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15 A king’s smile means life,
    and his favor is like a rain cloud in spring.[a]
16 How much better to get wisdom than gold!
    To get understanding is preferable to silver.[b](A)
17 The path of the upright leads away from misfortune;
    those who attend to their way guard their lives.[c]

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Footnotes

  1. 16:15 The last of six sayings about the king. In the previous verse, royal wrath means death; in this verse royal favor means life. It is significant that royal favor is compared to something not under human control—the clouds preceding the spring rains.
  2. 16:16 The point of comparison is the superiority of the pursuit of wisdom and gold, not the relative merits of wealth and wisdom.
  3. 16:17 In the metaphor of the two ways, the way of the righteous is protected and the way of the wicked is unprotected. Since the path of the righteous leads therefore away from trouble, one’s task is to stay on it, to “attend to” it.