ANGELS in the heart.
THE heart is full of guest-chambers
that are never empty; and as the heart is the seat
of life, these guests are continually acting upon
the life, either for good or evil, according to their
quality. As the guests are, so our states of
life—tranquil and happy, if good; disturbed
and miserable, if evil.
We may choose our own guests, if we
are wise. None can open the door and come in,
unless we give consent; always provided that we keep
watch and ward. If we leave wide open the doors
of our houses, or neglect to fasten them in the night
season, thieves and robbers will enter and despoil
us at will. So if we leave the heart, unguarded,
enemies will come in. But if we open the door
only to good affections—which are guests—then
we shall dwell in peace and safety. We have all
opened the door for enemies; or let them enter through
unguarded portals. They are in all the heart’s
guest-chambers. They possess the very citadel
of life; and the measure of their possession is the
measure of our unhappiness.
Markland was an unhappy man; and yet
of this world’s goods, after which he had striven,
he had an abundance. Wealth, honor among men,
luxury; these were presented to his mind as things
most to be desired, and he reached after them with
an ardor that broke down all impediments. Success
answered to effort, with almost unerring certainty.
So he was full of wealth and honors. But, for
all this, Markland was unhappy. There were enemies
in the house of his life; troublesome guests in the
guest-chambers of his heart, who were forever disturbing,
if not wounding him, with their strifes and discords.
Some of these he had admitted, himself holding open
the door; others had come in by stealth while the
entrance was all unguarded.
Envy was one of these guests, and
she gave him no peace. He could not bear that
another should stand above him in anything. A
certain pew in the church he attended was regarded
as most desirable. He must have that pew at any
cost. So when the annual choice of pews was sold
at auction, he overbid all contestants, and secured
its occupancy. For all the preceding year, he
had failed to enjoy the Sabbath services, because
another family had a pew regarded as better situated
than his; and now he enjoyed these services as little,
through annoyance at having given so large a price
for the right of choice, that people smiled when they
heard the sum named. He had paid too dear for
the privilege, and this fact took away enjoyment.
Envy tormented him in a hundred different
ways. He could not enjoy his friend’s exquisite
statuary, or paintings, because of a secret intimation
in his heart that his friend was honored above him
in their possession. Twice he had sold almost
palatial residences, because their architectural attractions
were thrown into the shade by dwellings of later construction.
Thousands of dollars each year this troublesome guest
cost him; and yet she would never let him be at ease.
At every feast of life she dashed his cup with bitterness,
and robbed the choicest viands of their zest.
He did not enjoy the fame of an author, an orator,
an artist, a man of science, a general, or of any
who held the world’s admiring gaze—for
while they stood in the sunlight, he felt cast in
the shade. So the guest Envy, warmed and nourished
in his heart, proved a tormentor. She gave him
neither rest nor peace.
Detraction, twin-sister of Envy, was
all the while pointing out defects in friends and
neighbors. He saw their faults and hard peculiaries;
but rarely their good qualities. Then Doubt and
Distrust crept in through the unguarded door, and soon
after their entrance Markland began to think uneasily
of the future; to fear lest the foundations of worldly
prosperity were not sure. These troublesome guests
were busiest in the night season, haunting his mind
with strange pictures of disasters, and with suggestions
touching the arbitrary power of God, whom he feared
when the thought of him was present, but did not love.
“Whom He will He setteth up, and whom He will
He casteth down.” Doubt and Distrust revived
this warning in his memory, and seeing that it gave
his heart a throb of pain, they set it close to his
eyes, so that, for a time, he could see nothing else.
Thus, night after night, these guests troubled his
peace, often driving slumber from his eyelids until
the late morning watches. If there had been in
his heart that true faith in God which believes in
him as doing all things well, Doubt and Distrust might
never have gained an entrance. But he had trusted
in himself; had believed himself equal to the task
of creating his own prosperity—had been,
in common phrase, the architect of his own fortunes.
And now just as he was pluming himself on success,
in crept Doubt and Distrust with their alarming suggestions,
and he was unable to cast them out.
Affections, whether evil or good,
are social in their character, and obey social laws.
They do not like to dwell alone, and therefore seek
congenial friendships. They draw to themselves
companions of like quality, and are not satisfied
until they rule a man as to all the powers of his
mind.
In the case of Markland, Envy made
room for her twin-sister, Detraction; Ill-will, Jealousy,
Unkindness, and a teeming brood of their malevolent
kindred crowded into his heart, possessing its chambers,
ere a warning reached him of their approach. Is
there rest or peace for a man with such guests in
his bosom?
Doubt and Distrust only heralded the
coming of Fear, Anxiety, Solicitude, Suspicion, Despondency,
Foreboding. Markland had only to open his eyes
and look around him, to see, on every hand, the unsightly
wrecks of palaces once as fair to the eye as that which
he had raised with such labor and forethought, and
as he contemplated these, Doubt, Distrust, and their
companions, filled his mind with alarming thoughts,
and so oppressed him with a sense of insecurity that,
at times, he saw the advancing shadows of misfortune
on his path.
Thus it was with Markland at fifty.
He had all good as to the externals of life, yet was
he a miserable man, and, worse than all, he felt himself
growing more and more unhappy as the years increased.
Was there no remedy for this? None, while his
heart was so filled with evil affections, which are
always tormentors. He did not see this.
