discovered   that    ale     kept    in  a   corked  bottle
would    become  bubbly.     Quite   early   on,     the
discovery   was attributed  to  Alexander   Nowell,
dean    of  St. Paul’s  Cathedral.  Thomas  Fuller,
in   his     1662   History  of  the     Worthies    of
England,    wrote:
Without offense it  may be  remembered,
that    leaving a   bottle  of  ale,    when    fishing,    in
the grass,  [Nowell]    found   it  some    days
after,  no  bottle, but a   gun,    such    the sound
at  the opening thereof:    and this    is  believed
(casualty   is  mother  of  more    invention   than
industry)   the original    of  bottled ale in
England.By  1700,   glass-bottled   ale sealed  with    cork
and  thread  had     become  popular,    along   with
sparkling   Champagne   (p. 724).   But both    were
largely novelties.  Most    beer    was drunk   flat,   or
close   to  it, from    barrels.    Centuries   later,  with
the  development     of  airtight    kegs,   of
carbonation,     and     the     increasing  tendency    to
