Nuts to crack; or Quips, quirks, anecdote and facete of Oxford and Cambridge Scholars. Gooch Richard

Nuts to crack; or Quips, quirks, anecdote and facete of Oxford and Cambridge Scholars - Gooch Richard


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       Richard Gooch

      Nuts to crack; or Quips, quirks, anecdote and facete of Oxford and Cambridge Scholars

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066186210

       PREFACE.

       OXFORD AND CAMBRIDGE

       NUTS TO CRACK;

       QUIPS, QUIRKS, ANECDOTE AND FACETE.

       NEW WORKS

       Table of Contents

      Veil’d in a cloud of scarce black-letter lore.

      Had Galen’s self, sirs, ab origine, or Æsculapius, or the modern school of Pharmacopœians drugged their patients thus, they long ago, aye, long ago, had starved; your undertakers had been gone extinct, and churchyards turned to gambol-greens, forsooth. Mirth, like good wine, no help from physic needs:—blue devils and ennui! ha, ha, ha, ha! Didst ever taste champagne? Then laugh, sirs, laugh—“laugh and grow fat,” the maxim’s old and good: the stars sang at their birth—“Ha, ha, ha, ha!” I cry you mercy, sirs, the Book, the Book, Quips, Quirks, and Anecdotes. Oxonians hear! “Ha, ha, ha, ha!” Let Granta, too, respond. What would you more? the Book, sirs, read, read, read.

      ’Tis true, my work’s a diamond in the rough, and that there still are sparkling bits abroad, by wits whose wages may not be to die, would make it, aye, the very Book of Books! Let them, anon, to Cornhill wend their way (p.p.) to cut a figure in Ed. sec. 3d, or 4th, from Isis or from Cam. What if they say, as Maudlin Cole of Boyle, because some Christ-Church wits adorned his page with their chaste learning, “ ’Tis a Chedder cheese made of the milk of all the parish,”—Sirs, d’ye think I’d wince and call them knave or fool? Methink I’d joy to spur them to the task! Methink I see the mirth-inspired sons of Christ-Church and the rest, penning Rich Puns, Bon-mots, and Brave Conceits, for ages have, at Oxon, “borne the bell,” and oft the table set in royal roar. Methink I see the wits of Camus, too, go laughing to the task—and then, methink, O! what a glorious toil were mine, at last, to send them trumpet-tongued through all the world!

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      OR,

      QUIPS, QUIRKS, ANECDOTE AND FACETE.

       Table of Contents

      WAS OXFORD OR CAMBRIDGE FIRST FOUNDED?

      “Oxford must from all antiquity have been either somewhere or nowhere. Where was it in the time of Tarquinius Priscus? If it was nowhere, it surely must have been somewhere. Where was it?”—Facetiæ Cant.

      Here is a conundrum to unravel, or a nut to crack, compared to which the Dædalean Labyrinth was a farce. After so many of the learned have failed to extract the kernel, though by no means deficient in what Gall and Spurzheim would call jawitiveness (as their writings will sufficiently show,) I should approach it with “fear and trembling,” did I not remember the encouraging reproof of “Queen Bess” to Sir Walter Raleigh’s “Fain would I climb but that I fear to fall”—so dentals to the task, come what may. A new light has been thrown upon the subject of late, in an unpublished “Righte Merrie Comedie,” entitled “Trinity College, Cambridge,” from which I extract the following

      JEU DE POESIE.

      When first our Alma Mater rose,

       Though we must laud her and love her,

       Nobody cares, and nobody knows,

       And nobody can discover:

       Some say a Spaniard, one Cantaber,

       Christen’d her, or gave birth to her,

       Or his daughter—that’s likelier, more, by far,

       Though some honour king Brute above her.

      


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