Job 40:21
He lyeth amoge the redes in the Mosses, the fennes
He lyeth amoge the redes in the Mosses, the fennes
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22hyde him with their shadowe, and the wylowes of the broke couer him rounde aboute.
23Lo, without eny laboure might he drynke out the whole floude, and suppe off Iordane without eny trauayle.
20yt the mountaynes shulde geue him grasse, where all the beastes off the felde take their pastyme.
40lyege in their denes & lurkinge in their couches?
3Beholde, Assur was like a Cedre tre vpo the mount of Libanus, with fayre brauches: so thicke, that he gaue shadowes, and shot out very hye. His toppe reached vnto the cloudes.
4The waters made him greate, and the depe set him vp an hye. Roude aboute the rotes of him rane there floudes of water, he sent out his litle ryuers vnto all the trees of the felde.
5Therfore was he hyer the all the trees of the felde, and thorow ye multitude of waters that he sent fro him, he optayned many and longe braunches.
6All foules of the ayre made their nestes in his brauches, vnder his bowes gedred all the beastes of ye felde, & vnder his shadow dwelt all people.
7Fayre and beutifull was he in his greatnesse, and in the length of his braunches, for his rote stode besyde greate waters:
8no Cedre tre might hyde him. In the pleasaut garden of God, there was no Fyrre tre like his brauches, the playne trees were not like ye bowes of him. All the trees in the garden off God might not be copared vnto him in his beuty:
6Their dwellinge was beside foule brokes, yee in the caues & dennes of the earth.
7Vpo the drye heeth wete they aboute crienge, & in the brome hilles they gathered them together.
16Oft tymes a thinge doth florish, and men thynke that it maye abyde the Sonneshyne: it shuteth forth the braunches in his garden,
17it taketh many rotes, in so moch that it is like an house off stones.
7The drie grounde shal turne to ryuers, and the thurstie to springes of water. Where as dragons dwelt afore, there shal growe swete floures and grene russhes.
6Euen as the brode valleys, as the gardens by the waters syde, as ye tentes which the LORDE hath plated, & as the Ceder trees vpon ye water.
19For my rote was spred out by the waters syde, & the dew laye vpo my corne.
8The beestes crepe in to their dennes, & take their rest.
10The hilles were couered with the shadowe of it, & so were the stronge Cedretrees wt the bowes therof.
19These shall come, and shal light all in the valeyes, in ye vowtes of stone, vpon all grene thinges, and in all corners.
8but to seke their pasture aboute the moutaynes, & to folowe vpon the grene grasse.
21he breaketh ye grounde with the hoffes of his fete chearfully in his strength, and runneth to mete the harnest men.
9yee to rauish the poore, when he hath gotten him in to his nett.
10Then smyteth he, then oppresseth he & casteth downe the poore with his auctorite.
13When he is falle, all ye foules of ye ayre shal syt vpon him, and all wilde beestes of the felde shal go aboute amonge his brauches:
14so that from hence forth, no tre in the water shall attayne to his hyenesse, nor reach his toppe vnto the cloudes, nether shall eny tre off the water stonde so hye, as he hath done. For vnto death shall they all be delyuered vnder the earth, and go downe to ye graue, like other men.
17He spredeth out his tale like a Cedre tre, all his vaynes are stiff.
21whose leaues were fayre, ad the frute moch: vnder the which the beastes of the felde had their habitacion, and vpon whose braunches the foules of the ayre dyd syt:
7the grasse by the waters syde or vpon ye ryuers bancke, yee and what so euer is sowen by the waters, shalbe wythered, destroyed, & brought to naught.
10He layeth waite for me like a Bere, and as a lyon in a hole.
19And whe the hale falleth, it shal fall in the wodde and in the citie.
14Morouer, he goeth out to hewe downe Cedre trees: He bringeth home Elmes and okes, and other tymbre of the wodd. Or els the Fyrre trees which he planted himself, ad soch as the rayne hath swelled,
16His rotes shalbe dryed vp beneth, & aboue shall his haruest be cut downe.
30He treadeth the golde in the myre like ye sharpe potsherdes.
12Aboue vpon the hilles haue the foules of the ayre their habitacion, and synge amonge the braunches.
16The trees of the LORDE are full of sappe, euen the trees of Libanus which he hath planted.
17There make the byrdes their nestes, and the fyrre trees are a dwellinge for the storcke.
19I plante in the wayst grounde trees of Cedre, Boxe, Myrre and olyues. And in the drie, I set Fyrre trees, elmes and hawthornes together.
15Neuertheles leaue the grounde of his rote still in the earth, and bynde him vpon the playne felde, with cheynes of yron and stele. With the dew of heauen shall he be wet, and he shall haue his parte in the herbes of the grounde with other wylde beastes.
2He fedeth me in a grene pasture, ad ledeth me to a fresh water.
33The shal he be fayne to be buried amoge the stones by the broke syde. All men must folowe him, & there are innumerable gone before him.
12No: but (or euer it be shot forth, and or euer it be gathered) it wythereth, before eny other herbe.
8For he shalbe as a tre, that is planted by the water syde: which spredeth out the rote vnto moystnesse, whom the heate can not harme, when it commeth, but his leaues are grene. And though there growe but litle frute because off drouth, yet is he not carefull, but he neuer leaueth of to bringe forth frute.
9getteth the sent of water, it will budde, and brynge forth bowes, like as when it was first planted.
23Namely, vpon the hie hill of Sion will I plante it: that it maye bringe forth twygges, and geue frute, and be a greate Cedre tre: so that all maner of foules maye byde in it, and make their nestes vnder the shadowe of his braunches.
5He toke also a braunch of the londe, and planted it in a frutefull grounde, he brought it vnto greate waters, & set it as a willye tre therby.
20Thou makest darcknesse, that it maye be night, wherin all the beastes of the forest do moue.
12Like as a lyon that is gredy of his pray, & as it were a lyons whelpe lurckynge in his denne.
12his leaues were fayre, he had very moch frute, so yt euery ma had ynough to eate therin. The beastes of the felde had shadowes vnder it, and the foules off the ayre dwelt in the bowes therof. Shortly, all creatures fed of it.
11He made darcknesse his pauylion rounde aboute hi, with darcke water & thicke cloudes to couer him.