I have fire-proof perennial enjoyments,
called employments.
Richter.
“Always busy and always singing
at your work; you are the happiest man I know.”
This was said by the customer of an industrious hatter
named Parker, as he entered his shop.
“I should not call the world
a very happy one, were I the happiest man it
contains,” replied the hatter, pausing in his
work and turning his contented-looking face toward
the individual who had addressed him. “I
think I should gain something by an exchange with you.”
“Why do you think so?”
“You have enough to live upon,
and are not compelled to work early and late, as I
am.”
“I am not so very sure that
you would be the gainer. One thing is certain,
I never sing at my work.”
“Your work? What work have you to do?”
“Oh, I’m always busy.”
“Doing what?”
“Nothing; and I believe it is much harder work
than making hats.”
“I would be very willing to
try my hand at that kind of work, if I could afford
it. There would be no danger of my getting tired
or complaining that I had too much to do.”
“You may think so; but a few
weeks’ experience would be enough to drive you
back to your shop, glad to find something for your
hands to do and your mind to rest upon.”
“If you have such a high opinion
of labour, Mr. Steele, why don’t you go to work?”
“I have no motive for doing so.”
“Is not the desire for happiness
a motive of sufficient power? You think working
will make any one happy.”
“I am not so sure that it will
make any one happy, but I believe that all who are
engaged in regular employments are much more contented
than are those who have nothing to do. But no
one can be regularly employed who has not some motive
for exertion. A mere desire for happiness is
not the right motive; for, notwithstanding a man, when
reasoning on the subject, may be able to see that,
unless he is employed in doing something useful to
his fellows, he cannot be even contented, yet when
he follows out the impulses of his nature, if not compelled
to work, he will seek for relief from the uneasiness
he feels in almost any thing else: especially
is he inclined to run into excitements, instead of
turning to the quiet and more satisfying pursuits of
ordinary life.”
“If I believed as you do, I
would go into business at once,” said the hatter.
“You have the means, and might conduct any business
you chose to commence, with ease and comfort.”
“I have often thought of doing
so; but I have lived an idle life so long that I am
afraid I should soon get tired of business.”
“No doubt you would, and if
you will take my advice, you will let well enough
alone. Enjoy your good fortune and be thankful
for it. As for me, I hope to see the day when
I can retire from business and live easy the remainder
of my life.”
This was, in fact, the hatter’s
highest wish, and he was working industriously with
that end in view. He had already saved enough
money to buy a couple of very good houses, the rent
from which was five hundred dollars per annum.
As soon as he could accumulate sufficient to give
him a clear income of two thousand dollars, his intention
was to quit business and live like a “gentleman”
all the rest of his days. He was in a very fair
way of accomplishing all he desired in a few years,
and he did accomplish it.
Up to the time of his retiring from
business, which he did at the age of forty-three,
Parker has passed through his share of trial and affliction.
One of his children did not do well, and one, his favourite
boy, had died. These events weighed down his spirit
for a time, but no very long period elapsed before
he was again singing at his work not, it
is true, quite so gayly as before, but still with an
expression of contentment. He had, likewise,
his share of those minor crosses in life which fret
the spirit, but the impression they made was soon effaced.
In the final act of giving up, he
felt a much greater reluctance than he had supposed
would be the case, and very unexpectedly began to ask
himself what he should do all the day, after he had
no longer a shop in which to employ himself.
The feeling was but momentary, however. It was
forced back by the idea of living at his ease; of being
able to come and go just as it suited his fancy; to
have no care of business, nor any of its perplexities
and anxieties. This thought was delightful.
“If I were you, I would go into
the country and employ myself on a little farm,”
said a friend to the hatter. “You will find
it dull work in town, with nothing on your hands to
do.”
The hatter shook his head. “No,
no,” said he, “I have no taste for farming;
it is too much trouble. I am tired of work, and
want a little rest during the remainder of my life.”
Freedom from labour was the golden
idea in his mind, and nothing else could find an entrance.
For a few days after he had fully and finally got
clear from all business, and was, to use his own words,
a free man, he drank of liberty almost to intoxication.
Sometimes he would sit at his window, looking out
upon the hurrying crowd, and marking with pity the
care written upon each face; and sometimes he would
walk forth to breathe the free air and see every thing
to be seen that could delight the eye.
Much as the hatter gloried in this
freedom and boasted of his enjoyments, after the first
day or two he began to grow weary long before evening
closed in, and then he could not sit and quietly enjoy
the newspaper, as before, for he had already gone over
them two or three times, even to the advertising pages.
Sometimes, for relief, he would walk out again, after
tea, and sometimes lounge awhile on the sofa, and
then go to bed an hour earlier than he had been in
the habit of doing. In the morning he had no
motive for rising with the sun; no effort was therefore
made to overcome the heaviness felt on awaking; and
he did not rise until the ringing of the breakfast-bell.
