Value of love and friendship
Value of Love
Never cry for those who don't deserve ur tears but who deserve your tears never let you cry
In antiquated Greece there was a school of severe savants who showed a severe and harsh profound quality and restricted all joy as insidious. The happy Athenians nicknamed them "Pessimists", or growling canines ; for the Greek word "skeptic" signifies "canine like". The most noted Cynic scholar was Diogenes, who showed his scorn of solace by living in a tub ; and who strolled over Plato's rich rugs with sloppy feet
A skeptic is a scoffed. The words scoff and growl are associated. At the point when a canine growls, it is clearing its teeth to chomp; and when a man scoffs, he is planning to offer a gnawing comment. A pessimist jeers at what others hold sacrosanct. Appropriately, a pessimist is one who doesn't put stock in the presence of unbiased goodness. As W.H. Beecher said, "A skeptic is one who never sees a decent quality in a man, and who never neglects to see an awful one". He accepts that each human activity and calling springs from a low thought process. A man is straightforward, he says, simply because he observes genuineness pays; a lady is virtuous only on the grounds that she fears the outcomes of unchastity; a rich man provides for the poor essentially to get a name for liberality ; and appreciation, as indicated by the critic, is only "a vivacious assumption for favors to come". He is a doubter; he says, "Accept just 50% of what you see, and nothing that you hear".
Sir Robert Walpole's skeptical comment, "Each man has his value", well summarizes the belief of the pessimist. He implied that each man could be paid off assuming you offered a pay off adequately large. A man who might disdainfully dismiss Rs 100, would succumb to a pay off of Rs. 1000. Or then again, in the event that cash were not his item, a proposal of high spot or extraordinary power or distinction would purchase his vote. The pessimist knows the cost of everything and each individual. That is, he realizes how much will purchase the thing or the man ; or he figures he does. Be that as it may, of the worth of the things of the best worth in life he doesn't know anything. Characteristics, for example, trustworthiness, equity, benevolence, consideration, love, empathy, honor, fortitude and valor are priceless. These are treasures which the gem and gold can't rise to. The skeptic remains unaware of the worth of these fortunes, for he doesn't trust in them.

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