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party enjoyed a hearty laugh at the worthy vicar's ex

pense.

"Well, Mr. Twaddleton, if, as you say, I have brought down philosophy to account for the most familiar occurrences, it is but just that I should return the compliment, by declaring that you are equally prepared to throw a classical interest around the humblest as well as the most dignified subject, a capite usque ad calcem," observed Mr. Seymour.

"Now, Tom, as you have so lately been instructed in the different sources of sound, do tell your good friend, the vicar, the cause of the creaking of his shoes," said his father. "The dryness of the leather, I suppose," answered the young philosopher.

"A certain state of dryness is certainly a necessary condition, or else the cohesion between the inner and outer sole would exclude the air. Correctly speaking, the creaking depends upon the sudden compression of the air contained between the two surfaces of leather; just as a sound is produced by the clapping of the hands by the air thus set in vibration. Shoes with single soles, therefore, never creak, and by interposing a piece of oil-silk between the two soles, you will so far ensure the contact of their surfaces as to obviate the sound."

"That is at all events a piece of practical philosophy worth knowing; and I shall accordingly instruct my operator, Jerry Styles, upon this point," observed the vicar. "So you see, my dear sir, I am no bad shoemaker, although I have never yet made a shoe."

"To be sure to be sure," exclaimed the vicar ; as Horace has it

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"for

Hor., lib. i., sat. 3.

* "For though the wise nor shoes nor slippers made,
He's yet a skilful shoemaker by trade."

"You never made a happier quotation," exclaimed Mr. Seymour.

"I have only one other remark to make," continued he, "which the consideration of this subject has very naturally suggested that the various strange sounds, which have from time to time alarmed the superstitious, may be readily explained upon the simple principles we have been discussing. I well remember a whole family having been thrown into a state of terror, by a mysterious sound which regularly recurred every evening; when it was at length discovered to arise from the crawling of snails over the window; their slimy surfaces, as they moved along, produced a friction, which occasioned a vibration of the glass."

"And I never recall to my recollection, without some degree of terror," said the vicar, "the night I passed in an old oaken chamber which had the reputation of being haunted. A bright fire cheerfully blazed in the grate as I entered the apartment, and casting its ruddy light around, in some measure dissipated the prejudice which had been raised to the disparagement of my dormitory; but awaking in the night, my fire was out, and a succession of the most extraordinary noises I ever heard assailed me."

"All which are easily explicable," said Mr. Seymour. "The old oaken materials were expanded by the heat of your fire, and on the apartment cooling, they again contracted, and gave origin to all the sounds you describe."

"How unsparingly does science clip the wings of imagination!" observed Miss Villers.

66

Reverting to the subject of shoe-making," said Mr. Seymour, "let me ask the vicar, whether he remembers the receipt of Orator Henley, for making a pair in a few minutes."

"I remember it well; he collected a number of shoemakers by promising to impart his great secret to them; and this wonderful abridgment of time and labour was exhibited to

his gaping auditors by cutting off the tops of a ready made pair of boots!"

"I think," said Mr. Seymour, "when Tom has solved the enigma I am about to propose, you will allow that, as a paradoxical shoe-maker, I have fairly beaten the Orator out of the field."

"A shoemaker once made shoes without leather,

With all the four elements joined together;

There were FIRE and WATER, and EARTH too, and AIR,
And most of his customers wanted two pair."

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2

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"There sits Ned," said Mr. Seymour, "I knew we should find him on duty."-p. 353.

CHAPTER XXI.

AN INTERESTING COMMUNICATION, FROM WHICH THE READER MAY LEARN THAT THE MOST IMPORTANT EVENTS ARE NOT THOSE WHICH ABSORB THE GREATEST PORTION OF TIME IN THEIR RECITAL.MAJOR SNAPWELL COMMUNICATES TO MR. SEYMOUR AND THE VICAR HIS DETERMINATION TO CELEBRATE THE MARRIAGE OF HIS NEPHEW BY A FÊTE AT OSTERLEY PARK.-PUNCH AND THE FANTOCCINI.-AN ANTIQUARIAN DISCUSSION OF GRAVE IMPORTANCE.-ORIGIN OF THE BRIDE CAKE. AN INTERVIEW WITH NED HOPKINS, DURING WHICH HE DISPLAYED MUCH CUNNING AND HUMOUR, AND IS ENGAGED BY THE MAJOR AS THE DIRECTOR OF HIS PROPOSED COMIC ENTERTAINMENT.

FOR some time had Major Snapwell been occupied in making arrangements for an event, which he hailed not

only as the accomplishment of his most ardent wishes, but as the guarantee of his future happiness. We did not think it right to impart this secret to our readers, until the period should arrive when, in conformity with the usage of the world, the subject might be referred to without reserve or impropriety. To such a period has our history arrived, and we shall therefore at once communicate the whole story, by relating the substance of a conversation which took place between Major Snapwell and the vicar, in the presence of Mr. and Mrs. Seymour, in the library of Overton Lodge.

66

"Your hand, my dearest friend! your hand, and with it the congratulations of your heart," exclaimed the major, as he approached Mr. Twaddleton; "our friends here," added he, as he bowed to Mr. and Mrs. Seymour, are already acquainted with the proposed union between my worthy nephew, Henry Beecham, and the charming Isabella Villers; and may Heaven shed the dew of its blessing upon them!"

"Amen," ejaculated the vicar.

"Well, sir, I am most anxious that the ceremony should take place at Overton, and that you should officiate upon the occasion."

"Most cheerfully shall I comply with your request; 'connubio jungam stabili,' as the immortal poet has it," was the vicar's reply.

"I have also to inform you," continued the major, "that it is my wish to diffuse a portion of that delight, which this event will impart to me, over the neighbourhood in which I shall probably pass the days that may be yet spared to me; listen, therefore, to the scheme which I have devised for carrying this into effect. I design to give a public entertainment, upon a plan as novel as its scale shall be extensive; it shall not be a mere blaze of the spirits, but the recreation of the mind, and the jubilee of reason. "An entertainment!" muttered the vicar, whose coun

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