to Ql HI- SPERIMt UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA. Vol. XXVI LINCOLN, NKKKASKA, .JANUARY 22, ISOfi. No nusic. A "lim.it'(l world", becalmed it lay Through all the night, at break of day A song hurst forth, the Stars bunt lovn To place upon earth's brow, her crown. Liitnii: C. Hark. Here and There. Tho tilings we liuvo not done they are the ghosts that walk with us. They are the only ghosts, for why should things that have been real, come back to wander in shadows. They have been; they will always lie. It is vhe things that have never boon that haunt us. She wa dead . The room looked large with tho bod taken away, and the women sat in a dumb circle looking at the white floor, tho bit of carpet, the tiny stove set on four slonos. They talked in whispers and stopped suddenly when a wagon rat tled to the door; a wagon that was "bring ing from other houses as tiny, chairs "by twos and throes, chairs without backs, mended, u n painted, that were carried in one by om until the little room and Kitc-hon wore filled. A space was left Wide tho small round table. No one looked at it, nor at the door that opened into the bod room, until a heavy, long Wndk wagon clattered to the stops and 'od against them, shaking the door. Some of tho men, who were standing Hi'onnd the bedding, hoaped with the bed u the ground, came around to the front oor stumbling as they came over the toulhay that banked the house high up 10 tnded sng. Thay carried into "6 roorri fche long rough box, smeared ver with brown rpaint in uneven strokes, nomeitan casing at the corners scraped gainst the door and the little stove, as they moved into the bed room. Presently the little sister-in-law who had taken care of the dead woman, came out of tho bed room and took'a piece of comb quickly from under the cracked mirror. Then in a moment the coffin was lifted back into the room more slowly, heavily, and set on two chairs beside the table. It filled the room so close that we must need? look down on the face and white flowers-our flowers-on the lid. It was all there was left now to do. We had thought it all. The gowned minis-ter entered and read the service slowly. The little sister-in-law cried softly and the young husband -sat with his face in his hands. It was then that we began to remember. AVho would there be to sing? No one. Why had we not thought? She had loved music. She herself had had a sweet voice she was not yet twenty. "But I sing hoarse now," she told us once. If we had only remem bered. But we had not. The minister read on . The neighbor women sat with grave sad faces, turned on that face which seemed older than they all, with their wind-reddened cheeks and wet dropped eye-lids. Beside the coffin a woman sat with a child in her arms. It slept, and its heavy breathing filled the room and sounded loud in the solemn pauses. So it ended, and in hard grating silence they closed the lid over the course edges where carpet tacks held the lining fast, it was done and the man sitting in his ragged coat at the coffin head moved not. Only the sister-in-law sobbed un-