THE SPOIL-SPORT.

["The Town Clerk of Colwyn Bay informs us that the fish caught there the other day by two youths was a dogfish and not a shark, as reported, and that its size was much overestimated."—Manchester Guardian.]

O gallant youths of Colwyn Bay,

With what unmitigated rapture

Did I peruse but yesterday

The story of your famous capture!

Alone ye did it, or at least

'Twas next to being single-handed;

No other helped to catch the beast,

No strength but yours the monster landed.

But now comes in the cold Town Clerk,

Who has meticulously stated

It was a dogfish—not a shark—

In size much overestimated.

So ye intrepid striplings, who

Made all your school-fellows feel humble,

Are mulcted of your honours due

By an officious Cambrian Bumble.

But, though your generous hearts be sore,

Take comfort: all the true patricians

Of intellect have been at war

With frigid, rigid statisticians.

I too have suffered from the rule

Of sceptics, icily pedantic,

Who blighted, ere I went to school,

My dreams when they were most romantic.

For once, when swinging on a gate,

With hands that doubtless daubed it jammily,

I saw a lion, sure as fate,

And fled indoors to tell the family.

But when I told them, all agog,

My aunt, a lean and acid spinster,

Snapped out "the doctor's yellow dog";

And nothing I could say convinced her.

"'Twas ever thus from childhood's hour—"

Since HOMER, HANNIBAL or STRONGBOW,

Men of outstanding mental power

Are charged with drawing of the long bow.

Great travellers—not your GRANTS or SPEKES—

Who lived with dwarfs, or tamed gorillas,

Or scaled imaginary peaks

Upon the backs of pink chinchillas,

Or in some languorous lagoon

Bestrode the awe-inspiring turtle,

Or in the Mountains of the Moon

Saw rocs athwart the zenith hurtle—

All, all have had their fame aspersed

By rude Town Clerks or senior wranglers;

But those who have been treated worst

Are the heroic tribe of anglers.