OT-POET.filter - rotherham Ho:
rotherham@
Job:1:1 @ A man, there wasin the land of Uz, Job, his name, and that man was blameless and upright, and one who revered God, and avoided evil.
rotherham@Job:1:3 @ And his substance wasseven thousand sheep, and three thousand camels, and five hundred yoke of oxen, and five hundred she-asses, and a body of servants exceeding large, thus was that man the greatest of all the sons of the East.
rotherham@Job:1:4 @ Now his sons were wont to go, and make a banquet, at the house of each one upon his day, and to send and call their three sisters, to eat and to drink with them.
rotherham@Job:1:7 @ And Yahweh said unto the accuser, Whence comest thou? And the accuser answered Yahweh, and said, From going to and fro in the earth, and wandering about therein.
rotherham@Job:1:8 @ And Yahweh said unto the accuser, Hast thou applied thy heart unto my servant Job, that there is none like him in the earth, a man blameless and upright, one revering God and avoiding evil?
rotherham@Job:1:10 @ Hast not, thou thyself, made a hedge about him, and about his house, and about all that he hath, on every side? The work of his hands, thou hast blessed, and, his substance, hath broken forth in the land.
rotherham@Job:1:13 @ And there came a certain day, when his sons and his daughters were eating, and drinking wine, in the house of their eldest brother.
rotherham@Job:1:18 @ Yet was this one speaking, when, another, came in and said, Thy sons and thy daughters, were eating, and drinking wine, in the house of their eldest brother;
rotherham@Job:1:19 @ when lo! a great wind, came from over the desert, and smote the four corners of the house, and it fell upon the young men, and they died, and escaped am, only I alone, to tell thee.
rotherham@Job:2:2 @ And Yahweh said unto the accuser, Whence comest thou? And the accuser answered Yahweh, and said, From going to and fro in the earth, and from wandering about therein.
rotherham@Job:2:3 @ And Yahweh said unto the accuser, Hast thou applied thy heart unto my servant Job, that there is none like him in the earth, a man blameless and upright, one who revereth God, and avoideth evil; and still he is holding fast his integrity, although thou movedst me against him, to swallow him up without cause.
rotherham@Job:2:6 @ And Yahweh said unto the accuser, Behold him! in thy hand, only, his life, preserve thou!
rotherham@Job:2:9 @ Then said his wife unto him, Art thou still holding fast thine integrity? Curse God, and die!
rotherham@Job:2:10 @ And he said unto her, As one of the base women speaketh, speakest thou? Blessing, shall we accept from God, and, misfortune, shall we not accept? In all this, Job sinned not with his lips.
rotherham@Job:3:7 @ Lo! that night, be it barren, Let no joyous shouting enter therein:
rotherham@Job:3:8 @ Let day-cursers denounce it, Those skilled in rousing the dragon of the sky:
rotherham@Job:3:14 @ With kings, and counselors of the earth, who had built them pyramids:
rotherham@Job:3:15 @ Or with rulers possessing, gold, Who had filled their houses with silver:
rotherham@Job:3:21 @ Who long for death, and it is not, And have digged for it, beyond hid treasures:
rotherham@Job:3:22 @ Who rejoice unto exultation, Are glad, when they can find the grave:
rotherham@Job:3:23 @ To a man, whose way is concealed, And GOD hath straitly enclosed him?
rotherham@Job:4:2 @ If one attempt a word unto thee, wilt thou be impatient? But, to restrain speech, who, can endure?
rotherham@Job:4:3 @ Lo! thou hast admonished many, and, slack hands, hast thou been wont to uphold:
rotherham@Job:4:4 @ Him that was stumbling, have thy words raised up, and, sinking knees, hast thou strengthened.
rotherham@Job:4:5 @ But, now, it cometh upon thee, and thou despairest, It smiteth even thee, and thou art dismayed.
rotherham@Job:4:6 @ Is not, thy reverence, thy confidence? And is not, thy hope, the very integrity of thy ways?
