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The Salt Lake Tribune from Salt Lake City, Utah • 57

Location:
Salt Lake City, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
57
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

TIIE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE SUNDAY MORNING 19 19H0 csiiroi mvets OPIATE ART SUSA YOUNG STORY OF UTAH'S FOUNDER COLORFUL AND FASCINATING FORMIDABLE FIGURES IN HISTORY OF ARTS PORTRAYED BY LUDWIG'S SKILLED IIANDl THRFE TITANS BvFmilLudw'g Fublifhers Putnam Sons Three Titans Cay Glamorous Days of Second Empire Revived I HIV LoutIVs Friend Aiding In Biography Ada Dwver Russell bait Lake distinguished dramatic actiess is paying another brief visit to her old home nd has been for 10 davs the guest of her sister Miss Fdna Dwver whore recc nt Illness called Mrs Russell back As hteiajy executor for Amy Lowe! famous Brookline poet and leader of the IimrktB Mis Rus-sell has directed the publication of her two past humous volpmes ofjioetry "East Wind" inid "Ballads for bale" and the more recent woik on Poets and Poetry Much of her tune at piesent Is given to assembling data and otherwise assltlng in the preparation cf the life of the poet upon whkh Poster Damon has been for some time engaged wh se publication will probably not come before 1931 Duilng her visit Mrs Russell will read befoie the Literary club and the organisation front the "garden of Amy Lowell ROMANCE DELIGHTS Alt mJ Hart Lovelace ho in lieu cst novel Petticoat Couit" turns to France for setting THE I IFE STORY OF BRIGHAM YOUNG Bv Susa Gatea In collaboration with Leah Widtsoe Publisher The MacMU lan Company New York To tell the story of the Intrepid far-seeing leader who laid tho foundations of one of the greatest states of the West is to set forth also the history of that state for the one is inextricably bound up with the other This book is therefore far more than the biography of one of the chlelest of the Mormon leaders who was foremost figure In the story of early days From an intimate knowledge of the most authentic sources the writer has told of that epical westward migration from Nauvoo to the valley beside the salt sea of America of whkh however familiar the story one cannot read without thrilling to He stamma-testlng adventure Biigham Young a place In thin la of moment In Bhowlng what manner of man he was not only as a powerful religious leader but as a man of extraordinary vision coupled with sound piartical sense of fearlessness and unconquerable spirit That this history manufactured by a daughter and granddaughter of the Mormon head might be partisan In nature Is to be expected But setting aside the natural enthu i-oMiis of a strong filial love the reader rannot fail to find convincing evidence of his large qualities of character and his remarkable capabilities as an executive As to what forces developed his inherent powers of greatness there Is little In the account of his early life lo Indicate Until his espousal of the faith of the Latter-day Saints he had been a carpenter and cabinetmaker having been apprenticed to the trade at 14 years of age after a period of helping his lather on the farm His education as he himself stated later Included but eleven days of actual acliool attendance pieced out by a gentle mother's teachings Ills father stern Puritan (Coutlnutd on Followlnt Fuel I I li 4m iaJ to (IllviAtmUoa from Sume Young Giteii' Life of Brigham Young Repro duerd bv prmtfwion of publisher Autumn ilianelle PFTTICOAT COURT Maud Hart Lovelace Publ'sher 'I he John Day Company New Yorx Though Mrs Lovelaces pew story has Its basis tn a momentous rpi-sode of American history it is no such important recieauon of the past American scene as was found in her Early Candlelight" It is the cause of the ConfetUracy during Americas Civil War that bhe has taken as her cential theme but bhe has employed a rather roundabout method of tieatment as the locale of the btoiy Is 1 laid entirely In France amid the i glamor and fripperies of the Court of the Second Emphe with the exquisite and caprklous Eugenie as a chief figure i Petticoat If lighter Is nevertheless an altogether agreeable story written with all the charm of manner that has aided the populailty of Mrs Lovelaces pieoeding books There Is liveliness and sparkle to Its narrative and It brings to us the ven breath of Purls of the period and the sumptuous scenes of Louts Napoleon's Palace of the Tuilenes his Court at Compiegne the hunts and fetes and theatricals and the 'Little Mondays" Mrs Lovelace has expended painstaking care on her picture of the Empress and makes of the beautiful bpmlnrd whoso charms and elegance added so largely to the brilliance of the Imperial regime a most sympathetic figure