“I would rather live with a lion.
I would rather live with a dragon
Than live with an evil wife.
A wife’s wickedness
Changes her appearance.
Her wickedness darkens her face
Like that of a bear.
Her husband sits
Among the neighbors.
He cannot help sighing bitterly.
Any iniquity is small
Compared to a wife’s iniquity.
May a sinner’s lot befall her!
A sandy ascent
For the feet of the aged,
Such is a garrulous wife
To a quiet husband.”
Sirach continues his diatribe against women, particularly evil wives. He would rather live with a lion or a dragon, rather than an evil wife. In fact, he insists that her appearance changes because of her wickedness since her face will become dark like that of a bear. That would be some sight. Her poor husband will have to sit and eat with his neighbors and sigh bitterly. The worse kind of iniquity or evil is that committed by your wife. She should be reckoned as a sinner. This evil wife talks too much for her quiet husband. Thus he is like an old man trying to climb up a sandy dune. Sirach wants you to have pity for this poor husband with the evil wife, as if it never happened the other way around. Or perhaps he had some personal experience that colored his attitude.