OF all the fallacies accepted
by men as truths, there is none more widely prevalent,
nor more fatal to happiness, than that which assumes
the measure of possession to be the measure of enjoyment.
All over the world, the strife for accumulation goes
on; every one seeking to increase his flocks and herds-his
lands and houses-or his gold and merchandise-and
ever in the weary, restless, unsatisfied present,
tightening with one hand the grasp on worldly goods,
and reaching out for new accessions with the other.
In dispensation, not in possession,
lies the secret of enjoyment; a fact which nature
illustrates in a thousand ways, and to which every
man’s experience gives affirmation. “Very
good doctrine for the idle and thriftless,”
said Mr. Henry Steel, a gentleman of large wealth,
in answer to a friend, who had advanced the truth
we have expressed above.
“As good doctrine for them as
for you,” was replied. “Possession
must come before dispensation. It is not the
receiver but the dispenser who gets the higher blessing.”
The rich man shrugged his shoulders,
and looked slightly annoyed, as one upon whom a distasteful
theme was intruded.
“I hear that kind of talk every
Sunday,” he said, almost impatiently. “But
I know what it is worth. Preaching is as much
a business as anything else; and this cant about its
being more blessed to give than to receive is a part
of the capital in trade of your men of black coats
and white neck-ties. I understand it all, Mr.
Erwin.”
“You talk lighter than is your
wont on so grave a theme,” answered the friend.
“What you speak of as ‘cant,’ and
the preacher’s ’capital in trade’-’it
is more blessed to give than to receive, are the recorded
words of him who never spake as man spake. If
his words, must they not be true?”
“Perhaps I did speak lightly,”
was returned. “But indeed, Mr. Erwin, I
cannot help feeling that in all these efforts to make
rich men believe that their only way to happiness
is through a distribution of their estates, a large
element of covetousness exists.”
“That may be. But, to-day
you are worth over a quarter of million of dollars.
I remember when fifty thousand, all told, limited the
extent of your possessions, and I think you were happier
than I find you to-day. How was it, my friend?”
“As to that,” was unhesitatingly
replied, “I had more true enjoyment in life
when I was simply a clerk with a salary of four hundred
dollars a year, than I have known at any time since.”
“A remarkable confession,” said the friend.
“Yet true, nevertheless.”
“In all these years of strife
with fortune-in all these years of unremitted
gain-has there been any great and worthy
end in your mind? Any purpose beyond the acquirement
of wealth?”
Mr. Steel’s brows contracted.
He looked at his friend for a moment like one half
surprised, and then glanced thoughtfully down at the
floor.
“Gain, and only gain,”
said Mr. Erwin. “Not your history alone,
nor mine alone. It is the history of millions.
Gathering, gathering, but never of free choice, dispensing.
Still, under Providence, the dispensation goes on;
and what we hoard, in due time another distributes.
Men accumulate gold like water in great reservoirs;
accumulate it for themselves, and refuse to lay conduits.
Often they pour in their gold until the banks fail
under excessive pressure, and the rich treasure escapes
to flow back among the people. Often secret conduits
are laid, and refreshing and fertilizing currents,
unknown to the selfish owner, flow steadily out, while
he toils with renewed and anxious labors to keep the
repository full. Oftener, the great magazine
of accumulated gold and silver, which he never found
time to enjoy, is rifled by others at his death.
He was the toiler and the accumulator-the
slave who only produced. Miners, pearl-divers,
gold-washers are we, my friend; but what we gather
we fail to possess in that true sense of possession
which involves delight and satisfaction. For
us the toil, for others the benefit.”
“A flattering picture certainly!”
was responded by Mr. Steel, with the manner of one
on whose mind an unpleasant conviction was forcing
itself.
“Is it not true to the life?
Death holds out to us his unwelcome hand, and we must
leave all. The key of our treasure-house is given,
to another.”
“Yet, is he not bound by our
will?” said Mr. Steel. “As we have
ordered, must not he dispense?”
“Why not dispense with our own
hands, and with our own eyes see the fruit thereof?
Why not, in some small measure, at least prove if it
be indeed, more blessed to give than to receive?
Let us talk plainly to each other-we are
friends. I know that in your will is a bequest
of five thousand dollars to a certain charitable institution,
that, even in its limited way, is doing much good.
I speak now of only this single item. In my will,
following your example and suggestion, is a similar
bequest of one thousand dollars. You are forty-five
and I am forty-seven. How long do we expect to
live?”
“Life is uncertain.”
