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Greek Textus Receptus (1550/1894)
TR GNT
Young's Literal Translation
YLT
[No book] [1]Is there not a warfare to man on earth? And as the days of an hireling his days?
[No book] [2]As a servant desireth the shadow, And as a hireling expecteth his wage,
[No book] [3]So I have been caused to inherit months of vanity, And nights of misery they numbered to me.
[No book] [4]If I lay down then I said, `When do I rise!' And evening hath been measured, And I have been full of tossings till dawn.
[No book] [5]Clothed hath been my flesh [with] worms, And a clod of dust, My skin hath been shrivelled and is loathsome,
[No book] [6]My days swifter than a weaving machine, And they are consumed without hope.
[No book] [7]Remember Thou that my life [is] a breath, Mine eye turneth not back to see good.
[No book] [8]The eye of my beholder beholdeth me not. Thine eyes [are] upon me -- and I am not.
[No book] [9]Consumed hath been a cloud, and it goeth, So he who is going down to Sheol cometh not up.
[No book] [10]He turneth not again to his house, Nor doth his place discern him again.
[No book] [11]Also I -- I withhold not my mouth -- I speak in the distress of my spirit, I talk in the bitterness of my soul.
[No book] [12]A sea-[monster] am I, or a dragon, That thou settest over me a guard?
[No book] [13]When I said, `My bed doth comfort me,' He taketh away in my talking my couch.
[No book] [14]And thou hast affrighted me with dreams, And from visions thou terrifiest me,
[No book] [15]And my soul chooseth strangling, Death rather than my bones.
[No book] [16]I have wasted away -- not to the age do I live. Cease from me, for my days [are] vanity.
[No book] [17]What [is] man that Thou dost magnify him? And that Thou settest unto him Thy heart?
[No book] [18]And inspectest him in the mornings, In the evenings dost try him?
[No book] [19]How long dost Thou not look from me? Thou dost not desist till I swallow my spittle.
[No book] [20]I have sinned, what do I to Thee, O watcher of man? Why hast Thou set me for a mark to Thee, And I am for a burden to myself -- and what?
[No book] [21]Thou dost not take away my transgression, And cause to pass away mine iniquity, Because now, for dust I lie down: And Thou hast sought me -- and I am not!
Author: Stephanus (1550), with variants of Scrivener (1894)
Source: unbound.biola.edu
Source: unbound.biola.edu
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