rotherham@Job:4:7 @ Remember, I pray thee, who, being innocent, hath perished, or when, the upright, have been cut off.
rotherham@Job:4:8 @ So far as I have seen, They who plow for iniquity and sow misery, reap the same:
rotherham@Job:4:10 @ the roaring of the lion, and the noise of the howling lion, yet, the teeth of the fierce lions, are broken:
rotherham@Job:4:13 @ When there were thoughts, from visions of the night, When deep sleep falleth upon men,
rotherham@Job:4:19 @ How much more the dwellers in houses of clay, which, in the dust, have their foundation, which are crushed sooner than a moth:
rotherham@Job:5:1 @ Call, I pray theeis there one to answer thee? Or, to which of the holy ones, wilt thou turn?
rotherham@Job:5:3 @ I, have seen the foolish taking root, and then hath his home decayed, in a moment:
rotherham@Job:5:5 @ Whose harvest, the hungry, eateth up, and, even out of thorn hedges, he taketh it, and the snare gapeth for their substance.
rotherham@Job:5:7 @ Though, man, to trouble, were born, as, sparks, on high, do soar,
rotherham@Job:5:9 @ Who doeth great things, beyond all search, Wondrous things, till they cannot be recounted;
rotherham@Job:5:10 @ Who giveth rain, upon the face of the earth, and sendeth forth waters, over the face of the open fields;
rotherham@Job:5:12 @ Who doth frustrate the schemes of the crafty, that their hands cannot achieve abiding success;
rotherham@Job:5:13 @ Who captureth the wise in their own craftiness, yea the headlong counsel of the crooked:
rotherham@Job:5:14 @ By day, they encounter darkness, and, as though it were night, they grope at high noon.
rotherham@Job:5:16 @ Thus to the poor hath come hope, and, perversity, hath shut her mouth.
rotherham@Job:5:17 @ Lo! how happy is the man whom God correcteth! Therefore, the chastening of the Almighty, do not thou refuse;
rotherham@Job:5:21 @ During the scourge of the tongue, shalt thou be hid, neither shalt thou be afraid of destruction when it cometh;
rotherham@Job:5:22 @ At destruction and at hunger, shalt thou laugh, and, of the wild beast of the earth, be not thou afraid;
rotherham@Job:5:24 @ And thou shalt know that, at peace, is thy tent, and shalt visit thy fold, and miss nothing;
rotherham@Job:5:25 @ And thou shalt know, that numerous is thy seed, and, thine offspring, like the young shoots of the field.
rotherham@Job:5:26 @ Thou shalt come, yet robust, to the grave, as a stack of sheaves mounteth up in its season.
rotherham@Job:5:27 @ Lo! as for this, we have searched it outso, it is, Hear it, and know, thou, for thyself.
rotherham@Job:6:6 @ Can that which hath no savour be eaten without salt? Or is there any taste in the white of an egg?
rotherham@Job:6:7 @ My soul hath refused to touch, Those things, are like disease in my food.
rotherham@Job:6:8 @ Oh that my request would come! and, my hope, oh that GOD would grant!
rotherham@Job:6:10 @ So might it still be my comfort, And I might exult in the anguish he would not spare, That I had not concealed the sayings of the Holy One.
rotherham@Job:6:11 @ What is my strength, that I should hope? Or what mine end, that I should prolong my desire?
rotherham@Job:6:14 @ The despairing, from his friend, should have lovingkindness, or, the reverence of the Almighty, he may forsake.
rotherham@Job:6:19 @ The caravans of Tema looked about, the travelling companies of Sheba, hoped for them:
rotherham@Job:6:24 @ Show me, and, I, will hold my peace, And, wherein I have erred, cause me to understand.
rotherham@Job:6:25 @ How pleasant are the sayings that are right! But what can a decision from you, decide?
rotherham@Job:6:28 @ But, now, be pleased to turn to me, that it may be, to your faces, if I speak falsehood,
rotherham@Job:7:6 @ My days, are swifter than a weavers shuttle, and they are spent, without hope.