Enchantment of Paris Captivates Southern Heroine Cliloe Pevroux a 17-year-old bnde sent horn her New Oilcans home to escape the hazards of the Civil War Finds magic enveloping Paris Under By Guy a quality all tlielr own the wild 'the care of the sh-ter of the elderly sweet tone of the quaint moun-j husband who Is fighting with Instrument of the title Na- regard Cliloe tees but little oi Us studies ballads and dialect gaiety at first for the Marquise de The Bogart Press Atlanta Ga poems of the mountain folk poems Chaligny truculent old Roy alb still To smoo'h-f lowing measures Mr 1 inspired by the war love songs make mourning the days of Charles the up the varlctv 01 thu eollectlon tn Tenth has nothing but scorn for the Which a true 1VT1C voice speaks Whil Second Empire Le and mentary on life His mood is always there are poems show mg Mrs the daughter of the Guzmans and deeply serious hls theme thevaimy understanding of a life beyond her Kirkpatrick the wine merchant SHAFTS OP CYPRESS Neai lng STRAINS FROM A DULCIMORE By Emma Bell Miles Publisher tule FATHER-SOX THEME GIVEN TRADITIONAL LINCOLN TREATMENT BI -OWING Cl EAR Bv Jixeph a Co evv York Genius as we know It ru-es through the muck of poverty to write auteft the pages of history an Indelible record of personal achievement against almost Insurmountable odds In this volume Mr Ludwig probably the foremost blogranher of cur-lent times selects the names of three great men Michelangelo Rembrandt and Beethoven and calls them Titans" Anvone at all familiar wuh the gifts to posterity of these men and anvone acquainted with the struggle whkh was common to each of them can anpieciatc the aptness of the author In associating them as subject for one volume The theme Is the same as applied to emh Reaied in poverty doomed to a life of disappointment of loneliness of poverty of tragedy each nevertheless rase above ad handicaps and carved his name In bold lclterb on the scroll of fame forcing a recognition from a world which was reluctant to give it The happy selection of these three renowned figures In three sepaiate lines of artistic endeavor and the fine tieatment they receive at the hands of their biographer not only haves Its own lesson as plainly as lessons may be left but gives to the world a human understandable picture of the personal side and private lives of the sculptor the painter and the musician Personality of Each Not Ilia Work Ludwig's Interest Michelangelo was more than a sculptor He a great painter as itness the work In the Vatican or In the great halls and vaulted ceilings of St Peters at Rome and lie was an architect as well as a painter and a sculptor These things the world knows It Is the personal side of him which holds the attention here for the revelations of his character make the story of Michelangelo ring and throb with human interest Just as the great Italian rose to fame out of poverty and obscuilty so did Rembiandt the Dutch painter force his way to the ton Unlike Michelangelo however Rembrandt was Improvident followed the false lure of gold and came to the end of his life poverty where he staited and In disgrace Through the latter yeais of his life he was exploited a slave to Ills easel a producer of potboilers between an occasional masterpiece which will live forever In lus later days a falling eyesight forced the abandonment of his etchings examples of which have been sold and resold for fortunes Ludwig without seeming to do sd diaws the moral The Italian had a gieat mind an adaptable mind and as equally successful In anything he 1 tempted although posterity knows Make Background for Romance of Daughter of llie Confederacy Then matters becoming darker for the the Marqulne onr passion beside the cause of the legitimists Chloe who by an Impulsive act has won the lnteiest of the Empress is allowed to go to Court If so she mav win support for the cau and possibly hasten the hoptd-ior French Intervention The freshness all BonapartLst but capitulating at last to bring happiness back to Chloe is a figure to enjoy One of the extremely interesting features of the btorv Is the excerpts interpolated from newspaper com- nient of the peitod taken from Fn- glish and French Journals on the is- sue between the North and South and concerning "the good natured attorney who ought to have been left to entertain hts friends with highly flavored anecdotes in Kentucky" Montmartre and Paris i yo Undergo Many Changes Leonard Merrkk whose enticing and Company New York Here Is a typical 'Lincoln stoiy such as tins popular author lias been producing for the pleasure of Ills army of followers for somo twenty-five years More than a quarter century ago he found In the quaint Inartificial Cape Cod-crs Inspiring main Uil for clean homespun