22 OLIVER GOLDSMITH'S uim AND TIBUES. im 1744, shown, as a supposed expected guest, into the comforts iTIe. parlour of the squire. Those wore days when Irish : keepers and Irish squires more nearly approximated I now; and Mr. Featherston, unlike the excellent but plosive Mr. Hardcastle, is said to have seen tlio mistake humoured it. Oliver had a supper which gave Mm so ») satisfaction, that he ordered a bottle of wine to follow ; the attentive landlord was not only forced to drink 1 him, hut, with a like familiar condescension, the wife* : pretty daughter were invited to the supper-room, Gohij "bed, he stopped to give special instructions for a hot citki breakfast; and it was not till he had dfopfttehed this I*n meal, and was looking at his guinea with pathetic aspec! farewell, that the truth was told him by the good-nutn squire.* The late Sir Thomas Foatherston, grandson to:. supposed inn-keeper, had faith in the adventure ; and 1 Mr. Graham that as his grandfather and Charles Golctetif had been college acquaintance, it might the bettor accounted for/!' It is certainly, if true, the earliest known instancm of disposition to swagger with a grand air which afterww displayed itself in other forms, and strutted about in eU»fi rather noted for fineness than fitness, * Pwey Mtiiwh', fi, 1, , •t "The story,", said Mr, Graham, at n imlilto meuting itt Wftllyuittli'U* | monument to the Poet (reported in tho (knt. May. for 1HSO, xo. Ua»)» '! •" confirmed to me by the late Sir Thoma» PotvthorHtrm, Bw'i, a nhnrt tirup N "his death." ***