| | The Futility of Life 1There is another evil  I have seen under the sun, and it weighs heavily upon mankind: 
2God gives  a man  riches, wealth, and honor, so that he lacks nothing his heart   desires; but God does not allow him to enjoy them.  Instead, a stranger  will enjoy them. This is futile and a grievous affliction.  
3 A man may father a hundred children and live for many years; yet no matter how long  he lives,  if he  is unsatisfied with his prosperity and does not   even receive a proper burial, I say that a stillborn child is better off than he. 
4For a stillborn child enters in futility and departs in darkness, and his name is shrouded in obscurity. 
5The child, though neither seeing the sun nor knowing anything, has more rest than that man, 
6even if he lives a thousand years twice over but fails to enjoy his prosperity. Do not all go to the same place? 7All a man’s labor is for his mouth, yet his appetite is never satisfied. 
8What advantage, then, has the wise man over the fool? What gain comes to the poor man who knows how to conduct himself before others? 
9Better what the eye can see than the wandering of desire. This too is futile and a pursuit of the wind. 10Whatever exists was named  long ago, and what happens to a man is foreknown; but he cannot  contend with one stronger than he. 
11For  the more words, the more futility— and how does that profit anyone? 
12For who knows what is good for a man  during the few days in which he passes through his fleeting life like a shadow?  Who can tell a man what will come after him under the sun? | 
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