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The Vulture and the Husbandman -- Arthur Clement Hilton

Guest poem sent in by Tamsin Bacchus
(Poem #1907) The Vulture and the Husbandman
  By Louisa Caroline

  N.B. -- A Vulture is a rapacious and obscene bird, which destroys its prey
  by plucking it limb from limb with its powerful beak and talons.

  A Husbandman is a man in a low position of life, who supports himself by
  the use of the plough. -- (Johnson's Dictionary).

 The rain was raining cheerfully,
     As if it had been May;
 The Senate-House appeared inside
     Unusually gay;
 And this was strange, because it was
     A Viva-voce day.

 The men were sitting sulkily,
     Their paper work was done;
 They wanted much to go away
     To ride or row or run;
 "It's very rude," they said, "to keep
     Us here, and spoil our fun."

 The papers they had finished lay
     In piles of blue and white.
 They answered every thing they could,
     And wrote with all their might,
 But, though they wrote it all by rote,
     They did not write it right.

 The Vulture and the Husbandman
     Beside these piles did stand,
 They wept like anything to see
     The work they had in hand.
 "If this were only finished up,"
     Said they, "it would be grand!"

 "If seven D's or seven C's
     We give to all the crowd,
 Do you suppose," the Vulture said,
     "That we could get them ploughed?"
 "I think so," said the Husbandman,
     "But pray don't talk so loud."

 "O undergraduates, come up,"
     The Vulture did beseech,
 "And let us see if you can learn
     As well as we can teach;
 We cannot do with more than two
     To have a word with each."

 Two Undergraduates came up,
     And slowly took a seat,
 They knit their brows, and bit their thumbs,
     As if they found them sweet,
 And this was odd, because you know
     Thumbs are not good to eat.

 "The time has come," the Vulture said,
     "To talk of many things,
 Of Accidence and Adjectives,
     And names of Jewish kings,
 How many notes a sackbut has,
     And whether shawms have strings."

 "Please, Sir," the Undergraduates said,
     Turning a little blue,
 "We did not know that was the sort
     Of thing we had to do."
 "We thank you much," the Vulture said,
     "Send up another two."

 Two more came up, and then two more,
     And more, and more and more;
 And some looked upwards at the roof,
     Some down upon the floor,
 But none were any wiser than
     The pair that went before.

 "I weep for you," the Vulture said,
     "I deeply sympathise!"
 With sobs and tears he gave them all
     D's of the largest size,
 While at the Husbandman he winked
     One of his streaming eyes.

 "I think," observed the Husbandman,
     "We're getting on too quick.
 Are we not putting down the D's
     A little bit too thick?"
 The Vulture said with much disgust
     "Their answers make me sick."

 "Now, Undergraduates," he cried,
     Our fun is nearly done,
 "Will anybody else come up?"
     But answer came there none;
 And this was scarcely odd, because
     They'd ploughed them every one!
-- Arthur Clement Hilton
Note:
  ploughed: university slang for "get failed, give a less-than-passing
  grade to a candidate in an examination."

From another era - before the Second World War if not the First - when as
well as the written exams the candidates were examined in pairs viva voce.
Three verses of this poem were reproduced in "Poets at Play", a wonderful
but rather irritating (it has no index of first lines or titles) anthology,
put together by the then Dean of Durham, Cyril Allington.  He comments on
the title saying it "deals, as will be guesssed, with the kindred arts of
plucking and ploughing".

Allington has a weakness for puns.  The Dedication of his book concludes

"TO ALL THE CANONS OF GOOD TASTE
  (By which, of course, I mean my Chapter)."

While looking at it, the Dedication has a verse on what could be called
college days - from the other side of the podium...

  "Schoolmasters sometimes write TO THOSE
    WHO STILL REMEMBER WHAT WE TAUGHT THEM
  But ah! experience often shows
    They're even fewer than we thought them;"

Tamsin

[Martin adds]

When I ran Hilton's "Octopus", I noted that his parodies may be enjoyed as
humorous verse in their own right, but are much funnier if you first read
the original. Ironically, the parodist I chose to compare him to in this
respect was none other than Carroll. Today's poem is definitely better if
you've read The Walrus and the Carpenter - there are places where Hilton has
sacrificed pure humour for parodic fidelity (a common pitfall when writing
parody), and some of his choices only make full sense if you know what he's
twisting.

[Links]

An annotated version of the poem:
  http://rpo.library.utoronto.ca/poem/1022.html

The Walrus and the Carpenter:
  http://www.cs.rice.edu/~ssiyer/minstrels/poems/347.html

Biography:
  [broken link] http://www.poemhunter.com/arthur-clement-hilton/biography/poet-35387/

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