Proverbs 27:3

3 grave est saxum et onerosa harena sed ira stulti utroque gravior

Proverbs 27:3 Meaning and Commentary

Proverbs 27:3

A stone [is] heavy, and the sand weighty
As was the stone which was at the well's mouth, where Laban's flocks were watered, which could not be rolled away till all the shepherds were gathered together, ( Genesis 29:2 Genesis 29:3 Genesis 29:8 ) ; and like the burdensome stone Jerusalem is compared to ( Zechariah 12:3 ) ; and as that at the sepulchre of Christ, rolled away by the angel, ( Matthew 28:2 ) . And sand is a very ponderous thing; difficult to be carried, as the Septuagint render it, as a bag of it is; and to which heavy afflictions are sometimes compared, ( Job 6:2 Job 6:3 ) ;

but a fool's wrath [is] heavier than them both;
it cannot be removed, it rests in his bosom; it is sometimes intolerable to himself; he sinks and dies under the weight of it, as Nabal did: "wrath killeth the foolish man", ( Job 5:2 ) ; and it is still more intolerable to others, as Nebuchadnezzar's wrath and his fiery furnace were.

Proverbs 27:3 In-Context

1 ne glorieris in crastinum ignorans quid superventura pariat dies
2 laudet te alienus et non os tuum extraneus et non labia tua
3 grave est saxum et onerosa harena sed ira stulti utroque gravior
4 ira non habet misericordiam nec erumpens furor et impetum concitati ferre quis poterit
5 melior est manifesta correptio quam amor absconditus
The Latin Vulgate is in the public domain.