Job 31:26
Dyd I euer greatly regarde the rysinge of the Sonne? Or, had I the goinge downe of ye Moone in greate reputacion?
Dyd I euer greatly regarde the rysinge of the Sonne? Or, had I the goinge downe of ye Moone in greate reputacion?
These verses are found using AI-powered semantic similarity based on meaning and context. Results may occasionally include unexpected connections.
24 Haue I put my trust in golde? Or, haue I sayde to the fynest golde of all: thou art my cofidence?
25 Haue I reioysed because my substaunce was greate, and because my honde gat so moch?
27 Hath my hert medled priuely wt eny disceate? Or, dyd I euer kysse myne owne honde
2 O yt I were as I was in the monethes by past, & in the dayes whe God preserued me:
3 when his light shyned vpon my heade: whe I wente after the same light & shyne eue thorow the darcknesse.
4 As it stode wt me, whe I was welthy & had ynough: whe God prospered my house:
7 The light is swete, & a pleasaunt thinge is it for the eyes to loke vpon the Sonne.
8 Yf a man lyue many yeares, and be glad in them all, let him remembre the dayes of darcknesse, which shalbe many: & when they come, all thinges shalbe but vanite.
2 before the Sonne, ye light, ye Moone and the starres be darckened, and or the cloudes turne agayne after the rayne:
4 Doth not he se my wayes, & tell all my goinges?
5 Yf I haue cleued vnto vanite, or yf my fete haue runne to disceaue:
6 let me be weyed in an eauen balaunce, that God maye se my innocency.
7 Yf so be that I haue withdrawen my fote out of the right waye, yf my hert hath folowed myne eyesight, yf I haue stayned or defyled my hodes:
16 When I applied my mynde to lerne wy?dome, and to knowe the trauayle that is in the worlde (and that of soch a fashion, yt I suffred not myne eyes to slepe nether daye ner night)
11 Yee the darcknesse is no darcknesse with the, but the night is as cleare as the daye, the darcknesse & light are both alike.
5 Beholde, the Moone shyneth nothinge in comparison to him, & the starres are vnclene in his sight.
14 There are noble frutes of the increase of the Sonne, and noble rype frutes of ye monethes:
13 and I sawe, that wy?dome excelleth foolishnesse, as farre as light doth darknesse.
14 For a wyse man beareth his eyes aboute in his heade, but the foole goeth in the darknesse. I perceaued also that they both had one ende.
13 This wi?dome haue I sene also vnder ye Sone, & me thought it a greate thinge.
26 Yet neuerthelesse where as I loked for good, euell happened vnto me: and where as I waited for light, there came darcknesse.
11 When all they yt herde me, called me happie: & when all they yt sawe me, wysshed me good.
29 Haue I euer reioysed at the hurte of myne enemy? Or, was I euer glad, yt eny harme happened vnto him? Oh no,
26 When I herde this, I came agayne to myself, and mused, like as I had bene waked out of a swete slepe.
5 The Sone aryseth, the Sonne goeth downe, & returneth to his place, yt he maye there ryse vp agayne.
17 Thus can not I get out of darcknesse, the cloude hath so couered my face.
20 So I turned me to refrayne my mynde from all soch trauayle, as I toke vnder the Sonne:
3 For I considre thy heauens, euen the worke off thy fyngers: the Moone and the starres which thou hast made.
10 & loke what so euer myne eyes desyred, I let them haue it: & wherin so euer my herte delyted or had eny pleasure, I with helde it not fro it. Thus my hert reioysed in all yt I dyd, and this I toke for the porcion of all my trauayle.
11 But whan I considered all the workes yt my handes had wrought, and all the labours that I had taken therin: lo, all was but vanite and vexacion of mynde, & nothinge of eny value vnder ye Sonne.
7 Morouer, I turned me, and beholde yet another vanite vnder the Sonne.
19 the shewe me where light dwelleth, and where darcknes is:
21 For euery ma seith not the light, yt he kepeth cleare in the cloudes, which he clenseth whan he maketh the wynde to blowe.
31 As for the roude copase of his worlde, I make it ioyfull, for my delyte is to be amoge the children of men.
24 When I laughed, they knew well it was not earnest: & this testimony of my coutenaunce pleased the nothinge at all.
21 Dyd I euer lyft vp my honde to hurte the fatherlesse? Yee in the gate where I sawe my self to be in auctorite:
6 whe my wayes ranne ouer wt butter, & when the stony rockes gaue me ryuers of oyle:
7 when I wente thorow the cite vnto the gate, & whe they set me a chayre in ye strete:
37 I haue tolde the nombre of my goinges, and delyuered them vnto him as to a prynce.
19 Thou hast appoynted the Moone for certayne seasons, the Sonne knoweth his goinge downe.
16 I comoned wt myne owne herte, sayege: lo, I am come to a greate estate, and haue gotte more wy?dome, the all they yt haue bene before me in Ierusalem. Yee my hert had greate experiece of wy?dome & knowlege,
32 This I sawe, & cosidered it wel: I loked vpo it, & toke it for a warnynge.
16 When the poore desyred enythinge at me, haue I denyed it them? Haue I caused ye wyddowe stonde waytinge for me in vayne?
14 Thus I haue considered all the thinges that come to passe vnder the Sone, & lo, they are all but vanite & vexacion of mynde.
28 Mekely & lowly came I in, yee & without eny displeasure: I stode vp in ye cogregacion, & commoned with the
19 Haue I sene eny man perish thorow nakednes & want of clothinge? Or, eny poore man for lack of rayment,
5 Morouer, he seyth not the Sonne, and knoweth of no rest nether here ner there:
9 Let the starres be dymme thorow darcknesse of it. Let it loke for light, but let it se none, nether the rysynge vp of the fayre mornynge:
6 So that the Sonne shal not burne the by daye, nether the Moone by night.