* * * * * *
It was a lovely maiden down in Hertford’s
lovely shire;
Before her on a reading-desk, lay many
a well-filled quire:
The lamp of genius lit her eyes; her years
were twenty-two;
Her brow was high, her cheek was pale,
her bearing somewhat
blue:
She pondered o’er a folio, and laboured
to divine
The mysteries of “x”
and “y,” and many a magic sign:
Yet now and then she raised her eye, and
ceased
awhile to ponder,
And seem’d as though inclined to
allow her thoughts
elsewhere to wander,
A step was heard, she closed her book;
her heart
beat high and
fast,
As through the court and up the stairs
a manly figure passed.
One moment more, the opening door disclosed
unto her view
Her own beloved Examiner, her friend and
lover true.
“Tell me, my own Rixator, is it
First or Second Class?”
His firm frame shook, he scarce could
speak,
he only sigh’d
“Alas!”
She gazed upon him with an air serenely
calm and proud—
“Nay, tell me all, I fear it not”—he
murmured
sadly “Ploughed.”
She clasped her hands, she closed her
eyes as fell
the word of doom;
Full five times round in silence did she
pace her little room;
Then calmly sat before her books, and
sigh’d “Rixator dear,
“Give me the list of subjects to
be studied for next year.”
“My own brave Mathematica, my pupil
and my pride,
“My persevering Student whom I destine
for my bride;
“Love struggled hard with Duty,
while the lover marked you B;
“In the end the stern Examiner prevailed
and gave you D.
“Mine was the hand that dealt the
blow! Alas, against my will
“I plucked you in Arithmetic—and
can’st thou love me still?”
She gazed upon him and her eye was full
of love and pride—
“Nay these are but the trials, Love,
by which
true love is tried.
“I never knew your value true, until
you marked me D:
“D stands for dear, and dear to
me you evermore shall be.”
* * * * * *
A year had passed, and she had passed,
for morning,
noon, and night,
Her Euclid and her Barnard-Smith had been
her sole delight.
Soon “Baccalaurea Artium”
was added to her name,
And Hitchin’s groves, and Granta’s
courts resounded
with her fame;
And when Rixator hurried down one day
by the express,
And asked if she would have him, I believe
she answered “Yes.”
For now they live together, and a wiser,
happier pair,
More learned and more loving, can scarce
be found elsewhere;
And they teach their children Euclid,
and
their babies all
can speak
French and German in their cradles, and
at five
can write good
Greek;
And he is a Professor and she Professoress,
And they never cease the Little-go in
gratitude to bless;
When love could not the Lover from the
path of duty sway,
And no amount of plucking could his Student
fair dismay.