7. I bought many slaves, and there were slaves born in my household. I owned more livestock than anyone else who had ever lived in Jerusalem.
8. I also piled up silver and gold from the royal treasuries of the lands I ruled. Men and women sang to entertain me, and I had all the women a man could want.
9. Yes, I was great, greater than anyone else who had ever lived in Jerusalem, and my wisdom never failed me.
10. Anything I wanted, I got. I did not deny myself any pleasure. I was proud of everything I had worked for, and all this was my reward.
11. Then I thought about all that I had done and how hard I had worked doing it, and I realized that it didn't mean a thing. It was like chasing the wind — of no use at all.
12. After all, a king can only do what previous kings have done.So I started thinking about what it meant to be wise or reckless or foolish.
13. Oh, I know, “Wisdom is better than foolishness, just as light is better than darkness.
14. The wise can see where they are going, and fools cannot.” But I also know that the same fate is waiting for us all.
15. I thought to myself, “I will suffer the same fate as fools. So what have I gained from being so wise?” “Nothing,” I answered, “not a thing.”
16. No one remembers the wise, and no one remembers fools. In days to come, we will all be forgotten. We must all die — wise and foolish alike.
17. So life came to mean nothing to me, because everything in it had brought me nothing but trouble. It had all been useless; I had been chasing the wind.
18. Nothing that I had worked for and earned meant a thing to me, because I knew that I would have to leave it to my successor,
19. and he might be wise, or he might be foolish — who knows? Yet he will own everything I have worked for, everything my wisdom has earned for me in this world. It is all useless.