romance tales hi limning with salt humor and wisdom and the fiesh tang of the sea breezes that blow over Cape Cod such tales as one run turn to with Ho as October dyes and relish after too lonR a course of the I fnc? nlore lay lad Yfra Insistent raw realism of the mod- eimsts In the lonely taciturn fisherman John Huyler Heath we have a protagonist In every wav worthy of the Lincoln tradition "Hi" Heath living at "Seven-up with only Weeks a slow-witted Friar Turkish person as cook and his dog Nuisance whose sccondaiy name of Jack was obvious was Nautlcook characteristic hearty prepossessing And brings a brevity of pain Though now a heart of spilngtiine giieves know a woodland branch conceives Through northern wind and silver rain I love the leaves the sun-set leaves In red and gold no one All autumn sorrow Is in vain 1 hough now a heart of springtime grieves I lov the leaves the sunset leaves Recalling April age believes That life will green the boughs again: Though now a heart of springtime gi ieves I love the leaves the sonnet leaves MILLIR ROBINSON Balt Lake City encircling hills It Is In the songs that reveal her Intimacy with nature that like her best Student Enjoys First Literary Success and futility of all things Naught stays naught endures is often hbs cry therefore Life's a purseful to be spent Hoarded It must rot till one Cut the strings and spread the vent Finding with the journey done Nothing to pay rent Samuel Taylor senior at tire recluse suspected of having "a secret mysteiy gnawing at his heart' That there was something Nautl cook didnt know although he had been born in the town to whkh lie had returned In his early maturity was true because John Heath could not bring himself to speak of the tragedv that had driven him back nor of the young wife who had betrayed his love So when that un and charm of the little Ameilcan nearing is a lyric poet ana rv rnlminnMnn the South quickly win a place "Shafts of Cypress" his third volume1 snort story accepted as culmination! of verse Is distinguished bv an even 'of five years of effort by "Short her she is singled out lor lavor oi verse is oihuiiguisnea oy an even ishe makes ft friend of the witty and musical quality It is a merlmikiusotories a Doubleday Doran publl- Metternlch- book although Its wholly somber cation The story dealing with tlirII'Jr te film best as a great sculptor The 1 mood incllnesNme to complaint pi ize ring Is entitled "The unR and slie fmds romance awaiting lier Dutch painter had no facility audl The collection of Emma Bell Count Mr Taylor has sold several haracteriiations Have Reality to taste for money as such and was vehse edited bv Abby Crawford Mll-iarucles to such publications as The And Agreeableness an especially bad business man R'ton presents the woik of a poet of! New Witter "Writer's! it Is a very appealing slorv that Mr Nearing Is lyric poet andham YounS university ha had a Though now grieves That autumn comes I love the leaves the sunset leaves a heart of springtime and Joy will It Is a vintage that deceives style "Blowing Clear" Is a story well worth reading and that claims 11s place in the literature of the day although It does not subscribe ti the contemporary mood It has Its touch of romance for there Is the charming widow Busan Harwtll who doesnt Intend that anyone eLse shall look after John And to Mr Lincolns large galleiv of Cape Cod Quebec with the Macraes of Dutton'S and la expected In New York "Lyric a companion vol- ume to Alfred history of American poetry "Our Singing Strength" Is an October book on Coward-Mc Cairn's list Mr Krevm- iborg after completing this anthology lof American poetrv from 1630 to 1030 sailed for England where he Is to lecture on American poetrv at Oxford believable unexpected message came 'oddities may be added Weeks and to Heath saving that Ella dvlng had Huldv Baseoin the pious who pur-kft a son "their" sou to his careipceo'd to save his soul and endan the 11 -j ear-old Raymond Condon gored It eternally by marrying him was Introduced Into the queer hmisp- the Tennessee mountains who was Monthly" but this is lus first short Mrs Lovelace has built upon thi nature-lover and artist as well as stoiy to be published Irather slight foundation Her Chloe poet and whose life history readal The young writer is associate editor is a delightful peison and we must like poignant romance Mrs Mile 1 of the News In which he con- sorrow with her when the dread news bred In the mountains from her ninth 'duels a column called "Tavloredlcomes from New Orleans that dims year was a paradoxical creature He also lias written tor the splendor of her davs The old "Th university literary marked artistic talent manifesting The Scratch" Marquhe so vigorous In her dislike of fact that crippled