Proverbs 5:11
Yea, that thou mourne not at the last, when thou hast spent thy bodye and lustie youth, and then say:
Yea, that thou mourne not at the last, when thou hast spent thy bodye and lustie youth, and then say:
These verses are found using AI-powered semantic similarity based on meaning and context. Results may occasionally include unexpected connections.
22But while his fleshe is vpon him, it must haue sorowe: and his soule shall mourne within him.
9That thou geue not thy honour vnto other, and thy yeres to the cruell:
10That other men be not filled with thy vertues, and that thy labours come not in a straunge house.
21In so much that his body is cleane consumed away, and his bones appeare which before were not seene.
22His soule draweth vnto the graue, and his lyfe to death.
25Another dyeth in the bitternes of his soule, and neuer eateth with pleasure.
26They shall sleepe both alyke in the earth, and the wormes shall couer them.
1Go to nowe ye riche men, weepe and howle on your wretchednesse that shall come vpon you.
2Your riches is corrupt, your garmentes are motheaten:
3Your golde and siluer is cankred, and the rust of them shalbe a witnesse agaynst you, and shall eate your fleshe as it were fyre. Ye haue heaped treasure together in your last dayes.
9Be glad then (O thou young man) in thy youth, and let thy heart be merie in thy young dayes, folowe the wayes of thyne owne heart, and the lust of thyne eyes, but be thou sure that God shall bryng thee into iudgement for all these thinges.
10Put away displeasure out of thine heart, and remoue euill from thy body: for chyldhood and youth is but vanitie.
13Yet is there a sore plague which I haue seene vnder the sunne namely riches kept to the hurt of him that hath them in possession:
14For oft tymes they perishe with his great miserie and trouble: and yf he haue a chylde, it getteth nothyng.
15Lyke as he came naked out of his mothers wombe, so goeth he thyther agayne, and caryeth nothyng away with him of all his labour.
16This is a miserable plague, that he shall go euen as he came away: What helpeth it him then that he hath laboured in the wynde?
17All the dayes of his lyfe also he dyd eate in the darke, with great carefulnesse, sicknesse, and sorowe.
26Thou shalt come also to thy graue in a full age, like a corne sheafe cut downe in due season.
27Lo, this we our selues haue proued by experience, and euen thus it is: Hearken thou to it also, that thou mayest take heede to thy selfe.
11From his youth his bones are full of pleasures, but now shall it lye downe within him in the earth.
5But nowe it is come vpon thee, and thou art greeued: it toucheth thee, and thou art troubled.
14Thou shalt eate, and not haue inough: yea, thou shalt bring thy selfe downe in the middes of thee, thou shalt flee, but not escape, and those that thou wouldest saue, wyll I deliuer to the sworde.
5When men shall feare in hye places, and be afraide in the streetes, when the Almonde tree shall florishe and be laden with the grashopper, and when all lust shal passe: because man goeth to his long home, and the mourners go about the streetes.
15All fleshe shall come to naught at once, and all men shall turne againe vnto dust.
11So shall pouertie come vnto thee as one that trauayleth by the way, and necessitie like a weaponed man.
38And ye shall perishe among the heathen, and the lande of your enemies shall eate you vp.
17Neuerthelesse, thou hast commended the iudgement of the vngodly, and euen such a iudgement & sentence shalt thou suffer.
12Alas, why hated I nurture? why did my heart dispise correction?
13The heart is sorowfull euen in laughter, and the ende of myrth is heauinesse.
5The foole foldeth his handes together, and eateth vp his owne fleshe.
14And the apples that thy soule lusted after are departed from thee, and all thynges which were daintie and had in price are departed from thee, and thou shalt fynde them no more.
27Euen when the thyng that ye be afraide of falleth in sodenly like a storme, and your miserie lyke a tempest, yea when trouble and heauinesse commeth vpon you.
18Thy wayes and thy thoughtes haue brought thee vnto this, such is thine owne wickednesse and disobedience: and because it is a bitter thyng, it hath stricken thee to the heart.
12Your remembraunce is lyke vnto a sparke, and your bodies lyke the claye.
28And I as a rotten thing do consume away, as a garment that is moth eaten.
19And I wyll saye to my soule: Soule, thou hast much goods layed vp in store for many yeres, take thyne ease, eate, drynke, and be mery.
20But God sayde vnto hym: Thou foole, this nyght wyll they fetch awaye thy soule againe fro thee: Then whose shall those thynges be, which thou hast prouided?
8The morsels that thou hast eaten shalt thou parbreake, and loose those sweete wordes.
10For my life is wasted with sorow, and mine eares with mourning: my strength fayleth me because of mine iniquitie, and my bones are putrified.
11Thou doest chasten man, rebukyng him for sinne: thou as a moth doest consume his excellencie, for in very deede euery man is but vanitie. Selah.
10Thou hast consulted shame to thyne owne house, by destroying many people, & hast sinned against thyne owne soule.
25Wo vnto you that are full: for ye shall hunger. Wo vnto you that nowe laugh: for ye shall wayle and weepe.
11In that day shalt thou make thy plant to growe, and early in the mornyng shalt thou make thy seede to florishe: The haruest shalbe gone in the day of inheritaunce, and there shalbe sorowe without hope of comfort.
2It is better to go into an house of mourning, then into a banketting house: For there is the ende of all men, and he that is liuing taketh it to heart.
25But and yf ye do wickedly, then shall ye perishe, both ye and your king.
10The vngodly shall see it, and it wyll greeue hym, he wyll gnashe with his teethe and consume away: the desire of the vngodly shall perishe.
21The heritage that commeth hastylye at the first, shall not be blessed at the ende.
26And though after my skinne the wormes destroy this body, yet shall I see God in my fleshe:
15Slouthfulnesse bryngeth sleepe, and a soule accustomed with craft, shall suffer hunger.
16Then shouldest thou forget thy miserie, and thinke no more vpon it, then vpon the waters that runne by.