Ecclesiasticus — Ecclesiasticus Jesu, filii Sirach
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Chapter 27
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Vulgate><Knox Bible><Douay-Rheims
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Propter inopiam multi deliquerunt: et qui quærit locupletari avertit oculum suum.
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Sin comes often of an empty purse; nothing distorts the eye like the love of riches.
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Through poverty many have sinned: and he that seeketh to be enriched, turneth away his eye.
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Sicut in medio compaginis lapidum palus figitur, sic et inter medium venditionis et emptionis angustiabitur peccatum:
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Stake that is held between two stones cannot escape; nor may sin be avoided when there is seller on this side, buyer on that.
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As a stake sticketh fast in the midst of the joining of stones, so also in the midst of selling and buying, sin shall stick fast.
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conteretur cum delinquente delictum.
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Wrong done shall be undone, and the doer of it as well;
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Sin shall be destroyed with the sinner.
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Si non in timore Domini tenueris te instanter, cito subvertetur domus tua.
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hold fast to thy fear of the Lord, or thy wealth shall soon come to ruin.
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Unless thou hold thyself diligently in the fear of the Lord, thy house shall quickly be overthrown.
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Sicut in percussura cribri remanebit pulvis, sic aporia hominis in cogitatu illius.
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The sieve shaken, nothing is left but refuse; so thou wilt find a man’s poverty in his thought.
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As when one sifteth with a sieve, the dust will remain: so will the perplexity of a man in his thoughts.
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Vasa figuli probat fornax, et homines justos tentatio tribulationis.
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Pottery is tested in the furnace, man in the crucible of suffering.
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The furnace trieth the potter’s vessels, and the trial of affliction just men.
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Sicut rusticatio de ligno ostendit fructum illius, sic verbum ex cogitatu cordis hominis.
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Good fruit comes from a tree well dressed, and a man will be in word what he is in thought;
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As the dressing of a tree sheweth the fruit thereof, so a word out of the thought of the heart of man.
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Ante sermonem non laudes virum: hæc enim tentatio est hominum.
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do not give thy opinion of a man till he has spoken; there lies the proof.
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Praise not a man before he speaketh, for this is the trial of men.
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Si sequaris justitiam, apprehendes illam, et indues quasi poderem honoris: et inhabitabis cum ea, et proteget te in sempiternum, et in die agnitionis invenies firmamentum.
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Make right-doing thy quest, and thou wilt not miss the mark; this shall be a robe of honour to clothe thee, a welcome guest in thy house, to watch over thee continually, and to be thy stronghold at the hour when all is made known.
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If thou followest justice, thou shalt obtain her: and shalt put her on as a long robe of honour, and thou shalt dwell with her: and she shall protect thee for ever, and in the day of acknowledgment thou shalt find a strong foundation.
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Volatilia ad sibi similia conveniunt: et veritas ad eos qui operantur illam revertetur.
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Bird mates with bird, and he that shews faithfulness faithfulness shall meet.
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Birds resort unto their like: so truth will return to them that practise her.
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Leo venationi insidiatur semper: sic peccata operantibus iniquitates.
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The lion waits in ambush for his prey; leave the right path, and sin shall be ever at thy heels.
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The lion always lieth in wait for prey: so do sins for them that work iniquities.
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Homo sanctus in sapientia manet sicut sol: nam stultus sicut luna mutatur.
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Unfailing as the sun is the wisdom of a devout mind; moon and fool change continually.
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A holy man continueth in wisdom as the sun: but a fool is changed as the moon.
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In medio insensatorum serva verbum tempori: in medio autem cogitantium assiduus esto.
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When thou hast fools for thy company, thy word can wait; be closeted continually with the wise.
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In the midst of the unwise keep in the word till its time: but be continually among men that think.
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Narratio peccantium odiosa, et risus illorum in deliciis peccati.
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Out upon the wearisome talk of sinners, that of sin and its dalliance makes a jest!
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The discourse of sinners is hateful, and their laughter is at the pleasures of sin.
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Loquela multum jurans horripilationem capiti statuet, et irreverentia ipsius obturatio aurium.
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Out upon the man that uses oaths lightly; hair stands upright at his blaspheming, and ears are stopped!
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The speech that sweareth much shall make the hair of the head stand upright: and its irreverence shall make one stop his ears.
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Effusio sanguinis in rixa superborum, et maledictio illorum auditus gravis.
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Out upon the proud, that provoke bloodshed with their quarrelling, and by their cursing offend all who listen!
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In the quarrels of the road is the shedding of blood: and their cursing is a grievous hearing.
