Proverbs Chapter 31 verse 13 Holy Bible

ASV Proverbs 31:13

She seeketh wool and flax, And worketh willingly with her hands.
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BBE Proverbs 31:13

She gets wool and linen, working at the business of her hands.
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DARBY Proverbs 31:13

She seeketh wool and flax, and worketh willingly with her hands.
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KJV Proverbs 31:13

She seeketh wool, and flax, and worketh willingly with her hands.
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WBT Proverbs 31:13


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WEB Proverbs 31:13

She seeks wool and flax, And works eagerly with her hands.
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YLT Proverbs 31:13

She hath sought wool and flax, And with delight she worketh `with' her hands.
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Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerse 13. - DALETH. She seeketh wool, and flax. She pays attention to these things, as materials for clothing and domestic uses. Wool has been used for clothing from the earliest times (see Leviticus 13:47; Job 31:20, etc.), and flax was largely cultivated for the manufacture of linen, the processes of drying, peeling, hackling, and spinning being well understood (see Joshua 2:6; Isaiah 19:9; Jeremiah 13:1, etc.). The prohibition about mixing wool and flax in a garment (Deuteronomy 22:11) was probably based on the idea that all mixtures made by the art of man are polluted, and that what is pure and simple, such as it is in its natural state, is alone proper for the use of the people of God. And worketh willingly with her hands; or, she worketh with her hands' pleasure; i.e. with willing hands. The rendering of the Revised Version margin, after Hitzig, "She worketh at the business of her hands," is feeble, and does not say much. What is meant is that she not only labours diligently herself, but finds pleasure in doing so, and this, not because she has none to help her, and is forced to do her own work (on the contrary, she is represented as rich, and at the head of a large household), but because she considers that labour is a duty for all, and that idleness is a transgression of a universal law. Septuagint, "Weaving (μηρυομένη) wool and flax; she makes it useful with her hands."

Ellicott's Commentary

Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(13) And worketh willingly with her hands.--Literally, with the pleasure or willingness of her hands; they, as it were, catch her willing spirit.