< Job 39 >
1 [Say] if you know the time of the bringing forth of the wild goats of the rock, and [if] you have marked the calving of the hinds:
¿ Do you know [the] time of [the] bringing forth of mountain goats of rock [the] giving birth of does do you watch?
2 and [if] you has have numbered the full months of their being with young, and [if] you have relieved their pangs:
Will you count? [the] months [which] they complete and do you know? [the] time of bringing forth they.
3 and have reared their young without fear; and will you loosen their pangs?
They kneel down young their they cleave open labor-pains their they send forth.
4 Their young will break forth; they will be multiplied with offspring: [their young] will go forth, and will not return to them.
They become strong young their they grow in the open they go forth and not they return to them.
5 And who is he that sent forth the wild ass free? and who loosed his bands?
Who? did he let loose [the] wild donkey free and [the] fetters of [the] wild ass who? did he loosen.
6 whereas I made his habitation the wilderness, and the salt land his coverts.
Which I appointed [the] desert plain home its and dwelling-places its [the] saltiness.
7 He laughs to scorn the multitude of the city, and hears not the chiding of the tax-gatherer.
It laughs to [the] tumult of a town [the] shouting of a driver not it hears.
8 He will survey the mountains [as] his pasture, and he seeks after every green thing.
It explores mountains pasture its and after every green plant it searches.
9 And will the unicorn be willing to serve you, or to lie down at your manger?
¿ Is it willing a wild ox to serve you or? will it pass [the] night at feeding trough your.
10 And will you bind his yoke with thongs, or will he plough furrows for you in the plain?
¿ Will you bind [the] wild ox in a furrow rope its or? will it harrow valleys behind you.
11 And do you trust him, because his strength is great? and will you commit your works to him?
¿ Will you trust in it for [is] great strength its so you may leave? to it toil your.
12 And will you believe that he will return to you your seed, and bring [it] in [to] your threshing floor?
¿ Will you trust in it that (it will bring back *Q(K)*) seed your and threshing floor your it will gather.
13 The peacock has a beautiful wing: if the stork and the ostrich conceive, [it is worthy of notice],
[the] wing of Ostriches it flaps joyously if a pinion a stork and plumage.
14 for [the ostrich] will leave her eggs in the ground, and warm them on the dust,
For it abandons to the ground eggs its and on [the] dust it keeps [them] warm.
15 and has forgotten that the foot will scatter them, and the wild beasts of the field trample them.
And it has forgotten that a foot it will crush it and [the] animal of the field it will trample it.
16 She has hardened [herself] against her young ones, as though [she bereaved] not herself: she labours in vain without fear.
It treats roughly young its to not [belonging] to it [is] to emptiness labor its not fear.
17 For God has withholden wisdom from her, and not given her a portion in understanding.
For he has made forget it God wisdom and not he gave a share to it in understanding.
18 In her season she will lift herself on high; she will scorn the horse and his rider.
About the time on the height it flaps it laughs to the horse and to rider its.
19 Hast you invested the horse with strength, and clothed his neck with terror?
¿ Do you give to the horse strength ¿ do you clothe neck its a mane.
20 And have you clad him in perfect armour, and made his breast glorious with courage?
¿ Do you make leap it like locust [the] majesty of snorting its [is] terror.
21 He paws exulting in the plain, and goes forth in strength into the plain.
They paw in the valley so it may rejoices in strength it goes forth to meet weaponry.
22 He laughs to scorn a king as he meets him, and will by no means turn back from the sword.
It laughs to fear and not it is dismayed and not it turns back from before a sword.
23 The bow and sword resound against him; and [his] rage will swallow up the ground:
On it it rattles a quiver [the] blade of a spear and a javelin.
24 and he will not believe until the trumpet sounds.
With shaking and excitement it swallows [the] ground and not it stands firm for [the] sound of a horn.
25 And when the trumpet sounds, he says, Aha! and afar off he smells the war with prancing and neighing.
In [the] sufficiency of a horn - it says aha! and from a distance it smells battle [the] thunder of commanders and [the] battle-cry.
26 And does the hawk remain steady by your wisdom, having spread out her wings unmoved, looking towards the region of the south?
¿ From understanding your does it soar a falcon does it spread out? (wings its *Q(K)*) to [the] south.
27 And does the eagle rise at your command, and the vulture remain sitting over his nest,
Or? on mouth your does it make high [its flight] an eagle and that it sets on high nest its.
28 on a crag of a rock, and in a secret [place]?
A rock it dwells and it may pass [the] night on [the] tooth of a rock and a stronghold.
29 Thence he seeks food, his eyes observe from far.
From there it spies out food from afar eyes its they look.
30 And his young ones roll themselves in blood, and wherever the carcasses may be, immediately they are found.
(And young ones its *Q(K)*) they drink blood and at where [those] slain [are] [is] there it.