of pleasure which he has in common with the brute, man has 
the pleasures of the mind as well. These admit of many gradations, 
from the most innocent trifling or the merest talk up to the highest 
intellectual achievements; but there is the accompanying boredom to be 
set against them on the side of suffering. Boredom is a form of 
suffering unknown to brutes, at any rate in their natural state; it is only 
the very cleverest of them who show faint traces of it when they are 
domesticated; whereas in the case of man it has become a downright 
scourge. The crowd of miserable wretches whose one aim in life is to 
fill their purses but never to put anything into their heads, offers a 
singular instance of this torment of boredom. Their wealth becomes a 
punishment by delivering them up to misery of having nothing to do; 
for, to escape it, they will rush about in all directions, traveling here, 
there and everywhere. No sooner do they arrive in a place than they are 
anxious to know what amusements it affords; just as though they were 
beggars asking where they could receive a dole! Of a truth, need and 
boredom are the two poles of human life. Finally, I may mention that as 
regards the sexual relation, a man is committed to a peculiar 
arrangement which drives him obstinately to choose one person. This 
feeling grows, now and then, into a more or less passionate love,[1] 
which is the source of little pleasure and much suffering. 
[Footnote 1: I have treated this subject at length in a special chapter of 
the second volume of my chief work.]
It is, however, a wonderful thing that the mere addition of thought 
should serve to raise such a vast and lofty structure of human happiness 
and misery; resting, too, on the same narrow basis of joy and sorrow as 
man holds in common with the brute, and exposing him to such violent 
emotions, to so many storms of passion, so much convulsion of feeling, 
that what he has suffered stands written and may be read in the lines on 
his face. And yet, when all is told, he has been struggling ultimately for 
the very same things as the brute has attained, and with an 
incomparably smaller expenditure of passion and pain. 
But all this contributes to increase the measures of suffering in human 
life out of all proportion to its pleasures; and the pains of life are made 
much worse for man by the fact that death is something very real to 
him. The brute flies from death instinctively without really knowing 
what it is, and therefore without ever contemplating it in the way 
natural to a man, who has this prospect always before his eyes. So that 
even if only a few brutes die a natural death, and most of them live only 
just long enough to transmit their species, and then, if not earlier, 
become the prey of some other animal,--whilst man, on the other hand, 
manages to make so-called natural death the rule, to which, however, 
there are a good many exceptions,--the advantage is on the side of the 
brute, for the reason stated above. But the fact is that man attains the 
natural term of years just as seldom as the brute; because the unnatural 
way in which he lives, and the strain of work and emotion, lead to a 
degeneration of the race; and so his goal is not often reached. 
The brute is much more content with mere existence than man; the 
plant is wholly so; and man finds satisfaction in it just in proportion as 
he is dull and obtuse. Accordingly, the life of the brute carries less of 
sorrow with it, but also less of joy, when compared with the life of man; 
and while this may be traced, on the one side, to freedom from the 
torment of care and anxiety, it is also due to the fact that hope, in any 
real sense, is unknown to the brute. It is thus deprived of any share in 
that which gives us the most and best of our joys and pleasures, the 
mental anticipation of a happy future, and the inspiriting play of 
phantasy, both of which we owe to our power of imagination. If the 
brute is free from care, it is also, in this sense, without hope; in either
case, because its consciousness is limited to the present moment, to 
what it can actually see before it. The brute is an embodiment of 
present impulses, and hence what elements of fear and hope exist in its 
nature--and they do not go very far--arise only in relation to objects that 
lie before it and within reach of those impulses: whereas a man's range    
    
		
	
	
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