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became, in a short time, so expert that he could add, subtract, multiply, or divide, almost any given sum with little trouble and great exactness."

That was the sort of diversion and amusement enjoyed by Tommy on winter evenings. His amusements and diversions, by daylight and by candle-light, at other seasons of the year, were all of the same cheerful and diverting character. If you want to know what happened to Tommy, read—or re-read—the book. You have been told here what became of Mr. Day.

Mr. Day himself, take him for all-in-all, is perhaps the most diverting Landmark in English Literature!

It is rather startling, in view of the comparative maturity of the modern college "man," to read of Thomas Keble as entering Corpus when he was fourteen years and five months old; of his brother John as entering when he was two months older; and of Thomas Arnold as having reached the great age of fifteen and two-thirds when he was matriculated. The late Mr. Justice Coleridge's contribution of the account of the life and doings of these "men" at Oxford, in the early years of the last century, makes pleasant, soothing reading. Corpus was small in its numbers, and humble in its buildings, he tells us; and the mode of tuition was in harmony with those circumstances. They were not