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Shem Tob's Hebrew Matthew (1400)
ShemTob
The Septuagint in English by Brenton
LXX(EN)
[No book] [1]For a mortal born of a woman is short lived, and full of wrath.
[No book] [2]Or he falls like a flower that has bloomed; and he departs like a shadow, and cannot continue.
[No book] [3]Hast thou not taken account even of him, and caused him to enter into judgment before thee?
[No book] [4]For who shall be pure from uncleanness? not even one;
[No book] [5]if even his life should be but one day upon the earth: and his months are numbered by him: thou hast appointed him for a time, and he shall by no means exceed it.
[No book] [6]Depart from him, that he may be quiet, and take pleasure in his life, though as a hireling.
[No book] [7]For there is hope for a tree, even if it should be cut down, that it shall blossom again, and its branch shall not fail.
[No book] [8]For though its root should grow old in the earth, and its stem die in the rock;
[No book] [9]it will blossom from the scent of water, and will produce a crop, as one newly planted.
[No book] [10]But a man that has died is utterly gone; and when a mortal has fallen, he is no more.
[No book] [11]For the sea wastes in length of time, and a river fails and is dried up.
[No book] [12]And man that has lain down in death shall certainly not rise again till the heaven be dissolved, and they shall not awake from their sleep.
[No book] [13]For oh that thou hadst kept me in the grave, and hadst hidden me until thy wrath should cease, and thou shouldest set me a time in which thou wouldest remember me!
[No book] [14]For if a man should die, shall he live again, having accomplished the days of his life? I will wait till I exist again?
[No book] [15]Then shalt thou call, and I will hearken to thee: but do not thou reject the work of thine hands.
[No book] [16]But thou hast numbered my devices: and not one of my sins shall escape thee?
[No book] [17]An thou hast sealed up my transgressions in a bag, and marked if I have been guilty of any transgression unawares.
[No book] [18]And verily a mountain falling will utterly be destroyed, and a rock shall be worn out of its place.
[No book] [19]The waters wear the stones, and waters falling headlong overflow a heap of the earth: and thou destroyest the hope of man.
[No book] [20]Thou drivest him to an end, and he is gone: thou settest thy face against him, and sendest him away;
[No book] [21]and though his children be multiplied, he knows it not; and if they be few, he is not aware.
[No book] [22]But his flesh is in pain, and his soul mourns.
Author: Shem-Tob ben Isaac Ibn Shaprut (14th century)

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Author: Sir Lancelot Charles Lee Brenton (1851)
Source: ecmarsh.com
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