Psalms 90:5
Thou makest them to flowe away, they are a sleepe: they be in the morning as an hearbe that groweth.
Thou makest them to flowe away, they are a sleepe: they be in the morning as an hearbe that groweth.
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6In the mornyng it florisheth and groweth vp: in the euenyng it is cut downe and wythered.
3Thou turnest man most miserable euen vnto dust: thou sayest also, O ye children of men returne you into dust.
4For a thousande yeres in thy syght are but as yestarday that is past: and as a watch in the nyght.
2For they shall soone be cut downe like the grasse: and be withered euen as the greene hearbe.
15The dayes of man are as the dayes of an hearbe: he florisheth as a flowre in the fielde.
16For the winde passeth ouer it, and it is no more seene: and the place therof knoweth it no more.
20They shalbe smitten from the morning vnto the euening: yea they shall perishe for euer, when no man regardeth them.
7Wheras the vngodly do bud vp greene as the grasse, and wheras all workers of iniquitie do florishe: that they notwithstandyng shalbe destroyed for euer and euer.
6They shall be as the grasse growing vpon the house toppes: whiche withereth afore that it be shot foorth to his growth.
11May a rushe be greene without moystnesse? or may the grasse growe without water?
12No, but whilste it is nowe in his greennesse, though it be not cut downe, yet withereth it before any other hearbe:
11My dayes fade away lyke a shadowe: and I am wythered lyke grasse.
7The grasse is withered, the floure falleth away, for the breath of the Lord bloweth vpon them: of a trueth the people are grasse.
24They are exalted for a litle, but shortly are gone, brought to pouertie, and taken out of the way, yea and vtterly pluckt of, as the eares of corne.
11In that day shalt thou make thy plant to growe, and early in the mornyng shalt thou make thy seede to florishe: The haruest shalbe gone in the day of inheritaunce, and there shalbe sorowe without hope of comfort.
24For all fleshe is as grasse, and all the glorie of man, is as the flowre of grasse. The grasse withereth, and the flowre falleth away:
19Oh howe be they brought to a destruction euen vpon a sodayne: they faynt, they consume away for very dread.
20They be as a dreame to a man after he is once waked: O Lorde thou wylt cause their image to be dispised in the citie.
14They shalbe put into a graue dead as a sheepe, death shall feede on them: but the ryghteous shall haue dominion of them in the mornyng, their beautie shall consume away, hell shall receaue them from their house.
18Yea, they shalbe euen as hay before the winde, and as chaffe that the storme carieth away.
10Agayne, the riche, in that he is made lowe: Because as the flowre of the grasse he shall passe away.
11For the sunne hath rysen with heate, and the grasse hath withered, and his flowre hath fallen away, & the beautie of the fashion of it hath perished: So also shall the ryche man fade away in his wayes.
29When thou hydest thy face, they are troubled: when thou takest away their spirite, they dye, and are turned agayne to their dust.
11As the waters passe from the sea, and as the flood decayeth and dryeth vp:
12So man after he is asleepe ryseth not, he shall not wake tyll the heauens be no more, nor rise out of his sleepe.
9For all our dayes do passe in thine anger: we spende our yeres as in speaking a worde.
10The dayes of our yeres be in all threescore yeres and tenne, and yf through strength of nature men come to foure score yeres: yet is their iolitie but labour and care, yea moreouer it passeth in haste from vs, and we flee from it.
2He commeth vp, and is cut downe like a floure: He fleeth as it were a shadow, and neuer continueth in one state.
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.
11They shall perishe, but thou endurest, and they shall waxe olde as doth a garment:
12And as a vesture shalt thou folde the vp, and they shalbe chaunged: but thou art the same, & thy yeres shall not fayle.
26They shall perishe, but thou wylt remayne styll: they all shall waxe olde as doth a garment, and as a vesture thou wylt chaunge them, and they shalbe chaunged.
3Therfore they shalbe as the mornyng cloude, and as the deawe that early passeth away, and like as dust that the whirlewinde taketh away from the floore, and as smoke that goeth out of the chimney.
14They shall styll bryng foorth fruite in their age: they shalbe fat and florishyng.
4Man is lyke a thyng of naught: his dayes be lyke a shadowe that passeth away.
26They are passed away as the shippes that be good vnder sayle, & as the eagle that fleeth to the pray.
6He wyll come downe lyke the rayne into a fleece of wooll: euen as the droppes that water the earth.
4They shall growe together lyke as the grasse, and as the willowes by the waters side.
17Which when they haue passed by do vanishe, and when the heate commeth they fayle out of their place.
26Thou shalt come also to thy graue in a full age, like a corne sheafe cut downe in due season.
8Let them creepe away lyke a snayle that foorthwith consumeth to naught: or lyke the vntimely fruite of a woman, let them not see the sunne.
30For ye shalbe as a tree whose leaues are fallen away, and as a garden that hath no moystnesse.
16Whiche were cut downe out of time, and whose foundation was as an ouerflowing ryuer.
19The waters pearse through the very stones by litle & litle, the floodes washe away the grauell and earth: so shalt thou destroy the hope of man.
20In the twinckling of an eye shall they dye, and at midnight when the people and the tirantes rage, then shall they perishe, & be taken away without handes.
18The vngodly is swyft vpon the water: their portion shalbe cursed in the earth, and he shall not beholde the way of the vineyardes.
5I am free among the dead: like such as beyng kylled lye in a graue, whom thou remembrest no more, and are cut away from thy hande.
26And the inhabiters of them shalbe of litle power, and faynt hearted, and confounded, and shalbe lyke the grasse of the field, or greene hearbe, or as the hay on the toppes of the houses, or as the corne that is vnripe & smitten with blasting.
5Or are thy dayes as the dayes of man? and thy yeres as mans yeres?
14At euen beholde there is trouble, and or euer it be mornyng lo it is gone: This is the portion of them that oppresse vs, and the lot of them that robbe vs.