1As dead flies cause the perfumer's ointment to stink and ferment; so does a little folly to one esteemed for wisdom and honor. 2A wise man's heart is at his right hand; but a fool's heart at his left. 3Even when a fool walks along the way, his heart fails; and he says to everyone that he is a fool. 4If the spirit of the ruler rises up against you, remain quietly where you are; for quietness heals great offenses. 5There is an evil I have seen under the sun, like an error which comes from a ruler's presence: 6Folly is set in great dignity, and the rich sit in a low place. 7I have seen servants on horses, and princes walking on the ground like servants. 8He who digs a pit may fall into it; and whoever breaks through a hedge may be bitten by a snake. 9Whoever removes stones may be hurt by them; and he who splits wood may be endangered by it. 10If the iron is blunt, and he does not whet the edge, then he must exert more strength. But wisdom gives excellent success. 11The snake may bite if it is not charmed; and a master of the tongue is no better. 12The words of a wise mouth are gracious; but the lips of a fool will swallow him up. 13The words of his mouth begin with foolishness; and the end of his talk is wicked madness. 14A fool also multiplies words; a man does not know what shall be; and who can tell him what shall be after him? 15The labor of fools wearies him, because he does not even know how to go to the city. 16Woe to you, O land, when your king is a child, and your rulers eat in the morning. 17Blessed are you, O land, when your king is the son of nobles, and your rulers eat at the proper time, for strength, and not for drunkenness! 18Because of laziness the building decays; and through idleness of hands the house leaks. 19Food is made for laughter, and wine makes merry; but money is the answer to everything. 20Do not curse the king, not even in your thoughts; and do not curse the rich, not even in your bedroom; for a bird of the air may carry the voice, and that which has wings shall tell the matter.
Jamieson Fausset Brown Bible Commentary 1 (Ecc. 10:1-20)
Following up
Eccl 9:18.
him that is in reputation--for example, David (
2Sam 12:14); Solomon (1Ki. 11:1-43); Jehoshaphat (2Ch. 18:1-34;
2Chr 19:2); Josiah (
2Chr 35:22). The more delicate the perfume, the more easily spoiled is the ointment. Common oil is not so liable to injury. So the higher a man's religious character is, the more hurt is caused by a sinful folly in him. Bad savor is endurable in oil, but not in what professes to be, and is compounded by the perfumer ("apothecary") for, fragrance. "Flies" answer to "a little folly" (sin), appropriately, being small (
1Cor 5:6); also, "Beelzebub" means prince of flies. "Ointment" answers to "reputation" (
Eccl 7:1;
Gen 34:30). The verbs are singular, the noun plural, implying that each of the flies causes the stinking savor.
2 (
Eccl 2:14).
right--The right hand is more expert than the left. The godly wise is more on his guard than the foolish sinner, though at times he slip. Better a diamond with a flaw, than a pebble without one.
3 by the way--in his ordinary course; in his simplest acts (
Pro 6:12-
Pro 6:14). That he "saith," virtually, "that he" himself, &c. [Septuagint]. But Vulgate, "He thinks that every one (else whom he meets) is a fool."
4 spirit--anger.
yielding pacifieth-- (
Pro 15:1). This explains "leave not thy place"; do not in a resisting spirit withdraw from thy post of duty (
Eccl 8:3).
5 as--rather, "by reason of an error" [MAURER and HOLDEN].
6 rich--not in mere wealth, but in wisdom, as the antithesis to "folly" (for "foolish men") shows. So Hebrew, rich, equivalent to "liberal," in a good sense (
Isa 32:5). Mordecai and Haman (
Esth 3:1-
Esth 3:2;
Esth 6:6-
Esth 6:11).
7 servants upon horses--the worthless exalted to dignity (
Jer 17:25); and vice versa (
2Sam 15:30).
8 The fatal results to kings of such an unwise policy; the wrong done to others recoils on themselves (
Eccl 8:9); they fall into the pit which they dug for others (
Esth 7:10;
Ps 7:15;
Pro 26:27). Breaking through the wise fences of their throne, they suffer unexpectedly themselves; as when one is stung by a serpent lurking in the stones of his neighbor's garden wall (
Ps 80:12), which he maliciously pulls down (
Amos 5:19).
9 removeth stones--namely, of an ancient building [WEISS]. His neighbor's landmarks [HOLDEN]. Cuts out from the quarry [MAURER].
endangered--by the splinters, or by the head of the hatchet, flying back on himself. Pithy aphorisms are common in the East. The sense is: Violations of true wisdom recoil on the perpetrators.
