In Of Friendship, Bacon recognizes God’s kindness as he is unwilling to compare a solitude person with God who possesses universal love for all living and non-living things …show more content…
He values Epicurean theory preoccupying with the things of this world rather than with those of the next world. He says: Man must pursue things which are just in present, and leave the future to the Divine Providence. (2004, pp.120-121)It reminds us Dr. Tamkin in Saul Bellow’s Seize the Day who says: The past is no good to us. The future is full of anxiety. Only the present is real- the here-and–now. (1956, p.66) He does not consider that mere material progress will make a man virtuous and just rather it suggests that the earthly and spiritual life should be strictly maintained by a man to become triumphant. If man follows the course of piety and Godliness, he will succeed in this world and in the next. And if he chooses to follow the other course, i.e., that of Godlessness and evil, his life will be one of corruption, disruption, and frustration in this world and he will meet colossal misfortune in the life to come. (2005, P.6) There is also a touch of materialism in his essays, for he quotes an example of Machiavelli and falsifies Christian conception of