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Cvdl GENEXOLEVNUMDEUJOSJDGRUTH1SA2SA1KI2KI1CH2CHEZRANEHESTJOBPSAPROECCSNGISAJERLAMEZEDANHOSJOELAMOSOBAYNAMICNAHHABZEPHAGZECMALMATMARKLUKEYHNACTsROM1COR2CORGALEPHPHPCOL1TH2TH1TIM2TIMTITPHMHEBYAC1PET2PET1YHN2YHN3YHNYUDREV

Cvdl JOB

1In the lode of Hus there was a man called Iob: an innocent and vertuous man, soch one as feared God, and eschued euell. 2This man had vij. sonnes, and iij. doughters. 3His substaunce was vij. M. shepe, iij.M. camels, v.C. yock of oxen, v.C. she asses, and a very greate housholde: so yt he was one of the most principall men amoge all them of the east countre. 4His sonnes now wente on euery man, and made banckettes: one daye in one house, another daye in another, and sent for their iij. sisters, to eate & drinke with them. 5So when they had passed ouer the tyme of their banckettinge rounde aboute, Iob sent for them, and clensed them agayne, stode vp early, and offred for euery one a bretofferinge. For Iob thought thus: peraduenture my sonnes haue done some offence, and haue bene vnthankfull to God in their hertes. And thus dyd Iob euery daye. 6Now vpon a tyme, when the seruauntes of God came and stode before the LORDE, Sathan came also amonge them. 7And the LORDE sayde vnto Sathan: From whence commest thou? Sathan answered the LORDE, and sayde: I haue gone aboute the lode, and walked thorow it. 8Then sayde the LORDE vnto Satha: hast thou not considered my seruaunt Iob, how that he is an innocet and vertuous ma: soch one as feareth God, and eschueth euell, and that there is none like him in the londe? 9Sathan answered, and sayde vnto the LORDE: Doth Iob feare God for naught? 10hast thou not preserued him, his house, and all his substaunce on euery syde? hast thou not blessed the workes of his hondes? Is not his possession encreaced in the londe? 11But laye thyne honde vpo him a litle, touch once all that he hath, and (I holde) he shall curse the to thy face. 12And the LORDE sayde vnto Sathan: lo all that he hath, be in thy power: only vpon himself se that thou laye not thine honde. Then wente Sathan forth from the LORDE. 13Now vpon a certayne daye when his sonnes and doughters were eatinge, and drynkinge wyne in their eldest brothers house, 14there came a messaunger vnto Iob, and sayde: Whyle the oxen were a plowinge, and the Asses goinge in the pasture besyde them: 15the Sabees came in violetly, and toke them all awaye: yee they haue slayne the seruauntes with the swearde, and I only ranne my waye, to tell the. 16And whyle he was yet speakynge, there came another, and sayde: The fyre of God is fallen from heauen, it hath consumed & bret vp all the shepe and seruauntes: and I only ranne my waye, to tell the. 17In the meane season whyle he was yet speakinge, there came another, and sayde: The Caldees made thre armies, and fell in vpon the camels, which they haue caried awaye, yee and slayne the seruauntes with the swearde: and I only am gotte awaye, to tell the. 18Whyle he was speakinge, there came yet another, ad sayde: Thy sonnes and doughters were eatinge ad drynkinge wyne in their eldest brothers house, 19ad sodenly there came a mightie greate wynde out off the South, and smote the iiij. corners of the house: which fell vpon thy children, so that they are deed: and I am gotten awaye alone, to tell the. 20Then Iob stode vp, and rente his clothes shaued his heade, fell downe vpon the groude, worshipped, 21and sayde: Naked came I out of my mothers wombe, and naked shall I turne thither agayne. The LORDE gaue, and the LORDE hath taken awaye (the LORDE hath done his pleasure) now blessed be ye name off the LORDE. 22In all these thinges dyd Iob not offende, ner murmured foolishly agaynst God. 2It happened also apon a tyme, that when the seruauntes of God came & stode before the LORDE, Sathan came also amonge them, and stode before him. 2And the LORDE sayde vnto Sathan: From whence commest thou? Sathan answered and sayde: I haue gone aboute the lode, and walked thorow it. 3Then sayde the LORDE vnto Sathan: Hast thou not considered my seruaunt Iob, how that he is an innocent & vertuous man soch one as feareth God, and eschueth euell, and that there is none like him in the londe? But thou mouedest me agaynst him, to punysh him: yet is it in vayne, for he contynueth still in his godlynesse. 4Sathan answered the LORDE, and sayde: Skynne for skynne? yee a man will geue all yt euer he hath, for his life. 5But laye thine honde vpon him, touch him once vpon the bone and flesh, and (I holde) he shall curse the to thy face. 6Then sayde the LORDE vnto Satha: lo, there hast thou him in thy power, but spare his life. 7So wente Sathan forth from the LORDE, and smote Iob with maruelous sore byles, from the sole off the fote vnto his crowne: 8so that he sat vpon the grounde in the asshes, and scraped of the etter off his sores with a potsherde. 9Then sayde his wife vnto him: Dost thou yet cotynue in thy perfectnesse? curse God, & dye. 10But Iob sayde vnto her: Thou speakest like a foolish woma. Seinge we haue receaued prosperite at the honde of God, wherfore shulde we not be content with aduersite also? In all these thinges, dyd not Iob synne with his lippes. 11Now when Iobs frendes herde of all ye trouble, that happened vnto him, there came thre off them, euery one from his owne place: namely, Eliphas the Themanite, Baldad the Suhite, and Sophar the Naamathite. For they were agreed together to come, to shewe their compassion vpon him, and to comforte him. 12So when they lifte vp their eyes a farre off, they knewe him not. Then they cried, and wepte: then euery one off them rente his clothes, and sprynckled dust vpon their heades in the ayre. 13They sat them downe by him also vpon the grounde, vij. dayes and vij. nightes. Nether was there eny of them that spake one worde vnto him, for they sawe that his payne was very greate. 3After this opened Iob his mouth, and cursed his daye, 2and sayde: 3lost be that daye, wherin I was borne: and the night, in the which it was sayde: there is a manchilde conceaued. 4The same daye be turned to darcknesse, and not regarded of God from aboue, nether be shyned vpo wt light: 5but be couered with darcknesse, and the shadowe of death. Let the dymme cloude fall vpon it, and let it be lapped in with sorowe. 6Let the darckstorme ouercome ye night, let it not be reckened amonge the dayes off the yeare, ner counted in the monethes. 7Despysed be that night, and discommended: let them that curse the daye, 8geue it their curse also, euen those that be ready to rayse vp Leuiathan. 9Let the starres be dymme thorow darcknesse of it. Let it loke for light, but let it se none, nether the rysynge vp of the fayre mornynge: 10because it shut not vp the wombe that bare me, ner hyd these sorowes fro myne eyes. 11Alas, why dyed I not in ye byrth? Why dyd not I perysh, as soone as I came out of my mothers wobe? 12Why set they me vpo yeir knees? Why gaue they me suck with their brestes? 13Then shulde I now haue lyen still, I shulde haue slepte, and bene at rest: 14like as the kynges ad lordes of ye earth, which buylde them selues speciall places: 15As the prynces that haue greate substaunce of golde, & their houses full of syluer. 16O that I vtterly had no beynge, or were as a thige borne out of tyme (that is put asyde) ether as yonge children, which neuer sawe the light. 17There must the wicked ceasse from their tyranny, there soch as are ouerlaboured, be at rest: 18there are those letten out fre, which haue bene in preson, so that they heare nomore the voyce of the oppressoure: 19There are small and greate: the bonde man, and he that is fre fro his master. 20Wherfore is the light geuen, to him that is in mysery? and life vnto them, that haue heuy hertes? 21(Which longe for death, and it commeth not: for yf they might fynde their graue, 22they wolde be maruelous glad, as those that dygge vp treasure) 23To the man whose waye is hyd, which God kepeth backe from him. 24This is the cause, that I syghe before I eate, and my roaringes fall out like a water floude. 25For the thynge that I feared, is come vpon me: and the thynge that I was afrayed of, is happened vnto me. 26Was I not happy? Had I not quyetnesse? Was I not in rest? And now commeth soch mysery vpon me. 4Then answered Eliphas of Theman and sayde vnto him: 2Yf we begynne to comon with the, peradueture thou wilt be myscontent, but who can witholde himself from speakynge? 3Beholde, thou hast bene a teacher of many, and hast comforted the weery hondes. 4Thy wordes haue set vp those that were fallen, thou hast refresshed the weake knees. 5But now that the plage is come vpon the, thou shreckest awaye: now that it hath touched thyself, thou art faint harted. 6Where is now thy feare of God, thy stedfastnesse, thy pacience, and the perfectnesse of thy life? 7Considre (I praye the) who euer peryshed, beynge an innocent? Or, when were the godly destroyed? 8As for those that plowe wickednesse (as I haue sene myself) and sowe myschefe, they reape ye same. 9For whe God bloweth vpon them, they perysh, and are destroyed thorow the blast of his wrath. 10The roaringe of the lyon, the cryenge off the lyonesse, & ye teth off ye lyos whelpes are broke. 11The greate lyon perysheth, because he ca get no pray and the lyons whelpes are scatred abrode. 12There is spoken vnto me a thynge in councell, which hath geuen a terrible sounde in myne eare, 13with a vision in the night, when men are fallen a slepe. 14Soch feare and drede came vpo me, that all my bones shoke. 15And when the wynde passed ouer by me, the hayres of my flesh stode vp. 16Then stode there one before me, whose face I knewe not: an ymage there was, and the wether was still, so that I herde this voyce: 17Maye a man be iustified before God? Maye there eny man be iudged to be clene, by reason of his owne workes? 18Beholde, he hath founde vnfaythfulnesse amonge his owne seruauntes, and proude disobedience amonge his angels. 19How moch more the shal they (that dwell in houses of claye, whose foundacion is but earth) be moth eaten? 20They shalbe destroyed from the mornynge vnto the euenynge: yee they shall perish, or euer they be awarre: 21and be taken awaye so clene, that none of the shall remayne, but be deed, or euer they be awarre off it. 5Name me one els, yf thou canst fynde eny: yee loke aboute the, vpon eny of the holy men. 2As for the foolish man displeasure kylleth him, and anger slayeth ye ignoraunt. 3I haue sene my self, when the foolish was depe roted, that his bewty was sodely destroyed: 4that his children were without prosperite or health: that they were slayne in the dore, and no ma to delyuer them: 5that his haruest was eaten vp off the hungrie: that the weapened man had spoyled it, and that the thurstie had droncke vp his riches. It is not the earth that bryngeth forth trauayle, 6nether commeth sorow out of ye groude: 7but it is man, that is borne vnto mysery, like as the byrde for to fle. 8But now will I speake off the LORDE, and talke of God: 9which doth thinges, that are vnsearcheable, and marueles without nobre: 10Which geueth rayne vpo the earth, and poureth water vpon all thinges: 11which setteth vp them of lowe degre, and sendeth prosperite, to those that are in heuynesse: 12Which destroyeth the deuyces of the sotyll, so that they are not able to perfourme the thynges that they take in hode: 13which compaseth ye wyse in their owne craftynesse, and ouertroweth the councell of the wicked: 14In so moch that they runne in to darcknesse by fayre daye, and grope aboute them at the noone daye, like as in the night. 15And so he delyuereth the poore from the swearde, from their mouth, and from the hode of the cruell: 16that the poore maye haue hope, & that the mouth of the oppressoure maye be stopped. 17Beholde, happie is the man, whom God punysheth: therfore, despyse not thou ye chastenynge of the Allmighty. 18For though he make a wounde, he geueth a medicyne agayne: though he smyte, his honde maketh whole agayne. 19He delyuereth the out of sixe troubles, so that in the seuenth there can no harme touch the. 20In the myddest of honger he saueth ye from death: and when it is warre, from the power of the swearde. 21He shall kepe the from the perlous tonge so that when trouble commeth, thou shalt not nede to feare. 22In destruccion and derth thou shalt be mery, and shalt not be afrayed for the beastes of the earth: 23But the castels in the londe shal be confederate with the, & the beastes of the felde shall geue the peace: 24Yee thou shalt se, that thy dwellynge place shalbe in rest: thou shalt beholde thy substaunce, and be nomore punyshed for synne. 25Thou shalt se also, that thy sede shall encreace, and that thy posterite shalbe as the grasse vpon the earth. 26Thou shalt come to thy graue in a fayre age, like as ye corne sheeues are brought in to the barne in due season. 27Lo, this is the matter, as we oure selues haue proued by experience. Therfore now that thou hearest it, take better hede to thy selff. 