9 It is better to be living in an angle of the house-top, than with a bitter-tongued woman in a wide house.

10 The desire of the evil-doer is fixed on evil: he has no kind feeling for his neighbour.

11 When the man of pride undergoes punishment, the simple man gets wisdom; and by watching the wise he gets knowledge.

12 The Upright One, looking on the house of the evil-doer, lets sinners be overturned to their destruction.

13 He whose ears are stopped at the cry of the poor, will himself get no answer to his cry for help.

14 By a secret offering wrath is turned away, and the heat of angry feelings by money in the folds of the robe.

15 It is a joy to the good man to do right, but it is destruction to the workers of evil.

16 The wanderer from the way of knowledge will have his resting-place among the shades.

17 The lover of pleasure will be a poor man: the lover of wine and oil will not get wealth.

18 The evil-doer will be given as a price for the life of the good man, and the worker of deceit in the place of the upright.

19 It is better to be living in a waste land, than with a bitter-tongued and angry woman.

Matthew Henry's Commentary on Proverbs 21:9-19

Commentary on Proverbs 21:9

(Read Proverbs 21:9)

It is best to shun bitter contention by pouring out the heart before God. For by prudence and patience, with constant prayer, the cross may be removed.

Commentary on Proverbs 21:10

(Read Proverbs 21:10)

The evil desires of a wicked man's heart, lead to baseness in his conduct.

Commentary on Proverbs 21:11

(Read Proverbs 21:11)

The simple may be made wise by punishments on the wicked, and by instructions to those who are willing to be taught.

Commentary on Proverbs 21:12

(Read Proverbs 21:12)

Good men envy not the prosperity of evil-doers; they see there is a curse on them.

Commentary on Proverbs 21:13

(Read Proverbs 21:13)

Such as oppress the poor by beating down wages, such as will not relieve according to their ability those in distress, and those in authority who neglect to do justice, stop their ears at the cry of the poor. But doubtless care is to be used in the exercise of charity.

Commentary on Proverbs 21:14

(Read Proverbs 21:14)

If money can conquer the fury of the passions, shall reason, the fear of God, and the command of Christ, be too weak to bridle them?

Commentary on Proverbs 21:15

(Read Proverbs 21:15)

There is true pleasure only in the practice of religion.

Commentary on Proverbs 21:16

(Read Proverbs 21:16)

Of all wanderers in the ways of sin, those are in the most dangerous condition who turn aside into the ways of darkness. Yet there is hope even for them in the all-sufficient Saviour; but let them flee to him without delay.

Commentary on Proverbs 21:17

(Read Proverbs 21:17)

A life of worldly pleasure brings ruin on men.

Commentary on Proverbs 21:18

(Read Proverbs 21:18)

The righteous is often delivered out of trouble, and the wicked comes in his stead, and so seems as a ransom for him.

Commentary on Proverbs 21:19

(Read Proverbs 21:19)

Unbridled passions spoil the comfort of all relations.