his art and ruined his life None of Three Master Knew Real Freedom Beethoven came Into public notice at a time when Napoleon was The scourge of Furope when Mozart and Goethe were being lionized in the capitals by lovalty Like Michelangelo and Rembiandt he too had been poor and he fought his wav to the top only through a revolutionizing of music hold as a John Heath whose love and faith had once been destroyed was not ready to accept'Owen Latllmore whose "High Tar a son a son who might prove is a recent book from Little like the mother Brown Is engaged In writing an ao- Of how the lud prows Into John's 'count of her exiierlences in crossing heart of his work and sacrifices that fcibeila to join her husband In Chl-Ravmond shall have every advan- ise Turkestan fMmitl taiIe' of tlle new that weanl AUUJiAU 1Y11u11YL the youth from John hopes for him I According to Information from i of the fresh disappointment and the Harold Llovd bespectacled or reasonable oegree cf food may be enjoyed without adding to the weight or to ones health pro-lema A dietary prograrft for a week is nniiriTT' cm Ivinvc A 1 oULUlLu 0 STORY OF SERVICE Barkley Book WIKE LYIULATIS II UNBAND Eh anor Ilolgate Latllmore wife of hate to look a calorie In the face Now It Is found they have been other elements are necessary to keep us well Dr Harvey Wiley who writes art Introduction for the book states that Dr Kebler has followed strictly scientific principles In showing how excess adipose tissue may be reduced handt-i0f capped by an unattiactive face and art she a magazine EASTERN THOUGHT In his newest book "Prophets of the New India (Boms) Romaln Rol- land has endeavored to Illumine for Western minds the trends of Indian (thought today which he believes to be very vital force of our times In this account of Ramakrishna and the prophets of new India RolEand has received the assistance of lead-mg men of thought in that ancient land itself in her girlhood she was aided to continue her studies at a St Louis school but abandoned a promising career to answer the call of her mountains and of love Thereafte: combined wth the arduous duties a mountaineers wife tire crafts of scholar and artist Short stones Illustrated verses nature articles paintings were produced In the intervals of caring for a family of seven For years too she conducted sketching classes and tours of the Cumber-lands with bird-lovers until she became a victim of the white plague Induced by the hardships of her lot With this unusual background the i "The Passionate Kaslmlr Fdsrhmid romantic biography of poems In Strains from a Dulclmuie'Loid Byron just published by the many of which have appeared in Boms Is described as the most dar-leadlng periodicals take on added ln-jing Interpretation of the Byron leg-terest But thev are songs that have end FAT FOLKS OFFERED RELIEF FROM EOGY TILT SHEDS GLOOM EAT AND KEFP FTP By Lyman Kebler Publisher Lyman Kebler Washington Obesity that bugaboo of every woman and many many of their brothers as well need be dreaded no longer Nor need one resort to drug cure and other devices not even to counting the calories in order to dismiss the specter from one mind According to Dr Kebler one may acquire the popular tlie In fact imperative If one considers fashion svelte figure without endangering the health and without being made miserable on a starvation diet In Dr plan based on Information acquired from many sources calories are forgotten "Overweights everywhere" he says have been dosed with calories until they offered and there are chapters on causes of overweight and obesity on essential foods fundamentals ln eating to keep fit Ideal weights properties of fruits and vegetables meats cereals and beverages acidosis and proper diet for counteracting proper exercise and other points that must not be overlooked ln this matter of keeping the desirable thin figure Dr Kebler Is an associate professor of Georgetown Medieal collega and a former government specialist! In foods and drugs as well as medical director for various large Interests and In these matters he offer invaluable counsel 7 JuL -si zCv sfm-io in Tvr "Yu" "iJ storie in The Little Dog Laughed encnoe in the world greatest we hesitate to es- snid in rrnlv tn comment on his work merit because ft li a FieLchihid than with the British that mBrlc effort It Is one And thev a I a (straightforward ac The French fhid mv tfok UIiltvPnbV but not for the ame reason betUr vlulcr than Hard is a record an engrossing record of a sold'trs ex eral Ideas as reflected In the literature of the day 8 Eliot one writer whom Mrs Rnmpt( 0f a strange eccentric race of the tranedv of war Vi th Jameson except of fm a scholarly U)ld hPr that ln AnlPr)ra 8nd Fng- Lrror or 1 It a pure-to U' land It was