OT-POET.filter - rotherham of:
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:1:5 @ And so it was, when the days of the banquet came round, that Job sent and hallowed them, and rising early in the morning offered ascending-sacrifices according to the number of them all; for Job said, Peradventure my sons have sinned, and have cursed God in their hearts. Thus and thus, was Job wont to do all the days.
rotherham@Job:1:6 @ Now there came a certain day, when the sons of God entered in to present themselves unto Yahweh, so the accuser also entered, in their midst.
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:1:12 @ And Yahweh said unto the accuser, Lo! all that he hath, is in thy hand, only, against himself, do not put forth thy hand. So the accuser went forth from the presence of Yahweh.
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:1:15 @ when the Sabeans swooped down, and took them, and, the young men, smote they with the edge of the sword, and escaped am, only I alone, too tell thee.
rotherham@Job:1:16 @ Yet was this one speaking, when, another, came in and said, A fire of God, fell out of the heavens, and burned up the sheep and the young men, and consumed them; and escaped am, only I alone, to tell thee.
rotherham@Job:1:17 @ Yet was this one speaking, when, another, came in and said, The Chaldeans, appointed three chiefs, and spread out against the camels, and took them, and, the young men, smote they with the edge of the sword; and escaped am, only I alone, to tell thee.
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:1:21 @ and said Naked came I forth from the womb of my mother, and naked must I return thither, Yahweh, gave, and, Yahweh, hath taken away, The name of Yahweh be blessed!
rotherham@Job:2:1 @ And there came a certain day when the sons of God entered in, to present themselves unto Yahwehso the accuser also entered in their midst, to present himself unto Yahweh.
rotherham@Job:2:7 @ So the accuser went forth from the presence of Yahweh, and smote Job with a sore boil, from the sole of his foot, unto his crown.
rotherham@Job:2:8 @ And he took him a potsherd, to scrape himself therewith; he being seated in the midst of ashes.
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:2:11 @ Now when the three friends of Job heard of all this misfortune which had befallen him, they came, every man from his own place, Eliphaz the Temanite, and Bildad the Shuhite, and Zophar the Naamathite, for they had by appointment met together to come to shew sympathy with him, and to comfort him.
rotherham@Job:2:12 @ And, when they lifted up their eyes afar off, and knew him not, they lifted up their voice, and weptand rent, every one his robe, and sprinkled dust upon their heads, toward the heavens.
rotherham@Job:3:6 @ That night, darkness take it, May it not rejoice among the days of the year, Into the number of months, let it not enter.
rotherham@Job:3:8 @ Let day-cursers denounce it, Those skilled in rousing the dragon of the sky:
rotherham@Job:3:9 @ Darkened be the stars of its twilight, Let it wait for light, and there be none, neither let it see the eyelashes of the dawn:
rotherham@Job:3:10 @ Because it closed not the doors of the womb wherein I was, and so hid trouble from mine eyes.
rotherham@Job:3:14 @ With kings, and counselors of the earth, who had built them pyramids:
rotherham@Job:3:18 @ At once are prisoners at peace, they hear not the voice of a driver:
rotherham@Job:3:24 @ For, in the face of my food, my sighing, cometh in, and, poured out like the water, are my groans:
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:4:9 @ By the blast of GOD, they perish, And, by the breath of his nostrils, are they consumed:
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:4:11 @ The strong lion perishing for lack of prey, Even the whelps of the lioness, are scattered.
rotherham@Job:4:12 @ But, unto me, something was brought by stealth, and mine ear caught a whispering of the same:
rotherham@Job:4:13 @ When there were thoughts, from visions of the night, When deep sleep falleth upon men,
rotherham@Job:4:14 @ Dread, came upon me, and trembling, The multitude of my bones, it put in dread:
rotherham@Job:4:15 @ Then, a spirit, over my face, floated along, The hair of my flesh bristled-up:
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:4:21 @ Is not their tent-rope within them, torn away? They die, disrobed of wisdom!
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:5:5 @ Whose harvest, the hungry, eateth up, and, even out of thorn hedges, he taketh it, and the snare gapeth for their substance.
rotherham@Job:5:6 @ For sorrow, cometh not forth out of the dust, nor, out of the ground, sprouteth trouble.
