Youth and Egolatry by Pío Baroja
page 37 of 206 (17%)
page 37 of 206 (17%)
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to say, and so remain silent.
SENSIBILITY In my books, as in most that are modern, there is an indefinable resentment against life and against society. Resentment against life is of far more ancient standing than resentment against society. The former has always been a commonplace among philosophers. Life is absurd, life is difficult of direction, life is a disease, the better part of the philosophers have told us. When man turned his animosity against society, it became the fashion to exalt life. Life is good; man, naturally, is magnanimous, it was said. Society has made him bad. I am convinced that life is neither good nor bad; it is like Nature, necessary. And society is neither good nor bad. It is bad for the man who is endowed with a sensibility which is excessive for his age; it is good for a man who finds himself in harmony with his surroundings. A negro will walk naked through a forest in which every drop of water is impregnated with millions of paludal germs, which teems with insects, |
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