Lamentations 4:18
They laye so sharpe waite for vs, that we can not go safe vpon the stretes: for oure ende is come, oure dayes are fulfilled, oure ende is here.
They laye so sharpe waite for vs, that we can not go safe vpon the stretes: for oure ende is come, oure dayes are fulfilled, oure ende is here.
These verses are found using AI-powered semantic similarity based on meaning and context. Results may occasionally include unexpected connections.
19Oure persecuters are swifter then the Aegles of the ayre: they folowed vpon vs ouer the mountaynes, and layed wait for vs in ye wildernesse.
20The very breth of oure mouth; euen the anoynted LORDE himself shalbe take in oure synnes, of whom we saye: Vnder his shadowe we shal be preserued amonge the Heithen.
17Wherfore yet oure eyes fayle vs, whyle we loke for vayne helpe: seynge we be euer waitynge vpon a people, that can do vs no good,
11They lye waytinge in or waye on euery syde, turnynge their eyes downe to the grounde.
4We are fayne to drynke oure owne water for moneye, and oure owne wod must we bye with moneye.
5Oure neckes are vnder persecucion, we are weery, and haue no rest.
17Therfore oure hert is full of heuynesse, & oure eyes dymme:
18because of ye hill of Sion that is destroyed, In so moch, that the foxes runne vpon it.
46All oure enemies gape vpon vs.
47Feare and snare is come vpon vs, yee despite and destruccion.
6They holde alltogether, & kepe them selues close: they marck my steppes, how they maye catch my soule.
9And this is ye cause yt equite is so farre fro vs, & yt rightuousnes cometh not nye vs. We loke for light, lo, it is darknesse: for ye mornynge shyne, se, we walke in ye darke.
10We grope like ye blynde vpon ye wall, we grope euen as one yt hath none eyes. We stomble at ye noone daye, as though it were toward night: in ye fallinge places, like men yt are half deed.
11We roare all like Beeres, & mourne stil like doues. We loke for equite, but there is none: for health, but it is farre fro vs.
12For or offences are many before ye, & or synnes testifie agaynst vs. Yee we must cofesse yt we offende, & knowlege, yt we do amysse:
4How longe shall the londe mourne, and all the herbes off the felde perish, for the wickednes off them that dwell therin? The catell and the byrdes are gone, yet saye they: tush, God will not destroye vs vtterly.
14Though they be fearful at night, yet in the morninge it is gone with the, This is their porcion, that do vs harme, and heretage of them, that robbe vs.
4We are become an open shame vnto oure enemies, a very scorne and derision vnto them that are rounde aboute vs.
25My dayes haue bene more swifte, then a runner: they are gone sodenly, and haue sene no good thinge.
26They are passed awaye, as the shippes that be good vnder sale, and as the Aegle that haisteth to the pray.
13& my path haue they clene marred. It was so easy for them to do me harme, that they neded no man to helpe the.
14They fell vpon me, as it had bene ye breakynge in of waters, & came in by heapes to destroye me.
24Then shal this crie be herde: Oure armes are feble, heuynes and sorow is come vpon vs, as vpon a woman trauelinge with childe.
25Noman go forth in to the felde, no man come vpon the hie strete: for the swearde and feare of the enemie shalbe on euery side.
20The haruest is gone, the Somer hath an ende, and we are not helped.
22Let the noyse be herde out of their houses, when the murtherer cometh sodenly vpon them: For they haue digged a pit to take me, and layed snares for my fete.
18All this is come vpon vs, & yet haue we not forgotten the, ner behaued oure selues vnfaithfully in thy couenaunt.
19Oure hert is not turned backe, nether oure steppes gone out of thy waye.
8Seruauntes haue the rule of vs, and no man delyuereth vs out of their hodes.
9We must get or lyuynge with the parell of oure lyues, because of the drouth of the wildernesse.
15We loked for peace, and we fayre not the better, we wayted for the tyme of health, and lo, here is nothinge but trouble.
21Namely thus: Deeth is clymme vp in at oure wyndowes, he is come in to oure houses, to destroye the childe before the dore, & ye yonge man in the strete.
18for the pathes yt they go in, are croked: they haist after vayne thinges, and shal perish.
9For when thou art angrie, all or dayes are gone, we brynge or yeares to an ende, as it were a tayle that is tolde.
18and singe a mournynge songe of you: that the teares maye fall out of oure eyes, and that oure eye lyddes maye gushe out of water.
19For there is a lamentable noyse herde of Sion: O how are we so sore destroyed? O how are we so piteously confounded? We must forsake oure owne naturall countre, and we are shot out of oure owne lodgiges.
11And or aduersaries thought: They shall not knowe nether se, tyll we come in the myddes amonge the, and slaye them, & hynder ye worke.
11and beholde, they deale contrarely with vs, and come to thrust vs out of the inheritaunce, that thou hast geuen vs in possession.
7ye snare is broke, and we are delyuered.
14That oure oxen maye be stronge to laboure, that there be no myschaunce, no decaye, and no complayninge in oure stretes.
6Set vp thy self (o God) aboue the heaues, and thy glory aboue all the earth.
9Yee they saye in their hertes: Let vs spoyle the all together, thus haue they brent vp all the houses of God in the londe.
20that their increase shal be hewen downe, & their posterite consumed with the fyre.
6the ende is here. The ende (I saye) that waiteth for the, is come already,
6that they maye folowe out after vs, tyll we haue prouoked them forth of the cite: for they shal thinke that we flye before them, like as at ye first.
17But in vayne is ye net layed forth before the byrdes eyes.
2Oure enheritaunce is turned to the straungers, & oure houses to the aleauntes.
4The depe waters of the proude had gone eue vnto oure soule.
19Hast thou then vtterly forsaken Iuda? (sayde I) Dost thou so abhorre Sio? Or hast thou so plaged vs, that we can be healed nomore? We loked for peace, and there cometh no good: for the tyme of health, & lo, here is nothinge but trouble.
16All thine enemies gape vpon the, whisperinge and bytinge their teth, sayenge: let vs deuoure, for the tyme that we loked for, is come: we haue founde and sene it.