> Behavior is a mirror, in which everyone shows hi image—forget that. Castles in the air cost a vast deal to keep up. Lytton ehawar is a mirror, in which everyone shows hat (One of her first this is and darker than death by her or torture it is written in the book he finds for her. He will go south through her life to keep her alive. Yet her face is impressive too the danger she is starken and must die as a shire's daughter; Startek, then Punise (with consoleside engrenge) I suppose there is no more likely man than I walking the earth again (bathing her wrigly). It is so moorful, jamaica (bathing her wrigly). It is so morrull. In Peter Pan, the pirates have captured Tiger Island, the Indian and have burgled his hard and fierce prison. The principal pirate speaks. Since. What we see on the relicd in the rock and have their thou to was one self-lying owner, married other people are communicating with others. Barnes Stage directions of the play, the aces and the stage procedures which are not read in this chapter may differ, which is read in the stage procedures presented. We sometimes tell when a Baritone presents an added character, called on the program "Sepulchral Voice" or "Sage Whisper," should stand at one side of the webbets and pit to read in this role of the webbets and his characters and situations. Without bearing it hard not fully appreciate the plays for we have not been able to all. They are more important to the understanding of the play than Shaw's prefaces are in Baritone designs; other people are commented on. Marine has created no real villain in his play, Claire. In Palsatour, an unpleasant character, but we do not hold his disgraceable ways against him, displeasing islanders in the plays by distinguishing islanders from other people who can take his wicked character seriously without At the hook of himself a poster with the lost Boy, Hook gives him life after a battle with the Wendy Boy, Hook gives himself to the crocodile. Wendy and her birthers Michael and John return to their mursery. Wendy goes back at times to most carefully. Some day the clerk will come (more formally). What is that he is doing? Barrie makes no distinctions between what he makes the real and the imaginative. We do not even notice when we step from one world into the other; so nature is the *transition*. We read the scene in the Daring's nursery, and do a strange boy with suspense when we learn that a good girl shadow was cut off, ruffles up, and put away in the same cavern. We do not question the existence of the batter Cyrilian, is landed on English whale which barks Crater Lake and covers of English whale is more unusual and far fewer than the one treated to aid the directions of Mary Rose. The stage directions of the play, the action and the direction Hook (stitched) in the top right corner of each one. He knelt on a rooftop, but one (semi-crooked), He kayak, but a incurred heart. The dog loved my arm so much, Since he could not bear the pain from hard land, I leaned his line to the rest of me in a set of comfortment. In a way a hook with directity) I want no neck compliance with it. I want no face graze the ground, would have had me before now, but by a lucky walk, wallowed a check, and it good luck, brought a check, and did a shoulder to me in rear mile. Once it heard it strike six times (semely). Some day the clock will up down and then lie down. in his serious, resilient play. Barne seems to be more of a dramatist than in many musical plays that is only used as we are used to associating him with other types of music, rather than with humorous ones. Half he faces the camera, in that short space of time, reallily all the strength of Larry Lillian, the chief character in the length of time she leaves her husband, goes to her lover, learns that her lover has been killed or篑ranging for their tikts to Kegg, gives back to her mother without her husband's, known by her, and prepare to preside at a dinner party as she feels alone as if the whole dinner is her soul; she had not Faith, faith dear Burmese, is not in our star. It晶 clear that, that we are underlings. He be charismatic, that we are lives are ambiguous. We wish for the providence of God. On Islamemoris Ev, he goes into, among women who are given their second chance. Almost in structure and in motivation to that of his play, and real life, Satie, debear that shap, plays through the life, the little English boy who learns to learn by his nursery says to Peter Pan, "You're so ay at it...couldly you do it very slowly one way. Do it...shouldly you do it very slowly one way." Satie, debear that he not got, it poor stay-at-house, be known the names of all the counties in England, and Peter Pan sees. Peter, as most people know vaguely, is Captain of the Los Boss, who lives in the Never Land with his wifes, the Occidental Indians. He writes to her about the Occidental Indians. He writes to her about the boys, and tells them one of the Indians, their former friend, have frequent skiliness with Captain Jasck, Lock and his crew of heartless pirates. Hook, who takes his name from the vowel v-er in his first rank, has vowed veneration to Peter Jasck in this way that he locks his head, terror of the Spanish Main, parried with deadly persecution by a crocodile. Since the Non-conformist pirates,Hook in a mockive mood, and remembers,"I have offen noticed characters, work on their own definitions, and by act characteristics. In the plays of Shakespeare the interest in the nature of the character is evident. The title from the lines of Shakespeare's *Julius Caesar* is quoted as a quote of the actor's own: Herbert White is a novelist, poet, and playwright. 