1Honour thou a leech (or Honour a physician), for need; for why the Highest hath made or formed him.
2For why all medicine is of (or from) God; and he shall take of (or receive from) the king a gift.
3The cunning of a leech shall enhance his head (or The knowledge of a physician shall exalt or lift up his head); and he shall be praised in the sight of great men.
4The Highest hath made or (hath) formed (out) of the earth medicine; and a prudent man shall not loathe it.
5Whether bitter water was not made sweet of (or by) a tree? The virtue of those things came by experience to the knowing of men;
6and the Highest gave cunning (or knowing) to men, for to be honoured in his marvels.
7A man healing or curing in (or with) these things, shall assuage sorrow,
8and an ointment-maker shall make pigments of sweetness, and shall make anointings of health; and his works shall not be ended. For why the peace of God is on the face of (the) earth.
9My son, despise not thyself in thy sickness; but pray thou (to) the Lord, and he shall heal or cure thee.
10Turn thou away from sin, and (ad)dress (or direct) thine hands, and cleanse thine heart from all sin.
11Give thou sweetness, and the mind (or a memorial) of clean or tried flour of wheat, and make thou (a) fat offering;
12and give thou place to a leech (or to a physician). For the Lord made him, and depart he not or go he not away from thee; for his works be needful to thee.
13For why (a) time is (or shall be), when thou shalt fall into the hands of them.
14Forsooth they shall beseech the Lord, that he (ad)dress (or direct) the work of them, and health for their living.
15He that trespasseth in the sight of him, that made him, shall fall into the hands of the leech (or the physician).
16Son, bring thou forth tears on, (or over, or for) a dead man, and thou as suffering hard things begin to weep; and by or after doom, (or according to custom), cover thou the body of him, and despise thou not his bury-ing.
17But for backbiting, bear thou bitterly the mourning of him (for) one day; and be thou comforted for sorrow or take comfort for heavi-ness. And make thou mourning after his merit or deserving (for) one day, either twain or two, for backbiting.
18For why death hast(en)eth of (or from) sorrow, and covereth virtue (or strength); and the sorrow of heart boweth the head.
19Sorrow dwelleth in leading away; and the chattel or the substance of a needy man is after his heart.
20Give thou not thine heart in sorrow, but put it away from thee; and have thou mind on the last things,
21and do not thou forget. For why no (re)turning is from death to this present life, and thou shalt nothing profit to this dead man or and to this thou shalt nothing profit; and thou shalt harm worst thyself.
22Be thou mindful of my doom (or Remember my judgement); for also thine shall be thus, to me yesterday, and to thee today.
23In the rest of a dead man, make thou his mind (or his memory) to have rest; and comfort thou him, in the going out of his spirit.
24Write thou wisdom in the time of voidness; and he that is made less in (doing) deeds, shall perceive wisdom; for he shall be filled of or with wisdom.
25He that holdeth the plow (or the plough), and he that hath glory in a goad, driveth oxes or oxen with a prick, and he liveth in the works of those or them; and his telling is in the sons of bulls.
26He shall give his heart to turn furrows; and his waking shall be about the fatness of (the) kine.
27So each carpenter, and principal workman, that passeth the night as the day; that engraveth images en-graved or the which graved graven brooches, and the busyness of him diverseth or varieth the painture; he shall give his heart in to the likeness of painture (or of painting), and by his waking he performeth the work.
28So a smith sitting beside the anfelt (or the anvil), and beholding the work of iron, the heat of fire burneth his fleshes; and he striveth in the heat of the furnace. The voice of a hammer maketh new his ear; and his eye is against (or towards) the like-ness of a vessel. He shall give his heart into the performing of (the) works; and by his waking he shall adorn unperfection, that is, matter (or material) which he bringeth to perfection of form.
29So a potter sitting at his work, turning a wheel with his feet, which is put evermore in busyness for his work; and all his working is unnumberable.
30In his arm he shall form (the) clay; and before his feet he shall bow (down) his virtue (or strength). He shall give his heart to end perfectly something; and by his waking he shall cleanse the furnace.
31All these men hoped in their hands; and each man is wise in his craft.
32A city is not builded without all these men. And they shall not dwell in, neither go in;
33and they shall not skip over into the church. They shall not sit on the seat of a judge; and they shall not understand the testament of doom, neither they shall make open teach-ing and doom; and they shall not be found in parables.
34But they shall confirm the creature (or the nature) of the world, and their prayer is the working of craft;