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ECCLESIASTES
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Chapter 1
Eccl CPDV 1:1  The words of Ecclesiastes, the son of David, the king of Jerusalem.
Eccl CPDV 1:2  Ecclesiastes said: Vanity of vanities! Vanity of vanities, and all is vanity!
Eccl CPDV 1:3  What more does a man have from all his labor, as he labors under the sun?
Eccl CPDV 1:4  A generation passes away, and a generation arrives. But the earth stands forever.
Eccl CPDV 1:5  The sun rises and sets; it returns to its place, and from there, being born again,
Eccl CPDV 1:6  it circles through the south, and arcs toward the north. The spirit continues on, illuminating everything in its circuit, and turning again in its cycle.
Eccl CPDV 1:7  All rivers enter into the sea, and the sea does not overflow. To the place from which the rivers go out, they return, so that they may flow again.
Eccl CPDV 1:8  Such things are difficult; man is not able to explain them with words. The eye is not satisfied by seeing, nor is the ear fulfilled by hearing.
Eccl CPDV 1:9  What is it that has existed? The same shall exist in the future. What is it that has been done? The same shall continue to be done.
Eccl CPDV 1:10  There is nothing new under the sun. Neither is anyone able to say: “Behold, this is new!” For it has already been brought forth in the ages that were before us.
Eccl CPDV 1:11  There is no remembrance of the former things. Indeed, neither shall there be any record of past things in the future, for those who will exist at the very end.
Eccl CPDV 1:12  I, Ecclesiastes, was king of Israel at Jerusalem.
Eccl CPDV 1:13  And I was determined in my mind to seek and to investigate wisely, concerning all that is done under the sun. God has given this very difficult task to the sons of men, so that they may be occupied by it.
Eccl CPDV 1:14  I have seen all that is done under the sun, and behold: all is emptiness and an affliction of the spirit.
Eccl CPDV 1:15  The perverse are unwilling to be corrected, and the number of the foolish is boundless.
Eccl CPDV 1:16  I have spoken in my heart, saying: “Behold, I have achieved greatness, and I have surpassed all the wise who were before me in Jerusalem.” And my mind has contemplated many things wisely, and I have learned.
Eccl CPDV 1:17  And I have dedicated my heart, so that I may know prudence and doctrine, and also error and foolishness. Yet I recognize that, in these things also, there is hardship, and affliction of the spirit.
Eccl CPDV 1:18  Because of this, with much wisdom there is also much anger. And whoever adds knowledge, also adds hardship.
Chapter 2
Eccl CPDV 2:1  I said in my heart: “I will go forth and overflow with delights, and I will enjoy good things.” And I saw that this, too, is emptiness.
Eccl CPDV 2:2  Laughter, I considered an error. And to rejoicing, I said: “Why are you being deceived, to no purpose?”
Eccl CPDV 2:3  I decided in my heart to withdraw my flesh from wine, so that I might bring my mind to wisdom, and turn away from foolishness, until I see what is useful for the sons of men, and what they ought to do under the sun, during the number of the days of their life.
Eccl CPDV 2:4  I magnified my works. I built houses for myself, and I planted vineyards.
Eccl CPDV 2:5  I made gardens and orchards. And I planted them with trees of every kind.
Eccl CPDV 2:6  And I dug out fishponds of water, so that I might irrigate the forest of growing trees.
Eccl CPDV 2:7  I obtained men and women servants, and I had a great family, as well as herds of cattle and great flocks of sheep, beyond all who were before me in Jerusalem.
Eccl CPDV 2:8  I amassed for myself silver and gold, and the wealth of kings and governors. I chose men and women singers, and the delights of the sons of men, bowls and pitchers for the purpose of pouring wine.
Eccl CPDV 2:9  And I surpassed in opulence all who were before me in Jerusalem. My wisdom also persevered with me.
Eccl CPDV 2:10  And all that my eyes desired, I did not refuse them. Neither did I prohibit my heart from enjoying every pleasure, and from amusing itself in the things that I had prepared. And I regarded this as my share, as if I were making use of my own labors.