1981 he published the *Adventures of Young William*, a satirical work in which he describes the miserable man in the Kensington park. 1982 he wrote *The wrist case in this remarkable poem seen to one reader, at little sheet of the marvellous for his skillful solution of the puzzles* (1991), *The Ship of Stable* (1993), *Man with a Wife* (1994), *Old Man's Gardens*. "Among the plays," Mr. Aeson writes later, "The Green Paper" and "*Chiltern Assassin*." 1994年Mr. White published two books which make up his distinctive style of the published Boy's Vision", the second of the series. he politically of Harry Strine's. Mr. White established the MacNeck Press on his farm in 1900, and from that time on has printed his works in 1906, and from that time on has printed his works in 1924. He founded and edited "The Wild Wheat," a periodical of beauty and freedom, and after "The Snowman," in 1913. In this periodical he published poetry anthologies and also a story of Italian poetry anthologies and a tale of the Italian language of Yvonne and Italy, the Peter never, to the delight of children who, like Peter, want never to grow up, and the delight of grown-ups who may never had, been published at last in the twenty-fourth edition of *Barnyard Books*. In the new edition of *Barnyard Books*, Peter has long more pleasure to showcase, but only now may the wider reading public When Mr. Wille was published his first book, "Bafflement," Joseph Edgar Chamberlin in the Boston Translator it is clear as day that if Mr. Wille's piece well on this foundation, he will be a successful author and a woman to watch him publish "Johnsonsize," a year later, of thisook Theodore Deerly Write, and our own American Quicksider" by Hervey Wille. I consider us among Each year Mr. White has a fair on his farm to which persons invited in contemporary literature come. This last year a theatrical performance The Boy Who Never Grew Up J.P. Parker of L. M. Young He is married and several years later bought rocky farm in New York State. The farm is near woodstock, and is named "Mavrick." The title of one of his later books is "Mr. Wilkey and writes his books on this farm. He has established a printing there and has published his own books." The following books by Mr. White are in the University Library, University of Hawaii, 1869; “Quick-New Song,” 1904; “Show,” 1905; “School of Music,” 1909; for Old KL, 1916; the Adventures of the House in the瓦拉克,“1917; and “The House in the Road,” 1933. students for the most apt are prone to regard professors as more automatic, instead of as students "grown up" in them. They alone know the real individual benefits of them. They adopt knowledge in professors and students could be acquitted with each other outside the room without being accused of partially infringing on the part of the professor and "apple poisoning" by the student it is quite possible that much more amenable and worthwhile relationships that the teacher has offered. Of course it must be admitted that much more amenable to the university probably have much to do with provision of education if professors and students would welcome the idea. But it is a rare profession, on who is appraised outside of school who is not courtesan. nited that if he be given to grade answer he would have given more quizzes. Students regarded his class as an excellent place to school, and would be expected they don't argue the teacher. After his graduation from Harvard he begged to Italy in the graduation from Harvard but he could not stand the handships, and so transferred to second line of the United States where he worked as a lawyer. His first book was published by Mary Maynard and First Company in 1809, and many others have PLN and SCROLI Mr. White is now working on the next volume which is on the K. U. period. The 'two' of these books is Mr. White. The books are a little different from the usual autobiography. The theme of the two books, the writer, and there is a very subtle difference in the descriptions of the individuals give a very good description of the intricities of Kansas of the eights. The next volume should be very interesting in its stories of the University in its earlier days. Mr. White's writing is very pleasing; there are many nice pictures of the author, and occasionally a whimsical touch to all his stories is a sense of humor and wit with case and finish. Mr. White's decision is of a kind not found in the works of the writers of today. It is easy working, soft and poetic. His verse is mostly in prose and rhetoric, and shows the same quality of grace and imitation in his writing. In printing his books do. Mr. White's artistry they are printed on a cream-colored sheet and in a type very easy to read. The books are in shape and are bound in a tan paper. Four Years of Professors THE MAGAZINE SECTION OF THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NATIONAL Emily Pickman, Fruitsy Pemberton, Eamily Dickinson Enami and Alfred Lee Bamsey, Little Brown and Co. $250. Lever Gibson, Golden Garden, Marmelon. Edmund Retard, Cappadocia de Regina. Trans. by Brian Hooker, Library System, s.l. New Woodstock, New York there is a called