6Iob answered, and sayde: 2O that my misery weere weyed, and my punyshment layed in the balaunces: 3for then shulde it be heuyer, then the sonde of the see. This is the cause, that my wordes are so soroufull. 4For the allmighty hath shott at me with his arowes, whose indignacion hath droncke vp my sprete, and ye terrible feares of God fight agaysnt me. 5Doth the wilde asse roare when he hath grasse? Or crieth the oxe, whe he hath fodder ynough? 6Maye a thynge be eaten vnseasoned, or without salt? What taist hath ye whyte within the yoke an egg? 7The thinges that sometyme I might not awaye withall, are now my meate for very sorow. 8O that I might haue my desyre: O yt God wolde graunte me the thynge, that I longe for: 9That he wolde begynne and smyte me: that he wolde let his honde go, & hew me downe. 10The shulde I haue some coforte: yee I wolde desyre him in my payne, that he shulde not spare, for I will not be agaynst ye wordes of the holy one. 11What power haue I to endure? Or? what is myne ende, that my soule might be paciet? 12Is my strength the strength of stones? Or, is my flesh made of brasse? 13Am I able to helpe my self? Is not my strength gone fro me, 14like as yf one withdrewe a good dede from his frende, and forsoke the feare of God? 15Myne owne brethren passe ouer by me as the waterbroke, that hastely runneth thorow ye valleys. 16But they that feare the horefrost, the snowe shal fall vpon them. 17When their tyme cometh, they shalbe destroyed and perishe: and when they be set on fyre, they shalbe remoued out of their place, 18for the pathes yt they go in, are croked: they haist after vayne thinges, and shal perish. 19Considre the pathes off Theman, & the wayes off Saba, wherin they haue put their trust. 20Confounded are they, that put eny cofidence in them: For whe they came to opteyne the thynges that they loked for, they were brought to confucion. 21Eue so are ye also come vnto me: but now that ye se my mysery, ye are afrayed. 22Dyd I desyre you, to come hyther? Or, to geue me eny off youre substaunce? 23To delyuer me me from the enemies honde, or to saue me from the powers off the mightie? 24Teach me and I will holde my tonge: and yf I do erre, shewe me wherin. 25Wherfore blame ye then the wordes, that are well and truly spoken? 26which of you can reproue them? Sauynge only that ye are sotyll to check mens sayenges, and can speake many wordes in the wynde. 27Ye fall vpon the fatherlesse, ad go aboute to ouerthrowe youre owne frende. 28Wherfore loke not only vpon me, but vpon youre selues: whether I lye, or no. 29Turne into youre owne selues (I praye you) be indifferent iudges, and considre myne vngyltinesse: 30whether there be eny vnrightuousnesse in my tonge, or vayne wordes in my mouth. 7Is not the life off ma vpon earth a very batayll? Are not his dayes, like the dayes of an hyred seruaunte? 2For like as a bonde seruaunt desyreth the shadowe, and as an hyrelinge wolde fayne haue an ende of his worke: 3Euen so haue I laboured whole monethes longe (but in vayne) and many a carefull night haue I tolde. 4When I layed me downe to slepe, I sayde: O when shal I ryse? Agayne, I longed sore for the night. Thus am I full off sorowe, till it be darcke. 5My flesh is clothed with wormes, fylthinesse and dust: my skynne is wythered, and crompled together: 6my dayes passe ouer more spedely, the a weeuer can weeue out his webbe, and are gone, or I am awarre. 7O remembre, that my life is but a wynde, ad that myne eye shal nomore se the pleasures 8therof yee and that none other mans eye shall se me eny more. For yf thou fasten thine eyes vpon me, I come to naught like 9as a cloude is cosumed and vanyshed awaye, euen so he that goeth downe to hell, commeth nomore vp, 10ner turneth agayne in to his house, nether shall his place knowe him eny more. 11Therfore I will not spare my mouth, but will speake in the trouble of my sprete, in ye bytternesse of my mynde will I talke. 12Am I a see or a whalfysh, that thou kepest me so in preson? 13When I thynke: my bedd shall comforte me, I shall haue some refresshinge by talkynge with myself vpon my couche: 14The troublest thou me with dreames, ad makest me so afrayed thorow visions, 15that my soule wyssheth rather to be hanged, and my bones to be deed. 16I can se no remedy, I shall lyue nomore: O spare me then, for my dayes are but vayne 17What is man, that thou hast him in soch reputacion, and settest so moch by him? 18Thou takest diligent care for him, and sodely doest thou trye him. 19Why goest thou not fro me, ner lettest me alone, so longe till I swalow downe my spetle? 20I haue offended, what shal I do vnto ye, O thou preseruer off men? Why hast thou made me to stonde in thy waye, and am so heuy a burden vnto myself? 21Why doest thou not forgeue me my synne? Wherfore takest thou not awaye my wickednesse? Beholde, now must I slepe in the dust: and yff thou sekest me tomorow in the mornynge, I shalbe gone. 8Then answered Baldad the Suhite, and sayde: 2How longe wilt thou talke of soch thinges? how longe shal yi mouth speake so proude wordes? 3Doth God peruerte the thinge that is laufull? Or, doth the Allmightie destroye the thynge that is right? 4Whe thy sonnes synned agaynst him, dyd not he punysh the for their wickednesse? 5Yff thou woldest now resorte vnto God by tymes, and make thine humble prayer to ye Allmightie: 6yf thou woldest lyue a pure and a godly life: shulde he not wake vp vnto the immediatly, & geue the the bewtie of rightuousnesse agayne? 7In so moch, that where i so euer thou haddest litle afore, thou shuldest now haue greate abundaunce. 8Enquere of them that haue bene before the, search diligently amonge thy forefathers: 9Namely, yt we are but of yesterdaye, and considre not, that oure dayes vpon earth are buth a very shadow. 10They shall shewe the, they shall tell the, yee they will gladly confesse the same. 11Maye a resshe be grene without moystnesse? maye the grasse growe without water? 12No: but (or euer it be shot forth, and or euer it be gathered) it wythereth, before eny other herbe. 13Euen so goeth it with all them, that forget God: and euen thus also shal the ypocrytes hope come to naught. 14His confidence shalbe destroyed, for he trusteth in a spyders webbe. 15He leeneth him vpo his house, but he shal not stonde: he holdeth him fast by it, yet shal he not endure. 16Oft tymes a thinge doth florish, and men thynke that it maye abyde the Sonneshyne: it shuteth forth the braunches in his garden, 17it taketh many rotes, in so moch that it is like an house off stones. 18But yf it be taken out off his place, euery man denyeth it, sayenge: I knowe the not. 19Lo, thus is it wt him, that reioyseth in his owne doinges: and as for other, they growe out of the earth. 20Beholde, God will not cast awaye a vertuous man, nether wil he helpe the vngodly. 21Thy mouth shall he fyll with laughynge, ad thy lyppes with gladnesse. 22They that hate the, shalbe confounded, & ye dwellinges of ye vngodly shal come to naught. 9Iob answered, and sayde: 2As for yt I knowe it is so of a treuth, yt a man compared vnto God, can not be iustified. 3Yf he wil argue with him, he shall not be able to answere him vnto one amonge a thousande. 4He is wyse of hert, and mightie in strength. Who euer prospered, that toke parte agaynst him? 5He translateth the moutaynes, or euer they be awarre, & ouerthroweth them in his wrath. 6He remoueth the earth out of hir place, that hir pilers shake withall. 7He commaundeth the Sone, & it ryseth not: he closeth vp the starres, as it were vnder a signet. 8He himself alone spredeth out ye heauens, and goeth vpon the wawes of the see. 9He maketh the waynes of heauen, the Orions, the vij. starres and the secrete places of the south. 10He doth greate thinges, soch as are vnsearcheable, yee and wonders without nombre. 11Yf he came by me, I might not loke vpo him: yf he wente his waye, I shulde not perceaue it. 12Yf he be haisty to take eny thinge awaye, who wil make him restore it agayne? Who wil saye vnto him: what doest thou? 13He is God, whose wrath no man maye with stode: but the proudest of all must stoupe vnder him. 14How shulde I then answere him? or, what wordes shulde I fynde out agaynst him? 15Yee though I be rightuous, yet will I not geue him one worde agayne, but mekely submytte my self to my iudge. 16All be it that I call vpon him, and he heare me, yet am I not sure, yt he hath herde my voyce: 17he troubleth me so with the tempest, and woundeth me out of measure without a cause. 18He will not let my sprete be in rest, but fylleth me wt bytternesse. 19Yf men will speake of strength, he is the stogest of all: yf me will speake of rightousnes, who darre be my recorde? 20yf I will iustifie my self, myne owne mouth shall codemne me: yf I will put forth my self for a perfecte man, he shal proue me a wicked doer: 21For that I shulde be an innocent, my coscience knoweth it not, yee I my self am weery off my life. 22This one thige wil I saye: He destroyeth both the rightuous & vngodly. 23And though he slaye sodenly wt the scourge, yet laugheth he at the punyshment of the innocent. 24As for the worlde, he geueth it ouer in to the power of the wicked, soch as the rulers be, wherof all londes are full. Is it not so? where is there eny, but he is soch one? 25My dayes haue bene more swifte, then a runner: they are gone sodenly, and haue sene no good thinge. 26They are passed awaye, as the shippes that be good vnder sale, and as the Aegle that haisteth to the pray. 27When I am purposed to forget my complayninges to chaunge my countenaunce, and to coforte my self: 28then am I afrayed of all my workes, for I knowe, thou fauourest not an euell doer. 29Yf I be then a wicked one, why haue I laboured in vayne? 30Though I wasshed my self with snowe water, and made myne hondes neuer so clene, 31yet shuldest thou dyppe me in ye myre, & myne owne clothes shulde defyle me. 32For he yt I must geue answere vnto, and with whom I go to lawe, is not a man as I am. 33Nether is there eny dayes man to reproue both the partes, or to laye his hode betwixte vs. 34Let him take his rod awaye fro me, yee let him make me nomore afrayed of him, 35and then shal I answere him without eny feare. For as longe as I am in soch fearfulnesse, I can make no answere: And why? 10it greueth my soule to lyue. Neuerthelesse, now will I put forth my wordes: I wil speake out of the very heuynesse off my soule, 2and will saye vnto God: O do not condemne me, but shewe me the cause, wherfore thou iudgest me on this maner. 3Thinkest thou it well done, to oppresse me, to cast me of (beinge a worke of thy hondes) and to manteyne the councell of the vngodly? 4Hast thou fle?shy eyes then, or doest thou loke as man loketh? 5Are thy dayes as the dayes of man, and thy yeares as mans yeares? 6that thou makest soch inquisicion for my wickednesse, and searchest out my synne? 7where as (notwithstondinge) thou knowest that I am no wicked person, & that there is no man able to delyuer me out of thine honde. 8Thy hondes haue made me, & fashioned me alltogether rounde aboute, wilt thou then destroye me sodely? 9O remembre (I beseke the) how that thou madest me of the moulde of the earth, and shalt brynge me to earth agayne. 10Hast thou not milked me, as it were mylck: and turned me to cruddes like chese? 11Thou hast couered me with skynne and flesh, and ioyned me together with bones & synowes. 12Thou hast graunted me life, and done me good: and the diligent hede that thou tokest vpon me, hath preserued my sprete. 13Though thou hydest these thinges in thine hert, yet am I sure, that thou remembrest the all. 14Wherfore didest thou kepe me, when I synned, and hast not clensed me fro myne offence? 15Yf I do wickedly, wo is me therfore: Yf I be rightuous, yet darre I not lift vp my heade: so full am I of confucion, and se myne owne misery. 16Thou huntest me out (beynge in heuynesse) as it were a Lyon, and troublest me out of measure. 17Thou bringest fresh witnesses agaynst me, thy wrath increasest thou vpon me, very many are the plages that I am in. 18Wherfore hast thou brought me out of my mothers wombe? O that I had perished, & that no eye had sene me. 19Yf they had caried me to my graue, as soone as I was borne, then shulde I be now, as though I had neuer bene. 20Shall not my short life come soone to an ende? O holde the fro me, let me alone, that I maye ease myself a litle: 21afore I go thyther, from whence I shal not turne agayne: Namely, to that londe of darcknesse & shadowe of death: 22yee into that darck clowdy londe & deadly shadowe, where as is no ordre, but terrible feare as in the darcknesse. 11Then answered Sophar the Naamathite, and sayde: 2Shulde not he that maketh many wordes, be answered? Shulde he that bableth moch, be commended therin? 3Shulde men geue eare vnto the only? Thou wilt laugh other men to scorne, & shal no body mocke the agayne? 4Wilt thou saye vnto God: The thinge that I take in honde, is perfecte, & I am clene in thy sight? 