"Ha! I thought you made a mistake; we'll call you now the faithful apostles,—and I think the change in the name is better than seven and sixpence apiece to you. "I see you in the gallery there, Rafferty. What do you pass that well-dressed woman for? thry back-Ha! see that, she had her money ready if you only asked her for it, don't go by that other woman there-O ho! So you won't give anything, ma'am? You ought to be ashamed of yourself. There is a woman with an elegant sthraw bonnet, and she won't give a farthing. Well now,-after that remember,-I give it from the althar, that from this day out sthraw bonnets pay fi'penny pieces." Thomas Durfy, Esq., £1 os. od. and he's a brave gentleman.' Miss Fanny Dawson, £1 os. od. "It's not his parish, "A Protestant, out of the parish, and a sweet young lady, God bless her! O faith, the Protestants is shaming you!" Dennis Fannin, Lo 7s. 6d. working mason." "Very good indeed, for a Jemmy Riley, £o 5s. od. "Not bad for a hedge carpenther." "I gave you ten, plaze your Reverence," shouted Jemmy; "and by the same token, you may remember it was on the Nativity of the blessed Vargin, sir, I gave you the second five shillin's." "So you did, Jemmy," cried Father Phil, "I put a little cross before it, to remind me of it; but I was in a hurry to make a sick call when you gave it to me, and forgot it afther: and indeed myself does n't know what I did with that same five shillings." Here a pallid woman, who was kneeling near the rails of the altar, uttered an impassioned blessing, and exclaimed, "O, that was the very five shillings, I'm sure, you gave to me that very day, to buy some little comforts for my poor husband, who was dying in the fever!" and the poor woman burst into loud sobs as she spoke. A deep thrill of emotion ran through the flock as this accidental proof of their poor pastor's beneficence burst upon them; and as an affectionate murmur began to arise above the silence which that emotion produced, the burly Father Philip blushed like a girl at this publication of his charity, and even at the foot of that altar where he stood, felt something like shame in being discovered in the commission of that virtue so highly commended by the Providence to whose worship that altar was raised. He uttered a hasty “Whisht, whisht!" and waved with his outstretched hands his flock into silence. In an instant one of those sudden changes so common to an Irish assembly, and scarcely credible to a stranger, took place. The multitude was hushed, the grotesque of the subscription list had passed away and was forgotten, and that same man and that same multitude stood in altered relations, -they were again a reverent flock, and he once more a solemn pastor; the natural play of his nation's mirthful sarcasm was absorbed in a moment in the sacredness of his office; and with a solemnity befitting the highest occasion, he placed his hands together before his breast, and, raising his eyes to heaven, he poured forth his sweet voice, with a tone of the deepest devotion, in that reverential call for prayer, "Orate, fratres!" The sound of a multitude gently kneeling down followed, like the soft breaking of a quiet sea on a sandy beach; and when Father Philip turned to the altar to pray, his pent-up feelings found vent in tears, and while he prayed he wept. I believe such scenes as this are not of unfrequent occurrence in Ireland,-that country so long suffering, so much maligned, and so little understood. Samuel Lover. A FRENCHMAN ON MACBETH. An enthusiastic French student of Shakespeare thus comments on the tragedy of Macbeth: "Ah! your Mossieu' Shak-es-pier! He is gr-r-aä-nd mysterieuse - soo-blime! You 'ave reads ze Macabess? ze scene of ze Mossieu' Macabess vis ze Vitch- eh? Superb sooblimitée! W'en he say to ze Vitch, Ar-r-roynt ze, Vitch!' she go away: but what she say when she go away? She say she will do s'omesing dat aves got no naäme! 'Ah, ha!' she say, 'I go, like ze r-r-aä-t vizout ze tail but I'll do! I'll do! I'll DO!' Wat she do? Ah, ha!-voila le graand mystérieuse Mossieu' Shak-es-pier! She not say what she do!" This was "grand," to be sure; but the prowess of Mac beth, in his "bout" with Macduff, awakens all the mercurial Frenchman's martial ardor:— "Mossieu' Macabess, he see him come, clos' by; he say (proud empressement), Come o-o-n, Mossieu' Macduffs, and d-d be he who first say Enoffs!' Zen zey fi-i-ght — moche. Ah, ha! voila! Mossieu' Macabess, vis his br-r-ight r-r-apier 'pink' him, vat you call, in his body. He 'ave gots mal d'estomac: he say, vis grand simplicité, Enoffs!' What for he say 'Enoffs?' 'Cause he got enoffs - plaänty; and he expire, r-r-ight away, 'mediately, pretty quick! Ah, mes amis, Mossieu' Shak-es-pier is rising man in La Belle France!" Anonymous. THE WHITE SQUALL. On deck, beneath the awning, And above the funnel's roaring, With universal nose. I could hear the passengers snorting,- Vainly I was courting The pleasure of a doze. So I lay, and wondered why light That shot across the deck; That whirled from the chimney neck. There was sleep from fore to mizzen, The hazy sky to speck. Strange company we harbored, To see those Rabbis greasy, Who did naught but scratch and pray. Their dirty children puking,Their dirty saucepans cooking,Their dirty fingers hooking Their swarming fleas away. To starboard Turks and Greeks were,- In silence smoked and squatted, He can't but smile who traces And so the hours kept tolling; Before the break of day,— Then the wind set up a howling, As she heard the tempest blowing; And the spray dashed o'er the funnels, And the steward jumps up, and hastens For the necessary basins. Then the Greeks they groaned and quivered, And splashed and overset them; As the warring waters doused them, Then all the fleas in Jewry |