[1] My son, be attentive to my wisdom, incline your ear to my understanding; [2] that you may keep discretion, and your lips may guard knowledge. [3] For the lips of a loose woman drip honey, and her speech is smoother than oil; [4] but in the end she is bitter as wormwood, sharp as a two-edged sword. [5] Her feet go down to death; her steps follow the path to Sheol; [6] she does not take heed to the path of life; her ways wander, and she does not know it. [7] And now, O sons, listen to me, and do not depart from the words of my mouth. [8] Keep your way far from her, and do not go near the door of her house; [9] lest you give your honor to others and your years to the merciless; [10] lest strangers take their fill of your strength, and your labors go to the house of an alien; [11] and at the end of your life you groan, when your flesh and body are consumed, [12] and you say, "How I hated discipline, and my heart despised reproof! [13] I did not listen to the voice of my teachers or incline my ear to my instructors. [14] I was at the point of utter ruin in the assembled congregation." [15] Drink water from your own cistern, flowing water from your own well. [16] Should your springs be scattered abroad, streams of water in the streets? [17] Let them be for yourself alone, and not for strangers with you. [18] Let your fountain be blessed, and rejoice in the wife of your youth, [19] a lovely hind, a graceful doe. Let her affection fill you at all times with delight, be infatuated always with her love. [20] Why should you be infatuated, my son, with a loose woman and embrace the bosom of an adventuress? [21] For a man's ways are before the eyes of the LORD, and he watches all his paths. [22] The iniquities of the wicked ensnare him, and he is caught in the toils of his sin. [23] He dies for lack of discipline, and because of his great folly he is lost.