Page:Cuthbert Bede--Verdant Green married and done for.djvu/110

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102
THE ADVENTURES OF MR. VERDANT GREEN.

ing her admiration to Verdant's undergraduate's gown—and was proudly escorted from College to College by her enamoured swain.


"Pleasant it was, when woods were green,
And winds were soft and low,"


when in a House-boat, and in four-oars, they made an expedition ("a wine and water party," as Mr. Bouncer called it) to Nuneham, and, after safely passing through the perils of the pound-locks of Iffley and Sandford, arrived at the pretty thatched cottage, and pic-nic'd in the round-house, and strolled through the nut plantations up to Carfax hill, to see the glorious view of Oxford, and looked at the Conduit, and Bab's-tree, and paced over the little rustic bridge to the island, where Verdant and Patty talked as lovers love to talk.

Then did Mr. Verdant Green accompany his lady-love to Northumberland; from whence, after spending a pleasant month that, all too quickly, came to an end, he departed (viâ Warwickshire) for a continental tour, which he took in the company of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Larkyns (née Mary Green), who were there for the honeymoon.

Then he returned to Oxford; and when the month of May had again come round, he went in for his Degree examination. He passed with flying colours, and was duly presented with that much-prized shabby piece of paper, on which was printed and written the following brief form:-


Green Verdant è Coll. Æn. Fac.


Die 28° Mensis Maii Anni 185—


Examinatus, prout Statuta requirunt, satisfecit nobis Examinatoribus.

 
 
Ita testamur
 

J. Smith
Gul. Brown
Jac. L. Jones
R. Robinson

 
Examinatores in
Literis Humanio-
ribus


Owing to Mr. Verdant Green having entered upon residence at the time of his matriculation, he was obliged, for the present, to defer the putting on of his gown, and, consequently, of arriving at the full dignity of a Bachelor of Arts. Nevertheless, he had taken his Degree de facto, if not de jure; and he, therefore—for