Eccl CPDV 2:11  But when I turned myself toward all the works that my hands had made, and to the labors in which I had perspired to no purpose, I saw emptiness and affliction of the soul in all things, and that nothing is permanent under the sun.
Eccl CPDV 2:12  I continued on, so as to contemplate wisdom, as well as error and foolishness. “What is man,” I said, “that he would be able to follow his Maker, the King?”
Eccl CPDV 2:13  And I saw that wisdom surpasses foolishness, so much so that they differ as much as light from darkness.
Eccl CPDV 2:14  The eyes of a wise man are in his head. A foolish man walks in darkness. Yet I learned that one would pass away like the other.
Eccl CPDV 2:15  And I said in my heart: “If the death of both the foolish and myself will be one, how does it benefit me, if I have given myself more thoroughly to the work of wisdom?” And as I was speaking within my own mind, I perceived that this, too, is emptiness.
Eccl CPDV 2:16  For there will not be a remembrance in perpetuity of the wise, nor of the foolish. And the future times will cover everything together, with oblivion. The learned die in a manner similar to the unlearned.
Eccl CPDV 2:17  And, because of this, my life wearied me, since I saw that everything under the sun is evil, and everything is empty and an affliction of the spirit.
Eccl CPDV 2:18  Again, I detested all my efforts, by which I had earnestly labored under the sun, to be taken up by an heir after me,
Eccl CPDV 2:19  though I know not whether he will be wise or foolish. And yet he will have power over my labors, in which I have toiled and been anxious. And is there anything else so empty?
Eccl CPDV 2:20  Therefore, I ceased, and my heart renounced further laboring under the sun.
Eccl CPDV 2:21  For when someone labors in wisdom, and doctrine, and prudence, he leaves behind what he has obtained to one who is idle. So this, too, is emptiness and a great burden.
Eccl CPDV 2:22  For how can a man benefit from all his labor and affliction of spirit, by which he has been tormented under the sun?
Eccl CPDV 2:23  All his days have been filled with sorrows and hardships; neither does he rest his mind, even in the night. And is this not emptiness?
Eccl CPDV 2:24  Is it not better to eat and drink, and to show his soul the good things of his labors? And this is from the hand of God.
Eccl CPDV 2:25  So who will feast and overflow with delights as much as I have?
Eccl CPDV 2:26  God has given, to the man who is good in his sight, wisdom, and knowledge, and rejoicing. But to the sinner, he has given affliction and needless worrying, so as to add, and to gather, and to deliver, to him who has pleased God. But this, too, is emptiness and a hollow worrying of the mind.
Chapter 3
Eccl CPDV 3:1  All things have their time, and all things under heaven continue during their interval.
Eccl CPDV 3:2  A time to be born, and a time to die. A time to plant, and a time to pull up what was planted.
Eccl CPDV 3:3  A time to kill, and a time to heal. A time to tear down, and a time to build up.
Eccl CPDV 3:4  A time to weep, and a time to laugh. A time to mourn, and a time to dance.
Eccl CPDV 3:5  A time to scatter stones, and a time to gather. A time to embrace, and a time to be far from embraces.
Eccl CPDV 3:6  A time to gain, and a time to lose. A time to keep, and a time to cast away.
Eccl CPDV 3:7  A time to rend, and a time to sew. A time to be silent, and a time to speak.
Eccl CPDV 3:8  A time of love, and a time of hatred. A time of war, and a time of peace.
Eccl CPDV 3:10  I have seen the affliction that God has given to the sons of men, in order that they may be occupied by it.
Eccl CPDV 3:11  He has made all things good in their time, and he has handed over the world to their disputes, so that man may not discover the work which God made from the beginning, even until the end.
Eccl CPDV 3:12  And I realize that there is nothing better than to rejoice, and to do well in this life.
Eccl CPDV 3:13  For this is a gift from God: when each man eats and drinks, and sees the good results of his labor.
