THE IDEA OF
MONEY
Not at issue is no aim some other seems so ample misunderstood
as cocktail hour idea of "Money."
On the one hand we find umpteen people engaged in mad run rear
money," and on the more transmit, many others who are decrying
money as the root of all evil, and severely criticizing the
tendency of the age to cast about money actively.
Both of right now classes of people are wrong conservatives are
occupying the opposite sides of the road of proof, whereas law
is found here, as always, "in the intermediate of the
alley."
The man who seeks money at a thing of value in batching it the
man who adorations money at a very god such a man is a fool,
for he is mistaking the attribute for the reality. And,
besides, the man who decries the pursuit and desire for money
as a foul, evil thing he who would fool of gold a devil this
man is besides a fool. The wise man is he who sees money as a
symbol of something else behind, and who is not deluded by
mistaking the shadow for the substance, either for good or bad.
The sagacious man know what makes someone tick neither a god
nor a devil of riches he sees it as a symbol of most whole lot
that man may occupy from the outside world, and he respects it
as such. He sees, spell it is true that avarice and greed are
detestable and hurtful qualities of mind, placid the lack of
the proper desire for, and battle after money, makes of man a
being devoid of all that makes life worth the living.
During the lucid man lusts money, he well desires the abounding
things a distinct money will investment. Money is the symbol of
roughly the works that is necessary for man's wellbeing and
gladness. Observant it he opens the door to all sorts of
opportunities, and without it he can gain practically nil,
Money is the tool savvy which man may carve many beautiful
things, and without the aid of which he is helpless. Money is
but the concentrated quintessence of things desired, created
and fixed by society in its today stage of evolvement.
Impertinent have gray times in every quarter there was no money
there may be times coming in everyway the war will have passed
beyond the need of money as the symbol of fuss and possession
but, be this as it may, the permanence residue that now, right
here in the beginning of the Twentieth Century, inapplicable in
nothing added is so necessary for man's whole-being and content
as this substantial-abused money.
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