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[1] After this hath Job opened his mouth, and revileth his day.
[2] And Job answereth and saith: --
[3] Let the day perish in which I am born, And the night that hath said: `A man-child hath been conceived.'
[4] That day -- let it be darkness, Let not God require it from above, Nor let light shine upon it.
[5] Let darkness and death-shade redeem it, Let a cloud tabernacle upon it, Let them terrify it as the most bitter of days.
[6] That night -- let thick darkness take it, Let it not be united to days of the year, Into the number of months let it not come.
[7] Lo! that night -- let it be gloomy, Let no singing come into it.
[8] Let the cursers of day mark it, Who are ready to wake up Leviathan.
[9] Let the stars of its twilight be dark, Let it wait for light, and there is none, And let it not look on the eyelids of the dawn.
[10] Because it hath not shut the doors Of the womb that was mine! And hide misery from mine eyes.
[11] Why from the womb do I not die? From the belly I have come forth and gasp!
[12] Wherefore have knees been before me? And what [are] breasts, that I suck?
[13] For now, I have lain down, and am quiet, I have slept -- then there is rest to me,
[14] With kings and counsellors of earth, These building wastes for themselves.
[15] Or with princes -- they have gold, They are filling their houses [with] silver.
[16] (Or as a hidden abortion I am not, As infants -- they have not seen light.)
[17] There the wicked have ceased troubling, And there rest do the wearied in power.
[18] Together prisoners have been at ease, They have not heard the voice of an exactor,
[19] Small and great [are] there the same. And a servant [is] free from his lord.
[20] Why giveth He to the miserable light, and life to the bitter soul?
[21] Who are waiting for death, and it is not, And they seek it above hid treasures.
[22] Who are glad -- unto joy, They rejoice when they find a grave.
[23] To a man whose way hath been hidden, And whom God doth shut up?
[24] For before my food, my sighing cometh, And poured out as waters [are] my roarings.
[25] For a fear I feared and it meeteth me, And what I was afraid of doth come to me.
[26] I was not safe -- nor was I quiet -- Nor was I at rest -- and trouble cometh!
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