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THE SCOTCH FERRY-BOAT.

HE ferry - boat was erowded. A great annual fair was about to be held at a place on the opposite side of the water, which was several miles broad. The company on board, numbering about two hundred, were mostly dissolute men of the class who wander about from fair to fair. Their ostensible business was to buy and sell, and get gain, or to make gain in less reputable ways. Almost all were ignorant, depraved, vicious, and profane. Oaths and polluted the ear, and contaminated the dark souls of utterers and listeners alike.

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But among this herd of wicked men was one who, though with them, was not of them. His business was not at the fair, or, if so, it was lawful business on which he was going. Of one thing we may be surehe utterly loathed the company in which he found himself; for his righteous soul, like that of Lot in Sodom, was vexed with the filthy conversation of the wicked." The name of this godly and God-fearing man was John Brown, a faithful preacher of the Gospel at Haddington.

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He was alone, but not alone; for, withdrawing himself as much as he could from the crowd on deck, he communed with God in prayer, secretly and silently, but with a full and sorrowful heart, praying for the wicked men around him.

He had not long been on board, however, before he was recognised; and while some, probably, declared with oaths that if they had known a parson was among them before the boat started, either he or they should have remained behind, others made up their minds to have some sport out of "the black coat," since he was there. The sport was rough, for they were rough men, even had their intentions been playful and good-humoured, which they were not. Stirred up by hatred of religion and teachers of religion, and further instigated by the master they served, they proceeded, in every conceivable way, to annoy and insult their fellow-passenger, whose only offence was his daring to show himself among them. They hustled him from side to side of the boat, mocked at his garb and his office, and poured their filthy jests and blasphemies into his ears. The good man bore all with patience and meekness. Resistance, indeed, would have been not only vain, but would have brought upon him more serious bodily injury; and

remonstrance would at that time have been useless also; so "he held his peace, even from good, though his sorrow was stirred."

But now a sudden change came over the whole scene. On leaving Newhaven the sun was bright, the water calm, and the wind gentle. The boat was half way across the Frith, four miles from either shore, when the sky became suddenly over-cast, the wind rose to a storm, and the waves began to roll with a violence which threatened destruction to the boat. In addition to its being fearfully overladen with its living freight, it was very old, clumsy, awkward to manage, and insufficiently manned.

The storm increased to a terrible tempest. Rain fell in torrents, and the wind blew with a fury that struck terror into the hearts of all on board. It is needless to say that the sport was over for that time. Presently came forward the captain of the ferry-boat.

"I and my men have done all in our power," said he to the affrighted crowd of passengers who, pale and prostrated by sickness, were huddled together in every variety of attitude on the wet and slippery deck: "we can do no more," he explained, adding that there had never to his knowledge been so furious a storm before on the Frith; that there was no hope of reaching shore on either side, and that a short quarter of an houreven if the old battered boat should hold together so long-was all that they could reckon on for life.

We may imagine if we cannot describe the scene which followed this announcement. Horror-stricken countenances on every side; muttered prayers for mercy; shrieks of terror and despair; mute misery; wringing of hands in hopeless agony; embraces; foolish, maudlin, and extravagant offers of reward for impossible rescue; the wind howling the while around, the water washing over the deck, the boat timbers strained and creaking with every angry blow of the waves; blackness above, a dark, seething cauldron below, and a thick mist all around.

There were no loud curses now to be heard; but presently arose a bitter cry which gave utterance to the thought.

"The minister! the minister! Can he do nought for us?"

The minister of the Gospel, whom in utter despite for the Gospel's sake they had abused and insulted, both with deeds and words, was now all at once the greatest man on board.

"Pray for us! Oh, minister, will ye not pray for us?" And stretched out to him in supplication were hands which a short half-hour before were ready to buffet him, but now would have touched him, 66 as though," says the narrator, mere contact with the person of a human being could shield another-and that other an unpardoned sinner-from the righteousvengeance of a holy God."

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A man of like passions, and also of like infirmity,

with his fellow-passengers, Mr. Brown was suffering from the effects of the terrible storm, when the loud, agonising shrieks of the despairing wretches reached his ear from every quarter of the deck; for the cry had been caught up and repeated as soon as heard.

"Oh, sir, pray! Pray for us! Pray for me! I am a great sinner! Oh, minister, pray for me! pray, pray!"