5O that God wolde speake, and open his lippes agaynst the, 6that he might shewe the (out of his secrete wy?dome) how manyfolde his lawe is: then shuldest thou knowe, that God had forgotten the, because of thy synnes. 7Wilt thou fynde out God with thy sekynge? wilt thou attayne to the perfectnesse of the Allmightie? 8He is hyer the heaue, what wilt thou do? Deper the hell, how wilt thou then knowe him? 9His length exceadeth the length of the earth, and his bredth ye bredth of the see. 10Though he turne all thinges vpsyde downe, close them in, or thrust the together, who darre check him therfore? 11For it is he, that knoweth the vanite of men: he seyth their wickednesse also, shulde he not then considre it? 12A vayne body exalteth him self, and the sonne of man is like a wylde asses foale. 13Yf thou haddest now a right herte, & liftest vp thine hondes towarde him: 14yf thou woldest put awaye the wickednesse, which thou hast in honde, so that no vngodlynesse dwelt in thy house: 15Then mightest thou lift vp thy face without shame, the shuldest thou be sure, and haue no nede to feare. 16Then shuldest thou forget thy misery, and thynke nomore vpon it, then vpon the waters that runne by. 17Then shulde thy life be as cleare as the noone daye, and sprynge forth as the mornynge. 18Then mightest thou haue comforth, in the hope that thou hast: & slepe quyetly, when thou art buried. 19Then shuldest thou take thy rest, and no ma to make the afrayed, yee many one shulde set moch by the. 20As for the eyes of the vngodly, they shal be consumed, and not escape: their hope shalbe misery and sorow of mynde. 12So Iob answered, and sayde: 2Then (no doute) ye are the men alone, and wy?dome shal perish with you. 3But I haue vnderstodinge as well as ye, and am no lesse then ye. Yee who knoweth not these thinges? 4Thus he that calleth vpo God, and whom God heareth, is mocked of his neghboure: the godly & innocent man is laughed to scorne. 5Godlynesse is a light despysed in ye hertes of the rich, & is set for them to stomble vpon. 6The houses of robbers are in wealth and prosperite, & they that maliciously medle agaynst God, dwel without care: yee God geueth all thinges richely with his honde. 7Axe the catell, & they shal enfourme the: the foules of the ayre, and they shall tell ye: 8Speake to the earth, and it shall shewe the: Or to the fyshes of the see, and they shal certifie the. 9What is he, but he knoweth, that ye hode of the LORDE made all these? 10In whose honde is the soule of euery lyuynge thinge, and the breth of all men. 11Haue not the eares pleasure in hearinge, and the mouth in tastinge the thinge that it eateth? 12Amonge olde personnes there is wy?dome, and amonge the aged is vnderstodinge. 13Yee with God is wy?dome and strength, it is he that hath councell & foreknowlege. 14Yf he breake downe a thinge, who can set it vp agayne? Yf he shutt a thinge, who wil open it? 15Beholde, yf he witholde the waters, they drye vp: Yf he let the go, they destroye the earth. 16With him is strength and wy?dome: he knoweth both the disceauer, and him that is disceaued. 17He carieth awaye the wyse men, as it were a spoyle, and bryngeth the iudges out of their wyttes. 18He lowseth the gyrdle of kynges, and gyrdeth their loynes with a bonde. 19he ledeth awaye the prestes into captiuyte, and turneth the mightie vp syde downe. 20He taketh the verite from out of the mouth, & disapoynteth ye aged of their wy?dome. 21He poureth out confucion vpon prynces, and coforteth them that haue bene oppressed. 22Loke what lyeth hyd in darcknesse, he declareth it opely: and the very shadowe of death bringeth he to light. 23He both increaseth the people, and destroyeth them: He maketh them to multiplie, and dryueth them awaye. 24He chaungeth the herte of the prynces and kynges of the earth, and disapoynteth them: so that they go wadringe out of the waye, 25and grope in the darke without light, stackeringe to and fro like droncken men. 13Lo, all this haue I sene with myne eye, herde with myne eare, & vnderstonde it. 2Loke what ye knowe, that same do I knowe also, nether am I inferior vnto you. 3Neuerthelesse I am purposed to talke with the Allmightie, and my desyre is to comon with God. 4As for you, ye are workmasters of lyes: and vnprofitable Phisicians alltogether. 5Wolde God ye kepte youre tonge, that ye might be taken for wyse men. 6Therfore heare my wordes, and pondre the sentence of my lippes. 7Will ye make answere for God with lyes, and mateyne him with disceate? 8Wil ye accepte ye personne of God, and intreate for him? 9Shal that helpe you, when he calleth you to rekenynge? Thynke ye to begyle him, as a man is begyled? 10Punysh you shall he and reproue you, yf ye do secretly accepte eny personne. 11Shall he not make you afrayed, when he sheweth himself? Shal not his terrible feare fall vpo you? 12youre remembraunce shalbe like the dust, & youre pryde shalbe turned to claye. 13Holde youre tonges now, and let me speake, for there is some thinge come in to my mynde. 14Wherfore do I beare my flesh in my teth, and my soule in myne hondes? 15Lo, there is nether coforte ner hope for me, yf he wil slaye me. But yf I shewe and reproue myne owne wayes in his sight, 16he is euen the same, that maketh me whole: and why? there maye no Ypocrite come before him, 17Heare my wordes, and pondre my sayenges with youre eares. 18Beholde, though sentence were geuen vpon me, I am sure to be knowne for vngilty. 19What is he, that will go to lawe with me? For yf I holde my tonge, I shal dye. 20Neuerthelesse graunte me ij. thinges, and then will I not hyde my self from the. 21Withdrawe thine honde fro me, & let not the fearfull drede of the make me afrayed. 22And then sende for me to the lawe, yt I maye answere for my self: or els, let me speake, and geue thou the answere. 23How greate are my my?dedes & synnes? Let me knowe my trasgressions & offences. 24Wherfore hydest thou thy face, and holdest me for thine enemye? 25Wilt thou be so cruell & extreme vnto a flyenge leaf, and folowe vpon drye stubble? 26that thou layest so sharply to my charge, and wilt vtterly vndoo me, for ye synnes of my yougth? 27Thou hast put my fote in the stockes: thou lokest narowly vnto all my pathes, & marckest the steppes of my fete: 28where as I (notwithstondinge) must consume like as a foule carion, and as a cloth that is moth eaten. 14Man that is borne of a woman, hath but a shorte tyme to lyue, and is full of dyuerse miseries. 2He cometh vp, and falleth awaye like a floure. He flyeth as it were a shadowe, and neuer continueth in one state. 3Thinkest thou it now well done, to open thine eyes vpon soch one, and to brynge me before the in iudgment? 4Who can make it cleane, that commeth of an vncleane thinge? No body. 5The dayes of man are shorte, ye nombre of his monethes are knowne only vnto the. Thou hast apoynted him his boundes, he can not go beyonde them. 6Go from him, that he maye rest a litle: vntill his daye come, which he loketh for, like as an hyrelinge doth. 7Yf a tre be cutt downe, there is some hope yet, that it will sproute and shute forth the braunches againe: 8For though a rote be waxen olde and deed in the grounde, yet whe the stocke 9getteth the sent of water, it will budde, and brynge forth bowes, like as when it was first planted. 10But as for man, when he is deed, perished and consumed awaye, what becommeth of him? 11The floudes when they be dryed vp, & the ryuers when they be emptie, are fylled agayne thorow the flowinge waters of the see: 12but when man slepeth, he ryseth not agayne, vntill the heauen perish: he shal not wake vp ner ryse out of his slepe. 13O that thou woldest kepe me, and hyde me in the hell, vntill thy wrath were stilled: & to appoynte me a tyme, wherin thou mightest remembre me. 14Maye a deed man lyue agayne? All the dayes of this my pilgremage am I lokynge, when my chaunginge shal come. 15Yf thou woldest but call me, I shulde obeie the: only despyse not the worke of thine owne hondes. 16For thou hast nombred all my goynges, yet be not thou to extreme vpon my synnes. 17Thou hast sealed vp myne offences, as it were in a bagg: but be mercifull vnto my wickednesse. 18The mountaynes fall awaye at the last, the rockes are remoued out of their place, 19the waters pearse thorow the very stones by litle and litle, the floudes wa?she awaye the grauell & earth: Euen so destroyest thou the hope of man in like maner. 20Thou preuaylest agaynst him, so that he passeth awaye: thou chaungest his estate, and puttest him from the. 21Whether his children come to worshipe or no, he can not tell: And yf they be men of lowe degre, he knoweth not. 22Whyle he lyueth, his flesh must haue trauayle: and whyle the soule is in him, he must be in sorowe. 15Then answered Eliphas the Themanite, and sayde: 2Shulde a wyse man geue soch an answere (as it were one that spake in the wynde) and fyll his stomacke with anger? 3Thou reprouest wt wordes, that are nothinge wroth: and speakest the thinges, which can do no good. 4As for shame, thou hast set it asyde, els woldest thou not make so many wordes before God: 5but thy wickednesse teacheth thy mouth, and so thou hast chosen the a craftie tonge. 6Thine owne mouth condemneth the, and not I: yee thine owne lippes shappe the an answere. 7Art thou the first man, that euer was borne? Or, wast thou made before the hylles? 8hast thou herde the secrete councell of God, that all wy?dome is to litle for ye? 9What knowest thou, yt we knowe not? What vnderstondest thou, but we can the same? 10With vs are olde and aged men, yee soch as haue lyued longer then thy forefathers. 11Dost thou nomore regarde the comforte of God? but thy wicked wordes wil not suffre the. 12Why doth thine herte make the so proude? Why stondest thou so greatly in thine owne conceate? Where vnto loke thine eyes, 13yt thy mynde is so puft vp agaynst God & lettest soch wordes go out of thy mouth? 14What is man, that he shulde be vncleane? what hath he (which is borne of a woman) wherby he might be knowne to be rightuous? 15Beholde, he hath founde vnfaithfulnesse amoge his owne sanctes: yee the very heauens are vnclene in his sight. 16How moch more then an abhominable and vyle ma, which dryncketh wickednesse like water? 17I will tell the, heare me: I wil shewe the a thinge, that I knowe: 18which wyse men haue tolde, & hath not bene hyd from their fathers: 19vnto whom only the londe was geuen, that no straunger shulde come amonge them. 20The vngodly despayreth all the dayes of his life, & the nombre of a tyrauntes yeares is vnknowne. 21A fearfull sounde is euer in his eares, & when it is peace, yet feareth he destruccion: 22He beleueth neuer to be delyuered out of darcknesse, the swearde is allwaye before his eyes. 23When he goeth forth to get his lyuinge, he thinketh planely, that the daye of darcknesse is at honde. 24Sorow and carefulnesse make him afrayed, & copasse him rounde aboute, like as it were a kinge with his hoost redy to the battayll. 25For he hath stretched out his honde agaynst God, & armed himself agaynst ye Allmightie. 26He runneth proudly vpon him, & with a stiff necke fighteth he agaynst him: 27where as he couereth his face with fatnesse, and maketh his body well lykynge. 28Therfore shall his dwellynge be in desolate cities, & in houses which no ma inhabiteth, but are become heapes of stones. 29He shall not be rich, nether shall his substaunce continue, ner encrease vpon earth. 30He shal neuer come out of darcknesse, the flame shal drye vp his braunches, with ye blast of the mouth of God shal he be take awaie. 31He wil nether applye himself to faithfulnes ner treuth, so sore is he disceaued wt vanite. 32He shall perish, afore his tyme be worne out, and his honde shal not be grene. 33He shalbe pluckte of as an vntymely grape from ye vyne, and shal let his floure fall, as the olyue doth. 34For the congregacion of Ypocrites is vnfrutefull, & the fyre shal consume the houses of soch, as are gredy to receaue giftes. 35He conceaueth trauayle, he beareth myschefe, & his body bryngeth forth disceate. 16Iob answered, and sayde: 2I haue oft tymes herde soch thinges. Miserable geuers of comforte are ye, all the sorte of you. 3Shall not thy vayne wordes come yet to an ende? Or, hast thou yet eny more to saye? 4I coude speake, as ye do also. But wolde God, that youre soule were in my soules steade: then shulde I heape vp wordes agaynst you, and shake my heade at you. 5I shulde comforte you with my mouth, and release youre payne with ye talkinge of my lyppes. 6But what shall I do? For all my wordes, my sorow wil not ceasse: and though I holde my toge, yet wil it not departe fro me. 7And now that I am full of payne, and all that I haue destroied 8(wherof my wryncles beare wytnesse) there stodeth vp a dyssembler to make me answere with lyes to my face. 9He is angrie at me, he hateth me, and gnassheth vpon me with his teth. Myne enemy skouleth vpon me with his eyes. 10They haue opened their mouthes wyde vpon me, and smytten me vpon the cheke despitefully, they haue eased the selues thorow myne aduersite. 11God hath geuen me ouer to the vngodly, and delyuered me in to the hondes of ye wicked. 