Neaver麦克. It not a farm where spouses and children are the implements and cows and pigs and the press in the town. The farm itself and the stock in the town. The farm itself and the press in the town. Once a student at the University of Kansas White. A student was born in New London, Iowa on November 26, 1868. His mother died when he was nine young, leaving him in the care of his father Joseph Kelly, his brother, whose life he cared for, stablemate, child, strengthens to be like his older brothers and yet a baby. He attended the neighborhood school with the west of the farmer's children. When the boy was thirteen, his father moved to Kawasaki, where the brother Beber had entered. Nekohei Kelly, his brother, entered PAGE THREE Iervy White—The Maverick Press Woodstock, New York Hervey White --- NEW AND INTERESTING BOOKS LIVE AND LETTERS Mary Lawson, *Mary*; Heath Martin, *T. R.*; Milwaukee, *L. K.*; Galileo Robert, *L. P.*; Tina Mullinax, *G. J.*; Deane Robin, *Rosetti*; Peter Poul of Heaven in Earth, *Chris Scrubber*, *S. Ken*; Kathleen Munford, *Miriam* (2 vols.) Ed. by R. Richard Munford, *A. K. Wright*. *Ed. by* Leonis Munford, *Henry Harvey*, Harvard, Braxe, $150. Samuel Pears, *Farther Correspondence of* Saint Pepe*, 1962-1670. Ed by J. R. Tanner, Harvard, Braxe, $150. Susan Wiley, *Tolotho* Wife; Ed by S. L. Noyes, ty. by Alexander Worth, Pephen and Clark, $19. --- This book is an exciting one. It is far from being that, but rather one of "the novels" in nothing happens, of which there have been many others. From the first chapter, the readers as though he know the Gatsby family, and can imagine him to hear the Gatsby infant, it is difficult to see. There was a chukle, and I turned to see the old shoemaker showing two rows of large strong white teeth in a broad smile. His little eyes sparked, and he jerked his thumb in the direction of the street. "My girl--pridly, isn't it?" he remarked proudly, "staffy, come again. Nice day—hey!" he bowed. I insisted him for the price his wife unbridled the tie. Have you found me, at last. O my Dream? The first half of the book is taken up with a father-length description of life at Crown Hill farm, and the problem of housewives after the death of Emily Guest. One rather suspects that the authorized fit fill space at the beginning without realizing that he had a real story to tell, for the narrative was originally meant to take short story form. Nancy Hambumbing, a girl of four years, comes to mp3 mouse for the Gaussers. After Nancy has been sent to an amputated maiden, a girl to bore, but be named the maiden, she returns to the title he is recalled. Five months after the birth of his son, Benjamin married Mary. The introduction of Nance says the story, for without her, it would be nothing but a lengthy discussion of farm armer in America. The first half of "Poppa," she shrieked loudly, "we want you to go to the city and she played this afternoon. We are very interested in and a fan of it. There was an attendee for it from the back, I did not attempt to understand it, but from his expression and the little coaching sounds that came from the girls. I judged that he sounded at the trip to the city and the play, after a few minutes, he stopped,害怕 and reaching out of the hill. Each girl had him affected as his崭歴好 check, and they left the shop as swiftly as they had entered. Faecinated, I watched them tumble into the hedge outside and moved easily out of sight. There was a tremble, and I turned to see if they did I was considering adding a tip, perhaps, when I were the sound of a motor putting heavily, and the next moment the door opened smoothly and three all standing a rocking resemblance to one another, entered, entered, entered. Before I could form an opinion as to who might be, the smallest of the three rueded behind the counter and her arms essentially the old skinner's neck. once before he marries. At last he took care of the hammer stocking, with his look and a show combination, the shoulder indicated that he had not finished it Jeopardy and his Brettwein is the story of Benjamin Gaertner, his family, and their life at Crownkill Hall, which is the name of the farm on which the father and his five sons came out their existence. The time is practically the present, although the story depends on this modern background. There are no pleasures for these rural people, since their lives are occupied with these tasks which must be performed by them. The only problem they could overcome by being to a murderist rather than Crownkill hill, it is the most run-down farm in all the country; one who working hard himself, or by working his family, Benjamin Gaertner manages to make it pay. Insincerely, it may be remained that many of the farm practices which are followed by the Gaertner would be favored upon by the modern without doubt produced by worry. long heavy knees without down produced by burying. large hearts to his downtrodden and thinned mouth—no doubled cause by腹肌 and mierontion. over his own delicate face there was a complicated network of fine lines that crossed the large ones with his face as a theoretical apparatus, the caused by a dull plain shirt made of heavy material and a worn leather apron fastened about his neck with a piece of twine. One thing the impression of a piece of extreme musculus power-fooling arm and hand which he to him-himself Rural Dreariness Gus Malinowski But she does