Eccl CPDV 3:14  I have learned that all the works which God has made continue on, in perpetuity. We are not able to add anything, nor to take anything away, from those things which God has made in order that he may be feared.
Eccl CPDV 3:15  What has been made, the same continues. What is in the future, has already existed. And God restores what has passed away.
Eccl CPDV 3:16  I saw under the sun: instead of judgment, impiety, and instead of justice, iniquity.
Eccl CPDV 3:17  And I said in my heart: “God will judge the just and the impious, and then the time for each matter shall be.”
Eccl CPDV 3:18  I said in my heart, about the sons of men, that God would test them, and reveal them to be like wild animals.
Eccl CPDV 3:19  For this reason, the passing away of man and of beasts is one, and the condition of both is equal. For as a man dies, so also do they die. All things breathe similarly, and man has nothing more than beast; for all these are subject to vanity.
Eccl CPDV 3:20  And all things continue on to one place; for from the earth they were made, and unto the earth they shall return together.
Eccl CPDV 3:21  Who knows if the spirit of the sons of Adam ascend upward, and if the spirit of the beasts descend downward?
Eccl CPDV 3:22  And I have discovered nothing to be better than for a man to rejoice in his work: for this is his portion. And who shall add to him, so that he may know the things that will occur after him?
Chapter 4
Eccl CPDV 4:1  I turned myself to other things, and I saw the false accusations which are carried out under the sun, and the tears of the innocent, and that there was no one to console them; and that they were not able to withstand their violence, being destitute of all help.
Eccl CPDV 4:2  And so, I praised the dead more than the living.
Eccl CPDV 4:3  And happier than both of these, I judged him to be, who has not yet been born, and who has not yet seen the evils which are done under the sun.
Eccl CPDV 4:4  Again, I was contemplating all the labors of men. And I took notice that their endeavors are open to the envy of their neighbor. And so, in this, too, there is emptiness and superfluous anxiety.
Eccl CPDV 4:5  The foolish man folds his hands together, and he consumes his own flesh, saying:
Eccl CPDV 4:6  “A handful with rest is better than both hands filled with labors and with affliction of the soul.”
Eccl CPDV 4:7  While considering this, I also discovered another vanity under the sun.
Eccl CPDV 4:8  He is one, and he does not have a second: no son, no brother. And yet he does not cease to labor, nor are his eyes satisfied with wealth, nor does he reflect, saying: “For whom do I labor and cheat my soul of good things?” In this, too, is emptiness and a most burdensome affliction.
Eccl CPDV 4:9  Therefore, it is better for two to be together, than for one to be alone. For they have the advantage of their companionship.
Eccl CPDV 4:10  If one falls, he shall be supported by the other. Woe to one who is alone. For when he falls, he has no one to lift him up.
Eccl CPDV 4:11  And if two are sleeping, they warm one another. How can one person alone be warmed?
Eccl CPDV 4:12  And if a man can prevail against one, two may withstand him, and a threefold cord is broken with difficulty.
Eccl CPDV 4:13  Better is a boy, poor and wise, than a king, old and foolish, who does not know to look ahead for the sake of posterity.
Eccl CPDV 4:14  For sometimes, one goes forth from prison and chains, to a kingdom, while another, born to kingly power, is consumed by need.
Eccl CPDV 4:15  I saw all the living who are walking under the sun, and I saw the next generation, who shall rise up in their places.
Eccl CPDV 4:16  The number of people, out of all who existed before these, is boundless. And those who will exist afterwards shall not rejoice in them. But this, too, is emptiness and an affliction of the spirit.
Eccl CPDV 4:17  Guard your foot, when you step into the house of God, and draw near, so that you may listen. For obedience is much better than the sacrifices of the foolish, who do not know the evil that they are doing.
Chapter 5
Eccl CPDV 5:1  You should not speak anything rashly, nor should your heart be hasty to present a word before God. For God is in heaven, and you are on earth. For this reason, let your words be few.
Eccl CPDV 5:2  Dreams follow many worries, and in many words foolishness will be found.