12I was somtyme in wealth, but sodenly hath he brought me to naught. He hath taken me by the neck, he hath rente me, and set me, as it were a marck for him to shute at. 13He hath compased me rounde aboute with his dartes, he hath wounded my loynes, & not spared. My bowels hath he poured vpon the grounde. 14He hath geue me one wounde vpon another, and is falle vpon me like a giaunte. 15I haue sowed a sack cloth vpon my skynne, and lye with my strength in the dust. 16My face is swolle with wepinge, & myne eyes are waxen dymne. 17Howbeit there is no wickednesse in my hondes, and my prayer is clene. 18O earth, couer not my bloude, and let my crienge fynde no rowme. 19For lo, my witnesse is in heauen, and he that knoweth me, is aboue in the heyth. 20My frendes laugh me to scorne, but myne eye poureth out teares vnto God. 21Though a body might pleate wt God, as one man doth with another, 22yet the nombre of my yeares are come, & I must go the waye, from whence I shal not turne agayne. 17My breth fayleth, my dayes are shortened, I am harde at deathes dore. 2I haue disceaued no man, yet must myne eye cotinue in heuynesse 3O delyuer me, and set me by the, who shall then be able to thrust my hondes together? 4Thou hast withholde their hertes from vnderstodinge, therfore shall they not be set vp an hye. 5He promiseth his fredes parte of his good, but his owne childre spende it. 6He hath made me as it were a byworde of the comon people, I am his gestinge stocke amoge the. 7My countenaunce is heuy for very anger, & the membres of my body are become like a shadowe. 8Vertuous me therfore shall wel cosidre this, and the innocent shal take parte agaynst the Ypocrite. 9The rightuous wil kepe his waye, and he yt hath cleane handes, wil euer be stronger & stronger. 10As for you, turne you, & get you hence, for I can not se one wyse ma amonge you. 11My dayes are past, my thoughtes are vanished awaye, which haue vexed myne herte, 12chaunginge the night in to daye, & ye light in to darcknes. 13Though I tary neuer so moch, yet the graue is my house, and I must make my bed in the darcke. 14I call corrupcion my father, and the wormes call I my mother and my sister. 15What helpeth then my longe tarienge? Or, who wil fulfill the thinge, that I loke for? 16All that I haue, shall go downe in to the pytt, & lye with me in the dust. 18Then answered Baldad the Suhite, and sayde: 2when wil ye make an ende of youre wordes? Marcke well, and considre, we wil speake also. 3Wherfore are we counted as beestes, & reputed so vyle in youre sight? 4Why destroyest thou thy self with anger? Shal ye earth be forsaken, or the stones remoued out of their place because of ye? 5Shal not the light of the vngodly be put out? yee the flame of his fyre shal not burne. 6The light shalbe darcke in his dwellinge, & his candle shalbe put out with him. 7His presumptuous goinges shal be kepte in, and his owne councell shal cast him downe. 8For his fete shalbe taken in the nett, and he shal walke in the snare. 9His fote shalbe holden in the gilder, and the thurstie shal catch him. 10The snare is layed for him in the grounde, and a pytfall in the waye. 11Fearfulnesse shal make him afrayed on euery syde, that he shall not knowe, where to get out. 12Honger shalbe his substaunce, and my?fortune shall hange vpon him. 13He shall eate his owne skynne, yee his owne armes shall he deuoure, beynge a firstborne of death. 14All his comforte and hope shalbe roted out of his dwellynge, very fearfulnesse shall brynge him to the kynge. 15Other men shall dwel in his house (which now is none of his) and brymstone shalbe scatered vpon his habitacion. 16His rotes shalbe dryed vp beneth, & aboue shall his haruest be cut downe. 17His remembraunce shall perish from the earth, & his name shall not be praysed in the stretes: 18he shalbe dryuen from the light into darcknesse, and be cast clene out of the worlde. 19He shall nether haue children ner kyn?folkes amonge his people, no ner eny posterite in his countre: 20yonge & olde shalbe astonyshed at his death. 21Soch are now the dwellynges of the wicked, and this is ye place of him that knoweth not God. 19Iob answered, & sayde: 2How loge wil ye vexe my mynde, & trouble me with wordes? 3Lo, ten tymes haue ye reproued me: are ye not ashamed, for to laugh me so to scorne? 4yf I go wronge, I go wronge to my self. 5But yf ye wil enhaunce yor selues agaynst me, & accuse me to be a wicked personne because of the shame that is come vpon me: 6knowe this then, yt it is God, which hath handled me so violetly, & hath compased me aboute with his scourges. 7Beholde, though I crie, yet violece is done vnto me, I can not be herde: Though I complane, there is none to geue sentece with me. 8He hath hedged vp my path, I ca not get awaye, he hath set darcknesse in my gate. 9He hath spoyled me of myne honoure, & taken the crowne awaye fro my heade. 10He hath destroyed me on euery syde, and I am vndone: My hope hath he taken awaye fro me, as it were a tre plucte vp by the rote. 11His wrath is kyndled agaynst me, he taketh me, as though I were his enemy. 12His men of warre came together, which made their waye ouer me, and beseged my dwellinge rounde aboute. 13He hath put my brethren farre awaye fro me, and soch as were of myne acquauntaunce, are become straugers vnto me. 14Myne owne kyn?folkes haue forsaken me, and my frendes haue put me out of remembraunce. 15The seruauntes and maydens of myne owne house take me for a strauger, and I am become as an aleaunt in their sight. 16When I call vpon my seruaut, he geueth me no answere: no though I praie him with my mouth. 17Myne owne wyfe maye not abyde my breth, I am fayne to speake fayre vnto the children of myne owne body. 18Yee the very deserte fooles despyse me, and when I am gone from them, they speake euell vpon me. 19All soch as were my most familiers, abhorre me: and they whom I loued best, are turned agaynst me. 20My bone hangeth to my skynne, and the flesh is awaye, only there is left me the skynne aboute my teth. 21Haue pite vpon me, haue pite vpon me (o ye my frendes) for the hande of the LORDE hath touched me. 22Seynge God persecuteth me, wil ye vexe me also? Haue ye not yet ynough of the trouble of my flesh? 23O that my wordes were written, O that they were put in a boke: 24wolde God they were graue wt an yron pene in leade or in stone. 25For I am sure, that my redemer lyueth, and that I shall ryse out of the earth in the latter daye: 26that I shal be clothed againe with this skynne, and se God in my flesh. 27Yee I my self shal beholde him, not with other but with these same eyes. My reynes are consumed within me, 28when yee saye: Why do not we persecute him? we haue founde an occasion agaynst him. 29But bewarre of the swearde, for the swearde wylbe avenged of wickednesse, and be sure, that there is a iudgment. 20Then answered Sophar the Naamathite, and sayde: 2For the same cause do my thoughtes compell me to answere. And why? my mynde is tossed here and there. 3I haue sufficiently herde the checkynge & reprofe, therfore am I purposed to make answere after my vnderstodinge. 4Knowest thou not this, namely: that from the begynninge (euer sence the creacion of man vpon earth) 5the prayse of the vngodly hath bene shorte, and that the ioye of Ypocrytes continued but ye twincklinge of an eye? 6Though he be magnified vp to the heaue, so that his heade reacheth vnto the cloudes: 7yet he perisheth at the last like donge: In so moch yt they which haue sene him, saye: Where is he? 8He vanysheth as a dreame, so that he can nomore be founde, & passeth awaye as a vision in ye night. 9So that the eye which sawe him before, getteth now no sight of him, & his place knoweth him nomore. 10His childre go a begginge, their handes bringe the to sorow and heuynesse. 11From his youth his bones are ful of vyce, which shal lie downe wt him in ye earth. 12Whe wickednesse is swete in his mouth, he hydeth it vnder his tonge. 13That he fauoureth, that wyll he not forsake, but kepeth it close in his throte. 14The meate that he eateth, shalbe turned to the poyson of serpetes within his body. 15The riches yt he deuoureth, shall he perbreake agayne, for God shal drawe them out of his bely. 16The serpentes heade shall sucke him, and the adders tonge shall slaye him: 17so that he shal nomore se the ryuers and brokes of hony and butter: 18But laboure shal he, & yet haue nothinge to eate. Greate trauayle shal he make for riches, but he shal not enioye them. 19And why? he hath oppressed the poore, and not helped them: houses hath he spoyled, and not buylded them. 20His bely coude neuer be fylled, therfore shall he perish in his couetousnesse. 21He deuoured so gredely, yt he left nothinge behynde, therfore his goodes shal not prospere. 22Though he had plenteousnesse of euerythinge, yet was he poore, & therfore he is but a wretch on euery syde. 23For though ye wicked haue neuer so moch to fyll his bely, yet God shal sende his wrath vpon him, and cause his battayll to rayne ouer him: 24so that yf he fle the yron weapens, he shall be shott with the stele bowe. 25The arowe shal be taken forth, & go out at his backe, and a glisteringe swearde thorow ye gall of him, feare shal come vpo him. 26There shal no darcknes be able to hyde him. An vnkyndled fyre shal consume him, and loke what remayneth in his house, it shall be destroyed. 27The heauen shall declare his wickednesse, & the earth shal take parte agaynst him. 28The substaunce that he hath in his house, shalbe taken awaye and perish, in the daye of the LORDES wrath. 29This is the porcion that ye wicked shal haue of God, and the heretage that he maye loke for of the LORDE. 21Iob answered, and sayde: 2O heare my wordes, and amende yor selues. 3Suffre me a litle, that I maye speake also, and the laugh my wordes to scorne, yf ye will. 4Is it with a man, that I make this disputacio? Which yf it were so, shulde not my sprete be the in sore trouble? 5Marck me well, be aba?shed, and laye youre hade vpon youre mouth. 6For whe I pondre & considre this, I am afrayed, and my flesh is smytten with feare. 7Wherfore do wicked me lyue in health and prosperite, come to their olde age, & increase in riches? 8Their childers children lyue in their sight, & their generacion before their eyes. 9Their houses are safe from all feare, for the rodd of God doth not smyte the. 10Their bullocke gendreth, and that not out of tyme: their cow calueth, and is not vnfrutefull. 11They sende forth their children by flockes, and their sonnes lede the daunce. 12They beare with them tabrettes and harpes, and haue instrumentes of musick at their pleasure. 13They spende their dayes in welthynesse: but sodenly they go downe to hell. 14They saye vnto God: go from vs, we desyre not the knowlege of thy wayes. 15What maner of felowe is the Allmightie, that we shulde serue him? What profit shulde we haue, to submitte oure selues vnto him? 16Lo, there is vtterly no goodnesse in them, therfore will not I haue to do with the councell of the vngodly. 17How oft shal the candle of ye wicked be put out? how oft commeth their destruccion vpon them? O what sorowe shall God geue them for their parte in his wrath? 18Yee they shal be euen as chaffe before the wynde, and as dust that the storme carieth awaye. 19And though God saue their childre from soch sorowe, yet wil he so rewarde theselues, that they shal knowe it. 20Their owne destruccion and misery shal they se with their eyes, and drynke of the fearfull wrath of the Allmighty. 21For whath careth he, what become of his housholde after his death? whose monethes passe awaye swifter then an arowe. 22In as moch the as God hath ye hyest power of all, who can teach him eny knowlege? 23One dyeth now when he is mightie & at his best, rich and in prosperite: 24euen when his bowels are at the fattest, and his bones full of mary. 25Another dyeth in sorowe and heuynesse, and neuer had good daies. 26Now slepe they both a like in the earth, & the wormes couer them. 27But I knowe what ye thinke, yee and what ye ymagin agaynst me vnrightuously. 28For ye saye: where is the prynces palace? where is the dwellynge of the vngodly: 29Axe eny man that goeth by the waye, and (yf ye will not regarde their tokens & dedes) he shal tell you, 30that the wicked is kepte vnto the daye of destruccion, and that the vngodly shalbe brought forth in the daye of wrath. 31Who darre reproue him for his wayes to his face? who rewardeth him for the vngraciousnesse that he doth? 32Yet shal he be brought to his graue, and watch amonge the heape of the deed. 33The shal he be fayne to be buried amoge the stones by the broke syde. All men must folowe him, & there are innumerable gone before him. 34O how vayne is the comforte yt ye geue me? Are not youre answeres cleane contrary to right and treuth? 22So Eliphas the Themanite gaue answere, & sayde: 2Maye a man be copared vnto God in wy?dome, though he seme to himself, for to be like him? 3What pleasure hath God in yt thou art rightuous? Or what doth it profite him, yt thy waies are perfecte? 