(51jf fantilg [For the American Presbyterian.] [FROM A WELL-KNOWN ANECDOTE.] For weeks was no rain in the village, Not a cloud to be seen in the sky, And the eyes of the farmers seemed failing With looking upward so high. The grain in the fields was all dying, For want of the soft gentle showers ; E'en the grass by the roadsidewas with'ring And low drooped the beautiful flowers. Then had they no refuge but praying That God who aendeth the rain, Might turn from Hia wrath unto mercy, And remember His people again. As up to the church came they sadly, Beside him one saw in the throng, A wee bonnie lassie, who carried A huge old umbrella along. Half smiling, he asked her the reason She carried the cumbersome thing, When the sun shone so bright in the heaven And no cloud in the blue sky was seen. She lifted her earnest face to him With a look half of wonder, half pain— " Why sir, I thought I should need it, You know, we're to pray for the rain." All his wisdom affordei no answer, For her words like an arrow of light Revealed the skeptical darkness That shrouded his spirit in night. And the faith of the child, by the Master, Was honored that same afternoon, For even while they were praying He sent them the long•wished-for boon. Just such is that faith of believers, That tells them their sins are forgiven, That Christ is their Lord and Redeemer, And their's is the kingdom of heaven. M. A. R HUNTING AFTER HIM. [The following is the fragment of a chapter in " Jane Gurley's Story," a serial of unusual beauty, by Miss E. Phelps, now running 'through Hours at. Home. The little here given sufficient ly reveals the early history of Jane and the glimpses of her better future, to make it both intelligent and interesting as an isolated article.] "Reuben, it is so funny to be happy." Reuben smiled. " I mean just to be a little bit happy, out of the house, when I'm off with you ; when I. forget about ;father ; when I forget about-0 ! so much 1" She drew a long, - restful breath. The boy's answer was in his eyes. "I think it is really very funny, Reuben," with her little whimsical shrug of the shoulders ; " sometimes I want to laugh at it, and sometimes— sometimes, Reuben, I want to cry." They were alone there in the door way ; she turned her face up to his, her wonderful eyes, full of their word less stories—a little dim just then. Janet's eyes were not often dim. She turned away her face to hide. them, when she heard what Reuben said. " Reuben , " presently, " sometimes I wonder think perhaps—do you suppose it might possibly be true, after all?'' " What, Janet 7" " About Him they say used to live here with the poor folks, Reuben ; to suffer all his life, and know all about every thing. Why, if I could believe it,"-.her eyes dilating with a sort of surprise—" if I could believe it, Reu ben 1" "I don't know, Janet," his face turn ing in its questioning way toward the darkness ; " sometimes I think it is, may be." " If I could atop awhile, Reuben ; if I could stop and rest a little while I If they--I don't know who it is, but there's somebody there—if they'd let us find out together—you and me. Do you suppose we could, Reuben ?" " When we get out in the country, Janet, where there's plenty of wind and flowers—may be, may be, some times I think it isn't so easy to think things against him. They come -up and look at you, and look at you, and look at you so, Janet. "I think it's easy enough I" the girl's face hardening for the moment; "all my life he's done things against me. I can't forget 'em so easy. Did I want to have a .devil for a father ? Did I want to stay working in the dust and wheels, always drawing pic tures on the glass, pictures on the reels, pictures on the walls; always hearing the dust and wheels laughing at me ? DO I want to see Baby Ben growing up like all the rest of 'em, and I can't stir a finger to help it ? Did I want to be born, any way ? Did he ever give me any thing I wanted but— you?' And then her voice dropped -into a whispers and her face melted utterly. "Reuben, if he'd let me keep you / If it.wasn't just like him to take you away V' "Take me away 7. Why, Janet! bow P You don't think it would be one, ja-net Her face was very beautiful and very womanly, when she simply aaswered: "No" After a pause : "I don't know- how, Reuben ; but he'd find a way if he wanted it. I can't help tbinking he'll find a way I" There are prophecies in life un sought and uncomprehended, which flash, -and pass, and are gone. Of the wheace and the whither, no man knoweth, nor shall know, till the day of the revealing of mysteries shall come. Such a prophecy might have been written on the faces of the two at thit moment The wind was wail ing abOUt the corner of the alley. They listened to it, and neither spoke. FAITH. The boy turned at last, smiling ' and pushed the hair from his forehead in his nervous