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:5:15 @ But he saveth from the sword, out of their mouth, and, out of the hand of the strong, the needy.
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:5:20 @ In famine, he will ransom thee from death, and in battle from the power of the sword;
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:5:23 @ For, with the stones of the field, shall be thy covenant, and, the wild beast of the field, hath been made thy friend;
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:6:3 @ For, now, beyond the sand of the seas, would it be heavy, On this account, my words, have wandered.
rotherham@Job:6:4 @ For, the arrows of the Almighty, are in me, The heat whereof, my spirit is drinking up, The, terrors of GOD, array themselves against me.
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:6:9 @ That it would please GOD to crush me, That he would set free his hand, and cut me off!
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:6:12 @ Is my strength, the strength of stones? Or is, my flesh, of bronze?
rotherham@Job:6:14 @ The despairing, from his friend, should have lovingkindness, or, the reverence of the Almighty, he may forsake.
rotherham@Job:6:15 @ Mine own brethren, have proved treacherous like a torrent, like a channel of torrents which disappear:
rotherham@Job:6:16 @ Which darken by reason of the cold, over them, is a covering made by the snow:
rotherham@Job:6:17 @ By the time they begin to thaw, they are dried up, as soon as it is warm, they have vanished out of their place.
rotherham@Job:6:19 @ The caravans of Tema looked about, the travelling companies of Sheba, hoped for them:
rotherham@Job:6:20 @ They are ashamed that they had trusted, They have come up to one of them, and are confounded.
rotherham@Job:6:22 @ Is it that I said, Make me a gift, or, out of your abundance, offer a bribe on my behalf;
rotherham@Job:6:23 @ And deliver me from the hand of the adversary? And, out of the hand of tyrants, ransom me?
rotherham@Job:6:26 @ To decide words, do ye intend, When, to the wind, are spoken the sayings of one in despair?
rotherham@Job:6:27 @ Surely, the fatherless, ye would assail, and make merchandise of your friend!
rotherham@Job:7:1 @ Is there not a warfare to a mortal, upon earth? And, as the days of a hireling, are not his days?
rotherham@Job:7:3 @ So, have I been made to inherit months of calamity, and, nights of weariness, have been appointed me.
rotherham@Job:7:4 @ As soon as I lie down, I say, When shall I arise? yet he lengtheneth out the evening, and I am wearied with tossings until the breeze of twilight.
rotherham@Job:7:5 @ My flesh is clothed with worms and a coating of dust, My skin, hath hardened, and then run afresh:
rotherham@Job:7:11 @ I also, cannot restrain my mouth, I must speak, in the anguish of my spirit, I must find utterance, in the bitterness of my soul.
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:8:2 @ How long wilt thou speak these things? Or, as a mighty wind, shall be the sayings of thy mouth?
rotherham@Job:8:4 @ Though, thy children, sinned against him, and he delivered them into the hand of their transgression,
rotherham@Job:8:8 @ For inquire, I pray thee, of a former generation, and prepare thyself for the research of their fathers;
rotherham@Job:8:9 @ For, of yesterday, are, we, and cannot know, for, a shadow, are our days upon earth:
rotherham@Job:8:10 @ Shall, they, not teach theetell thee, and, out of their memory, bring forth words?
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:8:16 @ Full of moisture he is, before the sun, and, over his garden, his shoot goeth forth:
rotherham@Job:8:17 @ Over a heap, his roots are entwined, a place of stones, he descrieth;
rotherham@Job:8:18 @ If one destroy him out of his place, then will it disown him I have not seen thee.
rotherham@Job:8:19 @ Lo! that, is the joy of his way, and, out of the dust, shall others spring up.
rotherham@Job:8:20 @ Lo! GOD, will not reject a blameless man, neither will he grasp the hand of evil-doers:
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:9:6 @ Who shaketh the earth, out of its place, and, the pillars thereof, shudder;
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:9:23 @ If, a scourge, slay suddenly, at the despair of innocent ones, he mocketh.
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:9:26 @ They have passed away with boats of paper-reed, like a vulture rusheth upon food.
rotherham@Job:9:28 @ I am afraid of all my pains, I know, that thou wilt not pronounce me innocent.
rotherham@Job:9:34 @ Let him take from off me his rod, and, his terror, let it not startle me:
rotherham@Job:9:35 @ I could speak, and not be afraid of him, although, not so, am, I, in myself!
rotherham@Job:10:1 @ My soul doth loathe my life, I let loose my complaint, I speak, in the bitterness of my soul.