4Is he afrayed to reproue the, & to steppe forth wt the in to iudgment? 5Cometh not this for ye greate wickednesse, & for thine vngracious dedes which are innumerable? 6Thou hast take the pledge from thy brethre for naught, & robbed the naked of their clothinge: 7To soch as were weery, hast thou geue no water to drynke, thou hast withdrawe bred fro the hungrie: 8Shulde soch one the as vseth violece, wroge & oppression (doinge all thinges of parcialyte, & hauynge respecte of personnes) dwell in the lode? 9Thou hast sent wyddowes awaye emptie and oppressed the poore fatherlesse. 10Therfore art thou compased aboute with snares on euery syde, & sodely vexed wt feare. 11Shuldest thou the se no darcknesse? Shulde not the water floude runne ouer the? 12Now because yt God is hyer the the heauens, & because thou seist yt the starres are so hye, 13wilt thou therfore saye: Tush, how shulde God knowe? Doth his dominion reach beyonde the cloudes? 14Tush, the cloudes couer him, yt he maye not se, for he dwelleth in heauen. 15Well, thou wilt kepe the olde waye, yt all wicked me haue gone: 16both olde & yonge, whose foundacion is a runnynge water, 17which saye vnto God: go from vs, and after this maner: Tush, what wil the Allmightie do vnto vs? 18where as he (not with stodinge) fylleth their houses wt all good. Which meanynge of the vngodly be farre fro me. 19For wt ioy shal the godly, and with gladnesse shal the innocent se, 20that their increase shal be hewen downe, & their posterite consumed with the fyre. 21Therfore recocile the vnto God, & be content, so shal all thinges prospere wt the right well. 22Receaue the lawe at his mouth, & laye vp his wordes in thine herte. 23For yf thou wilt turne to the Allmightie, thou shalt stonde fast, & all vnrightuousnesse shall be farre from thy dwellinge: 24He shal geue the an haruest, which in plenty & abundaunce shall exceade the dust of the earth, and the golde of Ophir like ryuer stones. 25Yee the Allmightie his owne self shalbe thine haruest, & the heape of thy money. 26Then shalt thou haue thy delyte in the Allmightie, & lift vp thy face vnto God. 27The shalt thou make thy prayer vnto him, & he shal heare the, & thou shalt kepe thy promyses. 28The, loke what thou takest in honde, he shal make it to prospere with the, and the light shall shyne in thy wayes. 29For who so humbleth himself, him shal he set vp: and who so loketh mekely, shalbe healed. 30Yf thou be innocet, he shal saue the: and thorow the vngiltynesse of thyne handes shalt thou be delyuered. 23Iob answered, and sayd: 2My sayenge is yet this daye in bytternes, and my hande heuy amonge my groninges. 3O that I might se him & fynde him: O that I might come before his seate, 4to pleate my cause before him, and to fyll my mouth with argumentes: 5That I might knowe, what answere he wolde geue me: & that I might vnderstonde, what he wolde saye vnto me. 6Wil he pleate agaynst me with his greate power & strength, or wyll he leane him self vtterly vpon me? 7Oh no, let him not do so with me. But let hym geue me like power to go to lawe, then am I sure to wynne my matter. 8For though I go before, I fynde him not: yf I come behynde, I ca get no knowlege of him: 9Yf I go on the left syde to pondre his workes, I can not atteyne vnto them: Agayne, yf I go on the right syde, he hydeth himself, yt I can not se him. 10But as for my waye, he knoweth it: & trieth me as ye golde in ye fyre. 11Neuertheles my fete kepe his path, his hye strete haue I holden, and not gone out of it. 12I haue not forsaken the comaundemet of his lippes, but loke what he charged me with his mouth, that haue I shutt vp in my herte. 13It is he himself alone, who will turne him back? He doth as him listeth, and bryngeth to passe what he wil. 14He rewardeth me into my bosome, & many other thinges mo doth he, as he maye by his power. 15This is ye cause, that I shrenke at his presence, so that when I considre him, I am afrayed of him. 16For in so moch as he is God, he maketh my herte soft: and seynge that he is Allmightie, he putteth me in feare. 17Thus can not I get out of darcknesse, the cloude hath so couered my face. 24Consideringe then that there is no tyme hyd from the Allmightie, how happeneth it, that they which knowe him, wil not regarde his dayes? 2For some me there be, that remoue other mes londe markes: that robbe them of their catell, and kepe the same for their owne: 3that dryue awaye the asse of the fatherlesse: that take ye wyddowes oxe for a pledge: 4that thrust the poore out of the waye, & oppresse the symple of the worlde together. 5Beholde, the wilde asses in ye deserte go by tymes (as their maner is) to spoyle: Yee the very wildernesse ministreth foode for their children. 6They reape the corne felde that is not their owne: and gather the grapes out of his vynyarde, whom they haue oppressed by violence. 7They are the cause yt so many men are naked and bare, hauynge no clothes to couer them and kepe them from colde: 8So that when the showers in the mountaynes haue rayned vpon them, & they be all wett, they haue none other sucoure, but to kepe them amonge the rockes. 9They spoyle the suckinge fatherlesse children, and put the poore in preson: 10In so moch that they let them go naked without clothinge, and yet the hungrie beare the sheeues. 11The poore are fayne to laboure in their oyle mylles, yee and to treade in their wyne presses, and yet to suffre thyrst. 12The whole cite crieth vnto the LORDE with sighinge, the soules of the slayne make their complaynte: But God destroyeth them not for all this, 13where as they (not wt stodinge) are rebellious and disobedient enemies: which seke not his light and waye, ner turne agayne in to his path. 14Tymely in the mornynge do they aryse, to murthur the symple and poore, & in the night they go a stealinge. 15The eye of the vngodly is like the aduouterer, that wayteth for the darcknesse, and sayeth thus in him self: Tush, there shal no ma se me, & so he disgyseth his face. 16In the night season they search the houses, and hyde them selues in the daye tyme, but wil not knowe ye light 17For as soone as the daye breaketh, the shadowe of death commeth vpo them, and they go in horrible darcknesse. 18The vngodly is very swyft: O yt his porcio also vpo earth were swyfter then ye runnynge water, which suffreth not ye shipma to beholde the fayre & pleasaut vyniardes. 19O yt they (for the wickednesse which they haue done) were drawen to the hell, sooner the snowe melteth at the heate. 20O yt all copassion vpon the were forgotte: yt their daynties were wormes: that they were clene put out of remembraunce, & vtterly hewe downe like an vnfrutefull tre. 21For they manteyne the baren, & make them yt they can not beare, & vnto wyddowes they do no good. 22They plucke downe the mightie wt their power, & when they them selues are gotten vp, they are neuer without feare, as longe as they liue. 23And though they might be safe, yet they wil not receaue it, for their eyes loke vpon their owne wayes. 24They are exalted for a litle, but shortly are they gone, brought to extreme pouerte, & take out of the waye: yee & vtterly plucte of as the eares of corne. 25Is it not so? Who wil the reproue me as a lyar, & saye yt my wordes are nothinge worth? 25Then answered Baldad the Suhite, & sayde: 2Power & feare is with him aboue, that maketh peace (sittinge) in his hynesse, 3whose men of warre are innumerable, and whose light aryseth ouer all. 4But how maye a man copared vnto God, be iustified? Or, how can he be clene, that is borne of a woman? 5Beholde, the Moone shyneth nothinge in comparison to him, & the starres are vnclene in his sight. 6How moch more the, ma, that is but corrupcion: and the sonne of man, which is but a worme? 26Iob answered, and sayde: 2O how helpest thou the weake? what comforte geuest thou vnto him that hath no stregth? 3Where is ye coucell yt thou shuldest geue him, which hath no wy?dome? Wilt thou so shewe thine excellent rightuousnes? 4Before whom hast thou spoken those wordes? Who made the breth to come out of ye mouth? 5The giauntes & worthies yt are slayne, & lye vnder ye worlde wt their copanions: 6yee & all they which dwell beneth in the hell are not hyd fro him, & the very destruccion it self ca not be kepte out of his sight. 7He stretcheth out ye north ouer the emptie, & hageth ye earth vpo nothinge. 8He byndeth ye water in his cloudes, that they fall not downe together. 9He holdeth back his stole, that it caa not be sene, and spredeth his cloudes before it. 10He hath copased the waters wt certayne boundes, vntill the daye & night come to an ende. 11The very pilers of heaue treble & quake at his reprofe. 12He stilleth the see with his power, & thorow his wy?dome hath he set forth ye worlde. 13With his sprete hath he garnished the heaues, & with his hande hath he wounded the rebellious serpet. 14This is now a shorte summe of his doynges. But who is able sufficiently to rehearce his workes? Who can perceaue and vnderstonde ye thondre of his power? 27Iob also proceaded and wete forth in his communicacion, sayege: 2As truly as God lyueth (which hath taken awaye my power fro me) & the Allmightie, that hath vexed my mynde: 3My lippes shall talke of no vanite, and my tonge shal speake no disceate, 4whyle my breth is in me, and as longe as the wynde (that God hath geuen me) is in my nostrels. 5God forbydde, that I shulde graunte youre cause to be right. As for me, vntill myne ende come wil I neuer go fro myne innocency. 6My rightuous dealynge wil I kepe fast, & not forsake it: For my conscience reproueth me not in all my conuersacion. 7Therfore myne enemy shalbe founde as the vngodly, & he yt taketh parte agaynst me, as the vnrightuous. 8What hope hath ye Ypocrite, though he haue greate good, and though God geue him riches after his hertes desyre? 9Doth God heare him the sooner, whe he crieth vnto him in his necessite? 10Hath he soch pleasure & delyte in the Allmightie, that he darre allwaye call vpon God? 11I wil teach you in the name of God, & the thinge that I haue of ye Allmightie, wil I not kepe from you. 12Beholde, ye stonde in yor owne conceate, as though ye knew all thinges. Wherfore then do ye go aboute wt soch vayne wordes, 13sayege: This is the porcion that the wicked shall haue of God, & the heretage that Tyrauntes shal receaue of ye Allmightie. 14Yf he get many childre, they shal perish wt the swearde, & his posterite shall haue scarcenesse of bred. 15Loke whom he leaueth behinde him, they shal dye & be buried, & no man shall haue pite of his wyddowes. 16Though he haue as moch money as the dust of the earth, & raymet as ready as the claye, 17he maye well prepare it: but the godly shal put it vpon him, and the innocet shal deale out the money. 18His house shal endure as the moth, & as a bothe that the watch man maketh. 19When the rich man dyeth, he carieth nothinge with him: he is gone in ye twincklynge of an eye. 20Destruccion taketh holde vpo him as a water floude, & ye tepest stealeth him awaye in the night season. 21A vehement wynde carieth him hence, & departeth: a storme plucketh him out of his place. 22It ru?sheth in vpon him, and spareth him not, he maye not escape from the power therof. 23Than clappe me their hodes at him, yee and ieast of him, whe they loke vpon his place. 28There are places where syluer is molte, & where golde is tryed: 2where yron is dygged out of the grounde, & stones resolued to metall. 3The darcknes shal once come to an ende, he can seke out the grounde of all thinges: the stones, the darcke, & the horrible shadowe, 4wt the ryuer of water parteth he a sunder the straunge people, yt knoweth no good neghbourheade: soch as are rude, vnmanerly & boysteous. 5He bryngeth foode out of the earth, & yt which is vnder, consumeth he with fyre. 6There is founde a place, whose stones are clene Saphirs, and where ye clottes of the earth are golde. 7There is a waye also that the byrdes knowe not, that no vulturs eye hath sene: 8wherin ye proude & hye mynded walke not, & where no lyon commeth. 9There putteth he his honde vpon the stony rockes, & ouerthroweth the mountaynes. 10Ryuers flowe out of the rockes, & loke what is pleasaunt, his eye seyth it. 11Out of droppes bryngeth he greate floudes together, & the thinge that is hyd bryngeth he to light. 12How commeth a man then by wy?dome? Where is the place that men fynde vnderstondinge? 13Verely no man can tell how worthy a thinge she is, nether is she foude in the lode of the lyuynge. 14The depe sayeth: she is not in me. The see sayeth: she is not with me. 15She can not be gotten for the most fyne golde, nether maye the pryce of her be bought with eny moneye. 16No wedges of golde of Ophir, no precious Onix stones, no Saphirs maye be compared vnto her. 17No, nether golde ner Christall, nether swete odours ner golden plate. 18There is nothinge so worthy, or so excellet, as once to be named vnto her: for parfecte wy?dome goeth farre beyonde the all. 19The Topas that cometh out of Inde, maye in no wyse be lickened vnto her: yee no maner of apparell how pleasaunt and fayre so euer it be. 20From whece then commeth wy?dome? & where is the place of vnderstondinge? 