rotherham@Job:7:7 @ Remember thou, that, a wind, is my life, not again shall mine eye see blessing:
rotherham@Job:7:8 @ Nor shall see methe eye that used to behold me, Thine eyes, are upon me, and I am not.
rotherham@Job:7:10 @ He shall not return again to his house, and his own place shall be acquainted with him no more.
rotherham@Job:7:12 @ Am, I, a sea, or a sea-monster, That thou shouldst set over me a watch?
rotherham@Job:7:14 @ Then thou scarest me with dreams, and, by visions, dost thou terrify me:
rotherham@Job:7:15 @ So that my soul chooseth strangling, Death, rather than my bones!
rotherham@Job:7:17 @ What is a mortal, that thou shouldst nurture him? Or that thou shouldst fix upon him thy mind?
rotherham@Job:7:18 @ That thou shouldst inspect him morning by morning, moment by moment, shouldst test him?
rotherham@Job:7:19 @ How long wilt thou not look away from me? Wilt thou not let me alone, till I can swallow my spittle?
rotherham@Job:7:20 @ I have sinned, What can I do for thee, thou watcher of men? Wherefore hast thou set me as thine object of attack, or have I become, unto thee, a burden?
rotherham@Job:7:21 @ And why wilt thou not remove my transgression, and take away mine iniquity? For, now, in the dust, should I lie down, and thou shouldst seek me diligently, and I should not be.
rotherham@Job:8:2 @ How long wilt thou speak these things? Or, as a mighty wind, shall be the sayings of thy mouth?
rotherham@Job:8:3 @ Should, GOD, pervert justice? Or, the Almighty, pervert righteousness?
rotherham@Job:8:4 @ Though, thy children, sinned against him, and he delivered them into the hand of their transgression,
rotherham@Job:8:5 @ Yet, if, thou thyself, wilt diligently seek unto GOD, and, unto the Almighty, wilt make supplication;
rotherham@Job:8:6 @ If, pure and upright, thou thyself, art, surely, now, will he answer thy prayer, and will prosper thy righteous habitation:
rotherham@Job:8:11 @ Can the paper-reed grow up, without a marsh? Or the rush grow up, without water?
rotherham@Job:8:12 @ Though while still, in its freshness, it be not plucked off, yet, before any kind of grass, it doth wither:
rotherham@Job:8:13 @ So, shall be the latter end of all who forget GOD, and, the hope of the impious, shall perish:
rotherham@Job:8:14 @ Whose trust shall be contemptible, and, a spiders web, his confidence:
rotherham@Job:8:15 @ He leaneth upon his house, and it will not stand, he holdeth it fast, and it will not remain erect.
rotherham@Job:8:16 @ Full of moisture he is, before the sun, and, over his garden, his shoot goeth forth:
rotherham@Job:8:21 @ At length he shall fill with laughter thy mouth, and thy lips, with a shout of triumph:
rotherham@Job:8:22 @ They who hate thee, shall be clothed with shame, but, the tent of the lawless, shall not be!
rotherham@Job:9:2 @ Of a truth, I know that so it is, But how can a mortal be just with GOD?
rotherham@Job:9:3 @ If he choose to contend with him, he cannot answer him, one of a thousand:
rotherham@Job:9:5 @ Who removeth mountains, unawares, Who overturneth them in his anger;
rotherham@Job:9:6 @ Who shaketh the earth, out of its place, and, the pillars thereof, shudder;
rotherham@Job:9:7 @ Who commandeth the sun, and it breaketh not forth, and, about the stars, he putteth a seal;
rotherham@Job:9:8 @ Who spreadeth out fire heavens, by himself alone! and marcheth along, on the heights of the sea;
rotherham@Job:9:9 @ Who made the Bear, the Giant and the Cluster, and the chambers of the south;
rotherham@Job:9:10 @ Who doeth great things, past finding out, and marvels, beyond number.
rotherham@Job:9:12 @ Lo! he snatcheth away, who can bring it back? Who shall say unto him, What wouldst thou do?