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:10:5 @ As the days of a mortal, are thy days? or, thy years, as the days of a man?
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:10:21 @ Before I go, and not return, unto a land of darkness and death-shade:
rotherham@Job:10:22 @ A land of obscurity, like thick darkness, of death-shade and disorder, and which shineth like thick darkness.
rotherham@Job:11:2 @ Should, the multitude of words, not be answered? Or should, a man full of talk, be justified?
rotherham@Job:11:6 @ That he would declare to thee the secrets of wisdom, for they are double to that which actually is,-Know then that GOD could bring into forgetfulness for thee, a portion of thine iniquity.
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:11:9 @ Longer than the earth, is the measure thereof, and broader than the sea.
rotherham@Job:11:11 @ For, he, knoweth men of falsity, and seeth iniquity, and him that doth not diligently consider.
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:12:2 @ Of a truth, ye, are the people, and, with you, wisdom, will die.
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:12:5 @ For ruin, there is contempt, in the thought of the man at ease, ready, for such as are of faltering foot!
rotherham@Job:12:7 @ But, in very deed, ask, I pray thee, the beasts, and they will teach thee, and the bird of the heavens, and it will tell thee;
rotherham@Job:12:8 @ Or address the earth, and it will teach thee, and the fishes of the sea, will recount it to thee:
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:12:12 @ In the Ancient, is wisdom, and Length of Days, understanding:
rotherham@Job:12:18 @ The fetters of kings, He looseth, or hath bound a slaves waistcloth about their loins:
rotherham@Job:12:20 @ Setting aside the speech of the trusty, and, the discernment of elders, He taketh away:
rotherham@Job:12:21 @ Pouring contempt upon nobles, and, the girdle of the mighty, hath He loosed:
rotherham@Job:12:22 @ Laying open deep things, out of darkness, and bringing out to light, the death-shade:
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:13:6 @ Hear, I pray you, the argument of my mouth, and, to the pleadings of my lips, give heed:
rotherham@Job:13:11 @ Shall not, his majesty, overwhelm you? and, the dread of him, fall upon you?
rotherham@Job:13:12 @ Are not your memorable sayings, proverbs of ashes? Breastworks of clay, your breastworks?
rotherham@Job:13:21 @ Thy handfrom off me, take thou far away, and, thy terror, let it not startle me!
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:14:1 @ Man that is born of a woman, is of few days, and full of trouble:
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:14:6 @ Look sway from him, that he may rest, Till he shall pay off, as a hireling, his day.
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:14:9 @ Through the scent of water, it may break forth, and produce branches like a sapling,
rotherham@Job:14:10 @ Yet, man, dieth, and is prostrate, Yea the son of earth doth cease to breathe, and where is he?
rotherham@Job:14:12 @ So, a man, hath lain down, and shall not arise, until there are no heavens, they shall not awake, nor be roused up out of their sleep.
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:14:18 @ But, in very deed, a mountain falling, will lie prostrate, or, a rock moved out of its place:
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:14:21 @ His sons, come to honour, and he knoweth it not, Or they are brought low, and he perceiveth it not of them.
rotherham@Job:15:3 @ Disputing with discourse that doth no good, or with speech, wherein is no profit?
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:15:11 @ Too small for thee, are the consolations of GOD? or a word spoken gently with thee?
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:15:20 @ All the days of the lawless man, he, doth writhe with pain, and, the number of years, is hidden from the tyrant;
rotherham@Job:15:21 @ A noise of dreadful things, is in his ears, In prosperity, the destroyer cometh upon him;
rotherham@Job:15:22 @ He hath no confidence to come back out of darkness, he, being destined to the power oft the sword;
rotherham@Job:15:23 @ A wanderer, he, for bread,? He knoweth that, prepared by his own hand, is the day of darkness;
rotherham@Job:15:26 @ He used to run against him with uplifted neck, with the stout bosses of his bucklers;
rotherham@Job:15:30 @ He shall not depart out of darkness, his young branch, shall the flame dry up, and he shall depart, by the breath of his own mouth!
