RE VEI TION'FROM / 1% ;. ELALU by Richarn x 40B lithe evening lightly laden with its fallen day. while mortal breath is wheeled in white by a woman in white down a slim cool corridor. seeing numbered lights seeing men veiled in gauze hearing whisperings hearing hurried preparations smelling starched cleanness smelling galling gases feeling cold contoured ungiving metal on warm unbending cheeks breathing ballooning breathing seeping wafts a phantom numbness creeps lungs'clogging, as uncoiled the mute mist hacking at throated nothingness, curdled., cut glass, now a spectrum of chiaroscuro watered, glazed, bobbed out. an unknown life or a death or no life at all, an unexperienced senselessness, no sense of change: spring earth unsunned in winter, a, cloud melted by snow, a pebble plopping into equatorial sea, a frozen shaft speared into the molten magnet of the earth. no atom and no universe no' orbit and no chaos: an unfelt thought and a thoughtless feeling, an unknown unknown. no blood catapulted through valve on valve no mind and no bone no point to point, no tick to tick in time. two unending unbeginning worlds unfused and unblended. an ethered oblivion. a belly tense (a drum's hide), pencil slit, blood, gut, tied. both removed from time. unlighted death and unblackened life reality's jagged edge; imagination's catalytic emissary. guts barrelled vice tight, hands twitch, nerves charged electric with awakened pain. Time enters with lithe evening lightly laden with its fallen day. no substance soul psalm shape no lyric spirit no love no hate no endymions enraged no prometheans encaged no frontiered space no island loneliness no unreached grasp no reach to grasp no imperious hyperion no unheeded satyr A coronation of a new day, or the sun moulting with its dusk. Has time been bracketed, once, twice, or not. Is Time no Time at all; Death no Death and Life at all. Who whispers, who speaks, speak! . . speak! -HAROLD OSSEPOW C HEN walked seven times around the Ivory pagoda, but the face of his Beloved did not appear. Then he began to doubt the Legends and spat upon the ground. Was not the prophecy "The walls of thy desire shall crumble at the seventh round'? Yet, perhaps he might have erred: he would try again. So once more he walked around the walls. At the end of the seventh round he stopped at the little white door and waited. He waited . . . and waited . . And the Glass grew full below, but te Beloved did not appear. Now Chen was a prnce and a man of assertion ii matters like these. He would wait no longer. Already the sun was low in the west, and the nightin- gales were noisy in the thick bamboos. 'I am the heir of all Si-Ling-Shi,' said he; 'I shall not be mocked!' The little door looked bluff, like the flesh-pots in Shusi's house; and old Shusi was a bluff fellow, too, one that Chen had always wanted to trounce... though Shusi was a heavier man than he. Well, he would wait no -longer. He thrust out his chest, struck a pose, and . .knocked. 'Who is there?' came the voice of the Beloved. BIt is I,' said Chen, knowing well that she knew his voice. There was a long pause. Chen won- dered: would she never open the door? 'This house will not hold Me and Thee,' she replied. And the door was not opened unto him. Chen drew back, perplexed and ep raged. Was he a coistril to be thus mocked! A nidget, unworthy of the least lady of Si-Ling-Shi! 'This house will not hold me and thee!' Very welZ, he was no beggar! He would find what pleasures lay beyond the margins of Si-Ling-Shi; he would sup the cocoa- oil and dance the sly vengerka; he would kiss the virgins of Jask, darker lips than any in Cathay! So Chen got himself a swift horse, swifter than the ghostly steeds of Saudi, and flew away. He ranged North to the frozen hills of Kamchatka, and South to the Cape of Comorin; he ranged East to the blue waters of Taiwan, and West to the wastes of Nefud. And the years went by, and Chen was sad and lonely. He was no more the heir of all Kweiyang, nor the im- perious prince of Si-Ling-Shi. Chen remembered, and he wept. Then one day he marked the sand About the borders of Oman Land. As he walked along, alone and de- jected, his head down and his eyes half-closed, he met an Old Man with a very long beard. Chen did not perceive the Old Man, and would have walked on by. 