'There is a wide difference between having poison and
being poisoned. All apothecaries have poisons ready for special uses,
but they are not consequently poisoned, because the poison is only in
their shop, not in themselves; and so you may possess riches without
being poisoned by them, so long as they are in your house or purse only,
and not in your heart. It is the Christian's privilege to be rich in
material things, and poor in attachment to them, thereby having the use
of riches in this world and the merit of poverty in the next. Of a
truth, my daughter, no one will ever own themselves to be avaricious; -
everyone denies this contemptible vice: - men excuse themselves on the
plea of providing for their children, or plead the duty of prudent
forethought: - they never have too much, there is always some good
reason for accumulating more; and even the most avaricious of men not
only do not own to being such, but sincerely believe that they are not;
and that because avarice is as a strong fever which is all the less felt
as it rages most fiercely. Moses saw that sacred fire which burnt the
bush without consuming it, but the profane fire of avarice acts
precisely the other way, - it consumes the miser, but without burning,
for, amid its most intense heat, he believes himself to be deliciously
cool, and imagines his insatiable thirst to be merely natural and right.
If you long earnestly, anxiously, and persistently after what you do
not possess, it is all very well to say that you do not wish to get it
unfairly, but you are all the time guilty of avarice. He who longs
eagerly and anxiously to drink, though it may be water only, thereby
indicates that he is feverish.