Job 6:16
But they that feare the horefrost, the snowe shal fall vpon them.
But they that feare the horefrost, the snowe shal fall vpon them.
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17When their tyme cometh, they shalbe destroyed and perishe: and when they be set on fyre, they shalbe remoued out of their place,
18for the pathes yt they go in, are croked: they haist after vayne thinges, and shal perish.
15Myne owne brethren passe ouer by me as the waterbroke, that hastely runneth thorow ye valleys.
7Hir absteyners (or Nazarees) were whyter then ye snowe or mylke: their coloure was fresh read as the Corall, their beutie like the Saphyre.
8But now their faces are very black: In so moch, that thou shuldest not knowe them in the stretes. Their skynne cleueth to their bones, It is wythered, and become like a drye stock.
29Out of whose wobe came the yse? who hath gendred the coldnes of ye ayre?
30yt the waters are as harde as stones, & lye congeeled aboue the depe.
30My skynne vpo me is turned to black, & my bones are bret wt heate:
16In the night season they search the houses, and hyde them selues in the daye tyme, but wil not knowe ye light
17For as soone as the daye breaketh, the shadowe of death commeth vpo them, and they go in horrible darcknesse.
18The vngodly is very swyft: O yt his porcio also vpo earth were swyfter then ye runnynge water, which suffreth not ye shipma to beholde the fayre & pleasaut vyniardes.
19O yt they (for the wickednesse which they haue done) were drawen to the hell, sooner the snowe melteth at the heate.
16He geueth snowe like woll, & scatereth ye horefrost like ashes.
17He casteth forth his yse like morsels, who is able to abyde his frost?
5I am black (o ye doughters of Ierusale) like as the tentes of the Cedarenes, and as the hanginges of Salomon:
6but yet am I faire & welfauoured withal. Maruell not at me yt I am so black, & why? ye Sonne hath shyned vpo me. For whan my mothers childre had euell wil at me, they made me ye keper of the vynyarde. Thus was I fayne to kepe a vynyarde, which was not myne owne.
22Wentest thou euer in to the treasuries off the snowe, or hast thou sene ye secrete places of the hale:
10Oure skynne is as it had bene brent in an ouen, for very sore honger.
6But how shall they rype Esau, and seke out his treasures?
12At the brightnes off his presence the cloudes remoued, with hale stones & coales of fyre.
5but be couered with darcknesse, and the shadowe of death. Let the dymme cloude fall vpon it, and let it be lapped in with sorowe.
6Let the darckstorme ouercome ye night, let it not be reckened amonge the dayes off the yeare, ner counted in the monethes.
14Shal not ye snowe (yt melteth vpon the stony rockes of Libanus) moysture the feldes? Or maye the springes off waters be so grauen awaye, that they runne nomore, geue moystnesse, ner make frutefull?
12chaunginge the night in to daye, & ye light in to darcknes.
17These are welles without water, & cloudes caried aboute of a tepest: to who ye myst of darknesse is reserued foreuer.
22yee into that darck clowdy londe & deadly shadowe, where as is no ordre, but terrible feare as in the darcknesse.
6When he commaundeth the snowe, it falleth vpon the earth: As soone as he geueth the rayne a charge, Immediatly the showers haue their strength and fall downe
30Though I wasshed my self with snowe water, and made myne hondes neuer so clene,
6Their dwellinge was beside foule brokes, yee in the caues & dennes of the earth.
6The folke shalbe afrayed of him, all faces shal be as blacke as a pot.
11Shuldest thou the se no darcknesse? Shulde not the water floude runne ouer the?
9Out of the south commeth the tempest, and colde out of the north.
10At the breth of God, the frost commeth, & the waters are shed abrode.
16My face is swolle with wepinge, & myne eyes are waxen dymne.
6He hath set me in darcknesse, as they that be deed for euer.
32The waye is light after him, the depe is his walkynge place.
7They are the cause yt so many men are naked and bare, hauynge no clothes to couer them and kepe them from colde:
8So that when the showers in the mountaynes haue rayned vpon them, & they be all wett, they haue none other sucoure, but to kepe them amonge the rockes.
6They holde alltogether, & kepe them selues close: they marck my steppes, how they maye catch my soule.
40On the daye tyme the heate cosumed me, and the frost on the night, and my slepe departed fro myne eyes.
18For the vngodly burne, as a fyre in the bryers and thornes: And as it were out of a fyre in a wod or a redebush, so ascendeth the smoke of their pryde.
21For euery ma seith not the light, yt he kepeth cleare in the cloudes, which he clenseth whan he maketh the wynde to blowe.
16Honoure ye LORDE youre God herein, or he take his light from you, and or euer youre fete stomble in darknesse at ye hill: lest whe ye loke for the light, he turne it in to ye shadowe and darknesse of death.
14In so moch that they runne in to darcknesse by fayre daye, and grope aboute them at the noone daye, like as in the night.
19the shewe me where light dwelleth, and where darcknes is:
3for then shulde it be heuyer, then the sonde of the see. This is the cause, that my wordes are so soroufull.
11his heade is the most fyne golde, the lockes of his hayre are bu?shed, browne as the euenynge:
8Fyre and hayle, snowe & vapors wynde and storme, fulfillynge his worde.
22There is no darcknes ner thicke shadowe, yt can hyde the wicked doers from him.
3As for heauen, I clooth it with darcknesse, and put a sack vpon it.