The feeling of satiety, almost inseparable from large possessions, is a surer cause of misery than ungratified desires.


The Bradenham Edition of the Novels and Tales of Benjamin Disraeli, 1st Earl of Beaconsfield (ed. 1927)


The feeling of satiety, almost inseparable from large possessions, is a surer cause of misery than ungratified desires.

The feeling of satiety, almost inseparable from large possessions, is a surer cause of misery than ungratified desires.

The feeling of satiety, almost inseparable from large possessions, is a surer cause of misery than ungratified desires.

The feeling of satiety, almost inseparable from large possessions, is a surer cause of misery than ungratified desires.