The Book of Job — Liber Job
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Chapter 30
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Douay-Rheims><Vulgate><Knox Bible
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But now the younger in time scorn me, whose fathers I would not have set with the dogs of my flock:
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Nunc autem derident me juniores tempore, quorum non dignabar patres ponere cum canibus gregis mei:
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And now? Now I am a laughing-stock, even to younger men; a flock of such base breed as theirs sheep-dog of mine never tended!
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The strength of whose hands was to me as nothing, and they were thought unworthy of life itself.
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quorum virtus manuum mihi erat pro nihilo, et vita ipsa putabantur indigni:
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So profitless their puny strength, I would have let them die before ever they came to maturity.
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Barren with want and hunger, who gnawed in the wilderness, disfigured with calamity and misery.
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egestate et fame steriles, qui rodebant in solitudine, squallentes calamitate et miseria.
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Starveling creatures, they should browse in the waste, unkempt, haggard and woe-begone,
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And they ate grass, and barks of trees, and the root of junipers was their food.
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Et mandebant herbas, et arborum cortices, et radix juniperorum erat cibus eorum:
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cropping mallow and tree-bark and juniper-root for their diet,
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Who snatched up these things out of the valleys, and when they had found any of them, they ran to them with a cry.
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qui de convallibus ista rapientes, cum singula reperissent, ad ea cum clamore currebant.
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and making great hue and cry after such dainties, as they pluck them from the hill-slopes!
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They dwelt in the desert places of torrents, and in caves of earth, or upon the gravel.
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In desertis habitabant torrentium, et in cavernis terræ, vel super glaream:
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Barren ravine and cave and rock their dwelling-place,
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They pleased themselves among these kind of things, and counted it delightful to be under the briers.
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qui inter hujuscemodi lætabantur, et esse sub sentibus delicias computabant:
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they were glad of so much shelter; a bramble thicket should be their welcome refuge.
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The children of foolish and base men, and not appearing at all upon the earth.
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filii stultorum et ignobilium, et in terra penitus non parentes.
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A senseless and a nameless breed, earth is well rid of them.
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Now I am turned into their song, and am become their byword.
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Nunc in eorum canticum versus sum, et factus sum eis in proverbium.
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O that I should be a song and a by-word on such lips as these!
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They abhor me, and flee far from me, and are not afraid to spit in my face.
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Abominantur me, et longe fugiunt a me, et faciem meam conspuere non verentur.
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That they loathe and shun me, and make bold to spit in my face, being what they are!
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For he hath opened his quiver, and hath afflicted me, and hath put a bridle into my mouth.
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Pharetram enim suam aperuit, et afflixit me, et frenum posuit in os meum.
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Now God has made me a mark for his archery, now he has put a bit in my mouth;
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At the right hand of my rising, my calamities forthwith arose: they have overthrown my feet, and have overwhelmed me with their paths as with waves.
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Ad dexteram orientis calamitates meæ illico surrexerunt: pedes meos subverterunt, et oppresserunt quasi fluctibus semitis suis.
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when my fair spring was overcast by calamity, every passer-by might throw me down; like a flood they swept over me,
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They have destroyed my ways, they have lain in wait against me, and they have prevailed, and there was none to help.
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Dissipaverunt itinera mea; insidiati sunt mihi, et prævaluerunt: et non fuit qui ferret auxilium.
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trampled down my path, took me unawares and overcame me, when there was none to bring rescue.
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They have rushed in upon me, as when a wall is broken, and a gate opened, and have rolled themselves down to my miseries.
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Quasi rupto muro, et aperta janua, irruerunt super me, et ad meas miserias devoluti sunt.
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One breach made, one gate forced, they might fall upon me all at once, and add their weight to my misery.
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I am brought to nothing: as a wind thou hast taken away my desire: and my prosperity hath passed away like a cloud.
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Redactus sum in nihilum: abstulisti quasi ventus desiderium meum, et velut nubes pertransiit salus mea.
