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Words and Works of Wise Men and Fools

12 The words of a wise person[a] win him[b] favor,[c]
but the words[d] of a fool are self-destructive.[e]
13 At the beginning his words[f] are foolish
and at the end[g] his talk[h] is wicked madness,[i]
14 yet a fool keeps on babbling.[j]
No one knows what will happen;
who can tell him what will happen in the future?[k]

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Footnotes

  1. Ecclesiastes 10:12 tn Heb “of a wise man’s mouth.”
  2. Ecclesiastes 10:12 tn The phrase “win him” does not appear in the Hebrew text, but has been supplied in the translation for clarity.
  3. Ecclesiastes 10:12 tn Or “are gracious.” The antithetical parallelism suggests that חֵן (khen) does not denote “gracious character” but “[gain] favor” (e.g., Gen 39:21; Exod 3:21; 11:3; 12:36; Prov 3:4, 34; 13:15; 22:1; 28:23; Eccl 9:11); cf. HALOT 332 s.v. חֵן 2; BDB 336 s.v. חֵן 2. The LXX, on the other hand, rendered חֶן with χάρις (charis, “gracious”). The English versions are divided: “are gracious” (KJV, YLT, ASV, NASB, NIV) and “win him favor” (NEB, RSV, NRSV, NAB, MLB, NJPS, Moffatt).
  4. Ecclesiastes 10:12 tn Heb “lips.”
  5. Ecclesiastes 10:12 tn Heb “consume him”; or “engulf him.” The verb I בָּלַע (balaʿ, “to swallow”) creates a striking wordplay on the homonymic root II בָּלַע (“to speak eloquently”; HALOT 134-35 s.v בלע). Rather than speaking eloquently (II בלע, “to speak eloquently”), the fool utters words that are self-destructive (I בָּלַע, “to swallow, engulf”).
  6. Ecclesiastes 10:13 tn Heb “the words of his mouth.”
  7. Ecclesiastes 10:13 sn The terms “beginning” and “end” form a merism, a figure of speech in which two opposites are contrasted to indicate totality (e.g., Deut 6:7; Ps 139:8; Eccl 3:2-8). The words of a fool are madness from “start to finish.”
  8. Ecclesiastes 10:13 tn Heb “his mouth.”
  9. Ecclesiastes 10:13 tn Heb “madness of evil.”
  10. Ecclesiastes 10:14 tn Heb “and the fool multiplies words.” This line is best taken as the third line of a tricola encompassing 10:13-14a (NASB, NRSV, NJPS, Moffatt) rather than the first line of a tricola encompassing 10:14 (KJV, NEB, RSV, NAB, ASV, NIV). Several versions capture the sense of this line well: “a fool prates on and on” (Moffatt) and “Yet the fool talks and talks!” (NJPS).
  11. Ecclesiastes 10:14 tn Heb “after him”; or “after he [dies].”