'Thou art sad, my son?' said the Old Man, and. bowed three times 1) Chen. He seemed like a kind Old Man, s Chen opened his. heart to him and told him of the Terrors of Kamchatka, of the tearful Winds of Comorin, of the Evils' of Taiwan, and the Bones of Nefud' Sands. And Chen wept, and spoke of the loneliness of his- own sick soul. But all the while he talked the Old Man paid little heed. Instead, he would prod the earth with his toe, or cast a glance at the resurgent stars, or tear a leaf from the thirsting shrubs. Chen was annoyed. He said: 'Old Man, I am sorry to have troubled thee,' and prepared to go. 'Look, my son,' said the Old Man, his eyes sparkling, 'look, there to the west gleams Corvus, and there Orion, clear as the noonday sun. I have watched them many times, but never on a night as clear as this.' ! He seeied wholly unaware of Chen, so that the younger man knew not what to think. He had never nntwed the stavi A white sky on the altar and the crumbling kiln Powders the roots of antique grass. Here, From neighboring clay, a dwelling grew For a son; red between young apple trees.' -- James Earnest Green on these dark summer nights, nor fingered the cuticle of the leaf. 'But I was telling thee of my suffer- ing,' said Chen, 'thou, it seemed, wast interested- 'Let us watch the stars, my son,' in- terrupted the Old Man, and he put -his arm about Chen, the sorrowing heir of Kweiyang. A feeling of understanding came over Chen. He looked more closely at his Companion. In his face Chen could see the marks of sorrow, and on his brow the wrinkles of despair. He suddenly realized that this Old Man had not spoken of himself at all, but only of the stars and the wonders of the world. Then did Chen perceive that Corvus held four golden crowns, that Draco roared upon the aspect of the Bear, and Leo sought his own confines. And as the constellations rose and fell Chen forgot Kamchatka and the hunger of his soul. When Morning came, the Old Mara 'I see nothing droll,' said Chen, test- ily. But the Young Man found Chen's remarks the more amusing as time went on, while Chen became the ntore en- raged. 'I say that thou art in for a beating! he shouted at last, and landed a blow on the Young Man's bushy pate. The Young Man seemed very surprised at this, but exclaimed: 'Thou art indeed a very stupid fellow,' and therewith struck Chen full on the jaw, a blow which sent him sprawling to a distance of six feet beyond the trough. But Chen had given the Young Man what- he had wanted to give him, and he was content. The strange thing about it was that the Young Man did not seem to mind very much, though he rubbed his head gingerly now and then. Chen sat still on the ground where he had landed and watched him. The Young Man went on painting, only faster, much faster than before. Hieadt'4eakc At last the dread mendicant has poised a tear-- grown, as tears grow, in still corridors. Horrible is the sound of-weeping; horrible is the music of grief. And the song of sorrow, even, is a song-nothing more. It is the bramble wine the -sweet ferment (the crushed and wilder grasses) that hold nepenthe for the cancered heart. 34ctnAIY 'x6nd .5feqwwe "April is the cruellest month" Whenever April shakes her hair all sweetly drenched with soft dim rain and twists the gilded threads to snare a quick heart down a greening lane; or sprinkles city streets with fair and lucid pools of gold, again my heart will know the sick despair, all April brings the sharpest pain. When April comes, can I forbear the waking dream within my brain? And feel once more wild lures to share the darkened road of men insane. If I am cold and-still, I know kind summer will come, April will go. -MARIAN PHILLIPS took his hand and said: 'Thy Nature is in the Stars and Flowers; depart from me and seek their verities. * * * So Chen left the Old Man. And wandered into Turkestan. A Carnival was in full swing at Tadz- hik Town. Chen elbowed his .- way through the crowd of Villagers and came upon a trou'gh for watering horses. A great white horse was drinking from the trough. He was so powerful and of such exquisite proportions that Chen could do no more than sit down upon a rock to admire him. And as the Crowd moved away he noted that beside him stood a fair Young Man, also admiring the beautiful creature. 