| 1. | And Job answereth and saith: -- |
| 2. | Till when do ye afflict my soul, And bruise me with words? |
| 3. | These ten times ye put me to shame, ye blush not. Ye make yourselves strange to me -- |
| 4. | And also -- truly, I have erred, With me doth my error remain. |
| 5. | If, truly, over me ye magnify yourselves, And decide against me my reproach; |
| 6. | Know now, that God turned me upside down, And His net against me hath set round, |
| 7. | Lo, I cry out -- violence, and am not answered, I cry aloud, and there is no judgment. |
| 8. | My way He hedged up, and I pass not over, And on my paths darkness He placeth. |
| 9. | Mine honour from off me He hath stripped, And He turneth the crown from my head. |
| 10. | He breaketh me down round about, and I go, And removeth like a tree my hope. |
| 11. | And He kindleth against me His anger, And reckoneth me to Him as His adversaries. |
| 12. | Come in do His troops together, And they raise up against me their way, And encamp round about my tent. |
| 13. | My brethren from me He hath put far off, And mine acquaintances surely Have been estranged from me. |
| 14. | Ceased have my neighbours And my familiar friends have forgotten me, |
| 15. | Sojourners of my house and my maids, For a stranger reckon me: An alien I have been in their eyes. |
| 16. | To my servant I have called, And he doth not answer, With my mouth I make supplication to him. |
| 17. | My spirit is strange to my wife, And my favours to the sons of my `mother's' womb. |
| 18. | Also sucklings have despised me, I rise, and they speak against me. |
| 19. | Abominate me do all the men of my counsel, And those I have loved, Have been turned against me. |
| 20. | To my skin and to my flesh Cleaved hath my bone, And I deliver myself with the skin of my teeth. |
| 21. | Pity me, pity me, ye my friends, For the hand of God hath stricken against me. |
| 22. | Why do you pursue me as God? And with my flesh are not satisfied? |
| 23. | Who doth grant now, That my words may be written? Who doth grant that in a book they may be graven? |
| 24. | With a pen of iron and lead -- For ever in a rock they may be hewn. |
| 25. | That -- I have known my Redeemer, The Living and the Last, For the dust he doth rise. |
| 26. | And after my skin hath compassed this `body', Then from my flesh I see God: |
| 27. | Whom I -- I see on my side, And mine eyes have beheld, and not a stranger, Consumed have been my reins in my bosom. |
| 28. | But ye say, `Why do we pursue after him?' And the root of the matter hath been found in me. |
| 29. | Be ye afraid because of the sword, For furious `are' the punishments of the sword, That ye may know that `there is' a judgment. |