21She is hyd from the eyes of all men, yee & fro the foules of the ayre. 22Destruccion & death saie: we haue herde tell of her wt oure eares. 23But God seyth hir waie, & knoweth hir place. 24For he beholdeth the endes of the worlde, and loketh vpon all that is vnder the heaue. 25When he weyed the wyndes, & measured ye waters: 26when he set the rayne in ordre, and gaue the mightie floudes a lawe: 27Then dyd he se her, the declared he her, prepared her and knewe her. 28And vnto man he sayde: Beholde, to feare the LORDE, is wy?dome: & to forsake euell, is vnderstondinge. 29So Iob proceaded and wete forth in his communicacion, sayenge: 2O yt I were as I was in the monethes by past, & in the dayes whe God preserued me: 3when his light shyned vpon my heade: whe I wente after the same light & shyne eue thorow the darcknesse. 4As it stode wt me, whe I was welthy & had ynough: whe God prospered my house: 5when the allmightie was with me: when my housholde folkes stode aboute me: 6whe my wayes ranne ouer wt butter, & when the stony rockes gaue me ryuers of oyle: 7when I wente thorow the cite vnto the gate, & whe they set me a chayre in ye strete: 8whe the yonge me (as soone as they sawe me) hyd the selues, & when the aged arose, & stode vp vnto me: 9whe the princes left of their talkinge, & laied their hade to their mouth: 10whe the mightie kepte still their voyce, and whe their tonges cleued to the rofe of their mouthes. 11When all they yt herde me, called me happie: & when all they yt sawe me, wysshed me good. 12For I delyuered ye poore whe he cried, & the fatherlesse yt wanted helpe. 13He yt shulde haue bene lost, gaue me a good worde, & ye widdowes hert praised me. 14And why? I put vpon me rightuousnes, which couered me as a garmet, & equite was my crowne. 15I was an eye vnto the blynde, & a fote to the lame. 16I was a father vnto the poore, & whe I knew not their cause, I sought it out diligetly. 17I brake the chaftes of ye vnrightuous, & plucte the spoyle out of their teth. 18Therfore, I thought verely, yt I shulde haue dyed in my nest: & yt my dayes shulde haue bene as many as the sondes of the see. 19For my rote was spred out by the waters syde, & the dew laye vpo my corne. 20My honor encreased more & more, and my bowe was euer the stronger in my hande. 21Vnto me men gaue eare, me they regarded, & wt sylence they taried for my coucell. 22Yf I had spoken, they wolde haue it none other wayes, my wordes were so well taken amonge the. 23They wayted for me, as the earth doth for the rayne: & gaped vpon me, as the groude doth to receaue the latter shower. 24When I laughed, they knew well it was not earnest: & this testimony of my coutenaunce pleased the nothinge at all. 25When I agreed vnto their waye, I was the chefe, & sat as a kynge amonge his seruauntes: Or as one that comforteth soch as be in heuynesse. 30Bvt now they that are my inferiours & yonger then I, haue me in derision: yee eue they, whose fathers I wolde haue thought scorne to haue set wt the dogges of my catell. 2The power & stregth of their hades might do me no good, & as for their age, it is spet & past awaye without eny profit. 3For very misery & honger, they wente aboute in the wildernesse like wretches & beggers, 4pluckynge vp herbes from amonge the bu?shes, & the Iunipers rote was their meate. 5And when they were dryuen forth, men cried after them, as it had bene after a thefe. 6Their dwellinge was beside foule brokes, yee in the caues & dennes of the earth. 7Vpo the drye heeth wete they aboute crienge, & in the brome hilles they gathered them together. 8They were the children of fooles & vylanes, which are deed awaye fro the worlde. 9Now am I their songe, & am become their iestinge stocke. 10they abhorre me, they fle farre fro me & stayne my face wt spetle. 11For ye LORDE hath opened his quyuer, he hath hytt me, & put a brydle in my mouth. 12Vpon my right hade they rose together agaynst me, they haue hurte my fete, made awaye to destroye me, 13& my path haue they clene marred. It was so easy for them to do me harme, that they neded no man to helpe the. 14They fell vpon me, as it had bene ye breakynge in of waters, & came in by heapes to destroye me. 15Fearfulnesse is turned agaynst me. Myne honoure vanisheth awaye more swiftly then wynde, & my prosperite departeth hece like as it were a cloude. 16Therfore is my mynde poured full of heuynesse, & ye dayes of trouble haue take holde vpon me. 17My bones are pearsed thorow in ye night season, & my synewes take no rest. 18With all their power haue they chaunged my garmet, & gyrded me therwith, as it were wt a coate. 19I am eue as it were claye, & am become like asshes & dust. 20Whe I crie vnto the, thou doest not heare me: & though I stonde before the, yet thou regardest me not. 21Thou art become myne enemye, & wt yi violet hade thou takest parte agaynst me. 22In tymes past thou didest set me vp an hye, as it were aboue ye winde, but now hast thou geue me a very sore fall. 23Sure I am, yt thou wilt delyuer me vnto death: where as a lodgyng is prepared for all me 24Now vse not me to do violece vnto the, yt are destroyed allready: but where hurte is done, there vse thei to helpe. 25Dyd not I wepe in ye tyme of trouble? Had not my soule copassion vpo ye poore? 26Yet neuerthelesse where as I loked for good, euell happened vnto me: and where as I waited for light, there came darcknesse. 27My bowels seeth wt in me & take no rest, for ye dayes of my trouble are come vpo me. 28Mekely & lowly came I in, yee & without eny displeasure: I stode vp in ye cogregacion, & commoned with the 29But now. I am a copanyon of dragons, & a felowe of Esiriches. 30My skynne vpo me is turned to black, & my bones are bret wt heate: 31my harpe is turned to sorow, & my pipe to wepinge. 31I made a couenaunt wt myne eyes, yt I wolde not loke vpo a dasell. 2For how greate a porcio shal I haue of God fro aboue? & what enheritauce fro ye Almightie on hie? 3As for the vngodly & he yt ioyneth himself to ye copani of wicked doers shal not destruccion & misery came vpon him? 4Doth not he se my wayes, & tell all my goinges? 5Yf I haue cleued vnto vanite, or yf my fete haue runne to disceaue: 6let me be weyed in an eauen balaunce, that God maye se my innocency. 7Yf so be that I haue withdrawen my fote out of the right waye, yf my hert hath folowed myne eyesight, yf I haue stayned or defyled my hodes: 8O then is it reason that I sowe, and another eate: yee that my generacion and posterite be clene roted out. 9Yf my hert hath lusted after my neghbours wife, or yf I haue layed wayte at his dore: 10O then let my wife be another mans harlot, and let other lye with her. 11For this is a wickednesse and synne, that is worthy to be punyshed, 12yee a fyre that vtterly shulde consume, & rote out all my substaunce. 13Dyd I euer thynke scorne to do right vnto my seruautes and maydens, when they had eny matter agaynst me? 14But seynge that God wil sytt in iudgment, what shal I do? And for so moch as he wil nedes vyset me, what answere shal I geue him? 15He that fashioned me in my mothers wombe, made he not him also? were we not both shappen alyke in oure mothers bodies? 16When the poore desyred enythinge at me, haue I denyed it them? Haue I caused ye wyddowe stonde waytinge for me in vayne? 17Haue I eaten my porcion alone, that the fatherles hath had no parte with me? 18(for mercy grewe vp with me fro my youth, & compassion fro my mothers wombe.) 19Haue I sene eny man perish thorow nakednes & want of clothinge? Or, eny poore man for lack of rayment, 20whose sydes thanked me not, because he was warmed wt ye woll of my shepe? 21Dyd I euer lyft vp my honde to hurte the fatherlesse? Yee in the gate where I sawe my self to be in auctorite: 22The let myne arme fall fro my shulder, & myne arme holes be broken from the ioyntes. 23For I haue euer feared ye vengeaunce & punyshmet of God, & knew very well, yt I was not able to beare his burthe. 24Haue I put my trust in golde? Or, haue I sayde to the fynest golde of all: thou art my cofidence? 25Haue I reioysed because my substaunce was greate, and because my honde gat so moch? 26Dyd I euer greatly regarde the rysinge of the Sonne? Or, had I the goinge downe of ye Moone in greate reputacion? 27Hath my hert medled priuely wt eny disceate? Or, dyd I euer kysse myne owne honde 28(that were a wickednesse worthy to be punyshed, for then shulde I haue denyed the God that is aboue.) 29Haue I euer reioysed at the hurte of myne enemy? Or, was I euer glad, yt eny harme happened vnto him? Oh no, 30I neuer suffred my mouth to do soch a sinne, as to wysh him euell. 31Yet they of myne owne housholde saye: who shal let vs, to haue oure bely ful of his flesh? 32I haue not suffred a straunger to lye wt out, but opened my dores vnto him. 33Haue I euer done eny wicked dede where thorow I shamed my self before men: Or eny abhominacion, yt I was fayne to hyde it? 34For yf I had feared eny greate multitude of people: Or yf I had bene dispysed of ye symple, Oh then shulde I haue bene afrayed. Thus haue I quyetly spent my lyfe, and not gone out at ye dore. 35O that I had one which wolde heare me. Lo, this is my cause. Let ye Allmightie geue me answere: & let him that is my cotrary party, sue me with a lybell. 36Then shall I take it vpon my shulder, & as a garlade aboute my heade. 37I haue tolde the nombre of my goinges, and delyuered them vnto him as to a prynce. 38But yf case be that my londe crie agaynst me, or yt the forowes therof make eny complaynte: 39yf I haue eaten the frutes therof vnpayed for, yee yf I haue greued eny of the plow men: 40Than, let thistles growe in steade of my wheate, & thornes for my barlye.Here ende the wordes of Iob. 32So these thre men wolde stryue nomore wt Iob, because he helde himself a rightuous man. 2But Eliu the sonne of Barachel the Bussite of the kynred of Ram, was very sore displeased at Iob, that he called himself iust before God. 3And with Iobs thre fredes he was angrie also, because they had founde no reasonable answere to ouercome him. 4Now taried Eliu till they had ended their communicacion with Iob, for why? they were elder then he. 5So when Eliu ye sonne of Barachel ye Bussite sawe, that these thre men were not able to make Iob answere, he was myscontent: 6so that he gaue answere himself, and sayde: Considerinve yt I am yonge, & ye be men of age, I was afrayed, & durst not shewe forth my mynde, 7for I thought thus within my self: It becometh olde men to speake, & the aged to teach wy?dome. 8Euery ma (no doute) hath a mynde, but it is the inspyracion of the Allmightie that geueth vnderstondinge. 9All men are not wyse, nether doth euery aged man vnderstonde the thinge that is laufull. 10Therfore wil I speake also (in so farre as I maye be herde) & wil shewe yow myne opinyon. 11For whe I had wayted till ye made an ende of youre talkynge, & herde youre wy?dome, what argumetes ye made in youre communicacion: 12yee when I had diligently pondred what ye sayde, I founde not one of you that made eny good argument agaynst Iob, or that directly coude make answere vnto his wordes: 13lest ye shulde prayse youre selues, to haue founde out wy?dome: because it is God that hath cast him out, & no man. 14Neuerthelesse, seynge he hath not spoken vnto me, therfore will not I answere him as ye haue done 15(for they were so aba?shed, that they coude not make answere, ner speake one worde) 16but in so moch as ye wil not speake, stondinge still like dom men & makinge no answere: 17I haue a good hope for my parte to shappe him an answere & to shewe him my meanynge. 18For I am full of wordes, & the sprete that is within me, copelleth me. 19Beholde, I am as the new wyne which hath no vente, & bursteth the new vessels in sunder. 20Therfore wil I speake, that I maye haue vete: I wil open my lyppes, and make answere. 21I will regarde no maner of personne, no man wil I spare. 22For yf I wolde go aboute to please me, I knowe not how soone my maker wolde take me awaye. 33Wherfore, heare my wordes (O Iob) & herken vnto all, that I wyll saye: 2Beholde, I wil open my mouth, & my tonge shal speake out of my chawes. 3My hert shall ordre my wordes a right, & my lyppes shal talke of pure wy?dome. 4The sprete of God hath made me, & the breth of the Allmightie hath geue me my life. 5Yf thou cast, then geue me answere: prepare thy self to stode before me face to face. 6Beholde, before God am I euen as thou, for I am fashioned and made eue of the same moulde. 7Therfore, thou nedest not be afrayed of me, nether nedest thou to feare, that my auctorite shal be to heuy for the. 8Now hast thou spoken in myne eares, & I haue herde ye voyce of thy wordes: 9I am clene without eny fawte, I am innocent, & there is no wickednesse in me. 10But lo, he hath pyked a quarell agaynst me, & taketh me for his enemy: 11he hath put my fote in the stockes, & loketh narowly vnto all my pathes. 