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There is an evil that I have seen under the sun, a common burden that people bear:[a] God gives somebody wealth, riches, and honor, so that he lacks nothing of everything that he craves, but God does not give him the opportunity to eat it. Instead, a stranger eats it. This is vapor, and a sickening evil.

A man may father a hundred children and live many years, but if his soul is not satisfied with good things and he does not even have a proper burial, no matter how many days he lives, I say, “A stillborn baby is better off than he is.” Why? Because that baby comes like a vapor and leaves in darkness, and its name gets covered in darkness. The baby does not see the sun or know it,[b] but it enjoys more peaceful rest than that man does, even if that man would live a thousand years two times without enjoying good things. They all go to the same place, don’t they?

All of a man’s hard work is to feed his mouth, but his appetite[c] never feels satisfied.

So what advantage does a wise man have over a fool? What advantage does a poor man gain, who knows how to keep walking among the living?[d] Better to have eyes that look at what is actually there than desires that roam. This too is vapor and chasing the wind.

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Footnotes

  1. Ecclesiastes 6:1 Or a burden which weighs heavily on people
  2. Ecclesiastes 6:5 Or know anything
  3. Ecclesiastes 6:7 Or his soul
  4. Ecclesiastes 6:8 Or how to survive among the living