1 And Job answereth and saith: --
- 2 O that my provocation were thoroughly weighed, And my calamity in balances They would lift up together!
- 3 For now, than the sands of the sea it is heavier, Therefore my words have been rash.
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4 For arrows of the Mighty
are with me, Whose poison is drinking up my spirit. Terrors of God array themselves for me! - 5 Brayeth a wild ass over tender grass? Loweth an ox over his provender?
- 6 Eaten is an insipid thing without salt? Is there sense in the drivel of dreams?
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7 My soul is refusing to touch! They
are as my sickening food. - 8 O that my request may come, That God may grant my hope!
- 9 That God would please--and bruise me, Loose His hand and cut me off!
- 10 And yet it is my comfort, (And I exult in pain--He doth not spare,) That I have not hidden The sayings of the Holy One.
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11 What
is my power that I should hope? And what mine end That I should prolong my life? - 12 Is my strength the strength of stones? Is my flesh brazen?
- 13 Is not my help with me, And substance driven from me?
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14 To a despiser of his friends
is shame, And the fear of the Mighty he forsaketh. - 15 My brethren have deceived as a brook, As a stream of brooks they pass away.
- 16 That are black because of ice, By them doth snow hide itself.
- 17 By the time they are warm they have been cut off, By its being hot they have been Extinguished from their place.
- 18 Turn aside do the paths of their way, They ascend into emptiness, and are lost.
- 19 Passengers of Tema looked expectingly, Travellers of Sheba hoped for them.
- 20 They were ashamed that one hath trusted, They have come unto it and are confounded.
- 21 Surely now ye have become the same! Ye see a downfall, and are afraid.
- 22 Is it because I said, Give to me? And, By your power bribe for me?
- 23 And, Deliver me from the hand of an adversary? And, From the hand of terrible ones ransom me?
- 24 Shew me, and I--I keep silent, And what I have erred, let me understand.
- 25 How powerful have been upright sayings, And what doth reproof from you reprove?
- 26 For reproof--do you reckon words? And for wind--sayings of the desperate.
- 27 Anger on the fatherless ye cause to fall, And are strange to your friend.
- 28 And, now, please, look upon me, Even to your face do I lie?
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29 Turn back, I pray you, let it not be perverseness, Yea, turn back again--my righteousness
is in it. - 30 Is there in my tongue perverseness? Discerneth not my palate desirable things?
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Young's Literal Translation (ylt - 1.1)
2006-10-25English (en)
Young's Literal Translation
of the Holy Bible
by Robert Young, 1862, 1898
(Author of the Young's Analytical Concordance)
Printed copy available from Baker Publishing
Grand Rapids, Mi. 49516- Direction: LTR
- LCSH: Bible. English.
- Distribution Abbreviation: ylt
License
Public Domain
Source (GBF)
- history_1.1
- Compressed the module.
- history_1.0
- Initial release.
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