Great ZEUS! was ever such a race since
1829,
When WORDSWORTH, SELWYN, MERIVALE began
the mighty line,
First of the stalwart heroes who matched
their straining thews,
And on great Thames’s tide have
fought the battle of the Blues?
Who writes of pampered softness?
Confusion on his pen:
Still is there pluck in England, and still
her sons are Men.
And still the lads go gaily forth in snow,
or wind, or rain,
With hearts elate to row the race, and
spurt, and spurt again.
A health to you, brave AMPTHILL; the cheering
echoes far;
For FLEICHER and the NICKALLS’ lads—nobile
fratrum par.
A shout goes up for WILKINSON, the stalwart
and the strong,
For REGGIE ROWE, and dauntless KENT, who
kept the stroke so long.
For POOLE, the tidy bowman, and HEYWOOD-LONSDALE
too;
Thrice thirty cheers for all of them,
that gallant Oxford Crew.
Nor,—though the years speed
onward, and others wield the oar,
Though others race and win or lose where
we have raced before;
Though others, while we watch the sport,
should play as we have played,
And scorn us prosy greybeards—shall
ELIN’s glory fade?
NOBLE, and LORD, and FRANCKLYN, they each
shall have their cheer,
And BRADDON, small, but quick of eye,
who craftily did steer,
And ROWLATT, and FOGG-ELLIOTT, and LANDALE,
of the Hall,
And FISON, sturdy Corpus man—we
cheer and praise them all.
Punch loves all sturdy men and
true, by whom great deeds are done,
And toasts and cheers with all his might
the Crews of ’91.
* * * * *
LEGAL MAXIMS.
(Suggestions for alteration and adaptation to Modern Manners and Customs, after the Jackson decision by the Court of Appeal.)
Common Law.—“The tradition of ages shall prevail,” save when it runs counter to the opinions of a leader-writer of a daily paper.
Equity.—(1). “No right shall be without a remedy,” save when it is sentimentally suggested that somebody’s right may be somebody else’s wrong.
(2.) “Equity follows the law,” at such a distance that it never comes up with it.
(3.) “Equity is equality,” save when a man’s wife is literally his better half.
(4.) “Where there is equal equity the law must prevail,” in any view it pleases to take at the instance of the Lord Chancellor for the time being.
(5.) “Where the equities are equal the law prevails,” in any course it likes to pursue.
(6.) “Equity looks upon that as done which is agreed to be done,” especially when, after obtaining legal relief, the suitor ultimately finds himself sold.
Contracts.—(1.) “All contracts are construed according to the intentions of the parties,” save where one of them subsequently changes his mind.
(2.) “The construction should be liberal” enough to suit the fancy of the Judge who enforces it.


