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<h2> RAIN DOCTORS. </h2>
<p>The prolonged drought has already inflicted serious injury on the farmers.
They are, as a rule, a loyal class of men, but their loyalty will probably
be shaken when they realise that the Lord has spoiled their crops to
provide Queen's weather for the Jubilee. An occasional shower might wet
the Queen's parasol or ruffle the plumage of the princes and princelings
in her train. Occasional showers, however, are just what the farmers want.
The Lord was therefore in a fix. Though the Bible says that with him
nothing is impossible, he was unable to please both sides; so he favored
the one he loved best, gave royalty unlimited sunshine, and played the
deuce with the agricultural interest.</p>
<p>Possibly the Lord knows better than we do, but we venture to suggest that
a slight exercise of intelligence, though we admit it may have been a
strain upon his slumbrous brain, would have surmounted the difficulty. The
windows of heaven might have been opened from two till four in the
morning. That would have been sufficient for a proper supply of rain, and
the whole of the day could have been devoted to "blazing" without injuring
anyone. Or, if the early morning rain would have damaged the decorations,
the celestial turnkey might have kept us a week without water giving us an
extra supply beforehand. On the whole, if we may hazard so profane an
observation, the powers above are singularly behind the age. Their affairs
are frightfully mixed, and the result is that capital and labor are both
in a state of uncertainty. The celestial dynasty will have to improve, or
its imperial power will be questioned, and there will be a demand for Home
Rule with regard to the weather. It is a perfect nuisance, with respect to
a matter which vitally affects us, not to be able to know what a day will
bring forth.</p>
<p>Meanwhile we turn to the clergy, and inquire why they do not perform their
professional duties in this emergency. There is a form of prayer for such
cases in the Prayer-book. Why has it not been used? Do the clergy think
the Lord is growing deaf with old age? Have they a secret suspicion that
praying for a change of weather is as useful as whistling for the wind? Or
has the spirit of this sceptical age invaded the clerical ranks so
thoroughly as to make them ashamed of their printed doctrines? When a
parish clerk was told by the parson one morning that the prayer for rain
would be read, he replied, "Why, sir, what's the use of praying for rain
with the wind in that quarter?" We fancy that parish clerk must have a
good many sympathisers in the pulpit.</p>
<p>Still the clergy should do what they are paid for, or resign the business.
They are our rain doctors, and they should procure us the precious fluid.
If they cannot, why should we pay them a heavenly water-rate? The rain
doctors of savages are kept to their contract. They are expected to bring
rain when it is required, and if they do not, the consequences are
unpleasant. They are sometimes disgraced, and occasionally killed. But the
rain doctors in civilised countries retain all the advantages of their
savage prototypes without any of their risks and dangers. Modern
Christians allow the clergy to play on the principle of "heads I win,
tails you lose." If the black regiments pray and there is no answer,
Christians resign themselves to the will of God. If there <i>is</i> an
answer, they put it to the credit of the priests, or the priests put it to
their own credit, which is much the same thing.</p>
<p>We should be sorry to charge such a holy body of men with duplicity, but
is there not "a sort of a smack, a smell to?" They are reluctant to pray
for rain, on the alleged ground that Omnipotence should not be interfered
with rashly. But the sincerity of this plea is questionable when we
reflect that it obviously favors the clergy. Our climate is variable, long
spells of particular weather are infrequent, and if when one occurs the
clergy hold back till the very last, their supplication for a change
cannot long remain unanswered. But perhaps this is only an illustration of
the wisdom of the serpent which Jesus recommended to his apostles.</p>
<p>If the clergy are anxious to exhibit their powers they should pray for
rain in the desert of Sahara. Missionaries might be sent out to establish
praying stations, and in the course of time the desert might bloom as a
garden, and the wilderness as a rose. We make the suggestion in all
sincerity. We are anxious to be convinced, if conviction is possible.
Praying for rain in a watery climate is one thing, praying for rain where
none ever falls is another. If the clergy can bring down a fruitful shower
on the African sands, we shall cry, "A miracle," and send them a quarter's
pew-rent.</p>
<p>Seriously—for we can be serious—we ask the clergy to do their
level best. The farmers are swearing wholesale, and by taking the name of
the Lord their God in vain they incur the peril of eternal damnation. The
fruit crop is injured, and children suffer unusually from the
stomach-ache. Worst of all, infidel France is flooding our markets with
cherries and other fruits, and we are supporting the accursed sceptical
brood because the Lord has not nourished our own growths. Surely then it
is time to act. If the parsons lose this fine opportunity they may rely on
it that the anti-tithe agitation will develop into alarming proportions.
Their livings are at stake, and we ask them to consider the interests of
their wives and families. If our generous warning is unheeded the clergy
may find the nation carrying out the principle of free trade in religion,
and importing some rain doctors from Africa. Many of these magical
blackmen would be glad to exchange their present pickings for a vicarage
and five hundred a year. If they thought there was a chance of obtaining a
bishopric, with a palace and six or ten thousand a year, they would start
for England at once. Many of them are of excellent reputation, and would
come to us with the best of testimonials. Would it not be well to give
them a trial? We should find out who was best at the business. He might be
constituted our national rain doctor at a liberal salary, and the rest
discharged; for surely the Lord does not require thirty thousand praying
to him at once, unless on the principle that he must be surrounded to
prevent the prayer from going into one ear and out at the other.</p>
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