Textus Receptus Bibles
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| 5:1 | My sonne, attend vnto my wisedome, and bowe thine eare to my vnderstanding. |
| 5:2 | That thou mayest regard discretion, and that thy lips may keepe knowledge. |
| 5:3 | For the lips of a strange woman drop as an hony combe, and her mouth is smoother then oyle. |
| 5:4 | But her end is bitter as wormewood, sharpe as a two edged sword. |
| 5:5 | Her feete goe downe to death: her steps take hold on hell. |
| 5:6 | Lest thou shouldest ponder the path of life, her wayes are moueable, that thou canst not know them. |
| 5:7 | Heare me now therefore, O yee children: & depart not from the words of my mouth. |
| 5:8 | Remoue thy way farre from her, and come not nie the doore of her house: |
| 5:9 | Lest thou giue thine honour vnto others, and thy yeeres vnto the cruell: |
| 5:10 | Lest strangers be filled with thy wealth, and thy labors be in the house of a stranger, |
| 5:11 | And thou mourne at the last, when thy flesh and thy body are consumed, |
| 5:12 | And say, How haue I hated instruction, and my heart despised reproofe? |
| 5:13 | And haue not obeyed the voyce of my teachers, nor inclined mine eare to them that instructed me? |
| 5:14 | I was almost in all euill, in the midst of the congregation & assembly. |
| 5:15 | Drinke waters out of thine owne cisterne, and running waters out of thine owne well. |
| 5:16 | Let thy fountaines bee dispersed abroad, and riuers of waters in the streets. |
| 5:17 | Let them be onely thine owne, and not strangers with thee. |
| 5:18 | Let thy fountaine be blessed: and reioyce with the wife of thy youth. |
| 5:19 | Let her bee as the louing Hinde and pleasant Roe, let her breasts satisfie thee at all times, and be thou rauisht alwayes with her loue. |
| 5:20 | And why wilt thou, my sonne, be rauisht with a strange woman, and imbrace the bosome of a stranger? |
| 5:21 | For the wayes of man are before the eyes of the Lord, and he pondereth all his goings. |
| 5:22 | His owne iniquities shall take the wicked himselfe, and he shall be holden with the coards of his sinnes. |
| 5:23 | He shall die without instruction, and in the greatnesse of his folly he shal goe astray. |
| 5:1 | My sonne, hearken vnto my wisedome, and incline thine eare vnto my knowledge. |
| 5:2 | That thou maiest regarde counsell, and thy lippes obserue knowledge. |
| 5:3 | For the lippes of a strange woman drop as an honie combe, and her mouth is more soft then oyle. |
| 5:4 | But the end of her is bitter as wormewood, and sharpe as a two edged sworde. |
| 5:5 | Her feete goe downe to death, and her steps take holde on hell. |
| 5:6 | She weigheth not the way of life: her paths are moueable: thou canst not knowe them. |
| 5:7 | Heare yee me nowe therefore, O children, and depart not from the wordes of my mouth. |
| 5:8 | Keepe thy way farre from her, and come not neere the doore of her house, |
| 5:9 | Least thou giue thine honor vnto others, and thy yeeres to the cruell: |
| 5:10 | Least the stranger should be silled with thy strength, and thy labours bee in the house of a stranger, |
| 5:11 | And thou mourne at thine end, (when thou hast consumed thy flesh and thy bodie) |
| 5:12 | And say, How haue I hated instruction, and mine heart despised correction! |
| 5:13 | And haue not obeied the voyce of them that taught mee, nor enclined mine eare to them that instructed me! |
| 5:14 | I was almost brought into all euil in ye mids of the Congregation and assemblie. |
| 5:15 | Drinke the water of thy cisterne, and of the riuers out of the middes of thine owne well. |
| 5:16 | Let thy fountaines flow foorth, and the riuers of waters in the streetes. |
| 5:17 | But let them bee thine, euen thine onely, and not the strangers with thee. |
| 5:18 | Let thy fountaine be blessed, and reioyce with the wife of thy youth. |
| 5:19 | Let her be as the louing hinde and pleasant roe: let her brests satisfie thee at all times, and delite in her loue continually. |
| 5:20 | For why shouldest thou delite, my sonne, in a strange woman, or embrace the bosome of a stranger? |
| 5:21 | For the waies of man are before the eyes of the Lord, and he pondereth all his pathes. |
| 5:22 | His owne iniquities shall take the wicked himselfe, and he shall be holden with the cordes of his owne sinne. |
| 5:23 | Hee shall die for fault of instruction, and shall goe astray through his great follie. |
| 5:1 | My sonne, geue hede vnto my wysdome, and bowe thyne eare vnto my prudence: |
| 5:2 | that thou mayest regarde good councel, and that thy lippes maye kepe knowledge |
| 5:3 | For the lyppes of an harlot are a droppyng hony combe and her throte is more glisterynge them oyle. |
| 5:4 | But at the last she is as bytter as wormwod, and as sharpe as a two edged swerde. |
| 5:5 | Her fete go downe vnto death and her steppes pearse thorowe vnto hell. |
| 5:6 | Parchaunse thou dwellynge with her wylt ponder the path of lyfe? so vnstedfast are her wayes, that thou canst not knowe them. |
| 5:7 | Heare me nowe therfore (O my sonnes) & departe not from the wordes of my mouth. |
| 5:8 | Kepe thy waye farre from her, and come not nye the dores of her house. |
| 5:9 | That thou geue not thy strength vnto other, & thy yeares to the cruell. |
| 5:10 | That other men be not fylled with thy goodes, and that thy laboures come not in a straunge house. |
| 5:11 | Yee that thou mourne not at the last (when thou hast spent thy body and lusty greane youth) |
| 5:12 | and then saye: Alas, why hated I nourtoure: why did my herte despise correccion? |
| 5:13 | Wherfore was not I obedient vnto the voyce of my teachers, and herkened not vnto them that infourmed me? |
| 5:14 | I am come almost into all misfortune, in the myddest of the multitude and congregacion. |
| 5:15 | Drincke of the water, of thyne awne well and of the ryuers that runne out of thyne awne springes. |
| 5:16 | Let thy welles flowe out abroade, that there may he ryuers of water in the stretes: |
| 5:17 | but let them be onely thyne awne, and not straungers with the. |
| 5:18 | Let thy well be blessed and be glad with the wyfe of thy youth. |
| 5:19 | Louinge is the hynde, and frendly is the Roo: let her brestes alwaye satisfye the, and holde the euer content with her loue. |
| 5:20 | My sonne, why wylt thou haue pleasure in an harlot, & embrace the bosome, of another woman? |
| 5:21 | For euery mans wayes are open in the syght of the Lorde, and he pondreth all theyr goynges. |
| 5:22 | The wyckednesse of the vngodly shall catch hymselfe, and with the snares of hys awne synnes shall he be trapped. |
| 5:23 | He shall dye without amendement, and for hys greate folyshnesse he shall go astraye. |
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Green's Literal Translation (LITV). Copyright 1993 by Jay P. Green Sr.
All rights reserved. Jay P. Green Sr., Lafayette, IN. U.S.A. 47903.
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