Fondare 1110 Risultati per: Tree Of Life
Poor man’s bread is poor man’s life; cheat him of it, and thou hast slain him; (Ecclesiasticus 34, 25)
sweat of his brow, or his life’s blood, what matters? (Ecclesiasticus 34, 26)
Good wife won is life well begun; a comforter thou hast, of thy own breed, a stay to support thee. (Ecclesiasticus 36, 26)
Closet thyself rather with some man of holy life, known to thee as God’s worshipper, (Ecclesiasticus 37, 15)
Ill counsel may make the heart veer round; four points its compass has, good and evil, life and death; and it is ever the tongue that sways it.✻ Shrewdness there is that can much impart, yet is its own enemy. (Ecclesiasticus 37, 21)
Son, as thy life goes on, make trial of thy appetites, and if harmful they be, give them no liberty; (Ecclesiasticus 37, 30)
Leave off thy sinning, thy life amend, purge thee of all thy guilt. (Ecclesiasticus 38, 10)
How shall he drink full draughts of wisdom that must guide the plough, that walks proud as any spearman while he goads on his team, all his life taken up with their labours, all his talk of oxen? (Ecclesiasticus 38, 26)
A life that shall leave such fame as one man wins in a thousand; a death not unrewarded. (Ecclesiasticus 39, 15)
What are the first needs of man’s life? Water, fire, iron, salt, milk, wheat-meal, honey, the grape-cluster, oil and clothing. (Ecclesiasticus 39, 31)
Look thou for thy meat to another’s table, I count thy life no life at all; what, owe thy very being to another man’s larder? (Ecclesiasticus 40, 30)
All that is of earth, to earth must needs return; from ban to bale is the cycle of a life ill lived. (Ecclesiasticus 41, 13)