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All that I was, is gone, the ambition, the happiness that was mine swept away like clouds before the storm;
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And now my soul fadeth within myself, and the days of affliction possess me.
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Nunc autem in memetipso marcescit anima mea, et possident me dies afflictionis.
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my heart is dead within me, a prey to long despairs.
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In the night my bone is pierced with sorrows: and they that feed upon me, do not sleep.
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Nocte os meum perforatur doloribus, et qui me comedunt, non dormiunt.
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By night, anguish racks my frame; sleepless the cares that consume me,
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With the multitude of them my garment is consumed, and they have girded me about, as with the collar of my coat.
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In multitudine eorum consumitur vestimentum meum, et quasi capitio tunicæ succinxerunt me.
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their poison seems to eat away the very garments I wear, clings fast about me like the collar of my coat.
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I am compared to dirt, and am likened to embers and ashes.
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Comparatus sum luto, et assimilatus sum favillæ et cineri.
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No better I than mud in the streets, little thought of as dust or ashes;
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I cry to thee, and thou hearest me not: I stand up, and thou dost not regard me.
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Clamo ad te, et non exaudis me: sto, et non respicis me.
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unheard I cry to thee, unregarded I stand in thy presence;
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Thou art changed to be cruel toward me, and in the hardness of thy hand thou art against me.
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Mutatus es mihi in crudelem, et in duritia manus tuæ adversaris mihi.
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so hardened is thy heart, so pitilessly thy blows fall upon me.
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Thou hast lifted me up, and set me as it were upon the wind, and thou hast mightily dashed me.
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Elevasti me, et quasi super ventum ponens; elisisti me valide.
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Didst thou exalt me, lift me so high in air, only to hurl me down in ruin?
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I know that thou wilt deliver me to death, where a house is appointed for every one that liveth.
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Scio quia morti trades me, ubi constituta est domus omni viventi.
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I know well enough that thou wilt bring me to the grave at last; it is the home thou hast appointed for all living men;
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But yet thou stretchest not forth thy hand to their consumption: and if they shall fall down thou wilt save.
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Verumtamen non ad consumptionem eorum emittis manum tuam: et si corruerint, ipse salvabis.
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but surely thou dost not exert thy power only to destroy, surely thou hast mercy on the fallen?
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I wept heretofore for him that was afflicted, and my soul had compassion on the poor.
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Flebam quondam super eo qui afflictus erat, et compatiebatur anima mea pauperi.
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I myself know what it is to pity the afflicted, to shed tears over human need!
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I expected good things, and evils are come upon me: I waited for light, and darkness broke out.
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Expectabam bona, et venerunt mihi mala: præstolabar lucem, et eruperunt tenebræ.
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But no, hope I for better things, I hope in vain; ever deeper the darkness shews to eyes straining for the light.
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My inner parts have boiled without any rest, the days of affliction have prevented me.
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Interiora mea efferbuerunt absque ulla requie: prævenerunt me dies afflictionis.
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Still my heart is in turmoil, greeted still by fresh despairs;
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I went mourning without indignation; I rose up, and cried in the crowd.
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Mœrens incedebam sine furore; consurgens, in turba clamabam.
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I go mourning, my face blacker than ever the sun’s heat made it, rise up in public, and claim audience for my wrongs;
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I was the brother of dragons, and companion of ostriches.
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Frater fui draconum, et socius struthionum.
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crying so dismally as if I had jackals for my brothers, ostriches for my company.
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My skin is become black upon me, and my bones are dried up with heat.
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Cutis mea denigrata est super me, et ossa mea aruerunt præ caumate.
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And all the while, fever to discolour this flesh, to shrivel this frame!
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My harp is turned to mourning, and my organ into the voice of those that weep.
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Versa est in luctum cithara mea, et organum meum in vocem flentium.
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What wonder if all, with me, is mourning and lament, if the music of harp and flute is heard no more?