욥기 39장 Coverdale Bible
- 1 Knowest thou the tyme when the wilde gotes brige forth their yoge amoge the stony rockes? Or layest thou wayte when the hindes vse to fawne?
- 2 Rekenest thou the monethes after they ingendre, yt thou knowest the tyme of their bearinge?
- 3 Or when they lye downe, when they cast their yonge ones, & when they are delyuered off their trauayle & payne?
- 4 How their yoge ones growe vp & waxe greate thorow good fedinge?
- 5 who letteth the wilde asse go fre, or who lowseth the bodes of the Moole?
- 6 Vnto who I haue geuen the wyldernes to be their house, & the vntilled londe to be their dwellinge place.
- 7 That they maye geue no force for the multitude off people in the cities, nether to regarde the crienge of the dryuer:
- 8 but to seke their pasture aboute the moutaynes, & to folowe vpon the grene grasse.
- 9 Wyll the vnicorne be so tame as to do ye seruyce, or to abyde still by thy cribbe?
- 10 Cast thou bynde ye yock aboute him in thy forowes, to make him plowe after the in ye valleis?
- 11 Mayest thou trust hi (because he is stroge) or comitte thy labor vnto hi?
- 12 Mayest thou beleue hi, yt he wil brige home yi corne, or to cary eny thinge vnto yi barne?
- 13 The Estrich (whose fethers are fayrer the ye wynges of the sparow hauke)
- 14 whe he hath layed his egges vpon the grounde, he bredeth them in the dust,
- 15 and forgetteth them: so that they might be troden with fete, or broken with somme wilde beast.
- 16 So harde is he vnto his yong ones, as though they were not his, and laboureth in vayne without eny feare.
- 17 And that because God hath taken wisdome from him, & hath not geuen him vnderstondinge.
- 18 When his tyme is, he flyeth vp an hye, and careth nether for horse ner man.
- 19 Hast thou geuen the horse is strength, or lerned him to bowe downe his neck with feare:
- 20 that he letteth him self be dryuen forth like a greshopper, where as the stoute neyenge that he maketh, is fearfull?
- 21 he breaketh ye grounde with the hoffes of his fete chearfully in his strength, and runneth to mete the harnest men.
- 22 He layeth asyde all feare, his stomack is not abated, nether starteth he a back for eny swerde.
- 23 Though the quyuers rattle vpon him, though the speare and shilde glistre:
- 24 yet russheth he in fearsly, and beateth vpon the grounde. He feareth not the noyse of the trompettes,
- 25 but as soone as he heareth the shawmes blowe, tush (sayeth he) for he smelleth the batell afarre of, ye noyse, the captaynes and the shoutinge.
- 26 Commeth it thorow thy wysdome, that the goshauke flyeth towarde the south?
- 27 Doth the Aegle mounte vp & make his nest on hye at thy commaundement?
- 28 He abydeth in the stony rockes, ad vpon the hye toppes of harde mountaynes, where no man can come.
- 29 From thence maye he beholde his praye, and loke farre aboute with his eyes.
- 30 His yonge ones are fed with bloude, and where eny deed body lyeth, there is he immediatly.