rotherham@Job:9:14 @ How much less that, I, should answer him, should choose my words with him?
rotherham@Job:9:15 @ Whom, though I were righteous, yet would I not answer, to be absolved, I would make supplication.
rotherham@Job:9:16 @ Though I had called, and he had answered me, I could not believe, that he would lend an ear to my voice.
rotherham@Job:9:17 @ For, with a tempest, would he fall upon me, and would multiply my wounds without need;
rotherham@Job:9:19 @ If it regardeth vigour, bold is he! If justice, who could summon him?
rotherham@Job:9:20 @ If I should justify myself, mine own mouth, would condemn me, I blameless? then had it shewn me perverse.
rotherham@Job:9:21 @ I blameless? I should not know my own soul, I should despise my own life!
rotherham@Job:9:24 @ The earth, hath been given into the hand of a lawless one, The faces of her judges, he covereth, If not, then who is it?
rotherham@Job:9:28 @ I am afraid of all my pains, I know, that thou wilt not pronounce me innocent.
rotherham@Job:9:29 @ I, shall be held guilty, Wherefore then, in vain, should I toil?
rotherham@Job:9:30 @ Though I bathe myself in snow water, and cleanse, in cleanness itself, my hands,
rotherham@Job:9:31 @ Then, in a ditch, wouldst thou plunge me, and mine own clothes should abhor me:
rotherham@Job:9:32 @ For he is not a man like myself, whom I might answer, nor could we come together into judgment:
rotherham@Job:9:33 @ There is not, between us, a mediator, who might lay his hand upon us both.
rotherham@Job:9:35 @ I could speak, and not be afraid of him, although, not so, am, I, in myself!
rotherham@Job:10:2 @ I say unto GOD, Do not hold me guilty, Let me know, on what account thou contendest with me!
rotherham@Job:10:3 @ Is it seemly in thee, that thou shouldst oppress? that thou shouldst despise the labour of thine own hand, when, upon the counsel of the lawless, thou hast shone?
rotherham@Job:10:4 @ Eyes of flesh, hast thou? or, as a mortal seeth, seest thou?
rotherham@Job:10:6 @ That thou shouldst seek for mine iniquity, and, for my sin, shouldst make search:
rotherham@Job:10:7 @ Though it is, within thine own knowledge, that I would not be lawless, and, none, out of thy hand, can deliver?
rotherham@Job:10:8 @ Thine own hands, shaped me, and made me, all in unison round about, and yet thou hast confounded me.
rotherham@Job:10:9 @ Remember, I pray thee, that, as clay, thou didst make me, and, unto dust, thou wilt cause me to return.
rotherham@Job:10:10 @ Didst thou not, like milk, pour me forth? and, as cheese, curdle me?
rotherham@Job:10:12 @ Life and lovingkindness, thou didst bestow upon me, and, thy watchful care, preserved my breath.
rotherham@Job:10:13 @ Yet, these things, thou didst hide in thy heart, I know that, this, hath been with thee!
rotherham@Job:10:14 @ If I have sinned, then couldst thou watch me, and, from mine iniquity, thou wouldst not acquit me:
rotherham@Job:10:15 @ If I have been lawless, alas for me! Or, if I am righteous, I will not lift up my head, Surfeited with shame, look thou then on my humiliation.
rotherham@Job:10:16 @ When it is lifted up, like a howling lion, thou dost hunt me, Then again thou dost shew thyself marvellous against me.
rotherham@Job:10:17 @ Thou renewest thy witnesses before me, and dost increase thy vexation with me, Relaysyea an army, is with me.
rotherham@Job:10:18 @ Wherefore then, from the womb, didst thou bring me forth? I might have breathed my last, and, no eye, have seen me.
rotherham@Job:10:19 @ As though I had not been, should I have become, from the womb to the grave, might I have been borne.
rotherham@Job:11:2 @ Should, the multitude of words, not be answered? Or should, a man full of talk, be justified?
