1Then responded Job, and said: 2Hear ye patiently my words, and let this be your consolation: 3Suffer me, that, I, may speak, and, after I have spoken, thou canst mock! 4Did, I, unto man, make my complaint? Wherefore, then, should my spirit not be impatient? 5Turn round to me, and be astonished, and lay hand on mouth! 6When I call to mind, then am I dismayed, and there seizeth my flesh a shuddering: 7Wherefore do, lawless men, live, advance in years, even wax mighty in power? 8Their seed, is established in their sight, along with them, yea their offspring, before their eyes; 9Their houses, are at peace, without dread, neither is, the rod of GOD, upon them; 10His bull, covereth, and causeth not aversion, His cow safely calveth, and casteth not her young; 11They send forthlike a flocktheir young ones, and, their children, skip about for joy; 12They rejoice aloud as timbrel and lyre, and make merry to the sound of the pipe; 13They complete, in prosperity, their days, and, in a moment to hades, they sink down. 14Yet they said unto GOD, Depart from us, and, In the knowledge of thy ways, find we no pleasure. 15What is the Almighty, that we should serve him? Or what shall we profit, that we should urge him? 16Lo! not in their own hand, is their welfare, The counsel of lawless men, is far from me! 17How oft, the lamp of the lawless, goeth out, and their calamity, cometh upon them, Sorrows, apportioneth he in his anger; 18They become as straw before the wind, and as chaff, which the storm stealeth away. 19Shall, GOD, reserve, for his children, his sorrow? Let him recompense him so that he may know it; 20His own eyes, shall see his misfortune, and, the wrath of the Almighty, shall he drink. 21For what shall be his pleasure in his house after him, when, the number of his months, is cut in twain? 22Is it, to GOD, one can teach knowledge, seeing that, he, shall judge, them who are on high? 23This, man dieth, in the very perfection of his prosperity, wholly tranquil and secure; 24His veins, are filled with nourishment, and, the marrow of his bones, is fresh; 25Whereas, this other man, dieth, in bitterness of soul, and hath never tasted good fortune: 26Together, in the dust, they lie down, and, the worm, spreadeth a covering over them. 27Lo! I know your plans, and the devices, wherewith ye would do me violence! 28For ye say, Where is the house of the noble-minded? And where the dwelling-tent of the lawless? 29Have ye not asked the passers-by in the way? And, their signs, can ye not recognise? 30That, to the day of calamity, is the wicked reserved, to the day of indignant visitation, are they led. 31Who can declareto his facehis way? And, what, he, hath done, who shall recompense to him? 32Yet, he, to the graves, is borne, and, over the tomb, one keepeth watch; 33Pleasant to him are the mounds of the torrent-bed,and, after him, doth every man march, as, before him, there were without number. 34How then should ye comfort me with vanity, since, as for your replies, there lurketh,