Job 30:7
Among the busshes went they about crying, and vnder the thornes they gathered them selues together.
Among the busshes went they about crying, and vnder the thornes they gathered them selues together.
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3For very miserie and hunger they fled into the wildernesse, a darke place, horrible and waste,
4Plucking vp nettles among the busshes, and the iuniper rootes for their meate.
5And when they were dryuen foorth, men cryed after them as it had ben afafter a thiefe.
6Their dwelling was in the cleftes of brookes, yea in the caues and dennes of the earth.
8They were the children of fooles and vyllaynes, which are more vile then the earth.
19These shall come and shall light all in the desolate valleys, in the holes of stones, and vpon all thornie and bushie places.
21He resteth him in the shade, in the couerte of the reede and fennes.
22The trees couer him with their shadowe, and the wyllowes of the brooke compasse him about.
10For whyles the thornes cleaue together, and whyles they banquet out their feastes, they are deuoured vp as very drie stubble.
1But nowe they that are younger then I haue me in derision: yea euen they whose fathers I would haue thought scorne to haue set with the dogges of my cattell.
17The seede is rotte vnder their cloddes, the garners are destroyed, the barnes are ouerthrowen: for the corne is withered.
18O howe cattell mourne? the heardes of beastes are in wofull case for lacke of pasture, and the flockes of sheepe are destroyed?
4They cause the poore to turne out of the way, so that the poore of the earth hyde them selues together.
5Beholde, as wilde asses in the desert go they foorth to their worke, & ryse betimes to spoyle: Yea the very wildernesse ministreth foode for them & their children.
6They reape the corne fielde that is not their owne, and let the vineyarde of the vngodly alone.
11His doynges be lyke a lions that is greedy to take a pray: and as a lions whelpe lurkyng in secrete places.
13Thornes shall growe in their palaces, nettles & thistles in their strong holdes, that the dragons may haue their pleasure therin, and that they may be a court for Estriches.
14There shall straunge visures & monsterous beastes meete one another, and the wylde kepe company together: there shall the Lamia lye and haue her lodgyng.
6For beholde they are gone away for destruction, but Egypt shall gather them, and Memphis shall bury them: the nettles shall possesse the pleasaunt places of their siluer, thornes shalbe in their tabernacles.
40When they couche in their places, and tarie in the couert to lye in wayte?
24They shall come into the lande with arrowes and bowes, because all the lande shall become bryers and thornes.
25As for all hilles that shalbe digged with the mattocke, there shall not come vpon them any feare of bryers and thornes: but the cattell shalbe driuen thyther, and the sheepe shal feede there.
26The conies are but a feeble folke, yet make their boroughes among the rockes:
27The grashoppers haue not a guide, yet go they foorth together by heapes:
14They call not vpon me with their heartes, but lye howlyng vpon their beddes: they wyll assemble them selues for corne and wine, but rebel against me.
8The beastes creepe into their dennes, and remaine in their places.
14Then said all the trees vnto the bryer: Come thou and raigne ouer vs.
6The wylde asses did stande in the hye places, and drewe in their winde lyke the dragons, their eyes did fayle for want of grasse.
18For vngodlynesse burneth as a fire, and shall deuour bryers and thornes, and it shall burne as in the thicket of a wood, and the wicked aduaunce them selues, as the smoke is caryed vp.
15But in mine aduersitie they reioysed and gathered them together: yea, the very abiectes came together against me, yer I wyst they rented me a peeces and ceassed not.
5Doth the wild asse rore when he hath grasse? or loweth the oxe when he hath fodder inough
6They haue prepared a net for my feete, that some man might presse downe my soule: they haue digged a pit before me, and are fallen into the midst of it them selues. Selah.
13Hide them in the dust together, and couer their faces in secrete:
7Therfore the goodes that remayneth in Moab, and the riches therof, they shall cary to the brooke of wyllowes.
8They are wet with the showres of the mountaynes, and embrace the rocke for want of a couering.
13My peoples fielde shall bryng thornes and thistles: and so shall it be in euery house of voluptuousnesse, and in euery citie that reioyceth.
29For ye shalbe confounded for the trees which ye haue desired: and ye shalbe ashamed of the gardens that ye haue chosen.
31And lo, it was all couered with nettles, and stoode full of thornes, and the stone wall was broken downe.
9Come all ye beastes of the fielde, that ye may deuoure all the beastes of the wood.
4The best of them is as bryer, and the most righteous of them is sharper then a thorne hedge: the day of thy watchmen, and of thy visitation commeth: then shalbe their confusion.
38They shall rose together lyke lions, and as the young lions when they be angry, so shall they bende them selues.
8But that grounde whiche beareth thornes and bryers, is reproued, and is nye vnto cursyng, whose ende is to be burned.
21For the heardmen are become foolishe, and they haue not sought the Lorde: therefore haue they dealt vnwisely with their cattell, and all are scattered abrode.
30Sharpe stones are vnder him lyke potsheardes, and he lyeth vpon sharpe thinges as vpon the soft myre.
27For their inhabitours shalbe like lame men brought in feare and confounded: they shalbe lyke grasse and greene hearbes in the fielde, lyke the hay vpon house toppes, that wythereth before it be growen vp.
6The burthen of the beastes of the south. In a land of trouble & anguishe, from whence shall come the young and olde lion, the viper and firie serpent that fleeth against them that vpon coltes beare their riches, and vpon camels their treasures, to a people that can do them no good.
7At thy rebuke they flee: at the noyse of thy thunder they bluster downe apace.
6They flocke together, they kepe them selues close: they marke my steppes, that they may lye in wayte for my soule.
13They gape vpon me with their mouthes: as it were a rampyng and a roryng lion.
5Lyke the noyse of charrettes vpon the toppes of the mountaynes they shall skip, like the noyse of a flamyng fire deuouryng the stubble, and as a strong people prepared to battayle.