2.6 KiB
Chapter 27
- Don't brag about tomorrow,
since you don't know what the day will bring.
- Let someone else praise you, not your own mouth--
a stranger, not your own lips.
- A stone is heavy and sand is weighty,
but the resentment caused by a fool is even heavier.
- Anger is cruel, and wrath is like a flood,
but jealousy is even more dangerous.
- An open rebuke
is better than hidden love!
- Wounds from a sincere friend
are better than many kisses from an enemy.
- A person who is full refuses honey,
but even bitter food tastes sweet to the hungry.
- A person who strays from home
is like a bird that strays from its nest.
- The heartfelt counsel of a friend
is as sweet as perfume and incense.
- Never abandon a friend--
either yours or your father's.
When disaster strikes, you won't have to ask your brother for assistance.
It's better to go to a neighbor than to a brother who lives far away.
- Be wise, my child, and make my heart glad.
Then I will be able to answer my critics.
- A prudent person foresees danger and takes precautions.
The simpleton goes blindly on and suffers the consequences.
-
Get security from someone who guarantees a stranger's debt. Get a deposit if he does it for foreigners.
-
A loud and cheerful greeting early in the morning
will be taken as a curse!
- A quarrelsome wife is as annoying
as constant dripping on a rainy day.
- Stopping her complaints is like trying to stop the wind
or trying to hold something with greased hands.
- As iron sharpens iron,
so a friend sharpens a friend.
- As workers who tend a fig tree are allowed to eat the fruit,
so workers who protect their employer's interests will be rewarded.
- As a face is reflected in water,
so the heart reflects the real person.
- Just as Death and Destruction are never satisfied,
so human desire is never satisfied.
-
Fire tests the purity of silver and gold, but a person is tested by being praised.
-
You cannot separate fools from their foolishness,
even though you grind them like grain with mortar and pestle.
- Know the state of your flocks,
and put your heart into caring for your herds,
- for riches don't last forever,
and the crown might not be passed to the next generation.
- After the hay is harvested and the new crop appears
and the mountain grasses are gathered in,
- your sheep will provide wool for clothing,
and your goats will provide the price of a field.
- And you will have enough goats' milk for yourself,
your family, and your servant girls.