12Beholde, vnto these vnreasonable wordes of thyne wil I make answere. Shulde God be reproued of man? 13Why doest thou then stryue agaynst him, because he geueth the no accomptes of all his doinges? 14For whe God doth once commaunde a thinge, there shulde no man be curious, to search whether it be right. 15In dreames and visions of the night season (when slombrynge cometh vpo me, that they fall a slepe in their beddes) 16he rowneth them in the eares, he infourmeth them, & sheweth the planely, 17that it is he, which withdraweth man from euell, delyuereth him from pryde, 18kepeth his soule from destruccion, & his life from ye swearde. 19he chasteneth him with sicknesse, & bringeth him to his bed: he laieth sore punyshmet vpo his bones, 20so that his life maye awaye wt no bred, & his soule abhorreth to eate eny dayntie meate: 21In so moch, that his body is clene consumed awaye, & his bones appeare nomore. 22His soule draweth on to destruccion, & his life to death. 23Now yf there be an angel (one amonge a thousande) sent for to speake vnto ma, and to shewe him the right waye: 24the the LORDE is mercifull vnto him, & sayeth: He shalbe delyuered, yt he fall not downe to destruccion, for I am sufficiently recociled. 25Than his flesh (which hath bene in misery & trouble) shalbe, as it was in his youth. 26For yf he submitte himself vnto God, he is gracious, & sheweth him his countenaunce ioyfully, & rewardeth man for his rightuousnes. 27Soch a respecte hath he vnto me. Therfore let a man cofesse, (& saye:) I offended, but he hath chastened & refourmed me: I dyd vnrightuously, neuerthelesse he hath not recopensed me therafter. 28Yee he hath delyuered my soule from destruccion, & my life, that it seyth ye light. 29Lo, thus worketh God allwaie with ma, 30that he kepeth his soule from perishinge, & latteth him enioye the light of ye lyuinge. 31Marke well (O Iob) & heare me: holde the still, vntill I haue spoken. 32But yf thou hast eny thinge to saye, then answere me and speake, for thy answere pleaseth me. 33Yf thou hast nothinge, then heare me, and holde thy tonge, so shal I teach the wy?dome. 34Eliu proceaded forth in his comunicacion, & sayde: 2Heare my wordes (O ye wyse men) herken vnto me, ye yt haue vnderstondinge. 3For like as the mouth tasteth the meates, so the eare proueth & discerneth the wordes. 4As for the iudgmet, let vs seke it out amonge or selues, yt we maye knowe what is right. 5And why? Iob hath sayde: I am rightuous, but God doth me wronge. 6I must nedes be a lyar, though my cause be right: & violetly am I plaged, where as I made no fawte. 7where is there soch one as Iob, yt drinketh vp scornefulnes like water? 8which goeth in ye company of wicked doers, & walketh wt vngodly me? 9For he saieth: Though a ma be good, yet is he naught before God. 10Therfore herke vnto me, ye yt haue vnderstondinge. Farre be it from God, that he shulde medle with wickednesse: and farre be it from the Allmightie, yt he shulde medle with vnrightuous dealynge: 11but he rewardeth the workes of man, and causeth euery man to fynde acordinge to his wayes. 12For sure it is, that God codemneth no man wrongeously, and the iudgmet of the Allmightie is not vnrightuous. 13Who ruleth the earth in his steade? Or, whom hath he set to gouerne the whole worlde? 14To whom hath he geuen his herte, for to drawe his sprete and breth vnto him? 15All flesh shal come together vnto naught, & all me shal turne agayne vnto earth. 16Yf thou now haue vnderstodinge, heare what I saye and herken to the voyce of my wordes. 17Maye he be made whole, that loueth no right? Yf thou were a very innocent man, shuldest thou then be punyshed? 18For he is euen the same, yt knoweth the rebellious kynges, & sayeth to princes: 19Vngodly men are ye He hath no respecte vnto the personnes of ye lordly, & regardeth not the rich more the poore. For they be all the worke of his hondes. 20In the twincklinge off an eye shall they be slayne: and at mydnight, when the people & the tyrauntes rage, then shal they perish, ad be taken awaye with out hondes. 21And why? his eyes loke vpon the wayes of man, and he seyth all his goinges. 22There is no darcknes ner thicke shadowe, yt can hyde the wicked doers from him. 23For no ma shalbe suffred to go into iudgment with God. 24Many one, yee innumerable doth he punyshe and setteth other in their steades. 25For he knoweth their euell & darcke workes, therfore shal they be destroyed. 26They that were in ye steade of Seers, dealt like vngodly me. 27Therfore turned they back traytorously and vnfaithfully fro hi, & wolde not receaue his wayes. 28In so moch that they haue caused ye voyce of the poore to come vnto him, & now he heareth the coplaynte of soch as are in necessite. 29Yf he delyuer & graunte pardo, who will iudge or condemne? But yf he hyde awaye his countenaunce, who wil turne it aboute agayne, whether it be to the people or to eny man? 30For the wickednesse & synne of ye people, he maketh an ypocrite to reigne ouer the. 31For so moch then as I haue begonne to talke of God, I wil not hyndre the. 32Yf I haue gone amysse, enfourme me: yf I haue done wronge, I wil leaue of. 33Wilt thou not geue a reasonable answere? Art thou afrayed of eny thinge, seynge thou beganest first to speake, & not I? 34For els the men of vnderstodinge & wisdome that haue herde me, might saye: What cast thou speake? 35As for Iob he hath nether spoken to the purpose ner wysely. 36O father, let Iob be well tryed, because he he hath turned himself to ye wicked: 37yee aboue his synnes he hath blasphemed, which offence he hath done euen before vs, in yt he stryueth agaynst God with his wordes. 35Eliu spake morouer, and sayde: 2Thinkest thou it right that thou sayest: I am rightuous before God 3Seinge thou sayest so, how doest thou knowe it? What thinge hast thou more excellet, the I yt am a synner? 4Therfore will I geue answere vnto the & thy frendes: 5loke vnto the heaue, & beholde it: cosidre ye cloudes, how they are hyer then thou. 6Yf thou synnest, what dost thou vnto him? Yf thine offences be many, how gettest thou his fauoure? 7Yf thou be rightuous, what geuest thou him? Or, what receaueth he of thy handes? 8Of soch an vngodly personne as thou, & of ye sonne of man that is rightuous as thou pretendest to be: 9there is a greate crie & coplaynte made by the that are oppressed with violence, yee eueryman complayneth vpon the cruell arme of tyrauntes. 10For soch one neuer sayeth: Where is God that made me? ad yt shyneth vpon vs, that we might prayse him in the night? 11Which geueth vs more vnderstodinge then he doth the beastes of the earth, and teacheth vs more then the foules off heaue. 12Yf eny soch complayne, no ma geueth answere, and yt because of the wickednesse off proude tyrauntes. 13But yf a man call vpon God, doth not he heare him? Doth not the Almightie accepte his crie? 14Wha thou speakest then, shulde not he pardon the, yff thou open thyself before him, and put thy trust in him? 15Then vseth he no violence in his wrath nether hath he pleasure in curious and depe inquisicions. 16Therfore hath Iob opened his mouth but in vayne, ad folishly hath he made so many wordes. 36Eliu proceaded forth in his talkinge, & sayde: 2holde the still a litle, and I shal shewe the, what I haue yet to speake on Gods behalfe. 3I wil open vnto ye yet more of myne vnderstondinge, and proue my maker rightuous. 4True are my wordes, & no lye: and the knowlege wherwithall I argue agaynst the, is perfecte. 5Beholde, God casteth not awaye ye mightie, for he himselff is mightie in power and wisdome. 6As for the vngodly, he preserueth the not but helpeth the poore to their right. 7He turneth not his eyes awaye from the rightuous he setteth vp kynges in their Trone, and cofirmeth them, so that they allwaye syt therin. 8But yf they be layed in preson and cheynes, or bounde with the bondes of pouerte: 9then sheweth he them their workes ad dedes and the synnes wherwt they haue vsed cruell violence. 10He with punyshinge and nurturinge off them, rowneth them in the eares, warneth them to leaue of from their wickednesse, and to amende. 11Yf they now will take hede and be obedient, they shall weere out their dayes in prosperite, and their yeares in pleasure ad ioye. 12But yff they will not obeye, they shall go thorow the swearde, & perish or euer they be awarre. 13As for soch as be fayned, dyssemblers and ypocrytes, they heape vp wrath for them selues: for they call not vpon him, though they be his presoners. 14Thus their soule perisheth in foolishnesse, and their lyfe wt ye condened. 15The poore delyuereth he out of his straytnesse, and comforteth soch as be in necessite and trouble. 16Euen so shall he kepe the (yf thou wilt be content) from the bottomlesse pytte that is beneth: & yf thou wilt holde the quyete, he shal fyll thy table with plenteousnesse. 17Neuerthelesse, thou hast condemned the iudgment of the vngodly, yee euen soch a iudgment and sentence shalt thou suffre. 18For then shal not thy cause be stilled with crueltie, ner pacified with many giftes. 19Hath God ordened then, that the glorious life off the & all soch mightie men shulde not be put downe? 20Prolonge not thou the tyme, till there come a night for the, to set other people in thy steade. 21But bewarre that thou turne not asyde to wickednesse and synne, which hyther to thou hast chosen more then mekenesse. 22Beholde, God is of a mightie hye power: Where is there soch a gyde and lawegeuer as he? 23Who wil reproue him of his waye? who wil saye vnto him: thou hast done wronge? 24O considre how greate and excellent his workes be, whom all men loaue and prayse: 25yee wondre at him, and yet they se him but afarre of. 26Beholde, so greate is God, that he passeth oure knowlege, nether are we able to come to ye experiece of his yeares. 27He turneth ye water to smaldroppes, he dryueth his cloudes 28together for to rayne, so that they poure downe and droppe vpon men. 29He can sprede out the cloudes (a couerynge off his tabernacle) 30and cause his light to shyne vpo them, and to couer the botome of the see. 31By these thinges gouerneth he his people, and geueth the abundaunce of meate. 32In ye turnynge of a hande he hydeth the light, & at his commaundement it commeth agayne. 33The rysinge vp therof sheweth he to his frendes and to the catell. 37At this my hert is astonnied, and moued out of his place. 2Heare then the sounde of his voyce, and the noyse yt goeth out of his mouth. 3He gouerneth euery thinge vnder the heauen, and his light reacheth vnto the ende of the worlde. 4A roaringe voyce foloweth him: for his glorious magesty geueth soch a thondre clappe, that (though a man heare it) yet maye he not perceaue it afterwarde. It geueth an horrible sownde, 5when God sendeth out his voyce: greate thinges doth he, which we can not coprehende. 6When he commaundeth the snowe, it falleth vpon the earth: As soone as he geueth the rayne a charge, Immediatly the showers haue their strength and fall downe 7He sendeth feare vpon euery man, that they might knowe their owne workes. 8The beestes crepe in to their dennes, & take their rest. 9Out of the south commeth the tempest, and colde out of the north. 10At the breth of God, the frost commeth, & the waters are shed abrode. 11The cloudes do their laboure in geuynge moystnesse, the cloudes poure downe their rayne. 12He distributeth also on euery syde, acordinge as it pleaseth him to deale out his workes, that they maye do, what so euer he commaundeth the thorow the whole worlde: 13whether it be to punysh eny londe, or to do good vnto them, that seke him. 14Herken vnto this (o Iob) stonde still, and considre the wonderous workes of God. 15Art thou of coucel with God, when he doth these thinges? When he causeth the light to come forth of his cloudes? 16Art thou of his coucell, when he spredeth out the cloudes? Hast thou the perfecte knowlege of his wonders? 17and how thy clothes are warme, whe the lode is still thorow the south wynde? 18hast thou helped him to spred out the heauen, which is to loke vpo, as it were cast of cleare metall? 19Teach vs what we shal saye vnto hi, for we are vnmete because of darcknes. 20Shal it be tolde him, what I saye? Shulde a man speake, or shulde he kepe it backe? 21For euery ma seith not the light, yt he kepeth cleare in the cloudes, which he clenseth whan he maketh the wynde to blowe. 22Golde is brought out of the north, but the prayse and honoure off Gods feare commeth fro God himself. 23It is not we that can fynde out the allmightie: for in power, equite and rigtuousnesse he is hyer then can be expressed. 24Seinge then that euery body feareth him, why shulde not all wyse men also stode in feare of hi? 38Then spake the LORDE vnto Iob out of the storme, and sayde: 2what is he, that hydeth his mynde with foolysh wordes? 3Gyrde vp thy loynes like a ma, for I will question the, se thou geue me a dyrecte answere. 4Where wast thou, when I layed ye foundacions of the earth? Tell planely yff thou hast vnderstondinge. 5Who hath measured it, knowest thou? Or, who hath spred ye lyne vpon it? 6Where vpon stode the pilers of it? Or, who layed ye corner stone? 