rotherham@Job:11:3 @ Shall, thy pratings, cause men to hold their peace? When thou hast mocked, shall there be none to put thee to shame?
rotherham@Job:11:4 @ Since thou hast said, Right is my doctrine, and pure am I in his eyes.
rotherham@Job:11:7 @ The hidden depth of GOD canst thou discover? Or, unto the furthest limit of the Almighty, canst thou attain?
rotherham@Job:11:8 @ The heights of the heavens, what canst thou do? Depths deeper than hades, what canst thou know?
rotherham@Job:11:10 @ If he sweep on, or shut up, or call together, Who then shall hinder him?
rotherham@Job:11:13 @ If, thou, hast prepared thy heart, and wilt spread forth, unto him, thy hands
rotherham@Job:11:15 @ Surely, then, shalt thou lift up thy face free from blemish, and shalt be established, and not fear.
rotherham@Job:11:16 @ For, now, shalt thou forget, sorrow, Like waters passed away, shalt thou remember it.
rotherham@Job:11:18 @ And thou shalt he confident, that there is hope, and, when thou hast searched, securely shalt thou lie down;
rotherham@Job:11:20 @ But, the eyes of the lawless, shall fail, and, place of refuge, shall have vanished from them, and, their hope, be a breathing out of life.
rotherham@Job:12:3 @ I also, have a mind like you, I, fall not short, of you, But who hath not such things as these?
rotherham@Job:12:4 @ A laughing-stock to ones neighbour, do I become, one who hath called upon GOD and he hath answered him! A laughing-stocka righteous man without blame!
rotherham@Job:12:5 @ For ruin, there is contempt, in the thought of the man at ease, ready, for such as are of faltering foot!
rotherham@Job:12:6 @ At peace are the tents that belong to the spoilers, and there is security to them who provoke GOD, To him who bringeth a god in his hand.
rotherham@Job:12:9 @ Who knoweth not, among all these, that, the hand of Yahweh, hath done this?
rotherham@Job:12:10 @ In whose hand is the soul of every living thing, and the spirit of all the flesh of men.
rotherham@Job:12:15 @ Lo! He holdeth back the waters, and they dry up, or sendeth them out, and they transform the earth:
rotherham@Job:12:17 @ Who leadeth away counsellors a spoil, and, judges, He befooleth:
rotherham@Job:12:19 @ Who leadeth away priests a spoil, and, men firmly seated, He overturneth:
rotherham@Job:12:23 @ Who giveth greatness to nations, or destroyeth them, Who spreadeth out nations, or leadeth them into exile:
rotherham@Job:12:24 @ Who taketh away the sense of the chiefs of the people of the earth, and hath caused them to wander in a pathless waste:
rotherham@Job:13:2 @ Just as ye know, I too, know, I, fall not short, of you.
rotherham@Job:13:4 @ For, in truth, ye, do besmear with falsehood, Worthless physicians, all of you!
rotherham@Job:13:5 @ Oh that ye would, altogether held your peace, and it should serve you for wisdom!
rotherham@Job:13:15 @ Lo! he may slay me,, for him, will I wait, Nevertheless, my waysunto his face, will I show to be right:
rotherham@Job:13:19 @ Who is it that shall contend with me? For, now, if I should hold my peace, why! I should breathe my last!
rotherham@Job:13:20 @ Only, two things, do thou not with me, then, from thy face, will I not hide me:
rotherham@Job:13:21 @ Thy handfrom off me, take thou far away, and, thy terror, let it not startle me!
rotherham@Job:13:22 @ Then call thou, and, I, will answer, Or I will speak, and reply thou unto me.
rotherham@Job:13:23 @ How many are mine iniquities and sins? My transgression and my sin, let me know!
rotherham@Job:13:24 @ Wherefore, thy face, shouldst thou hide? Or count me, as an enemy to thee?
rotherham@Job:13:25 @ A driven leaf, wilt thou cause to tremble? Or, dry stubble, wilt thou pursue?
