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Poverty's simplicity has an inexpensive beauty rooted in it, which the rich can never afford to buy
Munia Khan
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Poverty's simplicity has an inexpensive beauty rooted in it, which the rich can never afford to buy

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It required all his delicate Epicurean education to prevent his doing something about it; he had to repeat over to himself his favorite notions: that the injustice and unhappiness in the world is a constant; that the theory of progress is a delusion; that the poor, never having known happiness, are insensible to misfortune. Like all the rich he could not bring himself to believe that the poor (look at their houses, look at their clothes) could really suffer. Like all the cultivated he believed that only the widely read could be said to know that they were unhappy.

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