[1]And the Lord yet again answered and spoke to Job out of the cloud, saying, [2]Nay, gird up now thy loins like a man; and I will ask thee, and do thou answer me. [3]Do not set aside my judgment: and dost thou think that I have dealt with thee in any other way, than that thou mightest appear to be righteous? [4]Hast thou an arm like the Lord's? or dost thou thunder with a voice like his? [5]Assume now a lofty bearing and power; and clothe thyself with glory and honour. [6]And send forth messengers with wrath; and lay low every haughty one. [7]Bring down also the proud man; and consume at once the ungodly. [8]And hide them together in the earth; and fill their faces with shame. [9]Then will I confess that thy right hand can save thee. [10]But now look at the wild beasts with thee; they eat grass like oxen. [11]Behold now, his strength is in his loins, and his force is in the navel of his belly. [12]He sets up his tail like a cypress; and his nerves are wrapped together. [13]His sides are sides of brass; and his backbone is as cast iron. [14]This is the chief of the creation of the Lord; made to be played with by his angels. [15]And when he has gone up to a steep mountain, he causes joy to the quadrupeds in the deep. [16]He lies under trees of every kind, by the papyrus, and reed, and bulrush. [17]And the great trees make a shadow over him with their branches, and so do the bushes of the field. [18]If there should be a flood, he will not perceive it; he trust that Jordan will rush up into his mouth. [19]Yet one shall take him in his sight; one shall catch him with a cord, and pierce his nose. [20]But wilt thou catch the serpent with a hook, and put a halter about his nose? [21]Or wilt thou fasten a ring in his nostril, and bore his lip with a clasp? [22]Will he address thee with a petition? softly, with the voice of a suppliant? [23]And will he make a covenant with thee? and wilt thou take him for a perpetual servant? [24]And wilt thou play with him as with a bird? or bind him as a sparrow for a child? [25]And do the nations feed upon him, and the nations of the Phoenicians share him? [26]And all the ships come together would not be able to bear the mere skin of his tail; neither shall they carry his head in fishing-vessels. [27]But thou shalt lay thy hand upon him once, remembering the war that is waged by his mouth; and let it not be done any more.
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Author: Sir Lancelot Charles Lee Brenton (1851)
Source: ecmarsh.com
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