THE HESPERIAN IN JOYtiUX PR1NTEMPS. When the young spring lints the woodland with a thousand nameless gleams, And the voice of summer whispers in the murmur of the streams; When the cold earth turns in silence her white face unto the sun, And his glad smile lights her features into beauty one by one, Then the Monocotyledon starteth upward from the sod, And the Schedonnardus texanus decks every prairie clod. All along the gloomy roadside spring the young Gramineae, And the fields are green with involute Dactylos- tacheae. Then the gleaming Microccoccus sets the river all aglow, And in and out the Typha stems the merry fishes go; And all along the shady banks the Physcomitrium Vies with the solt green branches of Cylindrothe- cium. Then we seek the Violaceae in every shady vale, And the first young Erythronium that trembles, faint and pale; And along the rocky ledges where the Filicinea grow . We find the first Atropurpurea, shining through the snow. When the leaves of every Populus and Salicaceae Aie assimilating carbon from each zephyr gliding by, And the chlorophyll is changing it to protoplasmic cells That seal the glancing sunlight in a million fairy wells. Then beneath the ramifying boughs of Cupuliferae The maiden stays to pluck the buds of Lilmceae; And, kneeling on the Phalaris and Eragrostis green, The golden sunlight mingles with her golden tresses' sheen. And, lifting up her glowing eyes unto the Tilia She murmurs, while the soft wind stirs the Geranacia, "Oh, Hydrocharidacia that crowns the riverside, Prosperinaca palustris, the water cannot hide, "Lift up your fresh young faces while I whisper you my woe, While I tell you how I sought the place where Decumaria grow. For upon the Sapimdacia I saw a wondrous thing, Like to Parmelliacia that waits not for the spring, "Hut ere my eager fingers had caught the glowing prize, A woodman trod the Jubula before my startled eyes. I fled unto the sheltering shade of Salicaceae, And watched the Paronychia till the stranger form passed by. "Hut ever since in vain I seek the Discolichenes, And ever since my treasure hides before my weary face. 1 seek it when the morning sun lights all the Lycium, 1 seek it when the silver moon is on the Gallium, "I seek it 'mid the soft green boughs of Cyperaceae, I seek it in the tangled maze of Oleaceae. My father o'er the Dactylon betakes his homeward way, I cannot leave the Cinna at the dying of the day. "But one fair boon I ask of thee. Oh smiling April sky, Show me that Carpophite before I lay me down and die." Then on that Cupulifera a gleaming form she spied. "Theloschistes chrysophthalmus," faintly mur mured she, and died. GIRLS' ANNUAL GYMNASIUM EXHIBITION. On the evening of the 10th, the Physical Training department gave the exhibition which has como to bo one of the loading events of the year. This time our co-eds attained oven greater glory than over before. In spite of the unfortunate illness of Miss Barr, the program was carried out with a promptness and skill which spoke well for the discipline of the young women, and the excellent leadership of Misses Elliott and Spurck. The Indian club, bar bell, and dumb boll drills wore very well conducted and carried out. The leadership of Miss Elliott through the difficult movements with - " " ''iiita "ijaiMr?1