Proverbs 27
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Confronta con un'altra Bibbia
Cambia Bibbia
NEW JERUSALEM | NEW AMERICAN BIBLE |
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1 Do not congratulate yourself about tomorrow, since you do not know what today wil bring forth. | 1 Boast not of tomorrow, for you know not what any day may bring forth. |
2 Let someone else sing your praises, but not your own mouth, a stranger, but not your own lips. | 2 Let another praise you--not your own mouth; Someone else--not your own lips. |
3 Heavy is the stone, weighty is the sand; heavier than both -- a grudge borne by a fool. | 3 Stone is heavy, and sand a burden, but a fool's provocation is heavier than both. |
4 Cruel is wrath, overwhelming is anger; but jealousy, who can withstand that? | 4 Anger is relentless, and wrath overwhelming-- but before jealousy who can stand? |
5 Better open reproof than feigned love. | 5 Better is an open rebuke than a love that remains hidden. |
6 Trustworthy are blows from a friend, deceitful are kisses from a foe. | 6 Wounds from a friend may be accepted as well meant, but the greetings of an enemy one prays against. |
7 The gorged throat revolts at honey, the hungry throat finds al bitterness sweet. | 7 One who is full, tramples on virgin honey; but to the man who is hungry, any bitter thing is sweet. |
8 Like a bird that strays from its nest, so is anyone who strays away from home. | 8 Like a bird that is far from its nest is a man who is far from his home. |
9 Oil and perfume gladden the heart, and the sweetness of friendship rather than self-reliance. | 9 Perfume and incense gladden the heart, but by grief the soul is torn asunder. |
10 Do not give up your friend or your father's friend; when trouble comes, do not go off to your brother'shouse, better a near neighbour than a distant brother. | 10 Your own friend and your father's friend forsake not; but if ruin befalls you, enter not a kinsman's house. Better is a neighbor near at hand than a brother far away. |
11 Learn to be wise, my child, and gladden my heart, that I may have an answer for anyone who insultsme. | 11 If you are wise, my son, you will gladden my heart, and I will be able to rebut him who tuants me. |
12 The discreet sees danger and takes shelter, simpletons go ahead and pay the penalty. | 12 The shrewd man perceives evil and hides; simpletons continue on and suffer the penalty. |
13 Take the man's clothes! He has gone surety for a stranger. Take a pledge from him, for personsunknown. | 13 Take his garment who becomes surety for another, and for the sake of a stranger, yield it up! |
14 Whoever at dawn loudly blesses his neighbour -- it will be reckoned to him as a curse. | 14 When one greets his neighbor with a loud voice in the early morning, a curse can be laid to his charge. |
15 The dripping of a gutter on a rainy day and a quarrelsome woman are alike; | 15 For a persistent leak on a rainy day the match is a quarrelsome woman. |
16 whoever can restrain her, can restrain the wind, and take a firm hold on grease. | 16 He who keeps her stores up a stormwind; he cannot tell north from south. |
17 Iron is sharpened by iron, one person is sharpened by contact with another. | 17 As iron sharpens iron, so man sharpens his fellow man. |
18 Whoever tends the fig tree eats its figs, whoever looks after his master wil be honoured. | 18 He who tends a fig tree eats its fruit, and he who is attentive to his master will be enriched. |
19 As water reflects face back to face, so one human heart reflects another. | 19 As one face differs from another, so does one human heart from another. |
20 Sheol and Perdition are never satisfied, insatiable, too, are human eyes. | 20 The nether world and the abyss are never satisfied; so too the eyes of men. |
21 A furnace for silver, a foundry for gold: a person is worth what his reputation is worth. | 21 As the crucible tests silver and the furnace gold, so a man is tested by the praise he receives. |
22 Pound a fool in a mortar, among grain with a pestle, his fol y wil not leave him. | 22 Though you should pound the fool to bits with the pestle, amid the grits in a mortar, his folly would not go out of him. |
23 Know your flocks' condition well, take good care of your herds; | 23 Take good care of your flocks, give careful attention to your herds; |
24 for riches do not last for ever, crowns do not hand themselves on from age to age. | 24 For wealth lasts not forever, nor even a crown from age to age. |
25 The grass once gone, the aftergrowth appearing, the hay gathered in from the mountains, | 25 When the grass is taken away and the aftergrowth appears, and the mountain greens are gathered in, |
26 you should have lambs to clothe you, goats to buy you a field, | 26 The lambs will provide you with clothing, and the goats will bring the price of a field, |
27 goat's milk sufficient to feed you, to feed your household and provide for your serving girls. | 27 And there will be ample goat's milk to supply you, to supply your household, and maintenance for your maidens. |