The “laziness” of her
husband, as Mrs. Parker did not hesitate so call it,
annoyed his good wife. She did not find things
any easier she could not retire from business.
In fact, the new order of things made her a great
deal more trouble. One-half of her time, as she
alleged, Mr. Parker was under her feet and making
her just double work. He had grown vastly particular,
too, about his clothes, and very often grumbled about
the way his food come on the table, what she had never
before known him to do. The hatter’s good
lady was not very choice of her words, and, when she
chose to speak out, generally did so with remarkable
plainness of speech. The scheme of retiring from
business in the very prime of life she never approved,
but as her good man had set his heart on it for years,
she did not say much in opposition. Her remark
to a neighbour showed her passive state of mind:
“He has earned his money honestly, and if he
thinks he can enjoy it better in this way, I suppose
it is nobody’s business.”
This was just the ground she stood
upon. It was a kind of neutral ground, but she
was not the woman to suffer its invasion. Just
so long as her husband came and went without complaint
or interference with her, all would be suffered to
go on smoothly enough; but if he trespassed upon her
old established rights and privileges, he would hear
it.
“I never saw a meal cooked so
badly as this,” said Mr. Parker, knitting his
brow one rainy day, at the dinner-table.
He had been confined to the house
since morning, and had tried in vain to find some
means of passing his time pleasantly.
The colour flew instantly to his wife’s
face. “Perhaps, if you had a better appetite,
you would see no fault in the cooking,” she said
rather tartly.
“Perhaps not,” he replied.
“A good appetite helps bad cooking wonderfully.”
There was nothing in this to soothe
his wife’s temper. She retorted instantly
“And honest employment alone
will give a good appetite. I wonder how you could
expect to relish your food after lounging about doing
nothing all the morning! I’ll be bound
that if you had been in your shop ironing hats or
waiting on your customers since breakfast-time, there
would have been no complaint about the dinner.”
Mr. Parker was taken all aback.
This was speaking out plainly “with a vengeance.”
Since his retirement from business, his self-estimation
had arisen very high, compared with what it had previously
been; he was, of course, more easily offended.
To leave the dinner-table was the first impulse of
offended dignity.
So broad a rupture as this had not
occurred between the husband and wife since the day
of their marriage not that causes equally
potent had not existed, for Mrs. Parker, when any
thing excited her, was not over-choice of her words,
and had frequently said more cutting things; but then
her husband was not so easily disturbed he
had not so high an opinion of himself.
It was still raining heavily, but
rain could no longer keep the latter at home.
He went forth and walked aimlessly the streets for
an hour, thinking bitter things against his wife all
the while. But this was very unhappy work, and
he was glad to seek relief from it by calling in upon
a brother craftsman, whose shop happened to be in his
way. The hatter was singing at his work as he
had used to sing he never sang at his work
now.
“This is a very dull day,”
was the natural remark of Mr. Parker, after first
salutations were over.
“Why, yes, it is a little dull,”
replied the tradesman, speaking in a tone that said,
“But it didn’t occur to me before.”
“How is business now?” asked Mr. Parker.
“Very brisk; I am so busy that,
rain or shine, it never seems dull to me.”
“You haven’t as many customers in.”
“No; but then I get a little
ahead in my work, and that is something gained.
Rain or shine, friend Parker, it’s all the same
to me.”
“That is, certainly, a very
comfortable state of mind to be in. I find a
rainy day hard to get through.”
“I don’t think I would,
if I were in your place,” said the old acquaintance.
“If I could do no better, I would lie down and
sleep away the time.”
“And remain awake half the night
in return for it. No; that won’t do.
To lie half-asleep and half-awake for three or four
hours makes one feel miserable.”
The hatter thought this a very strange
admission. He did not believe that, if he could
afford to live without work, he would find even rainy
days hang heavy upon his hands.
“Why don’t you read?”
“I do read all the newspapers that
is, two or three that I take,” replied Parker;
“but there is not enough in them for a whole
day.”
“There are plenty of books.”
“Books! I never read books;
I can’t get interested in them. They are
too long; it would take me a week to get through even
a moderate-sized book. I would rather go back
to the shop again. I understand making a hat,
but as to books, I never did fancy them much.”
Parker lounged for a couple of hours
in the shop of his friend, and then turned his face
homeward, feeling very uncomfortable.
The dark day was sinking into darker
night when he entered his house. There was no
light in the passage nor any in the parlour. As
he groped his way in, he struck against a chair that
was out of place, and hurt himself. The momentary
pain caused the fretfulness he felt, on finding all
dark within, to rise into anger. He went back
to the kitchen, grumbling sadly, and there gave the
cook a sound rating for not having lit the lamps earlier.
