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The family board at eve is spread,
And all the household crowd to eat :
Yet she must turn her hand and head
From pleasant drink and dainty meat;
The gleesome laugh disturbs her brain,
The sweet song wounds her sharpen'd ear,
The gnawing worm of ceaseless pain
Poisons the joy and carks the cheer.

And not her aching head alone,

And tortured side, her spirit rend;
She feels that every smother'd groan
Is echoed on from friend to friend;
She feels her sad, continual sighs,

Creeping, like cold airs, through the place;
She knows that, on the day she dies,
Shadows will fall from many a face!

Look on her ye, whose beds of death
Must yet be strewn on garret floors—
What boots it that her dying breath
Winds to the skies through gilded doors?
Oh, never dream that mirror'd halls
Make happier the hearts they hide,

Than the most lowly cabin walls,

Where Health is welcome to abide !

R. M.

THE HEDGEHOG LETTERS.

CONTAINING THE OPINIONS AND ADVENTURES OF JUNIPER HEDGEHOG, CABMAN, LONDON ; AND WRITTEN ΤΟ HIS RELATIVES AND ACQUAINTANCE, IN

VARIOUS PARTS OF THE WORLD.

LETTER XXIII.-To MRS. HEDGEHOG, OF NEW YORK.

DEAR GRANDMOTHER,-Of course, you must have heard of the potato blight. There are some subjects that women don't want newspapers to teach 'em about, and "potatos is one." I can't tell how your red Yorks and kidneys may be in your part of the world with us, they 're things to weep over. But of course your potatoes are all right: you've done nothing to bring down rot upon 'em from heaven. But it's very different with us, grandmother. Our potato blight was got up by her Majesty's Ministers,

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and-would you think it ?-consented to by her blessed Majesty ! It is now as plain as light that the Grant to Maynooth has done it all! One William Ferrie-who writes in a hair shirt with a girdle of tenpenny nails next his skin-has let out the terrible secret in the Witness, an Edinburgh paper (Nov. 8). He groans as follows:

Had we set ourselves to consider by what display of His sovereignty the Lord could most thoroughly and very severely have distressed Ireland, whilst yet He in some degree afflicted also both England and Scotland, in token of his indignation at the sin of their joint rulers in enacting that which, whilst it insulted Him, was justified on the plea that it would benefit Ireland, could we have conceived a more effectual one than the blasting of the potato crop !

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Now, Grandmother, this, I know, is stuff after your own heart. Popery is at the root of the rot! The Lord has been insulted; and his terrible vengeance is a blight upon potatos! There can be no doubt that this is the fact a fact so after the good old times! Nevertheless, for my part, I think it rather hard that Protestant potatos-potatos that, if they could talk, would cry no surrender" should suffer equally with potatos of Roman Catholic principles. I know it's very conceited in me to give an opinion against men like William Ferrie,-men, who always bawl and scribble (I've heard 'em in their pulpits, as well as read their stuff in print,) as if they were nothing less than livery servants to Providence, and knew all the household secrets! And Willy Ferrie, depend on 't, is a flunky after this fashion.

A rotten potato is a rotten potato-at least, so I should have thought it, afore I'd been taught better by ranting Willy; but now, I can see into the thing just as well as if Erasmus Wilson— the magician of the microscope-had lent me his glass, and his eyes and brains into the bargain. I can see into the decayed parts, for I won't bother your dear head with hard words (though when a man's got 'em for the first time, he likes to sport 'em)—and can behold nothing but, what you used to call, "the murdering papishes." I've a 'tato before me, as rotten as the heart of any talking 'tato that ever spouted blarney in the face of starvation. Well, with the microscope, I can see the Old Woman in Scarlet, with her toe polished with holy kisses-cardinals and abbots, and friars, and priests in white and red and gold, and canopies, and dolls of the virgin, and saints, and little boys swinging censers. I can see all this, by the assistance of Willy Ferrie,-all of it in one potato,

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as plainly as once I saw all sorts of sharks in a drop of New River I shall write this blessed night to Sir Andrew Agnew(by the way, dear Grandmother, it was said that Sir Andrew was lately caught in a Sunday train, but it isn't true: it's now proved to be somebody I won't mention to you, who sometimes, out of spite to the baronet, goes about in his likeness)-I'll write to Sir Andrew, and get him to give a Potato Lecture, after this fashion, at Exeter Hall. If with one potato he wouldn't make the women cry, then there's no weeping to be got out of an onion! Sir Andrew with one rotten potato, like David with a smooth pebble, would kill Goliah Peel as dead as Tamworth mutton.

