PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JANUARY 27, 1924 SUNDAY, JANUARY 27, 1924 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 0 Jean Huguenot. It is a hopeless j feat. Yes, my Marguerite is a very who, becoming gardener-desired to a a lofty and steep rock, and I see the woman, finally a third time come inte risky affair, even at the piano. convent so physically declined in moist cloud which envelopes the head- a haven. Twice is enough-this is health that he was forced to loose his of this rock. That is to say, a place anticlimax and poor. That flaming1 I am an ardent lover of fiction, tongue from muteness and pray. It fiercwarlake en to abia mother-love is wasted and : gone,1 Nothing thrills me more than a good is great literature which makes the place for phantom's tonest in. Ulti- though Benet resurrects it and gives I heart throb, and the face flush, and mately this moisture will destroy the it an illegitimate child. of Hugues to the mind become intent! Thus one rock; ultimately these spirits will cherish. And all this 'waste through atrs and thera therinj e of the greatest novels of all time. is destroy the men. . Now -then thoughtlessness-Jean's in her sudden to myself the events, and as for ap- the Mare's tail wherein Don Gianni, a swiftly-place there a rock. Let it and unsuitable marriage, that ,f preciating the technique of the au- skillful magician, almost, but not mount high. Swiftly I tell-you; convey others in causing that war -which it1 quite, succeeded in converting poor the idea of a mist which. hugs the killed her new-found .joy. . Thought-;tPietro's wife into a horse; . failing be- head of this rock. You ask about the than I.. And :with all -my exorbitant lessness- tragedy. ean I Acontnue mainain a f cause Pietro intervened at-the critical colors? Do not look at Nature, but worite author. Where, tell me, can moment. It is really a pity that times ] look - at the- play :f the poet. Two BIERNE VOIFFULS you find more interesting stories thaz:change so and that our literati snub colors; one for the- rock, the man; (Continued from Pagef oFour) t fnd oe in ting o Ban the most intimate occasions in life to oje for.the mist, the spirit. Touch not activity. Hamadryades in h ab i t e d ylon, who sent his daughter to the squander their attention on superfu- a single otherc , butoly these every tree! King of Algrave, but she, being ship- ous things. Who have we today com- c two through your whole progress of k rt hparable t othe scintillating little Ital- I designing your scene and your cos- wrecked, 'learned a lot of things and toeItnt'oretn htec But our world really is more supple returned home with nine husbands on ian of the Ten Days near Florence? tumes, yet not forgetting that each than it used to be: Our laws began a string. Or the story of the horse- Icolor contains many variations. And with tangible controversies and real keeper who craftily cropped the hair THE WORLD ARTIST you a doubtn go adoo parties-assault and battery, for in- TWDofHalStthehkingsservanth tig tmelsfrh stance-now we expound the law of alh ig evat osv i (Contiued from Page One) play- the famous sleep-walking scene, intangible property, the law of prom- Queen from scandal. Or about Ali senting the practial technique of his t trcetoth tl, t heath, isentea d rortl w debts-the, troo bech, winsome girl, who earnestly saw art in an attempt to show that he the rooms of the castle-and be .very ises instead of actual debts--thenoto it that the devil .was put back in really did more than any other crafts- still and humble." who is this person hell. And where are cleverer tales man to shame the artificial realism this party to a suit "Bonding Cor than that of Messer Lizio da Valbona's of the last twenty years into disgrace. Gordon Craig's settings, a virtue pany"? And money superseded bar- daughter, who prevailed upon her dad Obviously his settings really concern which of itself makes them ideal, Is ter, and goods-for-service. Now tell to let her move out on to the balcony far greater things. Perhaps the best the fact that no matter how majestic me what "credit" is? Is it removed where the nightingales sing? I know illustration is to give you his own or lofty his loocality, attention always from barter by mere figures in ink? of none-unless, perhaps, you refer words: "Come now," he says, "I take rivets itself on the individual actor. me to the famous history of Masetto 'Macbeth.' I see two things. I see' In his design for Act I, Scene I, of Some authors are like great rivers, incessantly moving towards the sea: they surge upon us and inundate our minds, destroying much that we re- gardis c m etn as true and noble: but when Ths bh s c m ltn t it - their floods are past, we surprisedl; *fu h vt c mi discover fluvial deposits which have fourth year of service to the comm unty. enriched us and which have contrib- o Fifty-four years of progress, of healt uted, more than we can ever .estimate, F to our own productivity. growth of increased respc nsibihties, of (L. fluvialis-fluvius, river---fluo,,-r flow).rsdevotion to an ideal-that of rendering the maximum of bankig and investment Marguerite suffered a head-ache this service to the community. EDUCATIONAL real self so deep that no one ran pen- MIRRORS etrate to it. As long as men continue (Continued from Page One) ' to subscribe, whether sincerely or cept theories such as those of Meikle- hypocritically, to the usual idealistic john, we let ourselves be the prey of line about education, the young Amer- any student with the least degree of ican will continue to make a fool of sophistication. A- University gradu- himself in the eyes of the world. ate ought to be a man adept in sway- The