The Bear, is a thin, glossy collection of leaves, in which the protagonist, a Pyramus trope, grapples with a Bear in common land, protected by democratic civic laws, in a province that has lost its Crown land, to the smallest few places remaining. In the city and province enforcing equal and humane treatment of all citizens, involving an illegal death sport of urban bearbaiting, that cannot be stopped by the legislative and executive branches of Crown law, and that which even threatens the noble cause of the Crown in tradition, in the dead remnants of the 1932 Westminster Act of Parlaiment. Pease note the author has only now paralelled a metaphorical connection between Common Land History of England and the Westminster Act of 1932 to the narrative of Pyramus and Thisbe the postmodern condition of urban community lands.