Show In Our Poets Poet's Backyard MODERN LOVE I By Nancy Barr Mavity I want no little comfortable love in chivalry and gentleness Call Can me to courage Challenge me ma to truth Daro Dare mo me to high and difficult comradeship comradeship com corn Test me with anger clasp my hand again As All friends whom anger cannot part and then Lover LoveI to te lover I will meet you then March l with you ou step by ste step unto the end nd end N. X Y livening Evening Post THE ETERNAL FEMININE Dy Sauvage Owens So she sh awoke the little Egyptian Prin Prince rin- rin ce And peered ered red about In In the gloom Then rhen lightly tossing said aside the silken K rave She Shoran ran to the tho mouth of ot the tomb Tho The aw struck awe watchers vatcher pale in the tho flickering torchlight Sll Silently tl gave IrAV her ICI room m. m Laughed Laughed with II glee e the might Pharaohs Pharaoh's daughter And I perched on the UI Ups tips of ot her toes tou Site Sims blew bl w a kiss kle to the tho answering winds of ot the desert warm as u a rose Then a mirror forth tram from her Iter girdle powdered her hor no nose DOM nut 1301 D the eyes eye of ot the tho little E Jre re darkened with sudden audd woe Abi An Alii I whit what do doel she abs seek kT A sunny y nook by bJ the th river Where bare lotus blossom blow I Or the whispering shade hade where use she kept eo a tryst mat with hr hl lover wor lIo thousand years ea ate aio allOT I Bade Buk to her h. tomb she Iho crept th the tb royal rosI I maiden The rIM watchers wI standing there I larked how tsow she Ih h drew the tho sWeets silken robe about her with J jewels je fair And ADd the Uta WOI woman n cry f n- n thy they heard w wold waa Wal aa aaI old a Eden Edn I a thine tt to wear tar w New York Times Tl How JIoW good 04 It Is 18 to grow frow less young be b. not Dot yet t one on hour too old With t st l mind anc and sobered tong tonne tonee To s Dr r 1 things youth left u un- un told Os sik D In Chaucer's tim time tim a rr- e r ering to your ebo bole bo my good o prime prim e tr by bJ JO sour after X k bat lived by bJ span I t S f. f 5 I i T I S As linnets linnet's singing leave your our bo boughs bough U gli e. e Say t with rustling le leaves eB Onlo One On S man alan n S lo Found nd Ute life sweet after aCter youths youth's carouse S From From Tho Atlantic l Monthly S Ill C J u lA r it lAl Sly liT Delbert I Iehl Tho The West a West a Range flange where visions lend lendA S I A charm divine c t to those tholo who spend It Its borders lie beyond the lulls hills W Whose W. cUa snO peaks the brave bravo heart hert i thrill A A t beauty spot ot Like Like lAke wild wild herd berd berdon on the virgin range There roam at Will 11 in land Welt I strange Poetic mysteries Then mount thy steed td Oh Ob nia n rr r bold And nd ride that range nn like Knights of ot old oldIn oldIn In conquest Round Bound up the vCra ot bliss r Did ld mortal eer face rac c ace cJ cc a this w We think not Tuot 7 SL Then Thea let lt the wen well well fl fly Throughout the land where e sunset I die dl Beneath Pacific's waves Corral the bunch Spare pare not the brand I Mark Mirk alt all the herd hard In Land Far A western feature II sure Mure enough nough If It you vou cant can't hold em treat em era rough The The Lariat c I 0 fly nT lesh I than shall ha have has pearls pearl blacker than caviar caYlar RUbIes Ruble such luch as AI a ripe pomegranate Meeds Gold Cold pals pale as hone honey dripping from a aBrought astar star Itar Brought me by bJ slav Mares like snow mow and apple seed I t shall have haye linen smooth a as al pigeon I It t throats b roa ta I shall Ihan have baye purple more mor than sunset I red sal The velvet lt leap hap of ot leopards leopard to m my boats The france fr-ance fr of ot the tho cedars cedar to my Before my emperors emper emper- ors ora Will stand abashed as u troubled DOubled children chil- chil dren do I A riot kartt S Sut every m. m But Bat ut bM tIa then bring brine night j a Ir |