Catholic Public Domain Version
"The burning separates a pilgrim people from those who have been forgotten by the feet of the destitute man and from the unapproachable."
— Job 28:4, Catholic Public Domain Version
“The flood breaketh out from the inhabitant; even the waters forgotten of the foot: they are dried up, they are gone away from men.”
“He breaketh open a shaft away from where men sojourn; They are forgotten of the foot; They hang afar from men, they swing to and fro. ”
“He breaks open a shaft away from where people live. They are forgotten by the foot. They hang far from men, they swing back and forth.”
“Far from where people live he sinks a shaft, in places travelers have long forgotten, far from other people he dangles and sways.”
“The flood divideth from the people that are on their journey, those whom the food of the needy man hath forgotten, and who cannot be come at.”
“He makes a deep mine far away from those living in the light of day; when they go about on the earth, they have no knowledge of those who are under them, who are hanging far from men, twisting from side to side on a cord.”
“The flood breaketh out from the inhabitant; even the waters forgotten of the foot: they are dried up, they are gone away from men.”
Silver has its fissures where it is first found, and gold has a place where it is melted.
Iron is taken from the earth, and ore, unbound by heat, is turned into brass.
He has established a time for darkness, and he has settled on an end for all things, as well as for the stone that is in the gloom and shadow of death.
The burning separates a pilgrim people from those who have been forgotten by the feet of the destitute man and from the unapproachable.
The land, where bread appeared in its place, has been destroyed by fire.
Its stones are embedded with sapphires, and its soil, with gold.
The bird does not know its path, nor has the eye of the vulture beheld it.