This essay is a preface to the autobiography of Bertrand Russell. A passion/force drives every human throughout their life, which keeps them going. A few of them may wish for money, while others may desire fame. There are some people who wish for simple satisfaction as well. The desires which Bertie chased in his life were simple. He was driven by his passions which anyone might feel. At first, he wished for love and got it; he felt that it brought ecstasy. He got married four times. The next time, he wished for knowledge as we all seek it. He was a political activist, logician, mathematician, wrote on philosophy and contributed to literature for which he was awarded a Nobel prize. For the third time, he felt “an unbearable pity for the suffering of mankind”. He stood against the Vietnam war and World War I. Anyone will feel pity for a man/woman suffering as they have a heart, and so did Russell. He did not lust for materialistic things; he was born into an aristocratic family in Britain, which gave much of what he inherited. In favour of the world government and suffragists, he raised his voice. He trusted in free thought in morals and religion.