rotherham@Job:13:26 @ For thou writest, against me, bitter things, and dost make me inherit the iniquities of my youth;
rotherham@Job:13:27 @ And thou dost putin the stocksmy feet, and observest all my paths, Against the roots of my feet, thou dost cut out a bound;
rotherham@Job:14:3 @ And yet upon such a one as this, hast thou opened thine eye? And, him, wouldst thou bring into judgment with thee?
rotherham@Job:14:4 @ Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean? Not one!
rotherham@Job:14:5 @ If determined am his days, the number of his months, is with thee, Fixed times for him, thou hast appointed and he cannot go beyond.
rotherham@Job:14:7 @ Though there isfor a treehope, if it should be cut down, that, again, it will grow, and, the tender branch thereof, will not cease;
rotherham@Job:14:8 @ If its root, should become old in the earth, and, in the dust, its stock should die:
rotherham@Job:14:13 @ Oh that, in hades, thou wouldst hide me! that thou wouldst keep me secret, until the turn of thine anger, that thou wouldst set for me a fixed time, and remember me:
rotherham@Job:14:14 @ If a man die, can he live again? All the days of my warfare, would I wait, until my relief should come:
rotherham@Job:14:15 @ Thou shouldst call, and, I, would answer thee, For the work of thine own hand, thou shouldst long.
rotherham@Job:14:16 @ For, now, my steps, thou countest, Thou wilt not pass over my sin:
rotherham@Job:14:17 @ Sealed up in a bag, is my transgression, and thou hast glued over mine iniquity.
rotherham@Job:14:19 @ Stones, have been hollowed out by waters, the floods thereof wash away the dust of the earth, and, the hope of mortal man, thou hast destroyed:
rotherham@Job:14:20 @ Thou dost overpower him utterly, and he departeth, Disfiguring his face, so, hast thou sent him away.
rotherham@Job:14:21 @ His sons, come to honour, and he knoweth it not, Or they are brought low, and he perceiveth it not of them.
rotherham@Job:15:2 @ Should, a wise man, answer unreal knowledge? or fill, with the east wind, his inner man?
rotherham@Job:15:4 @ But, thou, wouldst take away reverence, and wouldst attain unto meditation before GOD.
rotherham@Job:15:5 @ For thine own mouth would teach thine iniquity, and thou wouldst choose the tongue of the crafty.
rotherham@Job:15:7 @ The first of mankind, wast thou born? Or, before the hills, wast thou brought forth?
rotherham@Job:15:8 @ In the secret council of GOD, hast thou been wont to hearken? Or canst thou attain for thyself unto wisdom?
rotherham@Job:15:9 @ What knowest thou, that we know not? understandest thou, and the same, is not with us?
rotherham@Job:15:10 @ Both hoary and venerable, are among us, one mightier than thy father in days!
rotherham@Job:15:12 @ How doth thine own heart carry thee away, and how thine eyes do roll!
rotherham@Job:15:13 @ For thy spirit, replieth against GOD, and thou bringest forthout of thy mouthwords!
rotherham@Job:15:14 @ What is a mortal, that he should be pure? or that righteous should be one born of a woman?
rotherham@Job:15:15 @ Lo! in his holy ones, he putteth not confidence, and, the heavens, are not pure in his eyes:
rotherham@Job:15:16 @ How much less when one is detested and corrupt, a man who drinketh inlike waterperversity.
rotherham@Job:15:28 @ And had inhabited demolished cities, houses, wherein men would not dwell, that were destined to become heaps.
rotherham@Job:16:3 @ Is there to be an end to windy words? Or what so strongly exciteth thee, that thou must respond?
rotherham@Job:16:5 @ I could make you determined, by my mouth, and then my lip-solace should restrain you.
rotherham@Job:16:6 @ Though I do speak, unassuaged is my stinging pain, And, if I forbear, of what am I relieved?
