Analysis of Cases - Willis V. The Bishop Of Oxford

James Williams 1869 (Taigwynion, near Tal-y-bont, Cardiganshire) – 1954 (United Kingdom)



(2 Probate Division, 192)

Aid me, Muses! my endeavour is to sing a woful song,
How a very learned bishop in the Arches Court went wrong.
Aid me, for duplex querela is an uninviting theme,
And the practice of the Arches raises no poetic dream.
'Tis the Reverend Child Willis, child in name but not in age,
Comes he to the Court of Arches burning with a noble rage,
Filing his duplex querela, claiming for himself thereby
Vicarage of Drayton Parslow, or to know the reason why.
"Reason why?" the bishop answers; "that is not so far to seek.
Little Latin have you, Willis, innocent are you of Greek.
You were specially examined by my good Archdeacon Pott;
He reported to me promptly, 'Greek and Latin all forgot,
Non idoneus is Willis, minus et sufficiens,
He may have a sanum corpus, but he lacks a sana mens.'"
"Nay," says Willis, "such an answer is but trifling with the court,
I have preached a Latin sermon, and the classics are my forte,
You must name the books I failed in, you must give me every chance
Of a fresh examination at the hands of Lord Penzance."
Lord Penzance supported Willis: "Bishop, you must file," said he,
"Some more tangible objection, some less vague and general plea.
As it stands I cannot gather what it is you ploughed him in,
Whether Hellenistic aorists or the Latin word for sin."
But alas! the world has never known as yet what Willis did,
In the breast of the Archdeacon still it lies a secret hid.
Was his Latin prose defective? Did his style of writing show
More resemblance to Tertullian than to Tullius Cicero?
Were his dates a little shaky? Could it, could it be that he
Confidently made Augustine flourish at a date B.C.?
None will know save Pott, Archdeacon, for alas! the patroness
Showed no mercy to Child Willis in the day of his distress.
She revoked the presentation, leaving Willis in the lurch,
One of undisputed learning preached in Drayton Parslow church.
Doubly barren was his triumph, it was not a twelve-month ere
Death set up his Court of Arches, Willis did not triumph there.


Scheme X AABBCCDDEEFFGGXXGGHHIIJJKKHAGGLLMM
Poetic Form
Metre 1010 11101010111011 10101100010111 11111110101 001010101010101 101001101011101 111011101010101 101111010111 111011110101 101010101111111 101011101001111 1010001011111 11011101010101 111101011 11101101110101 111011101110101 1110101000101110 1110111011111001 1010010101111 11010101011111 1110001011101001 111110101111110 1001011010111 101011101111101 0011011110101 111010101111101 1010111110010 011010101111111 1000110101011 1111111010100 111011100011101 10100101010001 1101010101011 101011101110111 111111101011101
Closest metre Iambic octameter
Characters 1,997
Words 372
Sentences 22
Stanzas 2
Stanza Lengths 1, 34
Lines Amount 35
Letters per line (avg) 45
Words per line (avg) 10
Letters per stanza (avg) 793
Words per stanza (avg) 182
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Submitted on August 03, 2020

Modified on March 08, 2023

1:49 min read
5

James Williams

John James Williams (8 October 1869 – 6 May 1954), commonly known by his bardic name of "J.J.", was a Welsh poet and served as Archdruid of the National Eisteddfod of Wales from 1936 to 1939 more…

All James Williams poems | James Williams Books

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