The Book of Job — Liber Job
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Chapter 5
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Douay-Rheims><Knox Bible><Vulgate
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Call now if there be any that will answer thee, and turn to some of the saints.
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Who will listen to thy plaint against God? Wilt thou turn to one of his angels for redress?
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Voca ergo, si est qui tibi respondeat, et ad aliquem sanctorum convertere.
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Anger indeed killeth the foolish, and envy slayeth the little one.
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Impatience is a great murderer of fools; in their simpleness of heart, they repine at the injury, to their ruin.
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Vere stultum interficit iracundia, et parvulum occidit invidia.
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I have seen a fool with a strong root, and I cursed his beauty immediately.
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Never yet did I see a fool secure in his possessions but I prophesied disaster, there and then, for his fair prospects.
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Ego vidi stultum firma radice, et maledixi pulchritudini ejus statim.
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His children shall be far from safety, and shall be destroyed in the gate, and there shall be none to deliver them.
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And still would I see his children bereft of hope, ground down by false judgement, and none to bring redress;
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Longe fient filii ejus a salute, et conterentur in porta, et non erit qui eruat.
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Whose harvest the hungry shall eat, and the armed man shall take him by violence, and the thirsty shall drink up his riches.
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his harvest a prey for hungry neighbours, himself for the armed robber, his wealth drunk up by thirsty mouths.
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Cujus messem famelicus comedet, et ipsum rapiet armatus, et bibent sitientes divitias ejus.
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Nothing upon earth is done without a cause, and sorrow doth not spring out of the ground.
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Never was ill without a cause; never did mischief spring up self-sown.
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Nihil in terra sine causa fit, et de humo non oritur dolor.
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Man is born to labour and the bird to fly.
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Man’s bent is for mischief, as sure as birds will fly.
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Homo nascitur ad laborem, et avis ad volatum.
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Wherefore I will pray to the Lord, and address my speech to God:
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Wiser counsels for me; to the Lord himself my plaint shall be made, of God himself I will seek audience.
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Quam ob rem ego deprecabor Dominum, et ad Deum ponam eloquium meum:
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Who doth great things and unsearchable and wonderful things without number:
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His magnificent counsels none may fathom, none reckon up his marvellous deeds.
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qui facit magna et inscrutabilia, et mirabilia absque numero;
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Who giveth rain upon the face of the earth, and watereth all things with waters:
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His to grant the parched earth rain, watering the countryside;
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qui dat pluviam super faciem terræ, et irrigat aquis universa;
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Who setteth up the humble on high, and comforteth with health those that mourn.
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his to exalt men of low esteem, to comfort the mourner with new hope.
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qui ponit humiles in sublime, et mœrentes erigit sospitate;
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Who bringeth to nought the designs of the malignant, so that their hands cannot accomplish what they had begun:
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Through him the crafty schemer is baulked of his aims;
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qui dissipat cogitationes malignorum, ne possint implere manus eorum quod cœperant;
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Who catcheth the wise in their craftiness, and disappointeth the counsel of the wicked:
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cunning overreaches itself, and knavish plots are scattered to the winds;
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qui apprehendit sapientes in astutia eorum, et consilium pravorum dissipat.
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They shall meet with darkness in the day, and grope at noonday as in the night.
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wise fools, that blink in daylight, and grope their way blindly at full noon!
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Per diem incurrent tenebras, et quasi in nocte, sic palpabunt in meridie.
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But he shall save the needy from the sword of their mouth, and the poor from the hand of the violent.
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So, from their slander and their violence, he rescues the poor and the unbefriended;
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Porro salvum faciet egenum a gladio oris eorum, et de manu violenti pauperem.
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And to the needy there shall be hope, but iniquity shall draw in her mouth.
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now, misery, take heart, let malice stand dumb with confusion!
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Et erit egeno spes; iniquitas autem contrahet os suum.
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Blessed is the man whom God correcteth: refuse not therefore the chastising of the Lord:
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Happy the man, whom God chastens for his faults! The correction he sends thee never, on thy life, refuse.
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Beatus homo qui corripitur a Deo: increpationem ergo Domini ne reprobes:
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For he woundeth, and cureth: he striketh, and his hands shall heal.
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Wounds he, it is but to heal; the same hand, which smote, shall medicine thee.
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quia ipse vulnerat, et medetur; percutit, et manus ejus sanabunt.
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In six troubles he shall deliver thee, and in the seventh, evil shall not touch thee.
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So in six perils thou shalt go unharmed, and find yet one deliverance more;
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In sex tribulationibus liberabit te, et in septima non tanget te malum.
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In famine he shall deliver thee from death: and in battle, from the hand of the sword.
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hunger shall not starve thee, sword wound thee,
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In fame eruet te de morte, et in bello de manu gladii.
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Thou shalt be hidden from the scourge of the tongue: and thou shalt not fear calamity when it cometh.
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slander find thee out, havoc reach thee;
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A flagello linguæ absconderis, et non timebis calamitatem cum venerit.
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In destruction and famine thou shalt laugh: and thou shalt not be afraid of the beasts of the earth.
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rapine and dearth thou shalt defy. And besides all this, ravening beasts shall not daunt thee;
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In vastitate et fame ridebis, et bestias terræ non formidabis.
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But thou shalt have a covenant with the stones of the lands, and the beasts of the earth shall be at peace with thee.
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friendly soil for thee are the desert rocks, and the wild things are in league with thee;
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Sed cum lapidibus regionum pactum tuum, et bestiæ terræ pacificæ erunt tibi.
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And thou shalt know that thy tabernacle is in peace, and visiting thy beauty thou shalt not sin.
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secure thou shalt keep thy tent, or visit thy fair lands, and nought shall go amiss.
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Et scies quod pacem habeat tabernaculum tuum; et visitans speciem tuam, non peccabis.
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Thou shalt know also that thy seed shall be multiplied, and thy offspring like the grass of the earth.
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Be sure that thy posterity will increase; like the green grass thy race shall flourish;
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Scies quoque quoniam multiplex erit semen tuum, et progenies tua quasi herba terræ.
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Thou shalt enter into the grave in abundance, as a heap of wheat is brought in its season.
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and when go to the grave thou must, it shall be with strength undiminished, like ripe corn at harvest-home.
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Ingredieris in abundantia sepulchrum, sicut infertur acervus tritici in tempore suo.
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Behold, this is even so, as we have searched out: which thou having heard, consider it thoroughly in thy mind.
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Here are thoughts tested and found true; well for thee if thou wilt heed them, and ponder them in thy heart.
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Ecce hoc, ut investigavimus, ita est: quod auditum, mente pertracta.