Ayub 41
"Can you draw out Leviathan[1] with a fishhook?
Or press down his tongue with a cord?
2Can you put a rope into his nose?
Or pierce his jaw through with a hook?
3Will he make many petitions to you?
Or will he speak soft words to you?
4Will he make a covenant with you,
That you should take him for a servant forever?
5Will you play with him as with a bird?
Or will you bind him for your girls?
6Will traders barter for him?
Will they part him among the merchants?
7Can you fill his skin with barbed irons,
Or his head with fish-spears?
8Lay your hand on him.
Remember the battle, and do so no more.
9Behold, the hope of him is in vain.
Will not one be cast down even at the sight of him?
10None is so fierce that he dare stir him
up.
Who then is he who can stand before me?
11Who has first
given to me, that I should repay him?[2]
Everything under the heavens is mine.
12"I will not keep silence concerning his limbs,
Nor his mighty strength, nor his handsome frame.
13Who can strip off his outer garment?
Who shall come within his jaws?
14Who can open the doors of his face?
Around his teeth is terror.
15Strong scales are his pride,
Shut up together with a close seal.
16One is so near to another,
That no air can come between them.
17They are joined one to another;
They stick together, so that they cannot be pulled
apart.
18His sneezing flashes forth light,
His eyes are like the eyelids of the morning.
19Out of his mouth go burning torches,
Sparks of fire leap forth.
20Out of his nostrils a smoke goes,
As of a boiling pot over a fire of reeds.
21His breath kindles coals.
A flame goes forth from his mouth.
22In his neck there is strength.
Terror dances before him.
23The flakes of his flesh are joined
together.
They are firm on him. They cannot be moved.
24His heart is as firm as a stone,
Yes, firm as the lower millstone.
25When he raises himself up, the mighty
are afraid.
They retreat before his thrashing.
26If one lay at him with the sword, it
cannot avail;
Nor the spear, the dart, nor the pointed shaft.
27He counts iron as straw;
And bronze as rotten wood.
28The arrow cannot make him flee.
Sling stones are like chaff to him.
29Clubs are counted as stubble.
He laughs at the rushing of the javelin.
30His undersides are like sharp potsherds,
Leaving a trail in the mud like a threshing sledge.
31He makes the deep to boil like a pot.
He makes the sea like a pot of ointment.
32He makes a path to shine after him.
One would think the deep had white hair.
33On earth there is not his equal,
That is made without fear.
34He sees everything that is high:
He is king over all the sons of pride."