Isaiah 59:5
They breede cockatrice egges, and weaue the spiders webbe, who so eateth of their egges, dyeth: but if one treade vpon them, there commeth vp a serpent.
They breede cockatrice egges, and weaue the spiders webbe, who so eateth of their egges, dyeth: but if one treade vpon them, there commeth vp a serpent.
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6Their webbe maketh no cloth, and they may not couer them with their labours: their deedes are the deedes of wickednesse, and the worke of robberie is in their handes.
7Their feete runne to euyll, and they make haste to shed innocent blood: their counsels are wicked counsels, harme and destruction are in their wayes.
4No man regardeth righteousnesse, and no man iudgeth truely: euery man hopeth in vayne things, and imagineth deceipt, conceaueth weerinesse, and bringeth foorth euill.
3The vngodly are straungers euen from their mothers wombe: assoone as they be borne, they go astray and speake a lye.
4They haue poyson within them lyke to the poyson of a serpent: they be lyke the deafe adder that stoppeth her eares,
8The chylde whyle he sucketh shall haue a desire to the serpentes nest, and when he is weaned, he shall put his hande into the Cockatrice denne.
16He shall sucke the gall of serpentes, and the adders tongue shall slay him:
17Moreouer, I wyll sende cockatrices and serpentes among you (whiche wyl not be charmed) and they shall bite you, saith the Lorde.
14For she leaueth her egges in the earth, and heateth them in the dust.
15She remembreth not that they might be troden with feete, or broken with some wilde beaste.
33Their vine is the poyson of dragons, and the cruell gall of aspes.
28The spyder laboureth with her handes, and is in kynges palaces.
35He conceaueth trauaile, and beareth vanitie, and their body bringeth foorth disceyte.
14His confidence shalbe destroyed, and his trust shalbe a spiders webbe.
16For their feete runne to euyll, and are hasty to shed blood.
17But as in vayne, the nette is layde foorth before the birdes eyes:
18So these lay wayte for the blood of them, and lye priuily for their liues.
26For among my people are found wicked persons, that priuily lay snares and wayte for men, to take them and destroy them.
27And like as a nette is full of byrdes, so are their houses full of that which they haue gotten with falshood and deceipt: Hereof commeth their great substaunce and riches,
29Reioyce not thou whole Palestina, because the rod of him that beateth thee is broken: for out of the serpentes roote there shall come an Adder, and his fruite shalbe a fierie fleeyng worme.
15There the fire shall deuoure thee, the sword shall cut thee of, shall deuoure as the locust, though thou be multiplied as the locust, though thou be as many as the grashopper.
13Their throte is an open sepulchre, with their tongues they haue deceaued, the poyso of aspes is vnder their lippes.
15There shall the Owle make her nest, builde, be there at home, & bryng foorth her young ones: there shall the Kytes come together, eche one to his lyke.
14The bread that he did eate, is turned to the poyson of serpentes within his bodye.
3They haue sharpened their tongue lyke a serpent: Adders poyson is vnder their lippes. Selah.
24They shalbe burnt with hunger, and consumed with heate, and with bitter destruction: I wyll also sende the teeth of beastes vpon them, with the furiousnesse of serpentes in the dust.
30His young ones also sucke vp blood: and where any dead body lyeth, there is he.
5They courage them selues in mischiefe: and comune among them selues how they may lay snares, and say, who shall see them?
8But he that diggeth vp a pitte, shall fall therin hym selfe: and who so breaketh downe the hedge, a serpent shall byte hym.
32It goeth downe sweetely, but at the last it byteth like a serpent, and stingeth lyke an adder.
15Their feete are swyft to shed blood.
46He gaue their fruites vnto the caterpiller: & their labour to the grashopper.
16Their arrowes are sodayne death, yea they them selues be very giauntes.
5His haruest was eaten of the hungrie, & taken from among the thornes, and the thurstie drunke vp their labour: It is not the earth that bringeth foorth iniquitie,
5Yea, one dissembleth with another, and they deale with no trueth: They haue practised their tongues to lye, and taken great paynes to do mischiefe.
14Beholde, he wyll be in trauayle of a mischiefe, for he hath conceaued a labour: but yet he shall be brought to bed of a falsehood.
9Wo he that coueteth an euyll couetousnesse to his house, that he may set his nest on hie, to escape from the power of euyll.
12The wordes of their lippes be the sinne of their mouth: O let them be taken in their pryde, for they speake nothing but curses and lies.
15The Heathen are sunke downe into the pit that they made: their owne foote is snared in the same net whiche they had layde priuily for other.
16Therfore they sacrifice vnto their net, and burne incense vnto their yarne: because by them their portion is fat, and their meate plenteous.
17They shal licke the dust like a serpente, and as the wormes of the earth that tremble in their holes: they shalbe afrayde of the Lorde our God, and they shall feare thee.
19And let euery creeping thing that fleeth, be vncleane vnto you, and not be eaten of.
11The partrich maketh a nest of egges, which she layed not: he commeth by riches, but not righteously, in the middest of his life must he leane them behynde hym, & at the last be founde a very foole.
16For they sleepe not except they haue done mischiefe: and sleepe is taken from them, vntyll they haue done harme.
17For they eate the bread of wickednes, and drinke the wine of robberie.
14And the lord god said vnto ye serpent: Because thou hast done this, thou art cursed aboue all cattel, and aboue euery beast of the fielde: vpon thy belly shalt thou go, and dust shalt thou eate all the dayes of thy lyfe.
4That which the caterpiller hath left the grashopper hath eaten, and what the grashopper left hath the canker worme eaten, and what the canker worme left the locust hath deuoured.
3And though they hyde them selues in the top of Charmel, I will searche, and take them out thence: and though they be hyd from my sight in the bottome of the sea, thence will I commaunde the serpent, and he shall bite them.
14My hand hath found out the strength of the people as it were a nest: and like as egges that were layde here and there, are gathered together, so do I gather all countreys, and there was none so bolde as to moue the winge, that dare open his mouth, or once whisper.
41Let euery creepyng thyng that creepeth vpon the earth be an abhomination, and not be eaten.