< Ecclesiastes 6 >

1 There is an evil that I have seen under the sun, and it weighs heavy on men.
There [is] an evil which I have seen under the sun and [is] great it on humankind.
2 God might give riches, wealth, and honor to a man so that he lacks nothing that he desires for himself, but then God gives him no ability to enjoy it. Instead, someone else uses his things. This is vapor, an evil affliction.
Anyone whom he gives to him God wealth and riches and honor and not he [is] lacking to appetite his - any of all that he desires and not he gives power him God to eat from it for a man foreign he eats it this [is] futility and [is] an affliction an evil it.
3 If a man fathers a hundred children and lives many years, so that the days of his years are many, but if his heart is not satisfied with good and he is not buried, then I say that a baby that is born dead is better off than he is.
If he will father anyone one hundred [children] and years many he will live and [will be] many - [that] which will be [the] days of years his and self his not it will be satisfied from the good and also burial not it belonged to him I say [is] good more than him the miscarriage.
4 Even such a baby is born in futility and passes away in darkness, and its name remains hidden.
For in futility it came and in darkness it will go and in darkness name its it is covered.
5 Although this child does not see the sun or know anything, it has rest even though that man did not.
Also [the] sun not it saw and not it knew rest [belongs] to this one more than this one.
6 Even if a man should live for two thousand years but does not learn to enjoy good things, he goes to the same place as everyone else.
And if he lived a thousand years two times and good not he saw ¿ not to a place one [are] all going.
7 All a man's work is for his mouth, yet his appetite is not satisfied.
All [the] toil of humankind [is] for mouth his and also the appetite not it will be filled.
8 Indeed, what advantage has the wise person over the fool? What advantage does the poor man have even if he knows how to act in front of other people?
For what? advantage [belongs] to the wise person more than the fool what? [belongs] to the poor [person] [who] knows to walk before the living.
9 It is better to be satisfied with what the eyes see than to desire what a wandering appetite craves, which is also vapor and an attempt to shepherd the wind.
[is] good [the] sight of Eyes more than going desire also this [is] futility and striving of wind.
10 Whatever has existed has already been given its name, and what mankind is like has already been known. So it has become useless to dispute with the one who is the mighty judge of all.
Whatever [that] which has been already it has been named name its and [is] known [that] which he humankind [is] and not he is able to contend with ([one] who [is] mighty *Q(K)*) more than him.
11 The more words that are spoken, the more futility increases, so what advantage is that to a man?
For there [are] words certainly they increase futility what? advantage [belongs] to person.
12 For who knows what is good for man in his life during his futile, numbered days through which he passes like a shadow? Who can tell a man what will come under the sun after he passes?
For who? [is] knowing what? [is] good for person in life [the] number of [the] days of [the] life of futility his and he spends them like shadow that who? will he tell to person what? will it be after him under the sun.

< Ecclesiastes 6 >