Job 6:16
Whiche are blackish be reason of the ice, and wherin the snowe is hyd.
Whiche are blackish be reason of the ice, and wherin the snowe is hyd.
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17 Which when they haue passed by do vanishe, and when the heate commeth they fayle out of their place.
18 They depart from the course of their wonted chanell to other places, they runne in vayne and perishe.
15 Myne owne brethren passe ouer by me as the water brooke, & as the ouerflowing of waters, whiche do hastly go away,
7 Her abstayners were whyter then the snowe or milke, their colour was freshe, red as corall, their beautie like the Saphire.
8 But nowe their faces be very blacke, insomuche that thou shouldest not knowe them in the streetes: their skinne cleaueth to their bones, it is withered and become like a drye stocke.
29 Out of whose wombe came the yce? Who hath gendred the coldnesse of the ayre?
30 That the waters are hidde as with a stone, and lye congealed aboue the deepe.
30 My skinne vpon me is turned to blacke, and my bones are brent with heate.
16 In the darke they digge through houses, whiche they marked for them selues in the day time: they knowe not the light.
17 The morning is to them euen as the shadow of death: if one know them, they are in the terrours of the shadowe of death,
18 The vngodly is swyft vpon the water: their portion shalbe cursed in the earth, and he shall not beholde the way of the vineyardes.
19 As the drye grounde and heate consume the snowye waters: so shall the graue the sinners.
16 He geueth snowe so whyte as wooll: he scattereth the hoare frost like asshes.
17 He casteth foorth his yse lyke fragmentes: who is able to abide his frost?
5 I am blacke (O ye daughters of Hierusalem) but yet fayre and well fauoured, like as the tentes of the Cedarenes, and as the hanginges of Solomon.
6 Marueyle not at me that I am so blacke, for why? the sunne hath shined vpon me: my mothers chyldren haue euyll wyll at me, they made me the keper of the vineyardes, but mine owne vineyarde haue I not kept.
22 Wentest thou euer into the treasures of the snow, or hast thou seene the secrete places of the hayle,
10 Our skinne is as it had ben made blacke in an ouen, for very sore hunger.
6 Howe are the thinges of Esau sought vp, and his treasures searched?
12 His cloudes, haylestones, and coles of fire: fell downe before hym after lyghtnyng.
5 But let it be stayned with darknesse and the shadowe of death, let the dimme cloude fall vpon it, whiche may make it terrible as a most bitter day.
6 Let the darke storme ouercome that night, and let it not be ioyned vnto the dayes of the yere, nor counted in the number of the monethes.
14 Wyll a man forsake the showe of Libanus, which commeth from the rocke of the fielde? Or shall the colde flowyng waters that commeth from another place be forsaken?
12 Chaunging the night into day, and the light approching into darkenesse.
17 These are welles without water, cloudes that are caryed with a tempest, to whom the mist of darknesse is reserued for euer.
22 Yea a lande as darke as darknesse it selfe, and into the shadowe of death where is none order, but the light is there as darknesse.
6 He commaundeth the snow, and it falleth vpon earth: he geueth the rayne a charge, and the showres haue their strength and fall downe.
30 If I washe my selfe with snowe water, and make myne handes neuer so cleane at the well:
6 Their dwelling was in the cleftes of brookes, yea in the caues and dennes of the earth.
6 Before his face shall the people tremble, the countenaunce of all folkes shall waxe blacke as a pot.
11 Shouldest thou then see no darknesse? shoulde not the water fludde run ouer thee?
9 Out of the south commeth the tempest, and colde out from the north winde.
10 At the breath of God the hoare frost is geuen, and the brode waters are frosen.
16 My face is withered with weeping, & in mine eyes is the shadowe of death.
6 He hath set me in darknesse, as they that be dead for euer.
32 He maketh the path to be seene after him, and he maketh the deepe to seeme all hoarie.
7 They cause the naked to lodge without garment, and without couering in the colde.
8 They are wet with the showres of the mountaynes, and embrace the rocke for want of a couering.
6 They flocke together, they kepe them selues close: they marke my steppes, that they may lye in wayte for my soule.
40 I was in suche case, that by day the heate consumed me, and the frost by nyght, and my slepe departed from mine eyes.
18 For 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.
21 For men see not the light that shineth in the cloudes: but the winde passeth and cleanseth them.
16 Honour the Lorde your God or he take his light from you, and or euer your feete stumble in darcknesse at the hyll: lest when you loke for the lyght, he turne it into the shadowe and darcknesse of death.
14 They runne into darknesse by fayre day, and grope at the noone day as in the night.
19 Then shewe me the way where light dwelleth, & where is the place of darkenesse?
3 For nowe it woulde be heauier then the sande of the sea: and this is the cause, that my wordes fayle me.
11 His head is as the most fine golde, the lockes of his heere are busshed, & blacke as a crowe.
8 Fire and hayle, snowe and vapours: stormie wynde fulfyllyng his worde.
22 There is no darkenesse nor shadowe of death that can hide the wicked doers from him.
3 As for heauen I clothe it with darknesse, and put as it were a sacke vpon it.