Eccl CPDV 5:3  If you have vowed anything to God, you should not delay to repay it. And whatever you have vowed, render it. But an unfaithful and foolish promise displeases him.
Eccl CPDV 5:4  And it is much better not to make a vow, than, after a vow, not to fulfill what was promised.
Eccl CPDV 5:5  You should not use your mouth so as to cause your flesh to sin. And you should not say, in the sight of an Angel, “There is no Providence.” For God, being angry at your words, may scatter all the works of your hands.
Eccl CPDV 5:6  Where there are many dreams, there are many vanities and innumerable words. Yet truly, you must fear God.
Eccl CPDV 5:7  If you see false accusations against the indigent, and violent judgments, and subverted justice in the government, do not be surprised over this situation. For those in high places have others who are higher, and there are still others, more eminent, over these.
Eccl CPDV 5:8  But finally, there is the King who rules over the entire earth, which is subject to him.
Eccl CPDV 5:9  A greedy man will not be satisfied by money. And whoever loves wealth will reap no fruit from it. Therefore, this, too, is emptiness.
Eccl CPDV 5:10  Where there are many riches, there will also be many to consume these things. And how does it benefit the one who possesses, except that he discerns the wealth with his own eyes?
Eccl CPDV 5:11  Sleep is sweet to one who works, whether he consumes little or much. But the satiation of a wealthy man will not permit him to sleep.
Eccl CPDV 5:12  There is even another most burdensome infirmity, which I have seen under the sun: wealth kept to the harm of the owner.
Eccl CPDV 5:13  For they are lost in a most grievous affliction. He has produced a son, who will be in the utmost destitution.
Eccl CPDV 5:14  Just as he went forth naked from his mother’s womb, so shall he return, and he shall take nothing with him from his labors.
Eccl CPDV 5:15  It is an utterly miserable infirmity that, in the same manner as he has arrived, so shall he return. How then does it benefit him, since he has labored for the wind?
Eccl CPDV 5:16  All the days of his life he consumes: in darkness, and with many worries, and in distress as well as sadness.
Eccl CPDV 5:17  And so, this has seemed good to me: that a person should eat and drink, and should enjoy the fruits of his labor, in which he has toiled under the sun, for the number of the days of his life that God has given him. For this is his portion.
Eccl CPDV 5:18  And this is a gift from God: that every man to whom God has given wealth and resources, and to whom he has granted the ability to consume these, may enjoy his portion, and may find joy in his labors.
Eccl CPDV 5:19  And then he will not fully remember the days of his life, because God occupies his heart with delights.
Chapter 6
Eccl CPDV 6:1  There is also another evil, which I have seen under the sun, and, indeed, it is frequent among men.
Eccl CPDV 6:2  It is a man to whom God has given wealth, and resources, and honor; and out of all that he desires, nothing is lacking to his life; yet God does not grant him the ability to consume these things, but instead a man who is a stranger will devour them. This is emptiness and a great misfortune.
Eccl CPDV 6:3  If a man were to produce one hundred children, and to live for many years, and to attain to an age of many days, and if his soul were to make no use of the goods of his resources, and if he were lacking even a burial: concerning such a man, I declare that a miscarried child is better than he.
Eccl CPDV 6:4  For he arrives without a purpose and he continues on into darkness, and his name shall be wiped away, into oblivion.
Eccl CPDV 6:5  He has not seen the sun, nor recognized the difference between good and evil.
Eccl CPDV 6:6  Even if he were to live for two thousand years, and yet not thoroughly enjoy what is good, does not each one hurry on to the same place?
Eccl CPDV 6:7  Every labor of man is for his mouth, but his soul will not be filled.
Eccl CPDV 6:8  What do the wise have which is more than the foolish? And what does the pauper have, except to continue on to that place, where there is life?
Eccl CPDV 6:9  It is better to see what you desire, than to desire what you cannot know. But this, too, is emptiness and a presumption of spirit.
