Job 18:9
The grinne shall take him by the heele, and it shall catche him that is thirstie of blood.
The grinne shall take him by the heele, and it shall catche him that is thirstie of blood.
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10The snare is layde for him in the grounde, and a pitfall in the way.
11Fearefulnesse shall make him afraide on euery side, and shall driue him to his feete.
12Hunger shalbe his strength, and destruction shalbe redye at his side.
7The steppes of his strength shalbe restrayned, and his owne counsaile shall cast him downe:
8For his feete are taken as it were in the net, & he walketh vpon the snares.
8He sitteth lurkyng in theeuishe corners of the streates: and priuily in lurking dennes he doth murther the innocent, he eyeth diligently hym that is weake.
9He lieth in wayte lurking as a Lion in his denne: he lyeth in wayte lurkyng, that he may violently carry away the afflicted, he doth carry away violentlye the afflicted, in halyng hym into his net.
10He croucheth and humbleth him selfe: so that a number of the that be weake, fall by his myght.
5Can a birde fal in a snare vpon the earth where no fouler is? or wil he take vp the snare from the earth, and haue taken nothing at all?
8Let a sodayne destruction come vpon hym vnawares: and his net that he hath layde priuily catch hym selfe, let him fall into it with his owne destruction.
22The wickednes of the vngodly shall catche him selfe, and with the snares of his owne sinne shall he be trapped.
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.
8But he that diggeth vp a pitte, shall fall therin hym selfe: and who so breaketh downe the hedge, a serpent shall byte hym.
9Kepe me from the snare which they haue layde foorth for me: and from the trappes of them that be workers of iniquitie.
8Then set the heathen together on euery side of the countreis agaynst him, layde their nettes for him, and toke him in their pit.
7Shall they not rise vp sodenly that shall byte thee? and awake that shall stirre thee, & thou shalt be their pray?
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,
18The vngodly shalbe a raunsome for the righteous: and the wicked for the iust.
15He hath made a graue and digged it: but he hym selfe wyll fall into the pit whiche he hath made.
11Let the extortioner bryng into his snare all that he hath: and let straungers spoyle his labour.
13He compasseth the wise in their owne craftinesse, & maketh foolishe the counsell of the wicked.
6The righteousnesse of the iust shall delyuer them: but the wicked shalbe taken in their owne vngodlynesse.
16He shall sucke the gall of serpentes, and the adders tongue shall slay him:
24Trouble and anguishe wil make him afrayde, and compasse him about, as is a king in the middest of an armie.
10Therefore art thou compassed about with snares, & sodenly vexed with feare.
26For the Lorde shall stande by thy side, & kepe thy foote that thou be not taken.
24He taketh it with his eyes, and yet the hunter putteth a bridle into his nose.
10Who so causeth the righteous to go astray by an euill way, shall fall into his owne pit: but the iust shall haue the good in possession.
15And many among them shall stumble, and fall, and be broken, yea they shalbe snared and taken.
11He hath put my foote in the stockes, and looketh narowlye vnto all my pathes.
22Let the noyse be hearde out of their houses when thou bryngest the murtherer sodaynly vpon them: for they haue digged a pit to take me, and layde snares for my feete.
22God shal cast vpon him, and not spare, though he woulde fayne flee out of his hande.
22Let their table be as a snare before them: and in steade of aboundaunce of peace, let it be a meanes of destruction.
20Terrour taketh holde vpon hym as a water fludde, and the tempest stealeth him away in the night season.
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.
21A feareful sounde is euer in his eares, and when he is in peace, the destroyer shall come vpon him.
5Thornes and snares are in the way of the frowarde: but he that doth kepe his soule, wyll flee farre from them.
23So long tyll she had wounded his lyuer with her dart: lyke as if a byrde hasted to the snare, not knowing that the perill of his life lieth thervpon.
5The proude haue layde a snare for me, and spread a net abroade with coardes in the high wayes: they haue set trappes for me. Selah.
22When he had plenteousnesse of euery thing, yet was he poore, though he was helped on euery side.
5Saue thy self as a Doe from the hand of the hunter and as a byrde from the hande of the fouler.
5Who so flattereth his neighbour, layeth a net for his feete.
22But whe a stronger then he commeth vpon hym, and ouercommeth hym, he taketh from him all his harnesse, wherin he trusted, and deuideth his goodes.
2And he neuerthelesse is wise, and will plague the wicked, and goeth not from his worde, he wyll aryse against the housholde of the frowarde, and against the helpe of euyll doers.
13The wicked falleth into the snare thorowe the malice of his owne mouth: but the iust shall escape out of all perill.
21Making a man to sinne in the worde, and that toke him in a snare, whiche reproued them in the open place, and they that haue turned the cause of the righteous to naught.
5Wherfore shoulde I feare in euyll dayes? the wickednesse of my heeles then would compasse me round about.