THE POETS-AMY LOWELL (Continued from Page 1) the French town of Bar-le-Duc in the Province of the Meuse, the prefect had issued instructions to prevent the children from eating candies which might have been dropped from Ger- man airplanes, as other candy simi- larly scattered had been found to contain poison. The poem begins: "Currants and Honey! Bar-le-Duc in times of peace. Linden-tassel honey.' Cherry blossom, poppy-sweet honey. And round red currants like grape clusters, Red and yellow globes, lustred like stretched umbrella silk." And so, through delicate, burning lines describing the making of the candy, and the laughter of Germany, -the laughter of the people who for years have eaten the currants and honey of Bar-le-Duc, and who now will "give back sweetness for sweet- ness,"-on to the sharp, restrained horror of the conclusion. But this is Amy Lowell in an un- usual mood. She is concerned pri- marily with the thing seen rather than the thing felt. She loves brilliance and color, the flash and glow of the physical -world which she so intensely observes and enjoys. Her work has the hard, bright, decorative beauty of cloisonn. She is an artist in lacquers and embroideries. "THE MINI) IN THE MAKING" (Continued from Page 4) tion of new information and inventions unknown to the Greeks, or indeed, to anyprevious civilization. The mainpre- suppositions of this third period of the later Middle Ages go back, however, to the Roman Empire. They had been formulated by the Church Fathers, transmitted through the Dark Ages, and were now elaborated by the po- fessors in ,the newly established uni- vergities under the influence of Aris- totle's recovered works and built up into a majestic intellectual structure known as Scholasticism. * * * r civilization and the human d, critical and uncritical, as we it in our western world, is a rI snd uninterrupted outgrowth ce ivilization and thought of the later Middle Ages. Very gradually only did peculiarly free and auda- olous individual thinkers escape from this or that medieval belief, until in our own day some few have come to reject practically all the presuppo- sitions on which the Scholastic sys- tem was reared. But the great mass of Christian believers, whether Cath- olic or Protestant,tstill professedly or implicity adhere to the assumptions of the Middle Ages, at least in all mat- ters in which religious or moral sanc- tions are concerned. (To be continued next Sunday) (Copyright 1921, by Harper & Bros.) Knopf has published John V. Weav- er's story, "Margery Wins the Game"; a first novel by Jack Crawford called "I Walked in Ardon"; "Egholm and His God," translated from the Danish by Johannes.Buchholtz'(in the Borzoi- Gyldendal series); and "Readers and Writers," critical essays by A. R. Orage, literary editor of The New Age and long known as one of the most vehement and brilliant of English critics. It is said that John Galsworthy con- siderstas his most important perform- ance the bringing together in one volume 'under the title, "The Forsyte Saga," three of his most powerful novels: "The Man of Property," "In Chancery," and "To Let," together with two stories "The Indian Summer of a Forsyte" and "Awakening" which present the life of a representative English family thru three generations (Scribner). "Old London Town" by Will Owen is a book of sketches of out-of-the-way corners of London, done in the man- ner familiar to readers of W. W. Jacobs, many of whose books Mr. Owen illustrated. In his preface Mr. Owen says: "I make no apology for the publication of this little book - on the contrary.". (McBride.) "Men of Affairs," by Roland Pertwee (Knopf), is said to deal with the dubious methods employed by certain leading financiers in the pur- suit of valuable- concessions, but is fictitious as to characters and.events actually making up the story. Frances Hodgson Burnett's first book in several years, "The Head of the House of Coombe," hals recently been published. t Business! All Furnishing Goods must be Sold regardless of Cost. 711 N. University w ' l "-- other's DayPlace Your'Order DO YOU KNOW That one week from today is MOTHER'S DAY? DO YOU REALIZE How your Mother will appreciate your (tibute to her upon this day? CAN YOU THINK Of anything more appropriate than FLOWERS? OF COURSE NOT!! Then order your FLOWERS early. Blu Maize Blossom Shop Inc. Nickels' Arcade PHONE 666 213 E. Liberty ---