| Chapter 5 |
1 |
Pray, call, is there any to answer thee? And unto which of the holy ones dost thou turn? |
2 |
For provocation slayeth the perverse, And envy putteth to death the simple, |
3 |
I -- I have seen the perverse taking root, And I mark his habitation straightway, |
4 |
Far are his sons from safety, And they are bruised in the gate, And there is no deliverer. |
5 |
Whose harvest the hungry doth eat, And even from the thorns taketh it, And the designing swallowed their wealth. |
6 |
For sorrow cometh not forth from the dust, Nor from the ground springeth up misery. |
7 |
For man to misery is born, And the sparks go high to fly. |
8 |
Yet I -- I inquire for God, And for God I give my word, |
9 |
Doing great things, and there is no searching. Wonderful, till there is no numbering. |
10 |
Who is giving rain on the face of the land, And is sending waters on the out-places. |
11 |
To set the low on a high place, And the mourners have been high in safety. |
12 |
Making void thoughts of the subtile, And their hands do not execute wisdom. |
13 |
Capturing the wise in their subtilty, And the counsel of wrestling ones was hastened, |
14 |
By day they meet darkness, And as night -- they grope at noon. |
15 |
And He saveth the wasted from their mouth, And from a strong hand the needy, |
16 |
And there is hope to the poor, And perverseness hath shut her mouth. |
17 |
Lo, the happiness of mortal man, God doth reprove him: And the chastisement of the Mighty despise not, |
18 |
For He doth pain, and He bindeth up, He smiteth, and His hands heal. |
19 |
In six distresses He delivereth thee, And in seven evil striketh not on thee. |
20 |
In famine He hath redeemed thee from death, And in battle from the hands of the sword. |
21 |
When the tongue scourgeth thou art hid, And thou art not afraid of destruction, When it cometh. |
22 |
At destruction and at hunger thou mockest, And of the beast of the earth, Thou art not afraid. |
23 |
(For with sons of the field is thy covenant, And the beast of the field Hath been at peace with thee.) |
24 |
And thou hast known that thy tent is peace, And inspected thy habitation, and errest not, |
25 |
And hast known that numerous is Thy seed, And thine offspring as the herb of the earth; |
26 |
Thou comest in full age unto the grave, As the going up of a stalk in its season. |
27 |
Lo, this -- we searched it out -- it is right, hearken; And thou, know for thyself! |