The Book of Job — Liber Job
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Chapter 37
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Douay-Rheims><Vulgate><Knox Bible
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At this my heart trembleth, and is moved out of its place.
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Super hoc expavit cor meum, et emotum est de loco suo.
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What wonder if my heart trembles and fails me at the thought?
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Hear ye attentively the terror of his voice, and the sound that cometh out of his mouth.
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Audite auditionem in terrore vocis ejus, et sonum de ore illius procedentem.
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Listen to the bruit of it, the voice that speaks amid such terrors, the dread accents of that utterance!
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He beholdeth under all the heavens, and his light is upon the ends of the earth.
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Subter omnes cælos ipse considerat, et lumen illius super terminos terræ.
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Under what part of heaven, into what corner of earth does he not look, do not his lightnings flash?
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After it a noise shall roar, he shall thunder with the voice of his majesty, and shall not be found out, when his voice shall be heard.
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Post eum rugiet sonitus; tonabit voce magnitudinis suæ: et non investigabitur, cum audita fuerit vox ejus.
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Then what a crash resounds, the magnificent peal of his thunder; a voice heard, and none can tell whence it comes!
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God shall thunder wonderfully with his voice, he that doth great and unsearchable things.
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Tonabit Deus in voce sua mirabiliter, qui facit magna et inscrutabilia;
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God’s voice in the thunder, a marvel worthy of him, whose deeds are so great and so unsearchable.
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He commandeth the snow to go down upon the earth, and the winter rain, and the shower of his strength.
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qui præcipit nivi ut descendat in terram, et hiemis pluviis, et imbri fortitudinis suæ;
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He it is that bids the snows fall over earth, and winter shower, and his fierce storms of rain.
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He sealeth up the hand of all men, that every one may know his works.
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qui in manu omnium hominum signat, ut noverint singuli opera sua.
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No hand of man but is shut up close now under his seal, that owns him Master-workman of all;
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Then the beast shall go into his covert, and shall abide in his den.
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Ingredietur bestia latibulum, et in antro suo morabitur.
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cowers the beast in its lair, or lurks in its cave;
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Out of the inner parts shall a tempest come, and cold out of the north.
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Ab interioribus egredietur tempestas, et ab Arcturo frigus.
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from his treasure-house in the north, tempest comes and cold.
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When God bloweth there cometh frost, and again the waters are poured out abundantly.
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Flante Deo, concrescit gelu, et rursum latissimæ funduntur aquæ.
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At God’s breath the frost binds fast, till he bids the waters flow again in plenty.
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Corn desireth clouds, and the clouds spread their light:
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Frumentum desiderat nubes, et nubes spargunt lumen suum.
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And now the crops must have rain; far and wide the clouds scatter their rays of hope;
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Which go round about, whithersoever the will of him that governeth them shall lead them, to whatsoever he shall command them upon the face of the whole earth:
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Quæ lustrant per circuitum, quocumque eas voluntas gubernantis duxerit, ad omne quod præceperit illis super faciem orbis terrarum:
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this way and that they turn at the guidance of his will, to do their appointed task on earth,
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Whether in one tribe, or in his own land, or in what place soever of his mercy he shall command them to be found.
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sive in una tribu, sive in terra sua, sive in quocumque loco misericordiæ suæ eas jusserit inveniri.
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among distant tribes, or here in his own land, let his mercy bid them appear where it may.
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Hearken to these things, Job: Stand, and consider the wondrous works of God.
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Ausculta hæc, Job: sta, et considera mirabilia Dei.
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Matter enough, Job, for thy heeding! Halt where thou standest, and consider the marvellous acts of God.
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Dost thou know when God commanded the rains, to shew his light of his clouds?
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Numquid scis quando præceperit Deus pluviis, ut ostenderent lucem nubium ejus?
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Canst thou tell us when it was God bade the rain bring hope to us from those clouds of his,
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Knowest thou the great paths of the clouds, and the perfect knowledges?
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Numquid nosti semitas nubium magnas, et perfectas scientias?
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tell us the course of their journeyings? Is thy knowledge so perfect?
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Are not thy garments hot, when the south wind blows upon the earth?
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Nonne vestimenta tua calida sunt, cum perflata fuerit terra austro?
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See if thy garments do not cling warm about thee when the south wind cheers the earth!
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Thou perhaps hast made the heavens with him, which are most strong, as if they were of molten brass.
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Tu forsitan cum eo fabricatus es cælos, qui solidissimi quasi ære fusi sunt.
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And was it with help of thine God fashioned the heavens, firm as cast bronze?
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Shew us what we may say to him: for we are wrapped up in darkness.
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Ostende nobis quid dicamus illi: nos quippe involvimur tenebris.
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Tell us, what words we shall use to him, we, shut up in our darkness?
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Who shall tell him the things I speak? even if a man shall speak, he shall be swallowed up.
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Quis narrabit ei quæ loquor? etiam si locutus fuerit homo, devorabitur.
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What messenger shall deliver my complaint to him, a human messenger that will bring on himself only ruin?
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But now they see not the light: the air on a sudden shall be thickened into clouds, and the wind shall pass and drive them away.
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At nunc non vident lucem: subito aër cogetur in nubes, et ventus transiens fugabit eas.
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Light fails men’s eyes; all of a sudden, the air is thick with clouds; then a breath of passing wind has driven them away!
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Cold cometh out of the north, and to God praise with fear.
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Ab aquilone aurum venit, et ad Deum formidolosa laudatio.
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As well search for the treasures of the north, as for the majestic praise which is God’s due;
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We cannot find him worthily: he is great in strength, and in judgment, and in justice, and he is ineffable.
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Digne eum invenire non possumus: magnus fortitudine, et judicio, et justitia: et enarrari non potest.
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find speech worthy of it we cannot, so great he is in strength, so prudent in counsel, so faithful in right dealing, past all that tongue can tell.
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Therefore men shall fear him, and all that seem to themselves to be wise, shall not dare to behold him.
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Ideo timebunt eum viri, et non audebunt contemplari omnes qui sibi videntur esse sapientes.
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Well may men fear him; none that think themselves wise but will tremble to meet his look.