Job 28:6
There is founde a place, whose stones are clene Saphirs, and where ye clottes of the earth are golde.
There is founde a place, whose stones are clene Saphirs, and where ye clottes of the earth are golde.
These verses are found using AI-powered semantic similarity based on meaning and context. Results may occasionally include unexpected connections.
1There are places where syluer is molte, & where golde is tryed:
2where yron is dygged out of the grounde, & stones resolued to metall.
3The darcknes shal once come to an ende, he can seke out the grounde of all thinges: the stones, the darcke, & the horrible shadowe,
15She can not be gotten for the most fyne golde, nether maye the pryce of her be bought with eny moneye.
16No wedges of golde of Ophir, no precious Onix stones, no Saphirs maye be compared vnto her.
17No, nether golde ner Christall, nether swete odours ner golden plate.
18There is nothinge so worthy, or so excellet, as once to be named vnto her: for parfecte wy?dome goeth farre beyonde the all.
19The Topas that cometh out of Inde, maye in no wyse be lickened vnto her: yee no maner of apparell how pleasaunt and fayre so euer it be.
20From whece then commeth wy?dome? & where is the place of vnderstondinge?
11The first is called Phison, which renneth aboute all the londe of Heuyla.
12And there is founde golde, (& the golde of that countre is precious,) and there is founde Bedellion, and the precious stone Onix.
24He shal geue the an haruest, which in plenty & abundaunce shall exceade the dust of the earth, and the golde of Ophir like ryuer stones.
5He bryngeth foode out of the earth, & yt which is vnder, consumeth he with fyre.
7There is a waye also that the byrdes knowe not, that no vulturs eye hath sene:
8wherin ye proude & hye mynded walke not, & where no lyon commeth.
9There putteth he his honde vpon the stony rockes, & ouerthroweth the mountaynes.
10Ryuers flowe out of the rockes, & loke what is pleasaunt, his eye seyth it.
17And thou shalt fill it with foure rowes full of stones. Let the first rowe be a Sardis, a Topas, and a Smaragde.
18The seconde: a Ruby, a Saphyre, and a Dyamonde.
19The thirde: a Ligurios, an Achatt, and an Ametyst.
20The fourth: a Turcas, an Onix, and a Iaspis. In golde shall they be sett in all the rowes,
10and fylled it with foure rowes of stones. The first rowe was: a Sardis, a Topas, and a Smaragde.
11The secode: a Ruby, a Saphyre, and a Dyamonde.
13Thou hast bene in ye pleasaut garde off God: thou art decte with all maner of precious stones: with Ruby, Topas, Christall, Iacyncte, Onyx, Iaspis, Saphir, Smaragde, Carbucle, & golde. Thy beuty & ye holes yt be in ye were set forth in the daye of yi creacion.
1O how is the golde become so dymme? How is the goodly coloure of it so sore chaunged? and the stones of ye Sanctuary thus scatred in the corner of euery strete?
7Onix stones and set stones for the ouerbody cote and for the brestlappe.
11Beholde, thou poore, vexed & despised: I wil make thy walles of precious stones, & yi foundacio of Saphires,
12thy wyndowes off Cristall, thi gates of fyne cleare stone, & yi borders of pleasaut stones.
15A mouth of vnderstodinge is more worth then golde, many precious stones, and costly Iewels.
15And of ye toppes of the mountaynes of olde, and of the hilles allwaye,
9A londe where thou shalt not eate bred in scarcenes, and where thou shalt lacke nothinge: A lode where ye stones are yron, where thou shalt dygge brasse out of hilles:
18And the buyldinge of the wall of it was of Iaspar. And the cite was of pure golde, like vnto cleare glasse:
19and ye foundacios of the walles and of ye cite were garnysshed with all maner of precious stones. The fyrst foundacion was a Iasper, the seconde a Saphyre, ye thyrde a Calcedony, the fourth a Smaragde:
20the fyft a Sardonix: the sixt a Sardeos: the seuenth a Crysolite, the eyght berall: the nynth a Topas: the tenth a Crysoprasos: the eleueth a Iacyncte: the twelfte an Amatist.
14And why? thy seruauntes haue a loue to hir stones, & it pitieth them to se her in the dust.
12How commeth a man then by wy?dome? Where is the place that men fynde vnderstondinge?
13Verely no man can tell how worthy a thinge she is, nether is she foude in the lode of the lyuynge.
13The fourth: a Turcas, an Onix & a Iaspis: closed rounde aboute with golde in all the rowes.
14his hades are full of golde rynges and precious stones. His body is as the pure yuery, decte ouer with Saphyres:
18The mountaynes fall awaye at the last, the rockes are remoued out of their place,
6Their dwellinge was beside foule brokes, yee in the caues & dennes of the earth.
6and ouerlayed the house with precious stones to beutifye it. As for the golde, it was golde of Paruaim.
9namely, wod, syluer, which is brought out of Tharsis, and beate to plates: and golde from Ophir, a worke yt is made with the honde of the craftesman & the caster, clothed with yalow sylck and scarlet: euen so is the worke of their wyse men all together.
9Onix stones, and stones to be set in ye ouerbody cote, and for the brestlappe.
14for the gettinge of it is better then eny marchaundise of syluer, & the profit of it is better then golde.
27As for ye prynces, they brought Onix stones, and set stones, for ye ouerbody coate, and for the brestlappe,
11For wysdome is more worth then precious stones, yee all the thinges that thou cast desyre, are not to be compared vnto it.
38who turneth the clottes to dust, & the to be clottes agayne?