rotherham@Job:16:7 @ But, now, hath he wearied me, thou hast destroyed all my family;
rotherham@Job:16:15 @ Sackcloth, sewed I on my skin, and rolledin the dustmy horn:
rotherham@Job:16:17 @ Though no violence was in my hands, and, my prayer, was pure.
rotherham@Job:16:20 @ And, he that voucheth for me is on high. My friends are, they who scorn me, Unto GOD, hath mine eye shed tears:
rotherham@Job:17:3 @ Appoint it, I pray theebe thou surety for me with thyself, Who is there that, on my side, can pledge himself?
rotherham@Job:17:4 @ For, their heart, hast thou kept back from understanding, On this account, thou wilt not exalt them.
rotherham@Job:17:9 @ That the righteous may hold on his way, and, the clean of hands, increase in strength.
rotherham@Job:17:10 @ But indeed, as for them all, will ye bethink yourselves and enter into it, I pray you? Or shall I not find, among you, one who is wise?
rotherham@Job:17:13 @ If I wait for hades as my house, in darkness, have spread out my couch;
rotherham@Job:17:14 @ To corruption, have exclaimed, My father, thou! My mother! and My sister! to the worm.
rotherham@Job:17:15 @ Where then would be my hope? And, as for my blessedness, who should see it!
rotherham@Job:17:16 @ With me to hades, would they go down, If, whollyinto the dust, is the descent!
rotherham@Job:18:2 @ How long will ye make a perversion of words? Ye should understand, and, afterwards, we could speak.
rotherham@Job:18:9 @ There catcheth himby the heela gin, there holdeth him fasta noose:
rotherham@Job:18:20 @ Over his day, have they been astounded who come behind, and, them who are in advance, a shudder hath seized.
rotherham@Job:19:2 @ How long will ye grieve my soul? or crush me with words?
rotherham@Job:19:10 @ He hath ruined me on every side, and I am gone, and he hath taken awaylike a treemy hope;
rotherham@Job:19:13 @ My Brethrenfrom beside me, hath he moved far away, and, mine acquaintance, are wholly estranged from me;
rotherham@Job:19:15 @ Ye guests of my house and my maidens, A stranger, have ye accounted me, An alien, have I become in their eyes;
rotherham@Job:19:19 @ All the men of mine intimate circle abhor me, and, these whom I loved, have turned against me;
rotherham@Job:19:22 @ Wherefore should ye persecute me as GOD? and, with my flesh, should not he satisfied?
rotherham@Job:19:26 @ And, though, after my skin is struck off, this, yet, apart from my flesh, shall I see GOD:
rotherham@Job:19:27 @ Whom, I myself, shall see, on my side, and, mine own eyes, have looked upon, and not those of a stranger. Exhausted are my deepest desires in my bosom!
rotherham@Job:19:28 @ Surely ye should say Why should we persecute him? seeing, the root of the matter, is found in me.
rotherham@Job:20:2 @ Not so, do my thoughts answer me, and to this end, is my haste within me:
rotherham@Job:20:4 @ Knowest thou, thisfrom antiquity, from the placing of man upon earth:
rotherham@Job:20:5 @ That, the joy-shout of the lawless, is short, and, the rejoicing of the impious, for a moment?
rotherham@Job:20:6 @ Though his elevation mount up to the heavens, and, his head, to the clouds, doth reach,
rotherham@Job:20:7 @ Like his own stubble, shall he utterly perish, They who had seen him, shall say, Where is he?
rotherham@Job:20:9 @ The eye that hath scanned him, shall not do it again, neither, any more, shall his place behold him:
rotherham@Job:20:12 @ Though, a sweet taste in his mouth, be given by vice, though he hide it under his tongue;
rotherham@Job:20:13 @ Though he spare it, and will not let it go, but retain it in the midst of his mouth,
rotherham@Job:20:17 @ Let him not see in the channels the flowings of torrents of honey and milk.
rotherham@Job:20:19 @ For he hath oppressedhath forsaken the poor, A house, hath he seized, which he cannot rebuild.
rotherham@Job:20:28 @ The increase of his house shall vanish, melting away in the day of his anger.