Mrs. Parker heard all, but said nothing. The
cook brought a lamp into the parlour and placed it
upon the table with an indignant air; she then flirted
off up-stairs, and complained to Mrs. Parker that
she had never been treated so badly in her life by
any person, and notified her that she should leave
the moment her week was up; that, anyhow, she had
nothing to do with the lamps lighting them
was the chambermaid’s work.
It so happened that Mrs. Parker had
sent the chambermaid out, and this the cook knew very
well; but cook was in a bad humour about something,
and didn’t choose to do any thing not in the
original contract. She was a good domestic, and
had lived with Mrs. Parker for some years. She
had her humours, as every one has, but these had always
been borne with by her mistress. Too many fretting
incidents had just occurred, however, and Mrs. Parker’s
mind was not so evenly balanced as usual. Nancy’s
words and manner provoked her too far, and she replied,
“Very well; go in welcome.”
Here was a state of affairs tending
in no degree to increase the happiness of the retired
tradesman. His wife met him at the supper-table
with knit brows and tightly compressed lips. Not
a word passed during the meal.
After supper, Mr. Parker looked around
him for some means of passing the time. The newspapers
were read through; it still rained heavily without;
he could not ask his wife to play a game at backgammon.
“Oh dear!” he sighed,
reclining back upon the sofa, and there he lay for
half an hour, feeling as he had never felt in his life.
At nine o’clock he went to bed, and remained
awake for half the night.
Much to his satisfaction, when he
opened his eyes on the next morning, the sun was shining
into his window brightly. He would not be confined
to the house so closely for another day.
A few weeks sufficed to exhaust all
of Mr. Parker’s time-killing resources.
The newspapers, he complained, did not contain any
thing of interest now. Having retired on his
money, and set up for something of a gentleman, he,
after a little while, gave up visiting at the shops
of his old fellow-tradesmen. He did not like
to be seen on terms of intimacy with working people!
Street-walking did very well at first, but he tired
of that; it was going over and over the same ground.
He would have ridden out and seen the country, but
he had never been twice on horseback in his life,
and felt rather afraid of his neck. In fact,
nothing was left to him, but to lounge about the house
the greater portion of his time, and grumble at every
thing; this only made matters worse, for Mrs. Parker
would not submit to grumbling without a few words
back that cut like razors.
From a contented man, Mr. Parker became,
at the end of six months, a burden to himself.
Little things that did not in the least disturb him
before, now fretted him beyond measure. He had
lost the quiet, even temper of mind that made life
so pleasant.
A year after he had given up business
he met Mr. Steele for the first time since his retirement
from the shop.
“Well, my old friend,”
said that gentleman to him familiarly, “how is
it with you now? I understand you have retired
from business.”
“Oh yes; a year since.”
“So long? I only heard
of it a few weeks ago. I have been absent from
the city. Well, do you find doing nothing any
easier than manufacturing good hats and serving the
community like an honest man, as you did for years?
What is your experience worth?”
“I don’t know that it
is worth any thing, except to myself; and it is doubtful
whether it isn’t too late for even me to profit
by it.”
“How so, my friend? Isn’t
living on your money so pleasant a way of getting
through the world as you had supposed it to be?”
“I presume there cannot be a
pleasanter way; but we are so constituted that we
are never happy in any position.”
“Perhaps not positively happy, but we may be
content.”
“I doubt it.”
“You were once contented.”
“I beg you pardon; if I had been, I would have
remained in business.”
“And been a much more contented man than you
are now.”
“I am not sure of that.”
“I am, then. Why, Parker,
when I met you last you had a cheerful air about you.
Whenever I came into your shop, I found you singing
as cheerfully as a bird. But now you do not even
smile; your brows have fallen half an inch lower than
they were then. In fact, the whole expression
of your face has changed. I will lay a wager that
you have grown captious, fretful, and disposed to
take trouble on interest. Every thing about you
declares this. A year has changed you for the
worse, and me for the better.”
“How you for the better, Mr. Steele!”
“I have gone into business.”
“I hope no misfortune has overtaken you?”
“I have lost more than half
my property, but I trust this will not prove in the
end a misfortune.”
“Really, Mr. Steele, I am pained
to hear that reverses have driven you to the necessity
of going into business.”
“While I am more than half inclined
to say that I am glad of it. I led for years
a useless life, most of the time a burden to myself.
I was a drone in the social hive; I added nothing
to the common stock; I was of no use to any one.
But now my labours not only benefit myself, but the
community at large. My mind is interested all
the day; I no longer feel listlessness; the time never
hangs heavy upon my hands. I have, as a German
writer has said, ’fire-proof perennial enjoyments,
called employments.’”
“You speak warmly, Mr. Steele.”
