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By This Time The Party Have Become So Brilliant, Having Polished Each Other Up As By Diamond Cutters' Wheels, That It Is "Moved And Seconded" That We "Try Again".

The laughter has brought down the Chemist from the laboratory, the Fisherman from his den; besides rousing the Astronomer, who scintillates in the corner to such a degree that all others expect to be totally eclipsed.

This time the Fisherman, who is also an amateur gardener and farmer on a small scale, draws an appropriate question, in regard to which he enlightens us as follows; and what he says must be true, as we know he has had experience with pigs and hens: -

"Which knows most, a pig or a hen? 'Tis hard to tell in rustic rhyme What pigs or hens may know. A cabbage-head in olden time Sure knew enough to grow. If Balm and corn to them were thrown By parsimonious Bill I think the fact would then be shown, For Piggy'd eat his fill."

Next comes the Chemist with the question: -

"Do you like peanuts? Peanuts are double, And so is the trouble Involved in effort To answer it. Hand over a few, And see if I do Not like peanuts Better than Sanskrit"

Any one who had heard the Chemist warbling, -

"He who hath good peanuts and gives his neighbor none, He sha'n't have any of my peanuts when his peanuts are gone,"

would not have doubted this.

The Philosopher next airs his learning in the following: -

"What do you admire in a fool? Water has such combustibility That one may rightfully admire The happy lack of wise ability Which never rivers sets on fire. Truth needs no recapitulation To make what's simple plainer still. Folly courts our admiration Wherever Fashion has her will."

Part of this is so abstruse that I fear the company do not fully appreciate it; so the next is quite startling; and after hearing it we learn, the cause of the Astronomer's silent merriment in the corner, and rejoice that Dr. Holmes's experience in "writing as funny as he could" has proved a warning to this individual: -

"What is stronger than an onion? Oh, scissors! on a summer night To tax a fat republican In thinking out with all his might Some mightier thing than on-i-on. Garlic, maybe's not strong enough Well, I'll exert my 'spunk' So here you have it, 'in the rough,' - A pole-cat, alias s - - k."

The Oleaginous Personage comes next with the question, "Do you like Crambo?" which was answered, rather ambiguously, thus: -

"If our last lingo was a specimen Of this most wise and learned game, 'Tis sure that thus not many men Would long be known to fame. Any of you as well as I Would knock our type all into Pi, If ghost, or man, or printer's devil Should show us up for good or evil."

Here the sedate and dignified Elsie gives her opinion of a summer recreation after this fashion:

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