1. Better a mouthful of dry bread with peace than a house filled with quarrelsome sacrifices.

2. A shrewd servant comes off better than an unworthy child, he will share the inheritance with the brothers.

3. A furnace for silver, a foundry for gold, but Yahweh for the testing of hearts!

4. An evil-doer pays heed to malicious talk, a liar listens to a slanderous tongue.

5. To mock the poor is to insult the Creator, no one who laughs at distress will go unpunished.

6. The crown of the aged is their children's children; the children's glory is their father.

7. Fine words do not become the foolish, false words become a prince still less.

8. A gift works like a talisman for one who holds it: it brings prosperity at every turn.

9. Whoever covers an offence promotes love, whoever again raises the matter divides friends.

10. A reproof makes more impression on a person of understanding than a hundred strokes on a fool.

11. The wicked person thinks of nothing but rebellion, but a cruel messenger will be sent to such a one.

12. Rather come on a bear robbed of her cubs than on a fool in his folly.

13. Disaster will never be far from the house of one who returns evil for good.

14. As well unleash a flood as start a dispute; desist before the quarrel breaks out.

15. To absolve the guilty and condemn the upright, both alike are abhorrent to Yahweh.

16. What good is money in the hand of a fool? To buy wisdom with it? The desire is not there.

17. A friend is a friend at all times, it is for adversity that a brother is born.

18. Whoever offers guarantees lacks sense and goes surety for a neighbour.

19. The double-dealer loves sin, the proud courts ruin.

20. The tortuous of heart finds no happiness, the perverse of speech falls into misery.

21. He who fathers a stupid child does so to his sorrow, the father of a fool knows no joy.

22. A glad heart is excellent medicine, a depressed spirit wastes the bones away.

23. Under cover of his cloak a bad man takes a gift to pervert the course of justice.

24. The intelligent has wisdom there before him, but the eyes of a fool range to the ends of the earth.

25. A foolish child is a father's sorrow, and the grief of her who gave the child birth.

26. To fine the upright is indeed a crime, to strike the noble is an injustice.

27. Whoever can control the tongue knows what knowledge is, someone of understanding keeps a cool temper.

28. If the fool holds his tongue, he may pass for wise; if he seals his lips, he may pass for intelligent.





“Não nos preocupemos quando Deus põe à prova a nossa fidelidade. Confiemo-nos à Sua vontade; é o que podemos fazer. Deus nos libertará, consolará e enorajará.” São Padre Pio de Pietrelcina