Eccl CPDV 6:10  Whoever shall be in the future, his name has already been called. And it is known that he is a man and that he is not able to contend in judgment against one who is stronger than himself.
Eccl CPDV 6:11  There are many words, and many of these, in disputes, hold much emptiness.
Chapter 7
Eccl CPDV 7:1  Why is it necessary for a man to seek things that are greater than himself, when he does not know what is advantageous for himself in his life, during the number of the days of his sojourn, and while time passes by like a shadow? Or who will be able to tell him what will be in the future after him under the sun?
Eccl CPDV 7:2  A good name is better than precious ointments, and a day of death is better than a day of birth.
Eccl CPDV 7:3  It is better to go to a house of mourning, than to a house of feasting. For in the former, we are admonished about the end of all things, so that the living consider what may be in the future.
Eccl CPDV 7:4  Anger is better than laughter. For through the sadness of the countenance, the soul of one who offends may be corrected.
Eccl CPDV 7:5  The heart of the wise is a place of mourning, and the heart of the foolish is a place of rejoicing.
Eccl CPDV 7:6  It is better to be corrected by a wise man, than to be deceived by the false praise of the foolish.
Eccl CPDV 7:7  For, like the crackling of thorns burning under a pot, so is the laughter of the foolish. But this, too, is emptiness.
Eccl CPDV 7:8  A false accusation troubles the wise man and saps the strength of his heart.
Eccl CPDV 7:9  The end of a speech is better than the beginning. Patience is better than arrogance.
Eccl CPDV 7:10  Do not be quickly moved to anger. For anger resides in the sinews of the foolish.
Eccl CPDV 7:11  You should not say: “What do you think is the reason that the former times were better than they are now?” For this type of question is foolish.
Eccl CPDV 7:12  Wisdom with riches is more useful and more advantageous, for those who see the sun.
Eccl CPDV 7:13  For as wisdom protects, so also does money protect. But learning and wisdom have this much more: that they grant life to one who possesses them.
Eccl CPDV 7:14  Consider the works of God, that no one is able to correct whomever he has despised.
Eccl CPDV 7:15  In good times, enjoy good things, but beware of an evil time. For just as God has established the one, so also the other, in order that man may not find any just complaint against him.
Eccl CPDV 7:16  I also saw this, in the days of my vanity: a just man perishing in his justice, and an impious man living a long time in his malice.
Eccl CPDV 7:17  Do not try to be overly just, and do not try to be more wise than is necessary, lest you become stupid.
Eccl CPDV 7:18  Do not act with great impiety, and do not choose to be foolish, lest you die before your time.
Eccl CPDV 7:19  It is good for you to support a just man. Furthermore, you should not withdraw your hand from him, for whoever fears God, neglects nothing.
Eccl CPDV 7:20  Wisdom has strengthened the wise more than ten princes of a city.
Eccl CPDV 7:21  But there is no just man on earth, who does good and does not sin.
Eccl CPDV 7:22  So then, do not attach your heart to every word that is spoken, lest perhaps you may hear your servant speaking ill of you.
Eccl CPDV 7:23  For your conscience knows that you, too, have repeatedly spoken evil of others.
Eccl CPDV 7:24  I have tested everything in wisdom. I have said: “I will be wise.” And wisdom withdrew farther from me,
Eccl CPDV 7:25  so much more than it was before. Wisdom is very profound, so who shall reveal her?
Eccl CPDV 7:26  I have examined all things in my soul, so that I may know, and consider, and seek out wisdom and reason, and so that I may recognize the impiety of the foolish, and the error of the imprudent.
Eccl CPDV 7:27  And I have discovered a woman more bitter than death: she who is like the snare of a hunter, and whose heart is like a net, and whose hands are like chains. Whoever pleases God shall flee from her. But whoever is a sinner shall be seized by her.
Eccl CPDV 7:28  Behold, Ecclesiastes said, I have discovered these things, one after another, in order that I might discover the explanation
Eccl CPDV 7:29  which my soul still seeks and has not found. One man among a thousand, I have found; a woman among them all, I have not found.
