4 THE HESPERIAN : -. i Ruvino Valley, valo Agreoable Pleasant, acquiesant Smell Scant, aroma, odor Nice Pleasant IIouso Domicile, abode Darkness Night Mr. Peterson illustrates his idea in the following lino: "Dawn in thy garden with the faintest sound" and sots out as poetic words, dawn, thy, garden, faintest, sound; but is unfor tunate enough to substitute as prose equiva lents yard for garden and inaudible noise for faintest sound, none of which are in any sense synonyms. The student is now asked "how much of the feeling is left?" Woll not much. Let us now try a few stanzas in which are found Mr. Peterson's "prose words." "Now rings the wood and loud and long, The distanco takes a holier hue, And drowned in yonder living blue, The lark becomes a sightless song." What would you substitute for blue and how would it sound ? Try another: ':Wo have but faith; we cannot know; For knowledge is of things wo see; And yet wo trust it comes from thee, A beam in darkness lot it grow." u Tis darkness beautiful with thee." "Dark house by which once more I stand, Hero in the long lovely street, Doors, where my heart was usod to beat So quickly waiting for a hand." "Cold in that atmosphere of death." "Or like to noiseless phantoms Hit." A spectral doubt which makes mo cold." "Is cold to all that might have been." ." The Btudent will probably wonder why Lqrci Tennyson failed to think of the more "poetic words," mansion, portal, chilly, eto:r, To insure consistency all of the above ex amples are taken from "In Momoriam." They partially show how untenable is the thoory that any, word is proso or pootic ox oopt by tho caprico of the composer. In the above poem all tho designated proso words are usod ropeatodly. In tho construction of a chart by which this Kepler law of poetry is mado clear the student is gravely cautioned to get tho smaller subdivisions exactly squaro. The reasons for this aro not made plain but it is to bo presumed that upon tho accomplish ment of this font success largely depends. However, the system needs perfecting and when by numerous experiments a sym metrical line of "poetic emotion" has been laid upon this chart its value as a gunge for tho accurate production of poetry will be doubly enhanced to tho tyro rhymstor. New fields will bo opened to the Btudent of literature as he wanders through hitherto obscure passages absorbing the thought by means of curves and per cont marks instead of by tho laborious method of trying to understand. Its universality of application will no doubt insure its speedy introduction to other arts, for instance, music. Who knows but that by a simple plan of numbering the tones of tho scalo with an in geniously devised chart to bo used in connec tion therewith, wo may retain in cold per cent the quantity of emotion to bo found in Tanhausor or Shuberts' Serenade. Awaiting tho publication of a list of pootic words, however, it is more than likely that many readers of Mr. Peterson's article will be slow to adopt the plan of studying poetry sot forth, seeing that with present facilities for selecting pootic words tho rosults lack that certainty which is so satisfactory in mathematical calculation and atford no aid whatever in the study of English literature. 0. Yont. Street Car Conductor How old are you, my little girl ? Little Boston Girl If the corporation does not object, I prefer to pay full fare and keep my own statistics. Ex.