review of "Jean Hugenot" in ing others, in getting enough money this issue was written by Evelyn Sum- to 'live in comfort, and in hiding his merfield. Security May be found for your valuable docu- ments by using our Safety Deposit Vault. The service will please you. Farmers & Mechanics Bank 101-105 SOUTH MAIN 330 SOUTH STATE x ' Dinner Every Evening,Orders Should be in Before Three O'clock Afternoon Tea Daily y We Serve Fudge Cake# We Take Orders for Pies, Cakes and Nut Bread I y ' \ Picayunes . STUDIES IN SUBTLETY ILAC "INTRIGUE" (To Eva Gauthier) She was sitting behind a brocade. It was during the intermezzo And some were drowsy. She did not seem particularly Cunning. But listen- The lone misery is sometimes Plural..... She waved her fan like a nun. That was all. The three were dead next morning. "PARNASSUS" (For Frank Bishop) I was only up there once. It was not at all gusty. Neither was it fertile. It was merely crystalline. It is very hard to describe, For I was only up here once. I remember this- That when I left, I said to myself, "The captor of Erosive breezes Need not fear to be esoteric; For only the esoteric is gradual; And gradation is the essence Of Erosion." On this have I pondered. morning, and I gave her a lttle white tablet which I had purchased at an' apothecary's shop. I have been feel-; ing like a hypocrite ever since-and a fool. Where was my heralded "rea- son" and my "logic"? I acted like- like a mere layman who had never aprpeciated the metaphysical intrica-1 cies of the Mind-Body problem, or the analytical difficulties of his chemistry and his physics. A tablet-and a body composed of eighty-seven and one-half per cent of chalk and water -and a "headache" which discomforts my Marguerite's mind. I resign! I am no longera philosopher! I can- not perceive the causal relations "-ex- isting between these three sets of phenomena. In fact, I am no- longer certain of the phenomena;themselves, SUSPENSE Sweet, golden-haired Marguerite sits at the piano and plays me an etude or infuses me with the soul of divine Handel; and I, silent in my arm-chair, am transported. But when Marguerite is away, and. I sit by. watching the marvelous piano me- chanically play itself, every key - per- fectly timed, I am unmoved. - Why.? Surely, no one, is., more intoxicating than Marguerite, and ItIs, her nag- netism, her warm and active: spirit, which- makes the music live. But I, -wonder? What :about the- risk In- -volved"?: Do I trust WArguerite- thatshe.-will play. flawlessly through- out the piece? Is not the charm IJ derive from her playing very much like my happiness at a football game. or a horse-race or- a skating contest?] What I am * constantly interested.- in: is that next note. How.can I bet on. it? Will it be just what I expect it to be; and;if not, why was it changedp Was it intentionally changed, or was, it a mistake? There is slight :risk inI my playing-piano for'the inechanical imperfections' have largely been mas- tered-but my Marguerite skilled as she is,-is never certain, she is fallible. When she playa- through the piece- This bank has grown as the city has grown, each has prospered because of the other. Others have prospered but this one has outdistanced them all. Since it is only as a bank serves its community that it prospers we take pride that we have served the community faithfully. Fifty-four years is scarcely within the memory of most of us. University Hall was the extent of the building pro- gram then. A fence enclosed the cam- pus. Hill Street and Washtenaw Avenue ran into the woods about where they now intersect. The enrollment of the University was spoken of in hundreds in- stead of thousands. Panics, wars and strenuous financial periods have left their page In, the his- tory of this-more than half a century, but this bank has come safely through them all. No depositor has ever had a loss arisng from his connection with us. As in the past, we shall-strive to con- tinue to serve for the next fifty=four years, and the next one hundred and fifty-four.. The AnnArborf'&ivings-Bank PHONE 951-W POLLY LITTLE TEA SHOPPE On Thayer, Just Back o f H iI1 Auditorium -%0%0%0%0%0%0%^ - - - - w w 60 w w w . " W- r The Buss Lamp at .2 Ideal for Students A practical, yet artistic, standing -lamp that will clamp or hang anywhere. Gives you light exactly where you want. it. Attractively finished in bronze or brass. Then handiest lamp any stu- dent can own Tie Detroit Edison Company'. 1 I i I I E { ., Parnassus is really the region Where gradation dictates, And where imparity colors the mist. This do I feel. But I was only up there once. "OBLIVION" (To.Mrs. Doris Chamberlin) Night is not always serious! But this night was. It was nothing but a boat That they were in. It was a blue boat Although the water was deep. There were six stars in the sky. And only one looked invisible. The rest were vile enough. The breeze was not heinous. The boat moved gracefully, And no one would have supposed That the air was intolerable. Her hands were interminable; As was her hair. Her fingers flurried With intense hyperbolism as she said, "Shall- itbe sophisticated or diametric?" T t 4t i tI {It {I 1 His eyes were congealed. "Diametric," l-e answered. 6 x ... Y ;. Death is not always orderly, But ink swallowed thena graciously. "FANTASY" (For Stephanie Schehatowitsch) I wasloogink out the window. It, was snowing. A girl passed and I said: "She does not do the fandango And she is not far fetched." And then I saw a man drive by, And I said: "He does not -oppress-the singers. He is not reserved." MaIn at W1ilIam Telephone SW2W 2 BRAN CHES-707 N. UNTYEHSIT -COR ._IO~& M T I have learned since That they are married. How true-it is that per