Eccl CPDV 7:30  This alone have I discovered: that God made man righteous, and yet he has adulterated himself with innumerable questions. Who is so great as the wise? And who has understood the meaning of the word?
Chapter 8
Eccl CPDV 8:1  The wisdom of a man shines in his countenance, and even the expression of a most powerful man will change.
Eccl CPDV 8:2  I heed the mouth of the king, and the commandment of an oath to God.
Eccl CPDV 8:3  You should not hastily withdraw from his presence, nor should you remain in an evil work. For all that pleases him, he will do.
Eccl CPDV 8:4  And his word is filled with authority. Neither is anyone able to say to him: “Why are you acting this way?”
Eccl CPDV 8:5  Whoever keeps the commandment will not experience evil. The heart of a wise man understands the time to respond.
Eccl CPDV 8:6  For every matter, there is a time and an opportunity, as well as many difficulties, for man.
Eccl CPDV 8:7  For he is ignorant of the past, and he is able to know nothing of the future by means of a messenger.
Eccl CPDV 8:8  It is not in the power of a man to prohibit the spirit, nor does he have authority over the day of death, nor is he permitted to rest when war breaks out, and neither will impiety save the impious.
Eccl CPDV 8:9  I have considered all these things, and I have applied my heart to all the works which are being done under the sun. Sometimes one man rules over another to his own harm.
Eccl CPDV 8:10  I have seen the impious buried. These same, while they were still living, were in the holy place, and they were praised in the city as workers of justice. But this, too, is emptiness.
Eccl CPDV 8:11  For the sons of men perpetrate evils without any fear, because judgment is not pronounced quickly against the evil.
Eccl CPDV 8:12  But although a sinner may do evil of himself one hundred times, and by patience still endure, I realize that it will be well with those who fear God, who revere his face.
Eccl CPDV 8:13  So, may it not go well with the impious, and may his days not be prolonged. And let those who do not fear the face of the Lord pass away like a shadow.
Eccl CPDV 8:14  There is also another vanity, which is done upon the earth. There are the just, to whom evils happen, as though they had done the works of the impious. And there are the impious, who are very secure, as though they possess the deeds of the just. But this, too, I judge to be a very great vanity.
Eccl CPDV 8:15  And so, I praised rejoicing, because there was no good for a man under the sun, except to eat and drink, and to be cheerful, and because he may take nothing with him from his labor in the days of his life, which God has given to him under the sun.
Eccl CPDV 8:16  And I applied my heart, so that I might know wisdom, and so that I might understand a disturbance that turns upon the earth: it is a man, who takes no sleep with his eyes, day and night.
Eccl CPDV 8:17  And I understood that man is able to find no explanation for all those works of God which are done under the sun. And so, the more that he labors to seek, so much the less does he find. Yes, even if a wise man were to claim that he knows, he would not be able to discover it.
Chapter 9
Eccl CPDV 9:1  I have drawn all these things through my heart, so that I might carefully understand. There are just men as well as wise men, and their works are in the hand of God. And yet a man does not know so much as whether he is worthy of love or of hatred.
Eccl CPDV 9:2  But all things in the future remain uncertain, because all things happen equally to the just and to the impious, to the good and to the bad, to the pure and to the impure, to those who offer sacrifices and to those who despise sacrifices. As the good are, so also are sinners. As those who commit perjury are, so also are those who swear to the truth.
Eccl CPDV 9:3  This is a very great burden among all things that are done under the sun: that the same things happen to everyone. And when the hearts of the sons of men are filled with malice and contempt in their lives, afterwards they shall be dragged down to hell.
Eccl CPDV 9:4  There is no one who lives forever, or who even has confidence in this regard. A living dog is better than a dead lion.
Eccl CPDV 9:5  For the living know that they themselves will die, yet truly the dead know nothing anymore, nor do they have any recompense. For the memory of them is forgotten.
Eccl CPDV 9:6  Likewise, love and hatred and envy have all perished together, nor have they any place in this age and in the work which is done under the sun.
