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    Chapter 7 - Page 2

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    waters. He had learned to eat
    tenderly and carefully prepared food, even fish, even meat and poultry,
    spices and sweets, and to drink wine, which causes sloth and
    forgetfulness. He had learned to play with dice and on a chess-board,
    to watch dancing girls, to have himself carried about in a sedan-chair,
    to sleep on a soft bed. But still he had felt different from and
    superior to the others; always he had watched them with some mockery,
    some mocking disdain, with the same disdain which a Samana constantly
    feels for the people of the world. When Kamaswami was ailing, when he
    was annoyed, when he felt insulted, when he was vexed by his worries as
    a merchant, Siddhartha had always watched it with mockery. Just slowly
    and imperceptibly, as the harvest seasons and rainy seasons passed by,
    his mockery had become more tired, his superiority had become more
    quiet. Just slowly, among his growing riches, Siddhartha had assumed
    something of the childlike people's ways for himself, something of their
    childlikeness and of their fearfulness. And yet, he envied them, envied
    them just the more, the more similar he became to them. He envied them
    for the one thing that was missing from him and that they had, the
    importance they were able to attach to their lives, the amount of
    passion in their joys and fears, the fearful but sweet happiness of
    being constantly in love. These people were all of the time in love
    with themselves, with women, with their children, with honours or money,
    with plans or hopes. But he did not learn this from them, this out of
    all things, this joy of a child and this foolishness of a child; he
    learned from them out of all things the unpleasant ones, which he
    himself despised. It happened more and more often that, in the morning
    after having had company the night before, he stayed in bed for a long
    time, felt unable to think and tired. It happened that he became angry
    and impatient, when Kamaswami bored him with his worries. It happened
    that he laughed just too loud, when he lost a game of dice. His face
    was still smarter and more spiritual than others, but it rarely laughed,
    and assumed, one after another, those features which are so often
    found in the faces of rich people, those features of discontent, of
    sickliness, of ill-humour, of sloth, of a lack of love. Slowly the

    disease of the soul, which rich people have, grabbed hold of him.

    Like a veil, like a thin mist, tiredness came over Siddhartha, slowly,
    getting a bit denser every day, a bit murkier every month, a bit heavier
    every year. As a new dress becomes old in time, loses its beautiful
    colour in time, gets stains, gets wrinkles, gets worn off at the seams,
    and starts to show threadbare spots here and there, thus Siddhartha's
    new life, which
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