“Yet often prolonged to sixty,
seventy, or even eighty years. Take sixty-five
as the mean. Not for twenty years, then, will
this institution receive the benefit of your good
intention. It costs, I think, about fifty dollars
a year to support each orphan child. Only a small
number can be taken, for want of liberal means.
Applicants are refused admission almost every day.
Three hundred dollars, the interest on five thousand,
at six per cent., would pay for six children.
Take five years as the average time each would remain
in the institution, and we have thirty poor, neglected
little ones, taken from the street, and educated for
usefulness. Thirty human souls rescued, it may
be, from hell, and saved, finally, in heaven.
And all this good might be accomplished before your
eyes. You might, if you chose, see it in progress,
and comprehending its great significance, experience
a degree of pleasure, such as fills the hearts of
angels. I have made up my mind what to do.”
“What?”
“Erase the item of one thousand dollars from
my will.”
“What then?”
“Call it two thousand, and invest
it at once for the use of this charity. No, twenty
years shall stand between my purpose and its execution.
I will have the satisfaction of knowing that good is
done in my lifetime. In this case, at least,
I will be my own dispenser.”
Love of money was a strong element
in the heart of Mr. Steel. The richer he grew,
the more absorbing became his desire for riches.
It was comparatively an easy thing to write out charitable
bequests in a will-to give money for good
uses when no longer able to hold possession thereof;
but to lessen his valued treasure by taking anything
therefrom for others in the present time, was a thing
the very suggestion of which startled into life a
host of opposing reasons. He did not respond
immediately, although his heart moved him to utterance.
The force of his friend’s argument was, however,
conclusive. He saw the whole subject in a new
light. After a brief but hard struggle with himself,
he answered:
“And I shall follow in your
footsteps, my friend. I never thought of the
lost time you mention, of the thirty children unblessed
by the good act I purposed doing. Can I leave
them to vice, to suffering, to crime, and yet be innocent?
Will not their souls be required at my hands, now
that God shows me their condition? I feel the
pressure of a responsibility scarcely thought of an
hour ago. You have turned the current of my thoughts
in a new direction.”
“And what is better still,”
answered Mr. Erwin, “your purposes also.”
“My purposes also,” was the reply.
A week afterwards the friends met again.
“Ah,” said Mr. Erwin,
as he took the hand of Mr. Steel, “I see a new
light in your face. Something has taken off from
your heart that dead, dull weight of which you complained
when I was last here. I don’t know when
I have seen so cheerful an expression on your countenance.”
“Perhaps your eyes were dull
before.” Mr. Steel’s smile was so
all-pervading that it lit up every old wrinkle and
care-line in his face.
“I was at the school yesterday,”
said Mr. Erwin, in a meaning way.
“Were you?” The light
lay stronger on the speaker’s countenance.
“Yes. A little while after you were there.”
Mr. Steel took a deep breath, as if
his heart had commenced beating more rapidly.
“I have not seen a happier man
than the superintendent for a score of weeks.
If you had invested the ten thousand dollars for his
individual benefit, he could not have been half so
well pleased.”
“He seems like an excellent
man, and one whose heart is in his work,” said
Mr. Steel.
“He had, already, taken in ten
poor little boys and girls on the strength of your
liberal donation. Ten children lifted out of want
and suffering, and placed under Christian guardianship!
Just think of it. My heart gave a leap for joy
when he told me. It was well done, my friend-well
done!”
“And what of your good purpose,
Mr. Erwin?” asked the other.
“Two little girls-babes
almost,” replied Mr. Erwin, in a lower voice,
that almost trembled with feeling, “were brought
to me. As I looked at them, the superintendent
said: ’I heard of them two days ago.
Their wretched mother had just died, and, in dying,
had given them to a vicious companion. Hunger,
cold, debasement, suffering, crime, were in the way
before them; and but for your timely aid, I should
have had no power to intervene. But, you gave
the means of rescue, and here they are, innocent as
yet, and out of danger from the wolf.’ In
all my life, my friend, there has not been given a
moment of sincerer pleasure.”
For some time Mr. Steel sat musing.
“This is a new experience,”
he said, at length. “Something outside of
the common order of things. I have made hundreds
of investments in my time, but none that paid me down
so large an interest. A poor speculation it seemed.
You almost dragged me into it; but, I see that it
will yield unfailing dividends of pleasure.”
“We have turned a leaf in the
book of life,” his friend made answer, “and
on the new page which now lies before us, we find it
written, that in wise dispensation, not in mere getting
and hoarding, lies the secret of happiness. The
lake must have an outlet, and give forth its crystal
waters in full measure, if it would keep them pure
and wholesome, or, as the Dead Sea, it will be full
of bitterness, and hold no life in its bosom.”