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Qui denudat arcana amici fidem perdit, et non inveniet amicum ad animum suum.
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Betray thy friend’s secret, and all confidence is lost; never more shalt thou have friend to comfort thee.
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He that discloseth the secret of a friend loseth his credit, and shall never find a friend to his mind.
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Dilige proximum, et conjungere fide cum illo.
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Use such a man lovingly, and keep faith with him;
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Love thy neighbour, and be joined to him with fidelity.
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Quod si denudaveris absconsa illius, non persequeris post eum.
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if once thou hast betrayed him, court no more his company.
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But if thou discover his secrets, follow no more after him.
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Sicut enim homo qui perdit amicum suum, sic et qui perdit amicitiam proximi sui.
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Friendship thus killed, thy friend is dead to thee;
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For as a man that destroyeth his friend, so also is he that destroyeth the friendship of his neighbour.
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Et sicut qui dimittit avem de manu sua, sic dereliquisti proximum tuum, et non eum capies.
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bird let go from the hand is not lost more irretrievably;
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And as one that letteth a bird go out of his hand, so hast thou let thy neighbour go, and thou shalt not get him again.
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Non illum sequaris, quoniam longe abest: effugit enim quasi caprea de laqueo, quoniam vulnerata est anima ejus:
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he is gone, like hind released from the snare, gone beyond thy pursuit. The wound that hurts a man’s soul
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Follow after him no more, for he is gone afar off, he is fled, as a roe escaped out of the snare because his soul is wounded.
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ultra eum non poteris colligare. Et maledicti est concordatio:
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there is no healing; the bitter taunt may yet be unsaid,
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Thou canst no more bind him up. And of a curse there is reconciliation:
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denudare autem amici mysteria, desperatio est animæ infelicis.
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but once the secret is out all is misery, all is despair.
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But to disclose the secrets of a friend, leaveth no hope to an unhappy soul.
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Annuens oculo fabricat iniqua, et nemo eum abjiciet.
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Sly glance of the false friend! How shall a man be rid of him?
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He that winketh with the eye forgeth wicked things, and no man will cast him off:
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In conspectu oculorum tuorum condulcabit os suum, et super sermones tuos admirabitur: novissime autem pervertet os suum, et in verbis tuis dabit scandalum.
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Here in thy presence, he smooths his brow, and is all in wonderment at thy wise sayings; but ere long he will change his tune, and lend thy words an ill colour.
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In the sight of thy eyes he will sweeten his mouth, and will admire thy words: but at the last he will writhe his mouth, and on thy words he will lay a stumblingblock.
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Multa odivi, et non coæquavi ei, et Dominus odiet illum.
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Above all else, he earns my hatred; God’s hatred too, I doubt not.
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I have hated many things but not like him, and the Lord will hate him.
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Qui in altum mittit lapidem, super caput ejus cadet: et plaga dolosa dolosi dividet vulnera.
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None can throw stone in air but at his own head’s peril, nor ever was blow struck treacherously, but the traitor must have his share of hurt;
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If one cast a stone on high, it will fall upon his own head: and the deceitful stroke will wound the deceitful.
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Et qui foveam fodit incidet in eam: et qui statuit lapidem proximo offendet in eo: et qui laqueum alii ponit, peribit in illo.
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a man may fall into the pit he dug, trip on the stone he set in his neighbour’s path, perish in the snare he laid for another.
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He that diggeth a pit, shall fall into it: and he that setteth a stone for his neighbour, shall stumble upon it: and he that layeth a snare for another, shall perish in it.
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Facienti nequissimum consilium, super ipsum devolvetur, et non agnoscet unde adveniat illi.
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Plot ill, and the ill shall recoil on thyself, springing up beyond all thy expectation.
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A mischievous counsel shall be rolled back upon the author, and he shall not know from whence it cometh to him.
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Illusio et improperium superborum, et vindicta sicut leo insidiabitur illi.
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For the proud, mockery and shame! Vengeance, like a lion, couches in wait for them.
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Mockery and reproach are of the proud, and vengeance as a lion shall lie in wait for him.
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Laqueo peribunt qui oblectantur casu justorum, dolor autem consumet illos antequam moriantur.
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For all who triumph at the ill fortune of the just, a snare to catch them, and a long remorse before death takes them!
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They shall perish in a snare that are delighted with the fall of the just: and sorrow shall consume them before they die.
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Ira et furor utraque execrabilia sunt, et vir peccator continens erit illorum.
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Rancour and rage are detestable things both; and the sinner has both in store.
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Anger and fury are both of them abominable, and the sinful man shall be subject to them.