my Ere'1 bohemians jy actual Interest In the acMous and i Are vou a good liar? Dojouknow considered qu a In (reactions of the av'frage first Ciasa the te hnique of flattery? Canyon i ler fjgiina nan Aie you making the paper and John Bird peris Into The Fufuie of Oliver La Farge to discover if the Pulitzer prize winner is a "one-book" man that Oiev mlcht find a Freni novel IUter iterotinJ fasemthem as ILs book never fills you with an Interesting It fascinates them as a emotional sense ol the futility of that weie A I ranch lady said to me tlie other iKvernan who was only seventeen when fI1 to war Stephen Gwnn has -written an Introduction Hugh Walpole discusses Sark-ville-West as poet and author Norman Foerster views "The Literary Prophets" and John Macy Thaumaturgist Flan What 1 1 Ivl Lewis politan York Here Is a story of the war free from any trace of dramatization and by the same tokon pretty nearly free 0f ftnt-cass writing Private Barkley who has been cov ered with citations and medals from tlie several governments of the United States and Its allies wus ln one of the most dangerous brunches of the American the Intelligence servli accorded the FYenrh Prlx Muierva Tor 1939 -ELfciE STREETER 4 i dav adore your FngUsh characters they are so original eo quaint She said bow can that be? Montmartre is full at all events used to be full ot voung men like your Trlcotrln and Pltou continues Mr Merrick record unrivaled Yakian a bv any previous life of the martyr pre-idint body and an atrocious temperament His independence at the slait must have been a dosp but ilia conduct thereafter became a habit and he was hated liberally and Kennallv Ju-t as the Italian sculptor was a slave to the popes and the Italian ruleis and Rembrandt a slave to his creditors so Beethoven became a his profession Ills career his future was the tyrant which kept him on the wheel although In latei tears he too had considerations of family whieh could not be denied The swift sure strokes of the biographer pen make these men live and move Mr Ludwig has Invested his work with a fine distinctive Btvle wlurh sets rarh one of these gieat ehaiactcrs before the reader In a nanner as obvious as a sculpture or a painting nnd a considerable degree more understnndab'c IV OUR ROLF'! Ruth Chatierton lilavs four distinct characterizations in her new starring vehicle Right to Live She Is to be seen as a young girl them as a mother then as a young daughter then the daughter grown older Rosamond Lehmann's new novel "A Note In just published by Holt and Company was the September selection of the Ingllsh Book society FngUsh cntlrs have found it ns admirable a bit of writing as her "Dusty Answer" hailed as a remarkable first novel OCTOBER IS THE HALLOWE'EN Party Month Our patty roods the finishing will tom give to vour entertaining oKOOXo COMPANY 4 EAST ON SOUTH TEMPI SAtl LAKl City -UTAH NOMAD "While all roads are said to lead'dav I do not know of any otherprjde in being for tlie time a pro-ini to Rome Italy Is still one of the place that has changed so much ps'-loiml soldier than It Is with the liarde't countries to thoroughly mi- Physically and mentally in the space (detailed terrors of the sensitive man according to Irene dl Ro- of sixteen years as Paris lia done und(r arms bllant an Italian writer who de- One of the changes is for the better I do 10 recommend scribes some of the Idiosyncrasies I hanks to the continual Influx of of Italian Cities" ln the month Americans the hotels have more Nomad the casual tour! bathrooms she goes on "will notte that passing from Naples to Rome then on to Florence then to Venice with a hurried glance at the Italian IN MANY LANGUAGE? Emil Ludwig life of Lincoln (Lit-lakes 'tie Brown) has been translated Into "Montmartre is not full of these today Ills alory Is rather more filled 1th jelling At of a to Dont of Priestley's "The Good Com- paiilons (Harpers) has been award- the James Tall Black prize for the Kngllsh novel of 1929 Brother Goes (Richard Smith) 1 an account of a sensitive youths participation In reat conflict at Ypres the Marne the Somme told by yourself comer atlonalh If you feci you i If a failure in thee matters you are advvwd to read Conversation" ln which Bairingtrm Hall has done for conversation what Emily Post has for etiquette Brewer and Warren are pub- Mr Hall lmprov lng book this the same time they offer a novel womans overnight transformation from an unussuinlng homebody the latest modern type In "You Knuw Charley" bv Valentine Hinmson who wrote Brland Mdn to tne Ozark hill country which he calls Ilawg Fve Mr Wilson's short stories of the Ozarks have been published In leading magazines Putnams offer this book of Americana this month The history of Leonhard Seppala tlie herolr