rotherham@Job:15:33 @ He shall wronglike a vinehis sour grapes, and shall cast offas an olive-treehis blossom.
rotherham@Job:15:34 @ For, the family of the impious, is unfruitful, and, a fire, hath devoured the tents of bribery;
rotherham@Job:16:4 @ I also, like you, could speak, If your soul were in the place of my soul, I could string together words against you, and could therewith shake over you my head.
rotherham@Job:16:6 @ Though I do speak, unassuaged is my stinging pain, And, if I forbear, of what am I relieved?
rotherham@Job:16:11 @ GOD doth abandon me to him that is perverse, and, into the hands of the lawless, he throweth me headlong.
rotherham@Job:16:21 @ That one might plead, for a man, with GOD, Even a son of man, for his friend!
rotherham@Job:17:5 @ He that, for a share, denounceth friends, even, the eyes of his children, shall be dim.
rotherham@Job:17:6 @ But he hath set me, as the byword of peoples, And, one to be spit on in the face, do I become.
rotherham@Job:17:7 @ Therefore hath mine eye become dim from vexation, and, my members, are like a shadow, all of them.
rotherham@Job:17:9 @ That the righteous may hold on his way, and, the clean of hands, increase in strength.
rotherham@Job:17:11 @ My days, are past, my purposes, are broken off, the possessions of my heart!
rotherham@Job:17:12 @ Night for day, they appoint, Light, is near, by reason of darkness!
rotherham@Job:18:2 @ How long will ye make a perversion of words? Ye should understand, and, afterwards, we could speak.
rotherham@Job:18:4 @ One tearing in pieces his own soul in his anger, For thy sake, shall the earth be forsaken? or the rock be moved out of its place?
rotherham@Job:18:5 @ Even the light of the lawless, shall go out, Neither shall shine the flame of his fire;
rotherham@Job:18:7 @ The steppings of his strength are hemmed in, and his own counsel casteth him down;
rotherham@Job:18:13 @ Let it devour the members of his body, Let the firstborn of death devour his members;
rotherham@Job:18:14 @ Uprooted, out of his tent, be his confidence, and let it drive him down to the king of terrors;
rotherham@Job:18:15 @ There shall dwell in his tent, what is naught-of-his, Let brimstone be strewed over his dwelling;
rotherham@Job:18:16 @ Beneath, let his roots be dried up, and, above, be cut off his branch;
rotherham@Job:18:17 @ His memorial, have perished out of the land, and let him have no name over the face of the open field;
rotherham@Job:18:18 @ Let them thrust him out of light into darkness, Yea, out of the world, let them chase him;
rotherham@Job:18:19 @ Let him have neither scion nor seed among his people, neither any survivor in his place of sojourn:
rotherham@Job:18:21 @ Surely, these, are the dwellings of him that is perverse, and, this, is the place of him that knoweth not GOD.
rotherham@Job:19:9 @ My gloryfrom off me, hath he stripped, and hath removed the crown of my head;
rotherham@Job:19:14 @ Failed me, have my near of kin, and, mine intimate acquaintances, have forgotten 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:19:17 @ My breath, is strange to my wife, and I am loathsome to the sons of my own mother;
rotherham@Job:19:19 @ All the men of mine intimate circle abhor me, and, these whom I loved, have turned against me;
rotherham@Job:19:20 @ Unto my skin and unto my flesh, have my bones cleaved, and I have escaped with the akin of my teeth.
rotherham@Job:19:21 @ Pity me! pity me! ye, my friends, for, the hand of GOD, hath stricken me!
rotherham@Job:19:24 @ That, with a stylus of iron and lead, for all timein the rock, they could be graven!
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:19:29 @ Be ye afraidon your partof the face of the sword, because, wrath,
rotherham@Job:20:3 @ The correction meant to confound me, I must hear, but, the spiritout of my understanding, will give me a reply.
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:20:8 @ Like a dream, shall he fly away, and they shall not find him, yea he shall be chased away, as a vision of the night.
rotherham@Job:20:10 @ His children, shall seek the favour of the poor, and, his own hand, shall give back his wealth.
rotherham@Job:20:11 @ His bones, are full of youthful vigour, yet, with himin the dust, shall it lie down.