10 iron . . . blunt--in "cleaving wood" (
Eccl 10:9), answering to the "fool set in dignity" (
Eccl 10:6), who wants sharpness. More force has then to be used in both cases; but "force" without judgment "endangers" one's self. Translate, "If one hath blunted his iron" [MAURER]. The preference of rash to judicious counsellors, which entailed the pushing of matters by force, proved to be the "hurt" of Rehoboam (1Ki. 12:1-33).
wisdom is profitable to direct--to a prosperous issue. Instead of forcing matters by main "strength" to one's own hurt (
Eccl 9:16,
Eccl 9:18).
11 A "serpent will bite" if "enchantment" is not used; "and a babbling calumniator is no better." Therefore, as one may escape a serpent by charms (
Ps 58:4-
Ps 58:5), so one may escape the sting of a calumniator by discretion (
Eccl 10:12), [HOLDEN]. Thus, "without enchantment" answers to "not whet the edge" (
Eccl 10:10), both expressing, figuratively, want of judgment. MAURER translates, "There is no gain to the enchanter" (Margin, "master of the tongue") from his enchantments, because the serpent bites before he can use them; hence the need of continual caution.
Eccl 10:8-
Eccl 10:10, caution in acting;
Eccl 10:11 and following verses, caution in speaking.
12 gracious--Thereby he takes precaution against sudden injury (
Eccl 10:11).
swallow up himself-- (
Pro 10:8,
Pro 10:14,
Pro 10:21,
Pro 10:32;
Pro 12:13;
Pro 15:2;
Pro 22:11).
13 Illustrating the folly and injuriousness of the fool's words; last clause of
Eccl 10:12.
14 full of words-- (
Eccl 5:2).
a man cannot tell what shall be-- (
Eccl 3:22;
Eccl 6:12;
Eccl 8:7;
Eccl 11:2;
Pro 27:1). If man, universally (including the wise man), cannot foresee the future, much less can the fool; his "many words" are therefore futile.
15 labour . . . wearieth-- (
Isa 55:2;
Hab 2:13).
knoweth not how to go to the city--proverb for ignorance of the most ordinary matters (
Eccl 10:3); spiritually, the heavenly city (
Ps 107:7;
Matt 7:13-
Matt 7:14). MAURER connects
Eccl 10:15 with the following verses. The labor (vexation) caused by the foolish (injurious princes,
Eccl 10:4-
Eccl 10:7) harasses him who "knows not how to go to the city," to ingratiate himself with them there. English Version is simpler.
16 a child--given to pleasures; behaves with childish levity. Not in years; for a nation may be happy under a young prince, as Josiah.
eat in the morning--the usual time for dispensing justice in the East (
Jer 21:12); here, given to feasting (
Isa 5:11;
Acts 2:15).
17 son of nobles--not merely in blood, but in virtue, the true nobility (
Song 7:1;
Isa 32:5,
Isa 32:8).
in due season-- (
Eccl 3:1), not until duty has first been attended to.
for strength--to refresh the body, not for revelry (included in "drunkenness").
18 building--literally, "the joining of the rafters," namely, the kingdom (
Eccl 10:16;
Isa 3:6;
Amos 9:11).
hands-- (
Eccl 4:5;
Pro 6:10).
droppeth--By neglecting to repair the roof in time, the rain gets through.
19 Referring to
Eccl 10:18. Instead of repairing the breaches in the commonwealth (equivalent to "building"), the princes "make a feast for laughter (
Eccl 10:16), and wine maketh their life glad (
Ps 104:15), and (but) money supplieth (answereth their wishes by supplying) all things," that is, they take bribes to support their extravagance; and hence arise the wrongs that are perpetrated (
Eccl 10:5-
Eccl 10:6;
Eccl 3:16;
Isa 1:23;
Isa 5:23). MAURER takes "all things" of the wrongs to which princes are instigated by "money"; for example, the heavy taxes, which were the occasion of Rehoboam losing ten tribes (
1Kgs 12:4, &c.).
20 thought--literally, "consciousness."
rich--the great. The language, as applied to earthly princes knowing the "thought," is figurative. But it literally holds good of the King of kings (Psa. 139:1-24), whose consciousness of every evil thought we should ever realize.
bed-chamber--the most secret place (
2Kgs 6:12).
bird of the air, &c.--proverbial (compare
Hab 2:11;
Luke 19:40); in a way as marvellous and rapid, as if birds or some winged messenger carried to the king information of the curse so uttered. In the East superhuman sagacity was attributed to birds (see on
Job 28:21; hence the proverb).