way.. " We're as likely to be happy as any body else, Iguess, an't we, Janet ?" She made no answer. " And as long as it lasts." She looked up, with her truer and better look. "As long as it . lasts. Reuben, I'll hunt after that God—Him that lived with the poor folks. I think I should like to find him." As tong as it.,/asis. Verily,_ a proviso made by better' hearti than Jane's. The wealthy patriarch,at Bethel, who took the Lord to be.his God on condi tion that he would give him a prosper ous journey, and much cattle, and men-servants, and maid-servants, may not be without his counterpart in later and better times. When Janet was,alone in her own room'that night with Baby Ben, she „hunted for something on a neglected shelf high in the dust and cobwebs of her chimney closet. It was an old Bible, long disused and torn. She took it to the light, opened it, laid it on her table, and sat , down beside it, ' her hair falling ,over her facp,,and over it. She read till midnight, and closed the book, and leaned back in her chair with a long sigh. She took up Thomas Paine then, turning its far more familiar pages with a sort of im patience; then back again to the Bible; and then she closed them both. "If I could only believe it—if I could 1" throwing out her hands with a curious gesture of appeal. Muttering presently : "Crucified, and wounded, and killed !" She rose then to pace her room as she so`often did, her face like the face of a puzzled child. For the girl was honest with herself that night; of that Lam, sure., Her soul, growing, little by little, healthful and strong under the blessing of Reuben's love, cried out for that dearer love, and surer, of which she had*, moments—as I. fancy. even the lost must have—her dim dreams and longings. Indeed, it seem ed as if her unbelief were but a disease, caused by the actual, incessant suffer ing of her life, reacting upon itself, and which, the rest of a little happiness such as her God gave to so many I young creatures like Janet, in measure , pressed down and running over, might cure. " I wonder if He sent me Reuben," muttering the name over to herself : "Reuben. For it was such a mightylove that had come into this girl's life. On it hung such terrible, eternal issues. At any rate, through it, and because of it, for the first time for seventeen years, Jane was' huntinz i aor God. Very honestly, and vOljelpatiently. Quite alone and in the dark ; feeling her way over thorns, and straining tear-dimmed eyes, if perhaps he might be found of her—the Man of Sorrows, crowned with thorns, brought very near to her loneliness and her guilt; he who had felt every pang for her, and with her ; who had mourned over Janet standing afar off from him; who, before the world was, had lovd her. OC. how he would rest Janet. 01 that she knew where she might find him. And that she should come wearily back, his face unseen, his voice un heard; because there was no human helper to take her by the 'faltering hand and lead her unto' him 1 So near to him ; and it might be! It chanced that Janet had a holiday that week—it being one of those pub lic fasts which to her, and to others like her, mean the veriest thanksgiv ings for their rest from. the whirl and the roar and the dinginess. She bad taken Baby Ben out for a walk in the fresh, 'morning sunlight, hoping per. haps to find Reuben in some of their little rendezvous among the parks. She chose instinctively a street that led her past the chief picture -stores of the city—a street as familiar to her as to any of the gay connoisseurs who thronged to it in their daily pleasure hours. " We'll see the picture's, slian't we, Bennie ?" laughing as he clung to her neck, in infantile fear of the jostling passers. "Janie's baby mustn't be afraid ; she will take good care of him. A whole holiday, Ben ; and pictures in the windows. ThinlZ----such beauti- ful pictures for Janie's baby ! Baby Ben will love the pictures when he grows up, won't he ?" She had so taught the child the word, from its bright reflection in her own face, that he used to answer her with a cry of delight at the sound of it. She was so pleased at that always —laughing outright, and kissing his forehead, cheeks, and lips like a very child herself. "01 such pictures as Janie will draw for Baby Ben some day—when we go out in the country, may be—. Reuben and Bennie and me. Such nice times we will have 1 01 here they are =in windows, so many pictures for Baby Bent Gold frames, and black frames, and sansetp, and oceans, and rocks, and children and water-0 Baby Ben 1" And then she quite forgot Baby Ben, in her gazing. The windows were freshly stocked that day; the pictures all new to her. There was one that caught and held her eyes—a painting in oils. It bore a great name on the card slipped into its frame; but of that Janet knew and thought nothing. It was a long, low moor, with