Verse 1
Better is a drye morsell with quietnesse, then a house full of fat offeryng with strife.
Verse 2
A discrete seruaunt shall haue rule ouer a lewde sonne, and shal haue heritage with the brethren.
Verse 3
As siluer is tryed in the fire, and golde in the furnace: so doth the Lorde proue the heartes.
Verse 4
A wicked body geueth heede to false lippes, and a lyer geueth eare to a deceiptfull tongue.
Verse 5
Who so scorneth the poore, blasphemeth his maker: and he that is glad at another mans hurt, shall not be vnpunished.
Verse 6
Childers children are a crowne of the aged, and the fathers are the honour of the children.
Verse 7
Speache of aucthoritie becommeth not a foole, much lesse a lying mouth then beseemeth a prince.
Verse 8
A gyft is as a precious stone vnto hym that hath it: but vnto whom soeuer it turneth, it maketh hym vnwise.
Verse 9
Who so couereth a fault, procureth loue: but he that discloseth it, deuideth very frendes.
Verse 10
One reproofe more feareth a wise man, then an hundred stripes doth a foole.
Verse 11
A seditious person seketh mischiefe, and a cruell messenger shalbe sent agaynst hym.
Verse 12
It were better to meete a shee beare robbed of her whelpes, then a foole trusting in his foolishnesse.
Verse 13
Who so rewardeth euill for good, euil shall not depart from his house.
Verse 14
The beginning of strife is, as when a man maketh an issue for water: therfore leaue of before the contention be medled with.
Verse 15
The Lorde hateth as well hym that iustifieth the vngodly, as him that condempneth the innocent.
Verse 16
Whereto hath a foole treasure in his hande to bye wisdome, seeing he hath no minde therto?
Verse 17
He is a frende that alway loueth, and in aduersitie a man shall knowe who is his brother.
Verse 18
Who so promiseth by the hande and is suretie for his neighbour, he is a foole.
Verse 19
He that delighteth in sinne, loueth strife: and who so setteth his doore to hye, seeketh destruction.
Verse 20
Who so hath a frowarde heart, obteyneth no good: and he that hath a double tongue, shall fall into mischiefe.
Verse 21
He that begetteth a foole, begetteth his sorowe: and the father of a foole can haue no ioy.
Verse 22
A mery heart make a lustie age: but a sorowfull minde dryeth vp the bones.
Verse 23
The vngodly taketh gyftes out of the bosome, to wrest the wayes of iudgement.
Verse 24
Wisdome shineth in the face of hym that hath vnderstanding: but the eyes of fooles wander throughout al landes.
Verse 25
An vndiscrete sonne is a griefe vnto his father: and an heauinesse vnto his mother.
Verse 26
Certaynely to condempne the iust is not good: nor to strike the gouernours whiche iudge rightly.
Verse 27
A wyse man vseth fewe wordes, and a man of vnderstanding is of a pacient spirite.
Verse 28
Yea, a very foole when he holdeth his tongue is counted wise: and he that stoppeth his lippes is esteemed prudent.