| Chapter 6 |
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My son! if thou hast been surety for thy friend, Hast stricken for a stranger thy hand, |
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Hast been snared with sayings of thy mouth, Hast been captured with sayings of thy mouth, |
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Do this now, my son, and be delivered, For thou hast come into the hand of thy friend. Go, trample on thyself, and strengthen thy friend, |
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Give not sleep to thine eyes, And slumber to thine eyelids, |
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Be delivered as a roe from the hand, And as a bird from the hand of a fowler. |
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Go unto the ant, O slothful one, See her ways and be wise; |
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Which hath not captain, overseer, and ruler, |
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She doth prepare in summer her bread, She hath gathered in harvest her food. |
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Till when, O slothful one, dost thou lie? When dost thou arise from thy sleep? |
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A little sleep, a little slumber, A little clasping of the hands to rest, |
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And thy poverty hath come as a traveller, And thy want as an armed man. |
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A man of worthlessness, a man of iniquity, Walking [with] perverseness of mouth, |
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Winking with his eyes, speaking with his feet, Directing with his fingers, |
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Frowardness [is] in his heart, devising evil at all times, Contentions he sendeth forth. |
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Therefore suddenly cometh his calamity, Instantly he is broken -- and no healing. |
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These six hath Jehovah hated, Yea, seven [are] abominations to His soul. |
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Eyes high -- tongues false -- And hands shedding innocent blood -- |
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A heart devising thoughts of vanity -- Feet hasting to run to evil -- |
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A false witness [who] doth breathe out lies -- And one sending forth contentions between brethren. |
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Keep, my son, the command of thy father, And leave not the law of thy mother. |
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Bind them on thy heart continually, Tie them on thy neck. |
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In thy going up and down, it leadeth thee, In thy lying down, it watcheth over thee, And thou hast awaked -- it talketh [with] thee. |
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For a lamp [is] the command, And the law a light, And a way of life [are] reproofs of instruction, |
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To preserve thee from an evil woman, From the flattery of the tongue of a strange woman. |
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Desire not her beauty in thy heart, And let her not take thee with her eyelids. |
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For a harlot consumeth unto a cake of bread, And an adulteress the precious soul hunteth. |
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Doth a man take fire into his bosom, And are his garments not burnt? |
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Doth a man walk on the hot coals, And are his feet not scorched? |
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So [is] he who hath gone in unto the wife of his neighbour, None who doth touch her is innocent. |
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They do not despise the thief, When he stealeth to fill his soul when he is hungry, |
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And being found he repayeth sevenfold, All the substance of his house he giveth. |
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He who committeth adultery [with] a woman lacketh heart, He is destroying his soul who doth it. |
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A stroke and shame he doth find, And his reproach is not wiped away, |
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For jealousy [is] the fury of a man, And he doth not spare in a day of vengeance. |
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He accepteth not the appearance of any atonement, Yea, he doth not consent, Though thou dost multiply bribes! |