rank TOE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, MAY 3, 1866. winds, a stagnant grasses swept by marsh, and a dead tree sharp in the foreground. Beyond, a long, low sun set; a streak of dreary red, burnt through clouds. Midway, and alone, the figure of a woman with the red light on her face. There was another—a pretty bit of coloring on porcelain, a fter*- ofie of Correggio's children, strangling a greyhound with caresses...,_At that she laughed outright. The elegantly : clad lady, just brushingpast her within the door turned her haughty eyes on,her in astonishment. Two or three passers smiled. But Janet did not know it. She had forgotten that she was not the only person in the universe for whom the choice, bright window was opened. There was a little gem of Weber s, too, which she had the audacity perfectly to comprehend—you saw that from her eyes. But she found at last, that in which every thing else was forgotten. It was a fine line-engraving of one of Raphael's cartoons—Elymas the sor cerer, struck with blindness. You re member it ? At once among the most uncouth, revolting, and wonderful of all. Jane did not know the artist's name, and therefore went iuto no, well bred ecstasies. To her unsophisticat ed eyes the majority of the bystanders appeared to be cripples, and the apos tle, she concluded, after some specula tion, was trying to hide in the corner. But on the turbaned sorcerer, with his closed eyes, bared throat, and great, groping hands on which the veins stood out like iron, her eyes fastened. Not only because the whole genius of the picture lay in that solitary, appeal ing figure ; but because of some quick curious sympathy between it and her self, of which she was apparently ,un conscious. She was worth looking at, as she stood there in her faded dress and hat jostled by the brilliantly-clad passers, and ignorant of their presence, the child clinging to her neck, and her chameleon eyes on the. p49ture., So' utterly had the soul orthe greatmaster passed into, hers, that the very expres- sion of the groping face, the very en treaty of the groping hands, were re fleeted in her face and figure. Like him on whom the curse had fallen, she seemed to be feeling her way. " My child, you like the picture." It was a low voice—a sweet voice= and clear, like a bell. Janet used afterward to tell Reuben that it sound ed as if some one had laid a soft hand upon her forehead. She started and looked up. The voice belonged to a pale face, with large, serious eyes. The lady's dress was all of black. "You like the picture," the voice repeated. "He— he can't see," said Janet, coming slowly out of that'gioping look, and closing her outstretched hand. I "No ; he is blind ; he is feeling his way." The girl repeated her words, as if unconscious that she did so." "Feeling *way. Yes. It's dark." " You like pictures," the lady said. Janet simply raised her eyes. It was answer enough. "So do I," said the gentle voice. "It is something to be thankful for, to like pictures, isn't it ?" And thin both voice and face passed by with a smile. Janet stood like a statue, looking after her, Baby Ben's chatter quite unheeded. She looked until the mourn- ful black dress was lost in the crowd; then she turned slowly from 'the win dow and walked way. If I could tell you how the little thing had;touched her! They came to the Gardens after a while, and she found a quiet seat by a fountain, and let Baby Ben play about in the shade. Presently she took a piece of chalk from her pocket, and began, in a half-unconscious way, to draw lines with it upon the -painted seat. While she worked, her face changed and grew beautiful, the breath coming through her parted lips in its struggling way. The rough marks slowly assumed a form : groping hands first with large veins on them ; then a groping face, with turban and bared throat; at last a complete, crude copy of the sorcerer—she bending over it, her breath coming faster and sharper. The passers began toPlook at her curiously. One gentleman, a cm2nois- sear in art, could not pass the thing without an exclamation of surprise. It stopped her, and she looked up, her face flushing. "My good girl," said the gentleman, with a stare at her whose gentlemanli ness might be questioned, " did you do this ?" "I suppose so," said Janet in her sullen way. "I declare if it were possible." He bent over the chalk-marks curious ly. " You can never have seen any of Raphael's cartoons, of course ?" He turned in surprise at her laugh. "Don't know. Guess I haVen't seen very much. Some folks have chances, you know and some don't." The gentleman arched his eyebrows in delicate recoil from her shag. voice. "My—my good girl, didAiny body ever teach you to draw?" " No," shortly ; " who should ?" " Ton must have natural—it is strange, strange. Do you often do such things as that?" pointing to the