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:20:14 @ His food, in his stomach, is changed, the gall of adders, within him!
rotherham@Job:20:15 @ Wealth, hath he swallowed, and hath vomited the same, Out of his belly, shall, GOD, drive it forth:
rotherham@Job:20:16 @ The poison of adders, shall he suck, The tongue of the viper shall slay him;
rotherham@Job:20:17 @ Let him not see in the channels the flowings of torrents of honey and milk.
rotherham@Job:20:22 @ When his abundance is gone, he shall be in straits, All the power of distress, shall come upon him.
rotherham@Job:20:23 @ It shall be that, to fill his belly, he will thrust at him the glow of his anger, and rain upon him for his punishment.
rotherham@Job:20:24 @ He shall flee from the armour of iron, There shall pierce him, a bow of bronze!
rotherham@Job:20:25 @ He hath drawn it out, and it hath come forth out of his back, yea the flashing arrow-head, out of his gall, There shall march on himterrors:
rotherham@Job:20:28 @ The increase of his house shall vanish, melting away in the day of his anger.
rotherham@Job:20:29 @ This, is the portion of the lawless man, from God, and the inheritance decreed him from the Mighty One.
rotherham@Job:21:8 @ Their seed, is established in their sight, along with them, yea their offspring, before their eyes;
rotherham@Job:21:9 @ Their houses, are at peace, without dread, neither is, the rod of GOD, upon them;
rotherham@Job:21:12 @ They rejoice aloud as timbrel and lyre, and make merry to the sound of the pipe;
rotherham@Job:21:14 @ Yet they said unto GOD, Depart from us, and, In the knowledge of thy ways, find we no pleasure.
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:21:16 @ Lo! not in their own hand, is their welfare, The counsel of lawless men, is far from me!
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:21:20 @ His own eyes, shall see his misfortune, and, the wrath of the Almighty, shall he drink.
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:21:23 @ This, man dieth, in the very perfection of his prosperity, wholly tranquil and secure;
rotherham@Job:21:24 @ His veins, are filled with nourishment, and, the marrow of his bones, is fresh;
rotherham@Job:21:25 @ Whereas, this other man, dieth, in bitterness of soul, and hath never tasted good fortune:
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:21:30 @ That, to the day of calamity, is the wicked reserved, to the day of indignant visitation, are they led.
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: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:22:6 @ 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:22:8 @ A man of might, to him, pertaineth the land, and, the favorite, dwelleth therein:
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:22:14 @ Dark clouds, are a veil to him, and he cannot see, or, the vault of the heavens, doth he walk?
rotherham@Job:22:15 @ The path of the ancient time, wilt thou mark, which the men of iniquity trod?
rotherham@Job:22:18 @ Yet, he, had filled their houses with good! The counsel of the lawless, then, is far from me:
rotherham@Job:22:24 @ Then lay up, in the dust, precious ore, and, among the stones of the torrent-beds, fine gold:
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:23:6 @ Would he, with fulness of might, contend with me? Nay, surely, he, would give heed to me!
rotherham@Job:23:11 @ Of his steps, my foot taketh hold, His way, have I kept, and not swerved;
rotherham@Job:23:12 @ The command of his lips, and would not go back, and, in my bosom, have I treasured the words of his lips.
rotherham@Job:23:17 @ Because I was not cut off before the darkness, nor, before my face, did the gloom form a shroud.
rotherham@Job:24:1 @ Wherefore, since from the Almighty times are not hid, have, his knowing ones, no vision of his days?
rotherham@Job:24:3 @ The ass of the fatherless, they drive off, they take in pledge the ox of the widow;
rotherham@Job:24:4 @ They turn aside the needy out of the way, at once, are the humbled of the land made to hide themselves.
rotherham@Job:24:6 @ In the field-a mans fodder, they cut down, and, the vineyard of the lawless, they strip of its late berries;
rotherham@Job:24:8 @ With the sweeping rain of the mountains, are they wet, and, through having no shelter, they embrace a rock.
rotherham@Job:24:12 @ Out of the cityout of the houses, they make outcry. and, the soul of the wounded, calleth for help, and, GOD, doth not regard it as foolish.
rotherham@Job:24:13 @ They, have become rebels against the light, they are not acquainted with the ways thereof, neither abide they in the paths thereof.
rotherham@Job:24:15 @ And, the eye