| Chapter 39 |
1 | Have you knowledge of the rock-goats? or do you see the roes giving birth to their young?
|
2 | Is the number of their months fixed by you? or is the time when they give birth ordered by you?
|
3 | They are bent down, they give birth to their young, they let loose the fruit of their body.
|
4 | Their young ones are strong, living in the open country; they go out and do not come back again.
|
5 | Who has let the ass of the fields go free? or made loose the bands of the loud-voiced beast?
|
6 | To whom I have given the waste land for a heritage, and the salt land as a living-place.
|
7 | He makes sport of the noise of the town; the voice of the driver does not come to his ears;
|
8 | He goes looking for his grass-lands in the mountains, searching out every green thing.
|
9 | Will the ox of the mountains be your servant? or is his night's resting-place by your food-store?
|
10 | Will he be pulling your plough with cords, turning up the valleys after you?
|
11 | Will you put your faith in him, because his strength is great? will you give the fruit of your work into his care?
|
12 | Will you be looking for him to come back, and get in your seed to the crushing-floor?
|
13 | Is the wing of the ostrich feeble, or is it because she has no feathers,
|
14 | That she puts her eggs on the earth, warming them in the dust,
|
15 | Without a thought that they may be crushed by the foot, and broken by the beasts of the field?
|
16 | She is cruel to her young ones, as if they were not hers; her work is to no purpose; she has no fear.
|
17 | For God has taken wisdom from her mind, and given her no measure of knowledge.
|
18 | When she is shaking her wings on high, she makes sport of the horse and of him who is seated on him.
|
19 | Do you give strength to the horse? is it by your hand that his neck is clothed with power?
|
20 | Is it through you that he is shaking like a locust, in the pride of his loud-sounding breath?
|
21 | He is stamping with joy in the valley; he makes sport of fear.
|
22 | In his strength he goes out against the arms of war, turning not away from the sword.
|
23 | The bow is sounding against him; he sees the shining point of spear and arrow.
|
24 | Shaking with passion, he is biting the earth; he is not able to keep quiet at the sound of the horn;
|
25 | When it comes to his ears he says, Aha! He is smelling the fight from far off, and hearing the thunder of the captains, and the war-cries.
|
26 | Is it through your knowledge that the hawk takes his flight, stretching out his wings to the south?
|
27 | Or is it by your orders that the eagle goes up, and makes his resting-place on high?
|
28 | On the rock is his house, and on the mountain-top his strong place.
|
29 | From there he is watching for food; his eye sees it far off.
|
30 | His young have blood for their drink, and where the dead bodies are, there is he to be seen.
|