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118 118 THE KING OF SCHNORRERS.

statutes, and he will tell you that my daughter's conduct is nowhere forbidden."

" Silence, sir," cried the President testily. " Mr. Chan- cellor, read the Ascama"

The Chancellor wriggled on his chair, his face flushing and paling by turns ; all eyes were bent upon him in anxious suspense. He hemmed and ha'd and coughed, and took snuff, and blew his nose elaborately.

"There is n-n-no express Ascanta," he stuttered at last. Manasseh sat still, in unpretentious triumph.

The Councillor who was now become his right-hand neighbour was the first to break the dazed silence, and it was his first intervention.

"Of course, it was never actually put into writing," he said in stern reproof. " It has never been legislated against, because it has never been conceived possible. These things are an instinct with every right-minded Sephardi. Have we ever legislated against marrying Christians?" Manasseh veered round half a point of the compass, and fixed the new opponent with his argumentative forefinger. " Cer- tainly we have," he replied unexpectedly. " In Section XX., Paragraph II." He quoted the Ascama by heart, rolling out the sonorous Portuguese like a solemn indictment. "If our legislators had intended to prohibit intermarriage with the German community, they would have prohibited it."

"There is the Traditional Law as well as the Written," said the Chancellor, recovering himself. " It is so in our holy religion, it is so in our constitution."

" Yes, there are precedents assuredly," cried the Presi- dent eagerly.

" There is the case of one of our Treasurers in the time of George II.," said the little Chancellor, blossoming under the sunshine of the President's encouragement, and naming the