And yet when it's plain that it's the Maynooth Grant, and not the wet-certainly not the wet-that's rotted the potato, we find big-wig Doctors sent to Ireland (a further insult to Providence, Grandmother) to inquire, as it is presumptuously said, into the cause of the disease. Why, I know what you, or any other good old woman would have done; after you'd tasted the Maynooth Grant -and there's no mistaking the flavour-in your early kidneys, you'd at once have stopped the rot ;-and how would you have done it? Why, you'd have got the Queen to send a message to Parliament, to order a repeal of the Maynooth Grant. Of course you

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would. But no; sinful men are made fool-hardy by success. cause, when they granted Catholic 'Mancipation, the fly spared our turnips, it was thought we could give money to Maynooth College, and yet save our 'tatos! Ha! dear Grandmother, when you take your kidney baked, steamed, or mashed,-think of us sinners, and say a short prayer for us.

I'd forgotten to tell you that the potatos in Belgium are as bad, or even worse, than ours. Besides the wet, I can't precisely tell the cause of this because there 's been no Maynooth Grant there; nearly all the wicked people being Catholics, but then, I suppose, that's it. Mr. Flunky Ferrie declares that "the present judgment is connected with Popery." There's no doubt of it:

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The blight being general over three kingdoms, points out the rulers of the land as the persons whose sin has secured it; and the blight being in the potato crop directs attention to their dealings with Ireland as the particular sins which have immediately called it down.

This is, doubtless, true enough; and no less true, because the whole people must suffer for the dozen rulers. Now, had the

blight fallen only upon Tamworth, or Strathfieldsaye, or all the 'tatos of all the Ministers,-the disease would doubtless have been hushed up. Yes, it was necessary that every man should suffer in his potatos; not only the sinful Protestant who consented to the Grant, but the lucky Catholics who accepted it. The judgment fell upon all tubers alike, the tubers of the Established Church and of the Church of Babylon. The Bishop of London's 'tatos are in as forlorn a way as the 'tatos of the Irish Lion of Judah: that's some comfort, Grandmother.

Well, and what does this blight say to the Catholics-what does every potato cry-(with the little voice that what they calltubercular consumption has left it)—what does it cry to the "papishes," but " Change your religion, and henceforth be happy in your 'tatos!" At first, I thought this change of religion a ticklish matter; but when I see how easily the nobs-the bright examples of the world do it, why it's only conceit in smaller people to hesitate for I've just read a long story about the Emperor of Nicholas, who's in Italy with his poor dying wife. (By the way, it seems that the Emperor, like many other folks, is such a good-tempered, jolly fellow when he 's out, that it's a pity he should ever go home again.) The Emperor's daughter, the Duchess Olga (a good play-bill name isn't it?) was to marry an Austrian Archduke; but her father wouldn't let her alter her religion from the Greek to the Catholic Church. Now, however, Nicholas has thought better of it, and his daughter may change her religion for a husband, just as she 'll put on a new gown to be married in. When emperors and kings play at hustle-cup with creeds, isn't it downright impudence in mere nobodies to be nice?

When I think, though, that the Maynooth Grant has brought the rot in potatos, I can't help looking round about the world, and fearing what may bye-and-bye become of us for our friendship with the heathen. We take tea of the Chinese; a people, evidently an insult to heaven-though long put up with, and mustering hundreds of millions. Doesn't Mr. Ferrie fear that some day, all us men may rise in the morning with pig-tails, and the women get up with a little foot a piece? We buy rhubarb from the wicked Turk. A time may come when—for a visitation -the drug may deceive all the doctors, and Old Gooseberry only know what mischief may happen! We get tallow from Russia. How do I know that I mayn't, in every six to a pound, without thinking of it, set up a candle to the Greek Church?

Will

Flunky Ferrie think of these things?—for there are many of his kidney who'd like to be enlightened.

But, oh Grandmother! perhaps the worst is to come. The Church is really now in danger! "I've not had a fare up LudgateHill lately, but I've no doubt St. Paul's is cracked from top to bottom. Would you believe it? David Salomons, the late Sheriff (who was sweetly cheated out of his gown as Alderman, the said gown being now on the shoulders of Church-and-State Moon, Esq.);-David Salomons, a Jew, has given 16667. 13s. 4d. to buy a scholarship of 50l. a year for the city of London, and the City -Gog and Magog quivered as with the ague-has been mean enough to take it. Oh, for the good old times, when they used to spit upon Jews in the Exchange! and now we take their money from 'em! I know you'll think it a blow at the Church. The scholarship is said to be "open to members of every religious persuasion;" this is a flam-a blind. The gift is a sly attack on the Established Church. It's the evident intention of the Minories to turn us all into Jews. Never has there been such a blow struck at the vested interests of Smithfield pig-market. Sir Robert Inglis-whom I took up at Exeter Hall a night or two ago -says, in two years there'll be a grand Rabbi in Lambeth Palace. Your affectionate Grandson,

JUNIPER HEDGEHOG.

LOOK FORWARD.

ONE year the nearer, wife,
Are we to death:

Time, love, that meeteth life,

Garners our breath.

Let not thy dear face own
Looks of distress:

If days of love are gone,
Sorrows are less.

Look forward cheerily,—

Hope to the last!

Would'st thou live wearily,

Cling to the past.

M. L.

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