Show I r I I Quoted Quoted I II By Hartford Curtis Cop Copyright 1924 1921 New ew York Evening Evening Eve Eve- ning World Ir ss s Publishing Co By HARTFORD CURTIS Copyright 1924 1024 New York Tork Evening Press Publishing Company Did you ou ever near hear me preach Charles Charles' said Coleridge to LambI Lamb I 1 never heard you do an anything anything any any- thing else was vas the reply 0 To the readers reader of ot any or all aU of 01 Dallas Dallas Dal Dab las lore Sharps Sharp's books the above application application application ap ap- ap- ap is obvious at least so thinks II H. L. L Koopman librarian of i Brown university In n reviewing Sharps Sharp's rp latest Tho Vt The hrs Magical f il Chance c In Brown Alumni Magazine l In which opinion the writer concurs Sharp a a. Methodist cler clergyman man and time one-time professor of or English at Boston Boston Bos Boa ton university is a voluminous writer of books nature books nature books The books The Face of ot the Fields The Fall all of the tho Year Winter Vinter Where Rolls the Oregon and many more As with Coleridge the reader swallows a sermon unit tingly though he may think he lis is reading a a. song Sharp co could ld jho ho more more write his song song prose prose though it be be without without preaching a sermon than could Coleridge No Xo sermon would mean no song as Koopman sa says Sharp arp finds as did did the time banished duke in the Forest of ot Arden in As As You Like It Jt It Tongues In the trees books In the running brooks Sermons in stones atones and good in thing every I I I Read nead Sharps Sharp's picture of ot the grim trees and the flaming I them in Ih carpet beneath his frequent the primeval Maine woods approaches to poetic expression ex ex- without actual one is tempted contact and with the humor that to say that along runs through his sermons Sharp might have chosen poetry as a medium of ot equal success expression with |