'What a miraculous form!' exclaimed the Young Man with great vigor, 'What a divine conception!' Chen was astonished. After all,, it was but a steed of Turkestan. 'Why art thou so vehement?' said Chen, 'a horse is but a horse.' 'Not at all,' replied- the Young Man as energetically as before, 'I shall show thee a horse that is a kingdom!' He de- parted for a moment, and then returned with canvas, easel, brush and oils. While the Young Man worked Chen sat oi the stone and told him of the Old Man, and of the celestial bodies and the recessions of the tides. But the Young Man paid little heed, though he seemed interested in Chen, so that Chen became confused. 'Tell me of thyself,' sqid the Young Man. Now it had been long since Chen re- membered Kamchatka and the Shores of Taiwan. But as he thought of his loneliness once more and of the many years that lay between those hours at Si-Ling-Shi and now, he grew sad, his memory quickened, and with great pain he told the Young Man the history of his miseries. The Young. Man, however, laughed often, and Chen was furious. Presently he could stand it no longer. Suddenly his face broke out into a broad smile, and he turned to Chen:' 'There! Come, see! The picture is fin- ished!' Chen got up to see. What he saw was not a horse at all, but the joy and folly and sadness and laughter and hae and love of all the faces in the Carnival. But what he saw more than all others was the expression of the Young Man, radiant with life and happiness, now that the Picture had been painted. 'Come, my friend, we shall buy us a bottle of wine.' said the Young Man gaily, gathering up his things. Chen was eager for talk and con- sented. 'Tell me,' said Chen, as they walked along, 'Why did'st thou laugh at my story? Was it really so droll?' -'Oh it was very droll,' replied the Young Man, 'and I am grateful to thee- for telling it.' A great light broke upon Chen. 'Hast -thou a mirror?' cried he. The Young Man drew from his robe a fair sized glass. Chen looked into it and took the paints and painted a Por- trait. It was of a haughty young prince who threw out his chest and struck a pose. There was sorrow and there was laughter, and the Young Man and Chen laughed at it for a long long time. But Chen must be on his way. He left the Young Man and the Wiue in search of Bread. * * * .- And as he wandered, a beggar yet, He entered the Slopes of Old Tibet' It was very warm, and he was tired and thirsty. He shaded his eyes with his hand to see if there was any spring or stream in sight, but he could see nothing more than a broad expanse of burning Sand. Chen was weary of all this Sand and Sun; he longed for the rice lands and shadowed coverts of his youth. Chen cursed the day that he was born. Finally he became so tired that he could walk no longer. He lay down on the earth and waited for death to re- lease him. He closed his eyes and soon sank into a quiet sleep. Suddenly he awoke with a start. The sun was- scarcely past its zenith so he .could not have lain there very long. But what had awakened him? He looked around and discovered a tall dark- skinned E and eyeing ordinary e 'Art tho a deep voue Chen sh sand out c he said, 1b from thirs 'Then w self?' retu ingly Chen lo of a poucl little more skin. He h lie was str ing a good 'Well, w the Strang Chen w Stranger la men were from his r 'Would'st and got up The Str firmly abc angry and about ten bubbling s 'Come,' until his w drink a lit The Stra Chen were much. He n looked wh However, h followed t dered why 'Where a 'Dost thc Chen, s dark patch 'Is that Chen. 'Wh ger?' The Stra back good cause there there; we and we sh Now Che he would fi Stranger sc he had no what he cct 'Art thou a loin skin 'Observe answered t 'But the suggested C 'Then w and I . . Then it entered mt of sun and strife, a lo such as he envisaged I wine and I nut-brown envisaged t laughter, I ,confounded himself an got the he started ran .. .0 across the chow, and. reached the The Ivor shining as c and rememi around the the seventh Door. 'Who is t Beloved. Chen kne is thyself,' b opened unto * -WILLIAM GRAM the, 'he cried. eypect me to lg Man, drop- hing his hands. st a humorous