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text-book. It seems as though someone could write it, even if we aren't all Van Loons and H. G. Wellses. I bet I could myself--at least I'd make it a fascinating book if not a strictly exact one ('Yes you would,' says her Subconscious, but she pays no attention)! When I think of the generations of defenseless students to be subjected to these text-books, my heart aches for them!... The Valerian Law was...." The scene changes from this lethargic one to a fireside on a winter evening. She drops the book in her lap, the yells of the savages are fainter. She shakes the salt spray from her chair and tries to adjust herself once more to the prosaic of a land-lubber. "To write a book like that is my only desire on earth," she murmurs, as she reaches for a volume of Jane Austen. Now, completely involved in the career of _Emma_, she says, "Oh, for that gift of the gods Jane Austen had! Her speech--a rippling stream of perfect and delicious English, the King's English indeed! Each phrase is as delicately constructed as a watch, and all her watches tick together as one." Thus the incorrigible child goes on, unaware how many fascinating books she has longed to have written. From _Nicholas Nickleby_ to _Thunder on the Left_, from _Walter H. Page_ to the _Constant Nymph_, and from _Chaucer_ to _Edna St. Vincent Millay_! A veritable gourmande, she is. But forgive her. Who has not felt that he might improve a text-book? Who has not longed, in reading a glorious book, for similar brilliance? What lover of books is unmoved to an occasional effort at emulation, even if he afterwards destroy it? You who do these things, sympathize with Shirley, who, by her own hand we do confess, is bitterly disillusioned every time she tries to write a theme. SHIRLEY WOODWARD, '27. OUR STREET Three Indians padded softly along through the tall dark pines. Their errand seemed peaceful, since their number was so small and they came so openly. Soon the path widened out, and finally led to a small glade in which stood a rough cabin. The Indians stopped to observe cautiously before making themselves known. What they saw filled them with curiosity and awe, for standing before the cabin was a white man praying, his deep voice echoing through the wild stillness of the forest. Beside him stood a younger man, whose attention, while respectful, was not undivided, for he had spied the Indians and waited restlessly for the "father" to f
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