Job (The Book of )



Job, Chapter 41


No one is so fierce as to dare to stir it up. Who can stand before it?


Who can confront it and be safe? --under the whole heaven, who?


"I will not keep silence concerning its limbs, or its mighty strength, or its splendid frame.

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Who can strip off its outer garment? Who can penetrate its double coat of mail?

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Who can open the doors of its face? There is terror all around its teeth.

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Its back is made of shields in rows, shut up closely as with a seal.

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One is so near to another that no air can come between them.

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They are joined one to another; they clasp each other and cannot be separated.

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Its sneezes flash forth light, and its eyes are like the eyelids of the dawn.

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From its mouth go flaming torches; sparks of fire leap out.

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Out of its nostrils comes smoke, as from a boiling pot and burning rushes.

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Its breath kindles coals, and a flame comes out of its mouth.

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In its neck abides strength, and terror dances before it.

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The folds of its flesh cling together; it is firmly cast and immovable.

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Its heart is as hard as stone, as hard as the lower millstone.

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When it raises itself up the gods are afraid; at the crashing they are beside themselves.

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Though the sword reaches it, it does not avail, nor does the spear, the dart, or the javelin.

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It counts iron as straw, and bronze as rotten wood.

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The arrow cannot make it flee; slingstones, for it, are turned to chaff.

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Clubs are counted as chaff; it laughs at the rattle of javelins.

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Its underparts are like sharp potsherds; it spreads itself like a threshing sledge on the mire.

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It makes the deep boil like a pot; it makes the sea like a pot of ointment.


It leaves a shining wake behind it; one would think the deep to be white-haired.

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On earth it has no equal, a creature without fear.


It surveys everything that is lofty; it is king over all that are proud."

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