“It is because I feel warmly
on this subject. Long before a large failure
in the city deprived me of at least half of my fortune,
I saw clearly enough that there was but one way to
find happiness in this life, and that was to engage
diligently in some useful employment, from right ends.
I shut my eyes to this conviction over and over again,
and acted in accordance with it only when necessity
compelled me to do so. I should have found much
more pleasure in the pursuit of business, had I acted
from the higher motive of use to my fellows, which
was presented so clearly to my mind, than I do now,
having entered its walks from something like compulsion.”
“And you really think yourself
happier than you were before, Mr. Steele?”
“I know it, friend Parker.”
“And you think I would be happier
than I am now, if I were to open my shop again?”
“I do much happier. Don’t
you think the same?”
“I hardly know what to think.
The way I live now is not very satisfactory.
I cannot find enough to keep my mind employed.”
“And never will, except in some
useful business, depend upon it. So take my advice,
and re-open your shop before you are compelled to do
it.”
“Why do you think I will be compelled to do
it?”
“Because, it is very strongly
impressed upon my mind that the laws of Divine Providence
are so arranged that every man’s ability to serve
the general good is brought into activity in some
way or other, no matter how selfish he may be, nor
how much he may seek to withdraw himself from the
common uses of society. Misfortunes are some of
the means by which many persons are compelled to become
usefully employed. Poverty is another means.”
“Then you think if I do not
go into business again, I am in danger of losing my
property?”
“I should think you were; but
I may be mistaken. Man can never foresee what
will be the operations of Providence. If you should
ever recommence business, however, it ought not to
be from this fear. You should act from a higher
and better motive. You should reflect that it
is every man’s duty to engage in some business
or calling by which the whole community will be benefited,
and, for this reason, and this alone, resolve that
while you have the ability, you will be a working
bee, and not a drone in the hive. It is not only
wrong, but a disgrace for any man to be idle when
there is so much to do.”
Mr. Parker was surprised to hear his
old customer talk in this way: but surprise was
not his only feeling he was deeply impressed
with the truth of what he had said.
“I believe, after all, that
you are right, and I am wrong. Certainly, there
is no disguising the fact that my life has become a
real burden to me, and that business would be far
preferable to a state of idleness.”
This admission seemed made with some
reluctance. It was the first time he had confessed,
even to himself, that he had committed an error in
giving up his shop. The effect of what Mr. Steele
had said was a resolution, after debating the pros
and cons for nearly a month, to recommence business;
but before this could take place, the kind of business
must be determined. Since Mr. Parker had ceased
to be a hatter and set up for a gentleman of fortune,
his ideas of his own importance had considerably increased.
To come back into his old position, therefore, could
not be thought of. His wife argued for the shop,
but he would not listen to her arguments. His
final determination was to become a grocer, and a
grocer he became. No doubt he thought it more
worthy of his dignity to sell rice, sugar, soap, candles,
etc., than hats. Why one should be more
honourable or dignified than the other we do not understand.
Perhaps there is a difference, but we must leave others
to define it we cannot.
A grocer Mr. Parker became instead
of a hatter. Of the former business he was entirely
ignorant; of the latter he was perfect master.
But he would be a grocer a merchant.
He commenced in the retail line, with the determination,
after he got pretty well acquainted with the business,
to become a wholesale dealer. That idea pleased
his fancy. For two years he kept a retail grocery-store,
and then sold out, glad to get rid of it. The
loss was about one-third of all he was worth.
To make things worse, there was a great depression
in trade, and real estate fell almost one-half in
value. In consequence of this, Mr. Parker’s
income from rents, after being forced to sacrifice
a very handsome piece of property to make up the deficit
that was called for in winding up his grocery business,
did not give him sufficient to meet his current family
expenses.
There was now no alternative left.
The retired hatter was glad to open a shop once more,
and look out for some of his old customers. Mr.
Steele saw his announcement, that he had resumed business
at his old stand and asked for a share of public patronage.
About two weeks after the shop was re-opened, that
gentleman called in and ordered a hat. As he
came to the door and was about reaching his hand out
to open it, he heard the hatter’s voice singing
an old familiar air. A smile was on the face
of Mr. Steele as he entered.
“All right again,” he
said, coming up to the counter and offering his hand.
“Singing at your work, as of old! This is
better than playing the gentleman, or even keeping
a grocery-store.”
“Oh, yes, a thousand times better,”
the hatter replied warmly. “I am now in
my right place.”
“Performing your true use to
the community, and happier in doing so.”
“I shall be happier, I am sure.
I am happier already. My hat-blocks and irons,
and indeed, every thing around me, look like familiar
friends, and give me a smiling welcome. When
health fails or age prevents my working any longer,
I will give up my shop, but not a day sooner.
I am cured of retiring from business.”