| Chapter 7 |
1 |
Better is a name than good perfume, And the day of death than the day of birth. |
2 |
Better to go unto a house of mourning, Than to go unto a house of banqueting, For that is the end of all men, And the living layeth it unto his heart. |
3 |
Better is sorrow than laughter, For by the sadness of the face the heart becometh better. |
4 |
The heart of the wise is in a house of mourning, And the heart of fools in a house of mirth. |
5 |
Better to hear a rebuke of a wise man, Than for a man to hear a song of fools, |
6 |
For as the noise of thorns under the pot, So is the laughter of a fool, even this is vanity. |
7 |
Surely oppression maketh the wise mad, And a gift destroyeth the heart. |
8 |
Better is the latter end of a thing than its beginning, Better is the patient of spirit, than the haughty of spirit. |
9 |
Be not hasty in thy spirit to be angry, For anger in the bosom of fools resteth. |
10 |
Say not thou, `What was it, That the former days were better than these?` For thou hast not asked wisely of this. |
11 |
Wisdom is good with an inheritance, And an advantage it is to those beholding the sun. |
12 |
For wisdom is a defense, money is a defence, And the advantage of the knowledge of wisdom is, She reviveth her possessors. |
13 |
See the work of God, For who is able to make straight that which He made crooked? |
14 |
In a day of prosperity be in gladness, And in a day of evil consider. Also this over-against that hath God made, To the intent that man doth not find anything after him. |
15 |
The whole I have considered in the days of my vanity. There is a righteous one perishing in his righteousness, and there is a wrong-doer prolonging himself in his wrong. |
16 |
Be not over-righteous, nor show thyself too wise, why art thou desolate? |
17 |
Do not much wrong, neither be thou a fool, why dost thou die within thy time? |
18 |
It is good that thou dost lay hold on this, and also, from that withdrawest not thy hand, for whoso is fearing God goeth out with them all. |
19 |
The wisdom giveth strength to a wise man, more than wealth the rulers who have been in a city. |
20 |
Because there is not a righteous man on earth that doth good and sinneth not. |
21 |
Also to all the words that they speak give not thy heart, that thou hear not thy servant reviling thee. |
22 |
For many times also hath thy heart known that thou thyself also hast reviled others. |
23 |
All this I have tried by wisdom; I have said, `I am wise,` and it is far from me. |
24 |
Far off is that which hath been, and deep, deep, who doth find it? |
25 |
I have turned round, also my heart, to know and to search, and to seek out wisdom, and reason, and to know the wrong of folly, and of foolishness the madness. |
26 |
And I am finding more bitter than death, the woman whose heart is nets and snares, her hands are bands; the good before God escapeth from her, but the sinner is captured by her. |
27 |
See, this I have found, said the Preacher, one to one, to find out the reason |
28 |
(that still my soul had sought, and I had not found), One man, a teacher, I have found, and a woman among all these I have not found. |
29 |
See, this alone I have found, that God made man upright, and they -- they have sought out many devices. |