rotherham@Job:21:3 @ Suffer me, that, I, may speak, and, after I have spoken, thou canst mock!
rotherham@Job:21:4 @ Did, I, unto man, make my complaint? Wherefore, then, should my spirit not be impatient?
rotherham@Job:21:9 @ Their houses, are at peace, without dread, neither is, the rod of GOD, upon them;
rotherham@Job:21:15 @ What is the Almighty, that we should serve him? Or what shall we profit, that we should urge him?
rotherham@Job:21:17 @ How oft, the lamp of the lawless, goeth out, and their calamity, cometh upon them, Sorrows, apportioneth he in his anger;
rotherham@Job:21:21 @ For what shall be his pleasure in his house after him, when, the number of his months, is cut in twain?
rotherham@Job:21:22 @ Is it, to GOD, one can teach knowledge, seeing that, he, shall judge, them who are on high?
rotherham@Job:21:23 @ This, man dieth, in the very perfection of his prosperity, wholly tranquil and secure;
rotherham@Job:21:28 @ For ye say, Where is the house of the noble-minded? And where the dwelling-tent of the lawless?
rotherham@Job:21:31 @ Who can declareto his facehis way? And, what, he, hath done, who shall recompense to him?
rotherham@Job:21:33 @ Pleasant to him are the mounds of the torrent-bed, and, after him, doth every man march, as, before him, there were without number.
rotherham@Job:21:34 @ How then should ye comfort me with vanity, since, as for your replies, there lurketh,
rotherham@Job:22:3 @ Is it a pleasure to the Almighty, that thou shouldst be righteous? or any profit, that thou shouldst be blameless in thy ways?
rotherham@Job:22:5 @ Is not, thy wickedness, great? and, without end, thine iniquities?
rotherham@Job:22:6 @ Surely then hast been wont to put thy brother in pledge, for nothing, and, the garments of the ill-clad, hast thou stripped off:
rotherham@Job:22:7 @ No waterto the weary, hast thou given to drink, and, from the hungry, thou hast withheld broad:
rotherham@Job:22:9 @ Widows, thou hast sent away empty, and, the arms of the fatherless, thou dost crush.
rotherham@Job:22:11 @ Or darknessthou canst not see, and, a flood of waters, covereth thee.
rotherham@Job:22:12 @ Is not, GOD, the height of the heavens? Behold, then, the head of the stars, that they are high.
rotherham@Job:22:13 @ Wilt thou say then, What doth GOD know? Out through a thick cloud, can he judge?
rotherham@Job:22:15 @ The path of the ancient time, wilt thou mark, which the men of iniquity trod?
rotherham@Job:22:16 @ Who were snatched away before the time, and, a stream, washed away their foundation?
rotherham@Job:22:17 @ Who had been saying unto GOD, Depart from us! and What can the Almighty do for himself?
rotherham@Job:22:18 @ Yet, he, had filled their houses with good! The counsel of the lawless, then, is far from me:
rotherham@Job:22:23 @ If thou return unto the Almighty and submit thyself, if thou far remove perversity from thy tent,
rotherham@Job:22:26 @ For, then, in the Almighty, shalt thou take exquisite delight, and shalt lift upunto GODthy face;
rotherham@Job:22:27 @ Thou shalt make entreaty unto him, and he will hear thee, and, thy vows, shalt thou pay;
rotherham@Job:22:28 @ And thou shalt decree a purpose, and it shall be fulfilled unto thee, and, upon thy ways, shall have shone a light;
rotherham@Job:22:29 @ When men cast themselves down, then thou shalt say: Up! And, him that is of downcast eyes, shall he save;
rotherham@Job:22:30 @ He shall deliver the innocent, and thou shalt escape by the pureness of thy hands.
rotherham@Job:23:7 @ There an upright man, might reason with him, so should I deliver myself completely from my judge.
rotherham@Job:23:8 @ Behold! eastward, I go, but he is not there, and, westward, but I perceive him not;