| 1 O death! how bitter the thought of you for the man at peace amid his possessions, For the man unruffled and always successful, who still can enjoy life's pleasures. |
| 2 O death! how welcome your sentence to the weak man of failing strength, Tottering and always rebuffed, with no more sight, with vanished hope. |
| 3 Fear not death's decree for you; remember, it embraces those before you, and those after. |
| 4 Thus God has ordained for all flesh; why then should you reject the will of the Most High? Whether one has lived a thousand years, a hundred, or ten, in the nether world he has no claim on life. |
| 5 A reprobate line are the children of sinners, and witless offspring are in the homes of the wicked. |
| 6 Their dominion is lost to sinners' children, and reproach abides with their descendants. |
| 7 Children curse their wicked father, for they suffer disgrace through him. |
| 8 Woe to you, O sinful men, who forsake the law of the Most High. |
| 9 If you have children, calamity will seize them; you will beget them only for groaning. When you stumble, there is lasting joy; at death, you become a curse. |
| 10 Whatever is of nought returns to nought, so too the godless from void to void. |
| 11 Man's body is a fleeting thing, but a virtuous name will never be annihilated. |
| 12 Have a care for your name, for it will stand by you better than precious treasures in the thousands; |
| 13 The boon of life is for limited days, but a good name, for days without number. |
| 14 My children, heed my instruction about shame; judge of disgrace only according to my rules, For it is not always well to be ashamed, nor is it always the proper thing to blush: |
| 15 Before father and mother be ashamed of immorality, before master and mistress, of falsehood; |
| 16 Before prince and ruler, of flattery; before the public assembly, of crime; |
| 17 Before friend and companion, of disloyalty, and of breaking an oath or agreement. |
| 18 Be ashamed of theft from the people where you settle, and of stretching out your elbow when you dine; |
| 19 Of refusing to give when asked, of defrauding another of his appointed share, |
| 20 Of failing to return a greeting, and of rebuffing a friend; |
| 21 Of gazing at a married woman, and of entertaining thoughts about another's wife; Of trifling with a servant girl you have, and of violating her couch; |
| 22 Of using harsh words with friends, and of following up your gifts with insults; |
| 23 Of repeating what you hear, and of betraying secrets-- |
| 24 These are the things you should rightly avoid as shameful if you would be looked upon by everyone with favor. |