And forgetting his own weakness, banishing, too, from his thoughts all recollection of the taunts and insults and persecutions he had just before suffered, or rather bearing in mind the injunctions of his Master, "Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully use you, and persecute you," the good man, standing in the midst of the terrified passengers, who had eagerly gathered around him, lifted up his voice to God in earnest and urgent supplication. Amid the noise of the elements, the howling of the wind and the beating of the waves, his voice was heard, praying that God would have mercy upon the miserable sinners on whom His hand was now so evidently laid; that He who rules over all things, who holds the winds in His fist, the waters of the sea in the hollow of His hand, would be graciously pleased to say to the storm, "Peace, be still."

He prayed and prayed, and still the apparentlydoomed vessel rolled fearfully; yet it held together. He continued in prayer, and his prayer was accompanied by the deep groans and convulsive sobs of many a fearful sinner who, it may be, for the first time for many a day, if ever, witnessed and listened to "the effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man."

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Effectual! Yes; for while he prayed a marvellous and utterly unlooked-for change commenced. wind began to moderate its force, the waves, though still rough, abated in their fury; the pelting rain ceased, and gleams of sunshine broke through the murky atmosphere, bringing with them some rays of hope, which brightened and strengthened, until at length the voice of prayer became the voice of praise for so prompt an answer, and so wonderful a deliverance from imminent danger and threatened death. Never before had any on board that old ferry-boat witnessed so literal a fulfilment of the psalmist's words "They that go down to the sea in ships, that do business in great waters; these see the works of the Lord, and His wonders in the deep. For He commandeth, and raiseth the stormy wind, which lifteth up the waves thereof. They mount up to the heaven, they go down again to the depths: their soul is melted because of trouble. They reel to and fro, and stagger like a drunken man, and are at their wits' end. Then they cry unto the Lord in their trouble, and He bringeth them out of their distresses. He maketh the storm a calm, so that the waves thereof are still. Then are they glad because they be quiet; so He bringeth them unto their desired haven."

Brighter and brighter grew the hopes of captain, crew, and passengers, as the yet labouring boat slowly made way towards the landing-place which they had despaired of ever reaching. The wind and waves which had seemed ready in their fierceness to overwhelm and engulf them, now, in their abated strength, speeded them onward to safety, and ere long the "desired haven was reached. The Lord had brought

them to it.

Delivered now from their fears, and with the full tide of worldliness again rushing in upon them, the passengers hastily disembarked, and were making towards the fair-ground, when the clear voice whose tones and accents had yet scarcely died away from their hearing, called upon them to remain where they were.

"It was the voice," writes the biographer, "to which they had so eagerly listened amid the wild revelry of howling winds, surging waves, and deluging rain. It was the voice of the man of God who, in the hour of their sore peril, forgetting the insults they had offered him, had complied with their request to act the part of intercessor for them in the court of that Omnipotent and Omniscient Being whom storms and tempests obey. It was the voice of one of whom all present felt assured they should never forget; and nearly all of those who had been in the boat clustered around him."

Then, raising himself above them on a timber-balk, the minister preached to them the Saviour whom they had despised, the God whom they had so lately defied, and whose power, both to punish and to deliver, they had just experienced-preached to them the Gospel of Him who came to call, not the righteous, but sinners to repentance. He faithfully unveiled to them their guilt and danger, and besought them, now that it was the accepted time and the day of salvation, to receive the offered mercy, and flee for refuge to lay hold on the hope set before them in the Gospel.

Out of the fulness of his heart the mouth of the preacher spake, and he was listened to with rapt attention and strong emotions. "Many a sun-browned cheek," we are told, was that day bedewed with penitential tears; and the power of the Lord was present both to wound and to heal, both to bruise and to bind up."

The preacher ceased, and the audience departed. Would the effect be lasting? He had cast the bread on the waters; would it be seen after many days?

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'My word," says Jehovah, "shall not return unto Me void, but it shall accomplish that which I please, ! and it shall prosper in the thing whereto I sent it." It is not always given to the faithful servant of Christ to know how successful his labours have been. He never can know perfectly and in full to what extent he-or rather the Gospel he has preached, either by word or by life has been "the savour of life unto life." But sometimes God is pleased, for the encouragement of those who work for Him, to show them that

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The voice of prayer was heard above the howling of the tempest. acknowledge and bless his efforts for their rescue from the greater danger of spiritual death to which they were exposed.

It would be pleasant to be able to give the particulars of some of the conversions witnessed that day, and to show how, in the after-life of the converted, God was glorified and souls were saved. In after

ask, "Is it likely that God would, at the prayer of His servant, so interfere with the ordinary course of nature as to turn away the storm, and save the imperilled ferryboat and her wicked passengers?" The Christian, however, who really believes in the efficacy of prayer, has a ready answer to the question in his own soul and experience that God is the Hearer and Answerer of prayer.

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