The Child of the Dawn eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 247 pages of information about The Child of the Dawn.

The Child of the Dawn eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 247 pages of information about The Child of the Dawn.

Amroth looked at me with amusement.  “It’s a sign,” he said, “if you feel that, that you are getting rested, and ready to move on; but you will be very much surprised when you know a little more about the life here.  You are like a baby in a cradle at present; when you come to enter one of our communities here, you will find it as complicated a business as you could wish.  Part of the difficulty is that there are no rules, to use your own phrase.  It is real democracy, but it is not complicated by any questions of property, which is the thing that clogs all political progress in the world below.  There is nothing to scheme for, no ambitions to gratify, nothing to gain at the expense of others; the only thing that matters is one’s personal relation to others; and this is what makes it at once so simple and so complex.  But I do not think it is of any use to tell you all this; you will see it in a flash, when the time comes.  But it may be as well for you to remember that there will be no one to command you or compel you or advise you.  Your own heart and spirit will be your only guides.  There is no such thing as compulsion or force in heaven.  Nothing can be done to you that you do not choose or allow to be done.”

“Yes,” I said, “it is the blessed and beautiful sense of freedom from all ties and influences and fears that is so utterly blissful.”

“But this is not all,” said Amroth, shaking his head with a smile.  “This is a time of rest for you, but things are very different elsewhere.  When you come to enter heaven itself, you will be constantly surprised.  There are labour and fear and sorrow to be faced; and you must not think it is a place for drifting pleasantly along.  The moral struggle is the same—­indeed it is fiercer and stronger than ever, because there is no bodily languor or fatigue to distract.  There are choices to be made, duties to perform, evil to be faced.  The bodily temptations are absent, but there is still that which lay behind the bodily frailties—­curiosity, love of sensation, excitement, desire; the strong duality of nature—­the knowledge of duty on the one hand and the indolent shrinking from performance—­that is all there; there is the same sense of isolation, and the same need for patient endeavour as upon earth.  All that one gets is a certain freedom of movement; one is not bound to places and employments by the material ties of earth; but you must not think that it is all to be easy and straightforward.  We can each of us by using our wills shorten our probation, by not resisting influences, by putting our hearts and minds in unison with the will of God for us; and that is easier in heaven than upon earth, because there is less to distract us.  But on the other hand, there is more temptation to drift, because there are no material consequences to stimulate us.  There are many people on earth who exercise a sort of practical virtue simply to avoid material inconveniences, while there is no such motive in heaven; I say all this not to disturb your present tranquillity, which it is your duty now to enjoy, but just to prepare you.  You must be prepared for effort and for endeavour, and even for strife.  You must use right judgment, and, above all, common sense; one does not get out of the reach of that in heaven!”

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The Child of the Dawn from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.