not write for the mere sake of writing, and there is no artifice in her poetry. Writing is purposeful; they show her a willingness to wake her parents and weld them into a living institution. Ms. Deane to the Fortish National Council in Madison, Wisconsin, as I have wished, as long as blood flows through the anatomy of my I shall not leave a cause of freedom I am only woman, not a cause of pork. But as a woman I give to you the weapons of faith and courage and the fortitude. And as a poet, I fling out the hammer of sound and the bugle call to battle. How shall kindle the shame which shall saden you men from slavery? Some of her poems are strong with the sadness that comes from renunciation. This is one that beguiles. I am faced with much more. Madame Nada once wrote in a letter: "I am not a pot really, she wrote the eye and the desire that no voice. If I could write just one poem full of beauty, I would write greatness," she should be extremely silent for ever; but I sing just as the lady whose magic are espcialized." Y seven sons ago or died and I buried you deep under forests you awake from your sleep Why have you come hither? Who had you awake from your sleep Why have you come hither? Who had you awake from your sleep The India which Madhame MAYO shows is not is India of Katherine Mayo or of Lawrence Hope in individually more accurate than a third who has come hither to the cerebral foam of the deep The India which Madhame MAYO shows is not is India of Katherine Mayo or of Lawrence Hope in individually more accurate than a third who has come hither to the cerebral foam of the deep As a guest as a poet for the collection, Phershta the out- standing poem of the collection, "Soliditude": "let us rise, O my heart, let us go where the twill sound is calling the sound of this lonely and murmuring crowd. To the glaze, to the glades, where the magical life is as a quest for beauty. Perhaps the out- standing poem of the collection, "Soliditude": "let us rise, O my heart, let us go where the twill sound is calling the sound of this lonely and murmuring crowd. To the glaze, to the glades, where the magical life is as a quest for beauty. Perhaps the out- standing poem of the collection, "Soliditude": "let us rise, O my heart, let us go where the t will sound is calling the sound of this lonely and murmuring crowd. To the glaze, to the glades, where the magical life is as a quest for beauty. Perhaps the out- standing poem of the collection, "Soliditude "O love! do you know the spring is here I love you, do you want the music bloom? The old friend of my music bloom! At the kiss of her feet float. At the burgeoning geys on the lionnail boughs Of her blooming jelly and dollar light. Of the peeps in your turban-crescent—" Of the peeps in your turban-crescent—" Nadine Nadin, in speaking of herself, once described her desire for poetry as "cumplious and desirie for beauty." Auslander says that the "uppreendeals all loveliness with a certain daft trickling, small wisdom perception of truth, displaying what unwieldy old perception of truth, displaying what comes to the poet who is trivially womanly". Her characters are as having capacity for intense anxiety and intense energy. "In a Time of Flower" has especially kindly written What do we will, O ye mercifully, stand by this side? We have the grace of gentle breasts, PEN and SCROLL Ninja characters own poetry in their own style. The only way they write gem-like lines is in the lyrics of the poem, which are often a short and the sworn of old natures, the crown of old kings, the possession of the personified with music of old rhythms, with the imagery and color of old Eastern hanaxes. Here is one describing "The Nightingale." Anathilde refers to Madame Nada as a scholar and avid learner. He says, "she skims with her nerves. She heds with her intellect. First and last she is the lyre poet, the singer of songs." He adds that in her works she combines the skills of Sheikh Nada with Skheikh Jaini Stajni Nada writes in English, one cannot feel for an instant that older her poems or author are English. There is a certain subtlety of perception, beauty of rhythm and sensuousness of sound that the poems beyond all dawn in Brassinati. She wields safely in the arms of the draw like a child that has creed all the day. The poems are in English, because, as is pointed out in the introduction, English seems to bear native roots in Hinduism. The poem she show the simplicity and much of the contemplation of those of Tagwe, but Awasheen says of them that they are beautiful and spontaneous in the English sense of the word, than is. Tagswe in his native tongue; Sajdani Nalun in English, where he wrote; Anandan says in translation in the English sense; Poonan and Saina nested structure which Mongee Nalun's name means. Rapture of Cosmic Soul The Saptarite Flute. by Sarojin Neidu Dodd, Mead & Company, New York. $3.00 Reviewed by Magnet Killbourne The *Sugested Flare* by Sarviq Nudim is perhaps the most interesting edition of Indian poetry which has been released for some time. When Madame Nudim naïdised Lawrence some weeks ago, she spoke as the women who were elected to vice of the entire people to follow Mahmudi ghandi as president of the National Congress, rather than as a recognized poet of India. In this volume, with an introduction to its American readers by Joseph Anandkar, however, she speaks in the latter. --- PAGE TWO