The Miser who has Lost his Treasure
I have never understood people who accumulate money while not enjoying life. They will never be able to spend it before they die, but still, they don't want to profit from their fortune or give away their money to their descendants or to charity.
I remember reading the book titled "Die Broke!", in the late 1990s. I totally agree with the principle.
L'Avare qui a Perdu son Trésor
L’usage seulement fait la possession.
Je demande à ces gens de qui la passion
Est d’entasser toujours,
mettre somme sur somme,
Quel avantage ils ont que n’ait pas
un autre homme.
Diogène là-bas est aussi riche qu’eux,
Et l’avare ici-haut comme lui vit en gueux.
L’homme au trésor caché,
qu’Ésope nous propose,
Servira d’exemple à la chose.
Ce malheureux attendait
Pour jouir de son bien une seconde vie ;
Ne possédait pas l’or, mais l’or le possédait.
Il avait dans la terre une somme enfouie,
Son cœur avec, n’ayant autre déduit1
Que d’y ruminer jour et nuit,
Et rendre sa chevance2 à lui-même sacrée.
Qu’il allât ou qu’il vînt, qu’il but ou qu’il mangeât,
On l’eût pris de bien court, à moins qu’il ne songeât
À l’endroit où gisait cette somme enterrée.
Il y fit tant de tours qu’un fossoyeur
le vit,
Se douta du dépôt, l’enleva sans rien dire.
Notre avare un beau jour ne trouva que le nid.
Voilà mon homme aux pleurs ; il gémit,
il soupire,
Il se tourmente, il se déchire.
Un passant lui demande à quel sujet ses cris. —
C’est mon trésor que l’on m’a pris. —
Votre trésor ! où pris ? —
Tout joignant cette pierre. —
Eh ! sommes-nous en temps de guerre
Pour l’apporter si loin ?
N’eussiez-vous pas mieux fait
De le laisser chez vous en votre cabinet
Que de le changer de demeure ?
Vous auriez pu sans peine y puiser
à toute heure. —
À toute heure, bons dieux ! ne tient-il qu’à cela ?
L’argent vient-il comme il s’en va ?
Je n’y touchais jamais.
— Dites-moi donc, de grâce,
Reprit l’autre, pourquoi vous vous affligez tant :
Puisque vous ne touchiez jamais à cet argent,
Mettez une pierre à la place ;
Elle vous vaudra tout autant.
1: Plaisir.
2: Son bien, sa fortune.
The Miser who has Lost his Treasure
Use alone makes possession.
I ask these people whose passion
Is to pile up always,
to put sum upon sum,
What an advantage they have that
no other man has.
Diogenes over there is as rich as them,
And the miser up here like him lives as a beggar.
The man with the hidden treasure,
that Aesop offers us,
Will serve as an example.
This unfortunate was waiting
To enjoy his good during a second life;
Didn't own the gold, but the gold owned it.
He had a sum buried in the ground,
His heart with it, getting no more pleasure
Than to ruminate there day and night,
And make his fortune sacred to himself.
Whether he went or came, drank or ate,
One would have taken him very short
unless he thought
About the place where the buried sum lay.
He went there so many times that
a gravedigger saw him,
Suspected the deposit, and discreetly took it.
One day, our miser only found the nest.
There's my man weeping; he moans,
he sighs,
He torments himself, he tears himself apart.
A passer-by asks him what his cries are about.
— It is my treasure that was taken from me.
— Your treasure! where taken?
— Everything under this stone. —
Hey! are we in a time of war
To take it so far?
Couldn't you have done better
To leave it at home in your office
Than to change his location?
You could easily have tapped into it
at any time. —
— Anytime, good gods! is it all about that?
Does money come as it goes?
I never touched it.
Tell me, please,
Said the other, why do you grieve so much:
Since you never touched that money,
Put a stone instead;
It will be worth just as much to you.
First Fable: The Circada and the Ant
Previous fable: The Wolf, the Mother, and the Child
Misers, niggards, and curmudgeons.
To have a big fortune and to live like a poor man, is not a good way to live. When you have money, you should at least live in relative comfort.
Misers are always complaining about their miserable life. They are not happy, and yet they may have a considerable amount of money, but they don't spend it for themselves or for anybody else, including their children or grandchildren.
If cryptos go up again and I am able to sell some of the ones I own, I will use it mostly for my family, as I have already done in the past.
How much money is too much?
We have all heard about billionaires. Personally, at my age, I would not like to have a billion dollars. Even though I am not a miser, it would bother me to see my fortune fluctuate daily by as much as I need to live comfortably for a year.
My wife and I have access to several houses in 3 countries, including an apartment and a house in British Columbia that I own. I don't see us buying another dwelling, even if we had plenty of money to spend.
In my opinion, fifty million dollars is the maximum you need. Any amount above this would not make you happier.
So, one billion dollars is way too much, in my opinion. If you do have such a fortune available, you should give it away. And that could even be a full time job.