7where wast thou when the mornynge starres gaue me prayse, ad when all the angels of God reioysed? 8Who shutt the see with dores, when it brake forth as a childe out off his mothers wombe? 9When I made the cloudes to be a coueringe for it, and swedled it with ye darcke? 10when I gaue it my comaundement, makynge dores & barres for it, 11sayenge: Hither to shalt thou come, but no further, and here shalt thou laye downe thy proude and hye wawes. 12Hast thou geue the mornynge his charge (as soone as thou wast borne) and shewed the dayespringe his place, 13yt it might take holde of the corners of the earth, & yt the vngodly might be shake out? 14Their tokes & weapes hast thou turned like claye, & set the vp agayne as the chaunginge of a garment. 15Yee thou hast spoyled the vngodly off their light, & broke the arme of the proude. 16Camest thou euer into the groude of the see, Or, hast thou walked in ye lowe corners of ye depe? 17Haue the gates of death bene opened vnto the or hast thou sene the dore of euerlastige treasure? 18Hast thou also perceaued, how brode ye earth is? Now yf thou hast knowlege of all, 19the shewe me where light dwelleth, and where darcknes is: 20yt thou mayest bringe vs vnto their quarters, yf thou cast tell the waye to their houses. 21Knewest thou (when thou wast borne) how olde thou shuldest be? 22Wentest thou euer in to the treasuries off the snowe, or hast thou sene ye secrete places of the hale: 23which I haue prepared agaynst the tyme of trouble, agaynst the tyme of batell & warre? 24By what waye is the light parted, & the heate dealt out vpon earth? 25Who deuydeth the abundauce of waters in to ryuers, or who maketh a waye for the stormy wether, 26yt it watereth & moystureth ye drye & baren grounde: 27to make the grasse growe in places where no body dwelleth, & in the wildernes where no ma remayneth? 28Who is the father of rayne? Or, who hath begotten the droppes of dew? 29Out of whose wobe came the yse? who hath gendred the coldnes of ye ayre? 30yt the waters are as harde as stones, & lye congeeled aboue the depe. 31Hast thou brought ye vij. starres together? Or, art thou able to breake the Circle of heaue? 32Cast thou bringe forth the mornynge starre or the euenynge starre at couenient tyme, & coueye the home agayne? 33Knowest thou the course off heaue, yt thou mayest set vp the ordinaunce therof vpo earth? 34Morouer, cast thou lift vp thy voyce to ye cloudes, yt they maye poure downe a greate rayne vpo the? 35Canst thou thodre also yt they maye go their waye, & be obediet vnto the, sayege: lo, here are we? 36Who geueth sure wisdome, or stedfast vnderstodinge? 37who nombreth the cloudes in wisdome? who stilleth ye vehement waters of the heaue? 38who turneth the clottes to dust, & the to be clottes agayne? 39Huntest thou the praye fro the Lyon, or fedest thou his whelpes 40lyege in their denes & lurkinge in their couches? 41who prouydeth meate for the rauen, whe his yonge ones crie vnto God, ad fle aboute for want of meate? 39Knowest thou the tyme when the wilde gotes brige forth their yoge amoge the stony rockes? Or layest thou wayte when the hindes vse to fawne? 2Rekenest thou the monethes after they ingendre, yt thou knowest the tyme of their bearinge? 3Or when they lye downe, when they cast their yonge ones, & when they are delyuered off their trauayle & payne? 4How their yoge ones growe vp & waxe greate thorow good fedinge? 5who letteth the wilde asse go fre, or who lowseth the bodes of the Moole? 6Vnto who I haue geuen the wyldernes to be their house, & the vntilled londe to be their dwellinge place. 7That they maye geue no force for the multitude off people in the cities, nether to regarde the crienge of the dryuer: 8but to seke their pasture aboute the moutaynes, & to folowe vpon the grene grasse. 9Wyll the vnicorne be so tame as to do ye seruyce, or to abyde still by thy cribbe? 10Cast thou bynde ye yock aboute him in thy forowes, to make him plowe after the in ye valleis? 11Mayest thou trust hi (because he is stroge) or comitte thy labor vnto hi? 12Mayest thou beleue hi, yt he wil brige home yi corne, or to cary eny thinge vnto yi barne? 13The Estrich (whose fethers are fayrer the ye wynges of the sparow hauke) 14whe he hath layed his egges vpon the grounde, he bredeth them in the dust, 15and forgetteth them: so that they might be troden with fete, or broken with somme wilde beast. 16So harde is he vnto his yong ones, as though they were not his, and laboureth in vayne without eny feare. 17And that because God hath taken wisdome from him, & hath not geuen him vnderstondinge. 18When his tyme is, he flyeth vp an hye, and careth nether for horse ner man. 19Hast thou geuen the horse is strength, or lerned him to bowe downe his neck with feare: 20that he letteth him self be dryuen forth like a greshopper, where as the stoute neyenge that he maketh, is fearfull? 21he breaketh ye grounde with the hoffes of his fete chearfully in his strength, and runneth to mete the harnest men. 22He layeth asyde all feare, his stomack is not abated, nether starteth he a back for eny swerde. 23Though the quyuers rattle vpon him, though the speare and shilde glistre: 24yet russheth he in fearsly, and beateth vpon the grounde. He feareth not the noyse of the trompettes, 25but as soone as he heareth the shawmes blowe, tush (sayeth he) for he smelleth the batell afarre of, ye noyse, the captaynes and the shoutinge. 26Commeth it thorow thy wysdome, that the goshauke flyeth towarde the south? 27Doth the Aegle mounte vp & make his nest on hye at thy commaundement? 28He abydeth in the stony rockes, ad vpon the hye toppes of harde mountaynes, where no man can come. 29From thence maye he beholde his praye, and loke farre aboute with his eyes. 30His yonge ones are fed with bloude, and where eny deed body lyeth, there is he immediatly. 40Morouer, God spake vnto Iob and sayde: 2Can he that stryueth with the Allmightie, be at rest? Shulde not he which disputeth with God, geue him an answere? 3Iob answered the LORDE, sayenge: 4Beholde, I am to vyle a personne, to answere the, therfore will I laye my hande vpon my mouth. 5Once or twyse haue I spoken, but I will saye nomore. 6Then spake the LORDE vnto Iob out of the storme, and sayde: 7gyrde vp yi loynes like a man, and tell me the thige that I will axe the. 8Wilt thou disanulle my iudgment? Or, wilt thou condemne me, yt thou thy self mayest be made rightuous? 9Is thine arme then like the arme of God? Maketh thy voyce soch a soude as his doth? 10Then arme thy self with thine owne power, vp, decke the in thy ioly araye, 11poure out the indignacion of thy wrath: se that thou cast downe all ye proude, 12loke well, that thou makest all soch as be stubburne, to obeye: treade all the vngodly vnder thy fete, 13cast the downe in to the myre, and couer their faces with darcknesse: 14Then will I confesse also, that thyne owne right honde hath saued the. 15Beholde, the cruell beaste (whom I made wt the) which eateth haye as an oxe: 16lo, how stronge he is in his loynes, and what power he hath in the nauell of his body. 17He spredeth out his tale like a Cedre tre, all his vaynes are stiff. 18His shynnes are like pipes off brasse, his rygge bones are like staues of yro 19First when God made him, he ordened the wyldernesse for him, 20yt the mountaynes shulde geue him grasse, where all the beastes off the felde take their pastyme. 21He lyeth amoge the redes in the Mosses, the fennes 22hyde him with their shadowe, and the wylowes of the broke couer him rounde aboute. 23Lo, without eny laboure might he drynke out the whole floude, and suppe off Iordane without eny trauayle. 24Who darre laye honde vpon him openly, and vndertake to catch him? Or, who darre put an hoke thorow his nose, ad laye a snare for him? 41Darrest thou drawe out Leuiathan with an angle, or bynde his tonge with a snare? 2Canst thou put a rynge in the nose of him, or bore his chaftes thorow with a naule? 3Wyll he make many fayre wordes with the (thynkest thou) or flatre the: 4Wyll he make a couenaunt with the? Or, art thou able for to compell him to do the contynuall seruyce? 5Wilt thou take thy pastyne wt him as with a byrde, or geue him vnto thy maydens, 6that thy companyons maye hew him in peces, to be parted amonge the marchaunt men? 7Canst thou fyll the nett wt his skynne, or ye fysh panyer with his heade? 8Darrest thou laye honde vpon him? It is better for the to considre what harme might happe the there thorow and not to touch him. 9For when thou thynkest to haue holde vpon him, he shall begyle the: Euery man also that seyth him, shall go backe. And why? 10There darre none be so bolde, as to rayse him vp. Who is able to stonde before me? 11Or, who hath geuen me eny thynge afore hande, that I am bounde to rewarde him agayne? All thinges vnder heauen are myne. 12I feare him not, whether he threaten or speake fayre. 13Who lifteth him vp and stripeth him out of his clothes, or who taketh him by the bytt of his brydle? 14Who openeth the dore of his face? for he hath horrible tethe rounde aboute. 15His body is couered with scales as it were with shyldes, lockte in, kepte, and well copacte together. 16One is so ioyned to another, that no ayre can come in: 17Yee one hangeth so vpon another, and sticke so together, that they can not be sundered. 18His nesinge is like a glisteringe fyre, and his eyes like the mornynge shyne. 19Out of his mouth go torches and fyre brandes, 20out off his nostrels there goeth a smoke, like as out off an hote seetinge pott. 21His breth maketh the coales burne, the flame goeth out of his mouth. 22In his necke remayneth strength, and before his face sorowe is turned to gladnesse. 23The membres of his body are ioyned so strayte one to another, and cleue so fast together, that he can not be moued. 24His hert is as harde as a stone, ad as fast as the styth ye that the hammer man smyteth vpon. 25When he goeth: the mightiest off all are afrayed, and the wawes heuy. 26Yff he drawe out the swearde, there maye nether speare ner brest plate abyde him. 27He setteth as moch by a strawe as by yro, and as moch by a rotten stocke as by metall. 28He starteth not awaye for him that bendeth the bowe, & as for slynge stones, he careth as moch for stubble as for them 29He counteth the hammer no better then a strawe, he laugheth him to scorne that shaketh the speare. 30He treadeth the golde in the myre like ye sharpe potsherdes. 31He maketh the depe to seeth and boyle like a pott, and stereth the see together like an oyntment. 32The waye is light after him, the depe is his walkynge place. 33Vpon earth is there no power like vnto his, for he is so made, that he feareth not. 34Yff a man will cosidre all hye thinges, this same is a kynge ouer all the children off pryde. 42The Iob answered the LORDE, and sayde: 2I knowe that thou hast power of all thinges, and that there is no thought hyd vnto the. 3For who can kepe his owne councell so secrete, but it shall be knowne? Therfore haue I spoken vnwysely, seynge these thinges are so hye, and passe myne vnderstondinge. 4O herken thou vnto me also, and let me speake: answere me vnto the thinge that I will axe the. 5I haue geuen diligent eare vnto the, and now I se ye with myne eyes. 6Wherfore I geue myne owne self ye blame, and take repentaunce in the dust and asshes. 7Now whe the LORDE had spoken these wordes vnto Iob, he sayde vnto Eliphas ye Themanite: I am displeased with the & thy two frendes, for ye haue not spoken the thinge yt is right before me, like as my seruaunt Iob hath done. 8Therfore take vij. oxen and seuen rammes, and go to my seruaunt Iob, offre vp also for youre selues a brentofferynge, and lat my seruaunt Iob praye for you. Him will I accepte, and not deale with you after youre foolishnesse: in that ye haue not spoke ye thinge which is right, like as my seruaunt Iob hath done. 9So Eliphas the Themanite, Baldad ye Suhite and Sophar the Naamathite wete their waye, and did acordynge as the LORDE commaunded them. The LORDE also accepted the personne off Iob, 10and the LORDE turned him vnto Iob, whe he prayed for his frendes: Yee the LORDE gaue Iob twyse as moch as he had afore. 11And the came there vnto him all his brethren, all his sisters with all them that had bene off his acquatauce afore, and ate bred with him in his house, wondringe at him, ad comfortinge him ouer all the trouble, that the LORDE had brought vpon him. Euery ma gaue him a shepe and a Iewell of golde. 12And the LORDE made Iob richer then he was before: for he had xiiij.M. shepe, vi.M. camels, a M. yock oxe, and a M. asses. 13He had children also: vij. sonnes and iij. doughters. 14The first he called Daye, the seconde, pouerte: the thirde, All plenteousnes. 15In all the londe were none founde so fayre, as the doughters of Iob, & their father gaue them enheritaunce amonge their brethren. 16After this lyued Iob xl. yeares, so that he sawe his children, & his childers children vnto the fourth generacion. 17And so he dyed, beinge olde & of a perfecte age.