Though his guests disturbed and afflicted him, he
called them friends, and gave them entertainments of
the best his house afforded.
Sometimes Pity came to the door of
his heart and asked for admission, but he sent Unkindness
to double bar it against her. Generosity knocked,
but Avarice stood sentinel. Envy was forever
refusing to let Good-will, Appreciation, Approval,
Delight, come in. Detraction would give no countenance
to Virtue and Excellence. Doubt made deadly assault
upon Faith, and Trust, and Hope, whenever they drew
near, while Ill-will stood ever on the alert to drive
off Charity, Loving-kindness and Neighborly regard.
Unhappy man! Fiends possessed him, and he knew
it not.
It so happened on a time, that Markland,
while standing in one of his well-filled ware-houses,
saw a child enter and come towards him in a timid,
hesitating manner.
“A beggar! Drive her away,”
said Unkindness and Suspicion, both arousing themselves.
Markland was already lifting his hand
to wave her back, when Compassion, who had just then
found an old way into his heart, hidden for a long
time by rank weeds and brambles, said, in soft and
pitying tones:
“She is such a little child!”
“A thieving beggar!” cried Unkindness
and Suspicion, angrily.
“A weak little child,”
pleaded Compassion. “Don’t be hard
with her. Speak kindly.”
Compassion prevailed. Her voice
had awakened into life some old and long sleeping
memories. Markland was himself, for a moment,
a child, full of pity, tenderness and loving-kindness.
Compassion had already uncovered the far away past,
and the sweetness of its young blossoms was reviving
old delights.
“Well, little one, what is wanted?”
Markland hardly knew his own voice, it was so gentle
and inviting.
How the, pale, pure face of the child
warmed and brightened! Gratefully with trust
and hope in her eyes, she looked up to the merchant.
There was no answer on her lips, for this unexpected
kindness had choked the coming utterance. Rebuff,
threat, anger, had met her so often, that soft words
almost surprised her into tears.
“Well, what can I do for you?”
Compassion held open the door through
which she gained an entrance, and already Good-will,
Kindness and Satisfaction had come in.
“Mother is sick,” said the child.
“A lying vagrant!” exclaimed
Suspicion, jarring the merchant’s inward ear.
“There is truth in her face,”
said Compassion, pleading, and, at the same time,
she unveiled an image, sharply cut in the past of
Markland’s life—an image of his own
beloved, but long sainted mother, pale and wasted,
on her dying bed.
“Give this to your mother,”
he said, hastily, taking a coin from his pocket.
There was more of human kindness in his voice than
it had expressed for many years.
“God bless you, sir,”
the child dropped her grateful eyes from his face,
as she took the coin, bending with an involuntary reverent
motion. Then, as she slowly passed to the warehouse
door, she turned two or three times, to look on the
man who, alone, of the many to whom she had made solicitation
that day, had answered her in kindness.
“So much for the encouragement
of vagrancy,” said Suspicion.
“Played on by the art of a cunning child,”
said Pride.
Markland began to feel ashamed of
his momentary weakness. But, he was not now,
wholly, at the mercy of the guests who had so long
tormented him. Compassion, Good-will and Kindness
were now his guests also; and they had other and pleasanter
suggestions for his mind. The child’s “God
bless you, sir,” they repeated over and over
again, softening the young voice, and giving it increasing
power to awaken tender and loving states which had
formed themselves in earlier and purer years.
Tranquility, so long absent from his soul, came in,
now, through the entrance made by Compassion.
Markland went back into his counting-room,
almost wondering at the peace he felt. Taking
up a newspaper, he read of a rare specimen of statuary
just received from Italy, the property of a well-known
merchant. Envy did not move quickly enough.
The old love of beauty and nature, which envy, detraction,
greed of gain, and their blear-eyed companions, had
kept in thrall, was already in a freer state; and
found in good-will, kindness and tranquility, congenial
friends.
So, love of art and beauty ruled his
mind in spite of envy, and Markland found real pleasure
in the ideal given him by the description he read.
It was, almost, a new sensation.
A friend came in, and spoke in praise
of one who had performed a generous deed. There
was an instant motion among the guests in Markland’s
heart, the evil inciting to envy and detraction, the
good to approval and emulation. Tranquility moved
to the door through which she had come in, as if to
depart; but Good-will, Kindness and Approbation, drew
her back, and held, with her, possession of the mind
they sought to rule. Envy and Detraction were
shorn, for the time, of their power.
Wondering, as he lay on his bed that
night, over the strange peace that pervaded his mind—a
peace such as he had not known for many years—Markland
fell asleep; and in his sleep there came to him a
dream of the human heart and its guest-chamber; and
what we have faintly suggested, was made visible to
him in living personation.
He saw how evil affections, when permitted
to dwell therein, became its enemies and tormentors;
and how, just in the degree that kind and good affections
gained entrance, there was peace, tranquility and
satisfaction.
“I have looked into my own heart,”
he said, on awaking.
The incident of the child, and the
dream that followed, were, in Providence, sent for
Markland’s instruction. And they were not
sent in vain. Ever after he set watch and ward
at the doors of his heart. Evil guests, already
in possession, were difficult to cast out; but, he
invited the good to come in, opening the way by kind
and noble acts, done in the face of opposing selfishness.
Thus he went on, peopling the guest-chamber with sweet
beatitudes, until angels instead of demons filled
his house of life.