chalk marks. " I'd be always doing 'em if I could," turning her eyes hungrily to the figure. The man looked at her, and coughed. "Well, well, my girl, I advise you to let such things be. Keep at your work—mill, I suppose ? Keep at your mills; don't go to turning your head with notions of things above you. It makes the masses discontented, and is a waste of time. Besides, you're spoiling the seat. Ah ! Miss anger, good-morning. Curious developments one will find among the people. I've been amusing—why—" "Why, I am glad to see you again !" Janet had raised her hand angrily, to rub away her sorcerer ; but it fell, and . the dark look died out of her eyes. For the gentle voice she - had heard at the shop-winthAr -was there again, and the kindly woman's face. "I am glad to see you again. You are drawing something there ?" • " Really—aw—quite a curiosity, considering the circumstances," drawl ed the connoisseur. " You were going this way, `Miss Granger.?" "Not just at present," said Miss Granger, somewhat gravely, turning, as.she spoke, to the vacant place on the settee at Janet's side. The connoisseur touched his hat, and left in some as tonishment. " What is this ? 0 1 the sorcerer 1" began the lady, pointing with her gloved hand to Janet's sketch. "It's him I saw in the window. Him that couldn't see. But I can't make him. I don't know how—l don't know how." Her face had utterly changed. You would not have thought, just then, that she was capable of a rudeness. And j ust then, that woman sitting there beside her could. have done with [ her anything she pleased. "You would like to be taught to draw, wouldn't you ?" with a certain quick sympathy in her voice that Janet had never heard in such a voice before. " I bet I would 1" in = her quick, man like :way; - then flushing painfully. " There! I didn't mean to say that.. I mean I should like to." But the lady did not appear in the least shocked; she simply smiled, and ' her smile was very kind. "If Yon,- could go tu the school of design for a while, my—you' haven't told me your name." "Janet." "If you could study a little while, Janet; but that, I suppose, is impos- I sible ' " seeing it'in the girl's face. "No; it's ILO use thinking about such things. I guess they an't m.:.de for folks like me." • "I am sorry for you," said Miss G - ranger simply. The girl flushed to her forehead. Her eyes, when she raised them, were full of teats. None but Reuben had 'ever brought * tears to Janet's eyes f before. And again, that woman could have done with her anything she pleased. Of that she did not think ; she only knew that this girl was her sister; that she had no helper; that was all. Your blind man was a very wicked man • did you know it ?" after a si lence. In the silence, the lady had' laid her delicate hand upon Janet's rough, bare one beside her, as if the touch might say what words could not. " Was that what they made him blind for ?" sharply. " Yes." Janet's mouth hardened. "They hadn't any business tot He couldn't help. it. I should like to know if they thought he'd be any better when he couldn't see anything." The hidden meaning of the words the other quite comprehended. For she said—and when she said it there were quick tears in her own eyes: "My poor child, try to see. God will do the rest." " Will he ?" eagerly, "if I try ? But I do try. I can't. I can't see any thing. I've been tormented all my life, and I suppose I've got to be tor mented all my life, and I'm as. wicked as the- 3, stopping short. The answer came very softly. " I understand, Janet. The poor are not the only ones in the world who suffer. Try to remember that." Janet glanced at her mourning gar ments, and said nothing. "And if you will only try to see— not everything, but a little; just enough to do right by, Janet. God is real, and heaven is real. It is worth trying hard for." A lady passing stopped then, and called Miss Granger's name. She rose regretfully. "I wish I Could see you again; but I am a stranger here, and leave town tomorrow. I wonder if you will re member what I said—some time when you are in great trouble." "I'll remember it," said Janet, in her concise way, "just as long as I live. And I'll remember you.' The lady smiled, and took her hand to say a gentle good-bye, Baby Ben came crawling up to Janet's knee, fretting to go home. " That's Baby Ben," said Janet, proudly, "my little brother." • "You must love him very much. May I have a kiss ?" And then she took the child in her arms, and touched his soft cheek with her lips. workingJauet looked after her, her s face d at her elb s o t tv ra u ng n e h l e y e.de ß d a . bY P ß res en e4:trsb e e took him up, touching her finger to his cheek with a certain whimsical air that seemed to be struggling with tears. "There! If anybody ever kisses you after this, that an't fit to, I guess I'll know it 1" When Reuben came up presently, be found her in such gentle and tender moods as even he had never, seen. "And 0, Reuben P' she said, in tell ing her eager story, "I'll hunt after that God—l'll hunt after him just as hard as I can hunt." So they met and parted—these - two women whose sisterhood bridged all chasms; who might have learned to thank God for each other—the one for her soul redeemed; the other for his blessing, in that he had given her this jewel in her waiting crown. tor tijt Atitar Strtit,s, FAMILIAR, TALKS-2D SERIES. XIV BY REV. EDWARD PAYSON HAMMOND.