dog-team driver who took the diphtheria serum to Nome has been wiltten by Fhz-beth Miller Bicker owner of Togo husky hero of (the episode Ainkan Dog Driver' Is a Lltte Brown book late September Mary Webbs well-known novel which was published ln a new edi'lon with wood-'cuLs bv Rowland HUder bv Duttons in the spring baa been dramatized and was recently presented ln London Henry Williamson author of "The and other splendid ks having a new woik Villdve Book" i eleji pd this month Mr Williamson who it a Dutton an-Jthor has been on a fuhing Lilp in I No matter what the you'll find Suggestions tor your party games in the Books in our stock TheyTl help you solve jour entertainment problems means moving from one world to an- German Italian Dutch Polish and difficult to lay clown other a change of atmosphere of Hi brew and arrangements are being i "Acres of 8ky" la the very Inclusive external appearance a difference made for it publication in Danish Sunonne Raul novel Not ti(J of Charles Morrow Wilsons cooking and language French Spamsh and Czecho-blo-Fnough (Farrar and Rinehart was nnvpj a btukwoods community of and Peace" and who is coming AmerUa In January to lectuie also Krakatoa Hand of the God" b) THE BOOKMAN In these days when youth it elf knows only disillusionment we Rrc no longer Impressed by final gestures according to Storm Jamison who gives the significant title Ha Ha I Laughing" to her article on the subject of the modern incli-nuon to take nothing seriously which appears In the current Bookman Further she says: sight of one of our friends taking up a dignified atti'ude does not fill us with respect It makes us think of him as an ass an amusing or (ol tenor) a boring ass In the same wav we prefer to look through our legs at the heroic and noble We like them belter from that angle There are still a few people even In Ingland who make dignified gestures and admire dignity Itself Hipv are almost all elderly or a Sitwell The rest put off ritgnrtv when they put off their belief In God and the beauty of chastitv The modern spirit wears a grinning mask and spends Its leisure catching others bending How has it Youth having emerged from the Victorian shadow and discovered sex and the brotherhood of man suffered a war change Afterward "Think of the new world that was announced to follow the war Think of the land fit for heroes And having thought look at it You can help laughing can you? Like hell you can After you have made the mast complete fool of yourself and talked so much nonsense After vou have been In-vired to win the war and had a joke like the Jxace poiycd on you After you have seen what heroes get for being heroic After you have discovered where banks Its profits You wouid nat-1 urally Never'Iicles- Mrs Jameson notes there are qualities in life and art rot encouraged bv this mod- ern habit of guvmg ever'hmg that wed to be considered heroic dlnl- fird and sublime It has brought about the thinks a neglect of Sunset at Hampton Lane TO SELECT TOUR XMAS CARDS NOW means a better selection and more time to give you satisfactory engraving on them Our line exclusive Miss di Robiiant discussion of the nuances of life ln her own country lenihraces social hRblts and stand- ards traditions and prejudires art education the opera situation and varied other points With Beatrice BarmbV one may take "A Stroll About the World chiefly ln Oriental places or with James Bose spend Weeks In The Or tf you do not care to go so far afield fee the "Offerings of the Old with (Nathan Goodman as nce and I on familiar ground 'Tlie of with Crislel lifting i of Taxis Dorotl Haight tehs you what vou may be prepared for tn taxi peculiarities abroad I ac' for the movie camera enthulat to 'know are offered ln Norman Iprelps' Tip From the Girl ti Giem'and Hanemann wi'h hLs accustomed zeal for knowledge wains to know "Whv All This Fir About Gasoline" when nothing if done aoout our hot wh'ih he learned much ouruig a jaunt tlrta summer The tranquil sunset's rosy-tinted veils Oa wood and mountain tenderly unfold And softly as a queens rich garni nt trails They sweep across the foothills scarred and old Within "the brfshy rlough faint as ln dreams A lonely thrush sings to the facing light Beneath the rising moon the world now seems Enchanted ln the melody-pp reed night With perfume overburdened mid tlie green Of thickly matted Ivy dewy-wet A Illy towers ln Its snow-white sheen Cuol and passionless as a statuette And rich with scents from meadows rip0 and fair Like balm of Heaven Is the wild-sweet air 44- EAST ON SOUTH TEMPLE 5 ALT LAKE CITY UTAH Salt Lake City.

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About The Salt Lake Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
1,964,073
Years Available:
1871-2004