Page:A discourse upon the origin and foundation of the inequality among mankind (IA discourseuponori00rous).pdf/109

 to him, becomes at lat equally indifferent. It is contantly the ame Order, contantly the ame Revolutions; he has not Sene enough to feel urprie at the Sight of the greatet Wonders; and it is not in his Mind we mut look for that Philoophy, which Man mut have to know how to oberve once, what he has every Day een. His Soul, which nothing diturbs, gives itelf up entirely to the Conciounes of its actual Exitence, without any Thought of even the nearet Futurity; and his Projects, equally confined with his Views, carce extend to the end of the Day. Such is, even at preent, the Degree of Foreight in the Carribean: he ells his Cotton Bed in the Morning, and comes in the Evening, with Tears in his Eyes, to buy it back, not having foreeen that he hould want it again the next Night.

The more we meditate on this Subject, the wider does the Ditance between