hold of her, is as he that taketh hold of a
scorpion.
26:11. A drunken woman is a great wrath: and her reproach and shame
shall not be hid.
26:12. The fornication of a woman shall be known by the haughtiness of
her eyes and by her eyelids.
26:13. On a daughter that turneth not away herself, set a strict watch:
lest finding an opportunity she abuse herself.
26:14. Take heed of the impudence of her eyes, and wonder not if she
slight thee.
26:15. She will open her mouth as a thirsty traveller to the fountain,
and will drink of every water near her, and will sit down by every
hedge, and open her quiver against every arrow, until she fail.
26:16. The grace of a diligent woman shall delight her husband, and
shall fat his bones.
26:17. Her discipline is the gift of God.
26:18. Such is a wise and silent woman, and there is nothing so much
worth as a well instructed soul.
26:19. A holy and shamefaced woman is grace upon grace.
26:20. And no price is worthy of a continent soul.
26:21. As the sun when it riseth to the world in the high places of God,
so is the beauty of a good wife for the ornament of her house.
26:22. As the lamp shining upon the holy candlestick, so is the beauty
of the face in a ripe age,
26:23. As golden pillars upon bases of silver, so are the firm feet upon
the soles of a steady woman.
26:24. As everlasting foundations upon a solid rock, so the commandments
of God in the heart of a holy woman.
26:25. At two things my heart is grieved, and the third bringeth anger
upon me.
26:26. A man of war fainting through poverty, and a man of sense
despised:
26:27. And he that passeth over from justice to sin, God hath prepared
such an one for the sword.
26:28. Two sorts of callings have appeared to me hard and dangerous: a
merchant is hardly free from negligence: and a huckster shall not be
justified from the sins of the lips.
From negligence... That is, from the neglect of the service of God:
because the eager pursuit of the mammon of this world, is apt to make
men of that calling forget the great duties of loving God above all
things, and their neighbours as themselves.-Ibid. A huckster... Or, a
retailer of wine. Men of that profession are both greatly exposed to
danger of sin themselves, and are too often accessary to the sins of
others.
Ecclesiasticus Chapter 27
Dangers of sin from several heads: the fear of God is the best
preservative. He that diggeth a pit, shall
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