* WHAT LITTLE CHRISTIANS CAN DO FOR JESUS. A few weeks since I wrote to the dear little readers of the AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, of how a little girl of about eight years was used by God to lead her father and mother to the Sa viour; and now I want to tell you of what three children did for their father, who had never been a praying man. One day, when coming home from a meeting, one of the little ones said : " I wish we could get our father to come to these meetings." "How can we do it ?" "I will tell you," said the little boy ; "we will all pray for him." " But where can we get a good place to pray for him ?" "Why, you go into the parlor, where father hardly ever goes, and I will go off, out to the barn," said the praying little boy. So into the parlor the two girls went;, and knelt down and began to pray. While they vi,ere pleading most earnestly, the father, who was a farm er, came up from the field, and instead of going round the back way, started to pass right through the parlor. But' as he opened the door quietly, they did not hear him. He listened a min ute, and felt he could not go through that room. Away he went, out to the barn, and there too, up in the haymow, he heard his boy's voice in pleading prayer. As the little fellow slid down from the mow, his father put his hands on his head, and with tears said : "0 ! pray for me; I will go to the meeting." And so he did; and what is better still, I think he came to Jesus and got a new heart, s 9 that he loves to pray himself. Does your father, my dear child, love the Saviour 7 . If not, wont you pray for him ? God will answer your prayer. He loves to listen to the prayers of little children. In Peoria, Illinois, a few days since, I asked all the children to bring a text from the Bible. Two sisters and a brother, in one envelope, brought not only a verse, but also some nice letters. You will see that each of thesd seems to have a new, praying heart. 0 ! I hope they will pray for all their friends, till they come and love the dear Saviour, who bled on the cross for their sins. If you could only see the letters, just as they spelled them, it would interest you a great deal more. Their father, you see, is not like the father of the other praying children of whom I have just told you. I saw him, and he told me he was glad his children loved the Saviour. I• read these letters to more than a thousand children and youth last Fri day, and they seemed much interested with them, and I. hope they will inter est you. Each of these, you see, "loves to pray." If you, my dear child, are a Christian, you too will love to pray. You will not say your prayers, but you will really pray. But I will not keep you longer from these children's letters. We will first see what the little boy, of only nine summers, says about the way he became a Christian, and got a praying heart. I have been to all of the children's meet ings but two, and I love Jesus now. Tuesday evening I felt I was a sinner. Mamma asked one of the ministers to pray with me, and he did so. And after the minister had prayed with me, I felt that my sins,.which were many, were alrforgiven. And now I feel very happy, and 1 love to read the Bible better than - I did before, and nove to pray better tha7i I did before." •My verse is : lave them that love me, and those that seek me early shall find me." Good-bye. Virnuaz B—. I am nine years old. Little Fannie, of eleven years, says , " I kive to pray; I pray three Eines a day." None can tell how much good she may do by such a life of prayer. For a long time I have wished to be a Christian; but I did not find the way to Jesus till after I went to three of your chil dren's meetings. There a kind lady spoke to me; and after praying at home, and dear papa telling me to give myself to Jesus, I became very happy. Now I like to read my Bible, and I try to love him more and more every day. I can't do enough for dear Jesus. I like to sins , "I love Jesus, yes I do.' , .1 love to pray, and I pray three times a day. Will you please to pray for me? My verse is: "And in that day thou shalt say I will Praise thee.; though thou vast angry with me, thine anger is turned away and thou comfortest me."