4:1 But
it
displeased
Ionah
exceedingly,
and
he
was
very
angry.
4:2 And
he
prayed
vnto
the
Lord,
and
sayd,
I
pray
thee,
O
Lord,
was
not
this
my
saying,
when
I
was
yet
in
my
countrey
Therefore
I
fledde
before
vnto
Tarshish:
for
I
knew
that
thou
art
a
gracious
God,
and
mercifull,
slow
to
anger,
and
of
great
kindnesse,
and
repentest
thee
of
the
euill.
4:3 Therefore
now,
O
Lord,
Take,
I
beseech
thee,
my
life
from
me;
for
it
is
better
for
me
to
die
then
to
liue.
4:4 Then
said
the
Lord,
Doest
thou
well
to
be
angry
4:5 So
Ionah
went
out
of
the
citie,
and
sate
on
the
East
side
of
the
city,
and
there
made
him
a
boothe,
and
sate
vnder
it
in
the
shadow,
till
hee
might
see
what
would
become
of
the
citie.
4:6 And
the
Lord
God
prepared
a
gourd,
and
made
it
to
come
vp
ouer
Ionah,
that
it
might
be
a
shadow
ouer
his
head,
to
deliuer
him
from
his
griefe.
So
Ionah
was
exceeding
glad
of
the
gourd.
4:7 But
God
prepared
a
worme
when
the
morning
rose
the
next
day,
and
it
smote
the
gourd
that
it
withered.
4:8 And
it
came
to
passe
when
the
Sunne
did
arise,
that
God
prepared
a
vehement
East
wind;
and
the
Sunne
beat
vpon
the
head
of
Ionah,
that
hee
fainted,
and
wished
in
himselfe
to
die,
and
said,
It
is
better
for
me
to
die,
then
to
liue.
4:9 And
God
said
to
Ionah,
Doest
thou
well
to
be
angry
for
the
gourd
and
he
said,
I
doe
well
to
be
angry,
euen
vnto
death.
4:10 Then
said
the
Lord,
Thou
hast
had
pitie
on
the
gourde,
for
the
which
thou
hast
not
laboured,
neither
madest
it
grow,
which
came
vp
in
a
night,
and
perished
in
a
night:
4:11 And
should
not
I
spare
Nineueh
that
great
citie,
wherein
are
more
then
sixscore
thousand
persons,
that
cannot
discerne
betweene
their
right
hand
and
their
left
hand,
and
also
much
cattell