''WHATS LIFE ALL ABOUT''



‘’Men are born crying, He lives complaining and He dies disappointed’’
The same faculty of reasoning, which give humanity the great advantage and prerogative over the rest of the creations, seems to make the greatest default of human nature. Moreover, thereby subjecting it to more troubles, miseries, or at disquiets of life than any of its fellow creations i.e. it is this which furnishes us with such variety of passions and consequently of wants and desires. That none other feels and these followed by infinite designs and endless pursuits, improved by that restlessness of thought of which is natural to most men. Giving him the condition of living suitable to that of his birth so that as he alone his born crying, so also should he alone live complaining and contemplating.
Since we cannot escape the pursuits of passion and perplexity of thoughts with which our reasoning furnishes us with, there is no way round only but to endure all we can either to subdue or divert them. This last is the last resort for common people, who seek to resort it to sports, pleasure, either plays or business. Nevertheless, because the two first are of short continuance, timely ending with weariness, decay of vigor and appetite.
The return where-of must be attended before the others can be renewed and because plays grows dull if it is not levered with the hopes of gain. The general diversion of humankind seems to be business alongside in pursuit of riches in one way or the other, which has an amusement that has one advantage above the others. It revolves round it engage-rs to the least end of their lives.
None has ever out-grown beyond the thoughts of aiming for increase in wealth and fortunes, either for himself, friends or for his generations to come.
In the first and simple ages of each country, the conditions and lives of men seems to have been very near of being compassionate with the rest of the creatures. They live through the counting of hours or days and satisfy their appetite with there every single encounter through the herbs, fruits and spring they met when they deem fit, as they were hungry and thirsty. Then with some-what is like fish, fowls, or beast they could kill by swiftness or strength, by crafts or thingamajigs from their hand or such instruments as with helped or which necessity forced them to invent. When a man had gotten enough for the day, he laid up the rest for the days to come and spend one day in labour thinking he might pass the others at ease. Thereby being lured around by the help of their foolishness.


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