--Isa. xii. 4. Your little friend, Parana Eleven years old. Lizzie says: "1 NOW LOVE TO BEAD NT BIBLE AND TO PRAY." *Copyright secured. I have seen the smiling faces of these two sisters and their brother, and they look very happy. It is be cause they have praying hearts, and are trying to do all they can for Jesus, who has done so much for them. I attended all your meetings but two. Tuesday evening I felt very unhappy, and I wanted to love Jesus. After the meeting was over .my Sunday-school teacher prayed with me, but still I did not feel happy. Thursday afternoon my mother went with me to • the meeting, and after it was over she asked nieliflft;woulducitAike to have one of thenninistersray - Aritirmey but F told her that - I would rather have papa pray with me , at home. Ah t I know why I did not want tio pniYhd withition"; it was because some of my playmates were' only a few seats in front of me, and I was afraid that some of them would laugh at me. On my reaching home, I felt very sorry for not staying, and when I went to bed that night I prayed that God-woulcl-forgive.me'for doing such a thing. I did not 'find' J esus until Saturday afternoon. After the -meeting, some-,one prayed with me, and then I felt that all my sins were washed away by Jesus' blood. And when I went home, dear papa and , mamma had a little prayer-meeting with us, and we were all very happy. Ilove now to read my Bible and to- pray. My verse is: "I waited pa tiently for the Lord, and he inclined unto me and heard my cry."--Psa. xl: 1. - I am your little friend; thirteen years of age, B—. If you, my little child, have learned to Ipve the dear Jesus,. I hope you will pray for all yourfriends:and,playmates till they too learn to love and trust Him. He will answer your prayers, for His voids are, ."ASK AND YE SHALL REGET'VE.I7 I have just been standing on the spot where President 'Lincoln asked the people of the United States to pray for him.. And, they: did pray for him; and Ipan but think their prayers were answered. Yes, God always answers, prayer. It may not be in just the way we ex pect,, but He does hear and answer those who pray with faith in Jesus' name. SPRINGIPIXLI), ILL., April, 1866. TWO SIDES. TO .A TALE. "What's the matter ?" said Groviler to the black cat, as-Ithe sat mamping on the step of the .kitchen door. "Mater enough," said theoat, turn ing her head an way..., " Onr cook is very fond of talking, of hanging me. I wish beartily,some one. would hang her." "Why, what is the matter ?" repeat ed Growler. "Hasn't she beaten me, and called me a thief, and threatened' to be the death of me ?" • " Dear, dear 1" said Growler ; " pray, what has brought it about ?" "0, the .merest trifle—absolutely nothing; it is her temper. All the servants coinplain of it. I wonder they haven't hanged her long ago." "Well, you see," said Growler, "cooks are awkward things to hang; you and I might be managed much more easily." "Not a drop of milk have I had this day," said the black cat; "and such a pain in my side 1!' "But what," said Growler—" what immediate cause.?" "Haven't I told you'?" said the black cat pettishly ; "it's her tempei—what I have had to suffer' from it I Every thing she breaks she lays to me—sach injustice l—it is unbearable Growler was quite indignant ; but, being of a reflective tarn, after the first gust of wrath bad passed, he asked, "Bat was, there..,7*9 -particular cause this morninigg "She chose to be very angry be cause I—l offended her," said the cat, " How ? may I ask," gently inquir ed Growler. "0 ; nothing worth telling—a mere mistake of mine." Growler looked at her with such a questioning expression, that she was compelled to say, " I took the wrong thing for my breakfast." "0 !" said. Growler, much enligh tened. " Why, the fact was," said the black cat, "I was springing at a mouse, and I knocked down a dish.; and not knowing exactly what it was, I smelt it, and just tasted it; and it was rather nice, and"-- " Then you finished it ?" suggested Growler. " Well, I should, I believe, if that cook hadn't come in. As it was I left the head." , "The head ofwhat ?" said Growler. -"Haw inquisitive you are!" said he black cat. "Nay, but I should like to know," said Growler. " Well, then, of some grand fish that was meant for dinner." "Then," said . Growler,, "say what you please; but now I've heard both sides of th story, I only wonder she didn't hang yon" —Original _Pales. SMART LITTLE GIRL.. A gentleman in Kentucky worth $lOO,OOO was present at a meeting to solicit aid for suffering Virginians. He wepcprofueely, and when the plate went round he gave fifty cents, where upon a little' girl sitting near said, " that was a heap of crying for a little giving." NEVER put much confidence in such as put no confidence in others. A man prone to suspect evil is mostly looking in his neighbor for what he 'sees in himself. As to the pure, all things are pure, even so to the impure, all things are impure.—Hare.