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Tedious brief tales of Granta and Gramarye

Chapter 3: To Two Cambridge Magicians
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About This Book

A linked sequence of short tales draws on college settings and local legend to mix comic anecdote with uncanny suggestion, portraying hidden rooms, secret societies, odd bequests, lost treasures, and experiments in necromancy. The stories use campus topography and scholarly eccentricity as a backdrop for folkloric incidents and moral ironies, shifting between light satire and macabre atmosphere to reflect on tradition, memory, and the foibles of academic life.

To Two Cambridge Magicians

In London lanes, uncanonized, untold
By letter’d brass or stone, apart they lie,
Dead and unreck’d of by the passer-by.
Here still they seem together, as of old,
To breathe our air, to walk our Cambridge ground,
Here still to after learners to impart
Hints of the magic that gave Faustus art
To make blind Homer sing “with ravishing sound
To his melodious harp” of Oenon, dead
For Alexander’s love; that framed the spell
Of him who, in the Friar’s “secret cell,”
Made the great marvel of the Brazen Head.
Marlowe and Greene, on you a Cambridge hand
Sprinkles these pious particles of sand.