“Yet I perceived
That one fate befalls all of them.
Then I said to myself.
‘What happens to the fool
Will happen to me also.
Why then have I been so very wise?’
I said to myself
That this also is vanity.
There is no enduring remembrance
Of the wise
Or of the fools.
In the days to come,
All will have been long forgotten.
How can the wise die just like fools?
So I hated life,
Because what is done under the sun
Was grievous to me.
All is vanity.
All is a chasing after wind.”
Having accepted the importance of wisdom, Qoheleth then realizes that he, the wise one, and the fools also will both die. They share the same fate. What then is the advantage to being a wise person? No one remembers the fools, but everyone will also forget about the wise ones. Even this wise life is in vain. Why do they both share the same result as dead forgotten people? Now he begins to hate life itself, as an element of despair like Job. He thought that this was injurious to him, since all was futile. He and the wise ones were just chasing after that unattainable wind.