Eccl CPDV 9:7  So then, go and eat your bread with rejoicing, and drink your wine with gladness. For your works are pleasing to God.
Eccl CPDV 9:8  Let your garments be white at all times, and let not oil be absent from your head.
Eccl CPDV 9:9  Enjoy life with the wife whom you love, all the days of your uncertain life which have been given to you under the sun, during all the time of your vanity. For this is your portion in life and in your labor, with which you labor under the sun.
Eccl CPDV 9:10  Whatever your hand is able to do, do it earnestly. For neither work, nor reason, nor wisdom, nor knowledge will exist in death, toward which you are hurrying.
Eccl CPDV 9:11  I turned myself toward another thing, and I saw that under the sun, the race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong, nor bread to the wise, nor wealth to the learned, nor grace to the skillful: but there is a time and an end for all these things.
Eccl CPDV 9:12  Man does not know his own end. But, just as fish are caught with a hook, and birds are captured with a snare, so are men seized in the evil time, when it will suddenly overwhelm them.
Eccl CPDV 9:13  This wisdom, likewise, I have seen under the sun, and I have examined it intensely.
Eccl CPDV 9:14  There was a small city, with a few men in it. There came against it a great king, who surrounded it, and built fortifications all around it, and the blockade was completed.
Eccl CPDV 9:15  And there was found within it, a poor and wise man, and he freed the city through his wisdom, and nothing was recorded afterward of that poor man.
Eccl CPDV 9:16  And so, I declared that wisdom is better than strength. But how is it, then, that the wisdom of the poor man is treated with contempt, and his words are not heeded?
Eccl CPDV 9:17  The words of the wise are heard in silence, more so than the outcry of a prince among the foolish.
Eccl CPDV 9:18  Wisdom is better than weapons of war. And whoever offends in one thing, shall lose many good things.
Chapter 10
Eccl CPDV 10:1  Dying flies ruin the sweetness of the ointment. Wisdom and glory is more precious than a brief and limited foolishness.
Eccl CPDV 10:2  The heart of a wise man is in his right hand, and the heart of a foolish man is in his left hand.
Eccl CPDV 10:3  Moreover, as a foolish man is walking along the way, even though he himself is unwise, he considers everyone to be foolish.
Eccl CPDV 10:4  If the spirit of one who holds authority rises over you, do not leave your place, because attentiveness will cause the greatest sins to cease.
Eccl CPDV 10:5  There is an evil which I have seen under the sun, proceeding from the presence of a prince, as if by mistake:
Eccl CPDV 10:6  a foolish man appointed to a high dignity, and the rich sitting beneath him.
Eccl CPDV 10:7  I have seen servants on horses, and princes walking on the ground like servants.
Eccl CPDV 10:8  Whoever digs a pit will fall into it. And whoever tears apart a hedge, a snake will bite him.
Eccl CPDV 10:9  Whoever carries away stones will be harmed by them. And whoever cuts down trees will be wounded by them.
Eccl CPDV 10:10  If the iron is dull, and if it was not that way before, but has been made dull by much labor, then it will be sharpened. And wisdom will follow after diligence.
Eccl CPDV 10:11  Whoever slanders in secret is nothing less than a snake that bites silently.
Eccl CPDV 10:12  Words from the mouth of a wise man are graceful, but the lips of a foolish man will throw him down with violence.
Eccl CPDV 10:13  At the beginning of his words is foolishness, and at the end of his talk is a most grievous error.
Eccl CPDV 10:14  The fool multiplies his words. A man does not know what has been before him, and who is able to reveal to him what will be in the future after him?
Eccl CPDV 10:15  The hardship of the foolish will afflict those who do not know to go into the city.
Eccl CPDV 10:16  Woe to you, the land whose king is a boy, and whose princes consume in the morning.
Eccl CPDV 10:17  Blessed is the land whose king is noble, and whose princes eat at the proper time, for refreshment and not for self-indulgence.
