their minute obscure world and straitened limits of living. No typical churchwarden or clerk of the parish could rub on in a more taciturn modest manner, or seem able to make himself happy with smaller things. It may be as well for us to hear his own account of the matter:
PRAYER.
I. I rose up at the dawn of day;
II. Said I, 'This sure is very odd;
III. 'I have mental joys and mental health,
IV. 'Then, if for riches I must not pray,
V. 'I am in God's presence night and day,
VI. 'For my worldly things God makes him pay, |