- The Motor Bus
"The Motor Bus" is a
macaronic poem by Alfred Denis Godley (1856 - 1925).The mixed English-Latin text makes fun of the difficulties of
Latin declension s. It takes off from puns on the English words "motor" and "bus ", ascribing them to different declensions in Latin, and conjugating them.At the time of writing Godley, a distinguished Classical scholar, was resident at Oxford University. The poem traditionally commemorates the introduction of a motorised omnibus service in the
city ofOxford (Corn and High are thecolloquial names of streets in the centre of the city where severalCollege s of the University are located), thereby shattering the bucolic charm of thehorse -drawn age. It has since also been cited in the context of the recent introduction of larger vehicles (including "bendy" buses).The poem owes its continuing popularity to the large number of pupils who had to learn Latin as a compulsory
subject for University entrance (not just Oxford and Cambridge) in theUnited Kingdom . [ [http://irelandsotherpoetry.spaces.live.com/Blog/cns!28AE47B7A265791B!120.entry Ireland's Other Poetry: An Unfashionable Poet: A D Godley ] ] Most of them will have used a "primer" in which Latinnoun s were "declined" (the correct declensions written out), for example, servus, serve, servum, servi, servo, servo (depending upon the order in which the cases - nominative, accusative, dative, etc. - were cited). The poem provides leavening to what is a very dry subject for most school pupils.:What is this that roareth thus?:Can it be a Motor Bus?:Yes, the smell and hideous hum:Indicat Motorem Bum!:Implet in the Corn and High:Terror me Motoris Bi::Bo Motori clamitabo:Ne Motore caedar a Bo---:Dative be or Ablative:So thou only let us live:---:Whither shall thy victims flee?:Spare us, spare us, Motor Be!:Thus I sang; and still anigh:Came in hordes Motores Bi,:Et complebat omne forum:Copia Motorum Borum.:How shall wretches live like us:Cincti Bis Motoribus?:Domine, defende nos:Contra hos Motores Bos!
The poem is quoted by
Dorothy L. Sayers in her well-known essay "The greatest single defect of my own Latin education".ee also
*
Carmen Possum Media
* recited by
David W. Solomons References
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