Eccl CPDV 10:18  By laziness, a framework shall be brought down, and by the weakness of hands, a house shall collapse through.
Eccl CPDV 10:19  While laughing, they make bread and wine, so that the living may feast. And all things are obedient to money.
Eccl CPDV 10:20  You should not slander the king, even in your thoughts, and you should not speak evil of a wealthy man, even in your private chamber. For even the birds of the air will carry your voice, and whatever has wings will announce your opinion.
Chapter 11
Eccl CPDV 11:1  Cast your bread over running waters. For, after a long time, you shall find it again.
Eccl CPDV 11:2  Give a portion to seven, and indeed even to eight. For you do not know what evil may be upon the earth in the future.
Eccl CPDV 11:3  If the clouds have been filled, they will pour forth rain upon the earth. If a tree falls to the south, or to the north, or to whatever direction it may fall, there it shall remain.
Eccl CPDV 11:4  Whoever heeds the wind will not sow. And whoever considers the clouds will never reap.
Eccl CPDV 11:5  In the same manner that you do not know the way of the spirit, nor the way that bones are joined together in the womb of a pregnant woman, so you do not know the works of God, who is the Maker of all.
Eccl CPDV 11:6  In the morning, sow your seed, and in the evening, do not let your hand cease. For you do not know which of these may rise up, the one or the other. But if both rise up together, so much the better.
Eccl CPDV 11:7  Light is pleasant, and it is delightful for the eyes to see the sun.
Eccl CPDV 11:8  If a man lives for many years, and if he has rejoiced in all of these, he must remember the many days of the dark times, which, when they will have arrived, will accuse the past of vanity.
Eccl CPDV 11:9  So then, rejoice, O young man, in your youth, and let your heart remain in what is good during the days of your youth. And walk in the ways of your heart, and with the perception of your eyes. And know that, concerning all these things, God will bring you to judgment.
Eccl CPDV 11:10  Remove anger from your heart, and set aside evil from your flesh. For youth and pleasure are empty.
Chapter 12
Eccl CPDV 12:1  Remember your Creator in the days of your youth, before the time of affliction arrives and the years draw near, about which you will say, “These do not please me.”
Eccl CPDV 12:2  Before the sun, and the light, and the moon, and the stars are darkened and the clouds return after the rain,
Eccl CPDV 12:3  when the guardians of the house will tremble, and the strongest men will waver, and those who grind grain will be idle, except for a small number, and those who look through the keyholes will be darkened.
Eccl CPDV 12:4  And they will close the doors to the street, when the voice of he who grinds the grain will be humbled, and they will be disturbed at the sound of a flying thing, and all the daughters of song shall become deaf.
Eccl CPDV 12:5  Likewise, they will fear the things above them, and they will dread the way. The almond tree will flourish; the locust will be fattened; and the caper plant will be scattered, because man shall go into the house of his eternity, and the mourners shall wander around in the street.
Eccl CPDV 12:6  Before the silver cord is broken, and the golden band pulls away, and the pitcher is crushed over the fountain, and the wheel is broken above the cistern,
Eccl CPDV 12:7  and the dust returns to its earth, from which it was, and the spirit returns to God, who granted it.
Eccl CPDV 12:8  Vanity of vanities, said Ecclesiastes, and all is vanity!
Eccl CPDV 12:9  And since Ecclesiastes was very wise, he taught the people, and he described what he had accomplished. And while searching, he composed many parables.
Eccl CPDV 12:10  He sought useful words, and he wrote most righteous words, which were full of truth.
Eccl CPDV 12:11  The words of the wise are like a goad, and like nails deeply fastened, which, through the counsel of teachers, are set forth by one pastor.
Eccl CPDV 12:12  You should require no more than this, my son. For there is no end to the making of many books. And excessive study is an affliction to the flesh.
Eccl CPDV 12:13  Let us all listen together to the end of the discourse. Fear God, and observe his commandments. This is everything for man.
Eccl CPDV 12:14  And so, for all that is done and for each error, God will bring judgment: whether it was good or evil.