| dr |
---|
1. |
My soul is weary of my life, I will let go my speech against myself, I will speak in the bitterness of my soul.
|
|
2. |
I will say to God: Do not condemn me: tell me why thou judgest me so.
|
|
3. |
Doth it seem good to thee that thou shouldst calumniate me, and oppress me, the work of thy own hands, and help the counsel of the wicked?
|
|
4. |
Hast thou eyes of flesh: or, shalt thou see as man seeth?
|
|
5. |
Are thy days as the days of man, and are thy years as the times of men:
|
|
6. |
That thou shouldst inquire after my iniquity, and search after my sin?
|
|
7. |
And shouldst know that I have done no wicked thing, whereas there is no man that can deliver out of thy hand.
|
|
8. |
Thy hands have made me, and fashioned me wholly round about, and dost thou thus cast me down headlong on a sudden?
|
|
9. |
Remember, I beseech thee, that thou hast made me as the clay, and thou wilt bring me into dust again.
|
|
10. |
Hast thou not milked me as milk, and curdled me like cheese?
|
|
11. |
Thou hast clothed me with skin and flesh: thou hast put me together with bones and sinews:
|
|
12. |
Thou hast granted me life and mercy, and thy visitation hath preserved my spirit.
|
|
13. |
Although thou conceal these things in thy heart, yet I know that thou rememberest all things.
|
|
14. |
If I have sinned and thou hast spared me for an hour: why dost thou not suffer me to be clean from my iniquity?
|
|
15. |
And if I be wicked, woe unto me: and if just, I shall not lift up my head, being filled with affliction and misery.
|
|
16. |
And for pride thou wilt take me as a lioness, and returning thou tormentest me wonderfully.
|
|
17. |
Thou renewest thy witnesses against me, and multipliest thy wrath upon me, and pains war against me.
|
|
18. |
Why didst thou bring me forth out of the womb: O that I had been consumed that eye might not see me!
|
|
19. |
I should have been as if I had not been, carried from the womb to the grave.
|
|
20. |
Shall not the fewness of my days be ended shortly? suffer me, therefore, that I may lament my sorrow a little:
|
|
21. |
Before I go, and return no more, to a land that is dark and covered with the mist of death:
|
|
22. |
A land of misery and darkness, where the shadow of death, and no order, but everlasting horror dwelleth.
|
|