THM MKK: OMAHA, TIUMiSDAY, MAltt'l! 27, 101M. 11 A 1 C age Interview With Ella Wheeler Wilcox on "The Battlefield of Love" 1 Tim lHlKlit of Helolso with Abclunl. The world's great battlefields aro al ways shrines for the tourists. Water loo Is ycurly visited by thousands or travelers, nnd pilgrimages aro continually made In our own land to Bunker Hill, Yorktown and Gettysburg. When I went to France It was my de nlre to visit anotjier great battlefield, a field where waged a 'strife that has re sounded through centuries that remark able" strife between religion and human pusslon. In tho hearts ot Abelard and He lolse ciilde books point to the tomb of Pere LncTialse as all that survives of philo sopher and pupil, lover and maid, hus band ami wife, monk and man; but It whs' my good fortune to learn moru ot the'' lives of this ill-fated pair thun the trnslnted volumes of their letters relate; ami to see iu of the places and objects associated with their names than the tomb at l'ere Luchalse. Guided through tho mazes of the ceme tery to the tomb of the Immortal lovers byjCharles Moonen, whose card and con vefsftlon proclaimed him "Homme deS' leUre's," while lie ac-cd as professional guide, I learned un Interesting fact, 'At Argentaull," said Mr, Moonen, "you will find the old convent still standing, though no longer a convent, where Helolso received her first com munion, and to which she returned after ward to take the vows for life." So to Argenteull tho next day was the pilgrimago made; at first to meet with many discouragements and baffling con tradictions from residents of that ancient and' historic environ of Paris, for He lolso lived long ago and while poets, ami-the savants, and tho bookworms, and tho dreamers ot Argenteull may all know her domicile, it was not my good fortune to meet any of them that first hour. Argonteull, In tiutli, is more noted for Its excellent usparagus than for its lovers of romantic history. But. at last, u gentle-faced nun, telling her beads as she walked before a church door, directed me aright. "It Is No. TO Houlevard Helolse. madame, and a prlvute residence." she said. "Here In this church you will find some of the sacred relies taken from the convent when Helolso and her sta ters In Christ were forced to leave and go to the paraclet. You must come and see them another day; we have ser vices now, and they" could not be shown." Driving along the boulevard In the glorious sunshine, the story of Helolso came back to me, In all Its force, that old story ot mad love, tud suffering, and llfc-luug sorrow. Helolse hnd been sent to the convent of Argenteull for the rudiments of her education, by her unele, the Canon Ful bert. She had returned to his home (now No. 11 Qual aux Fleurs where atl In scription over the door commemorates tho fact), a brilliant, beautiful young creature, who was famed for her. Intel lect and learning, while still In the first flush of girlhood. Canon Fulbert was proud of her at- talnments; and prouder still when she expressed a wish to atudy the philosophy ', of the great Abelard, then In the height of his fame, and cfllef of the school of Paris, the nucleus ot what Is known to day as the great SOrbonnc. Abelard was 37 years old, Helolak,, n little more than half that age, perhaps; and ono does not even need to recall the fact that the cloventh century was an era of licentiousness to understand how Abelard, In his Intimate association with his beautiful pupil, stood in danger of falling from his plnnaclo of religious power. The Canon Fulbert, believing lit the prudence and wisdom ot his niece (as men believe only and always In their Abclanl ami Helolse, from nn OIU PnintiiiK y K. CoMvay, Vlvnt to write I produced only Secrets of the Universe Revealed by Color. Our Eyelashes Are Primitive Spectroscopes. owm. and having faith in tho sincerity of Abelaid's Ideals, permitted the phll- 1 osopher to become a member of his household in oidn to give Helolsu the full benefit of his Instruction Not only waf Abelmfl given the priv ilege of teaching the beautiful girl, but he was authorized to chustlso her If she became Indifferent or negligent. In his etter to u friend long afterward Abelard wiotei Vo were under one-roof, and we be came cine ''heart. Under tho pretext of study we gave ourselves utterly to love. We opened our books, but there were more' kisses than explanations, and our eyes sought each other rather than tho texts. Yet, sometimes, to still further de ceive tho'unclo, I chastized Helolso as a bad pupil, but the blowB weriUiuso of love, not of anger. As I grow more anil more drunken with passion, I cared less and less for my school and my studies. ''It' was a violent effort for me to go about my duties. I lost all 'Inspiration I could only speak to my students from memory", repeating 'old lessons and when' By GAKHETT 1 SKUVISS. The miracle of tho spectroscope Is ic peatcd before .our eyes every day and cery night without our recognizing It. If people were more observant and morn accustomed to- think about the meaning of what they see, great dis coveries would be as plentiful as dia monds In a Klin borley pipe. A'.nian said to me the! other day, "What -is- all this color that see when J squint my eyes and look "at, tin electric light?" I replied: "It Is the greatest revelation 1 Yon Can Depend on this Tooth Powder It It cot merely a poliiblor powdtr or psste sweetened and blfhljr flat, ored. It hat raal quilltles that pr serre your teoih and keeps your raoutk, sums nnd throat la htalthy condition. You will like It appearance and taste and you will KNOW it U scientifically correct. MONOXIDE TOOTH POWDER or PASTE are at carefully componndad in oar laboratories as are celebrated tkcImj and anil -toilet. Uonozlde ttaodt unique among dentUrlett at a cleanser, polUber and purifier, and by liberation of oxygen destroys acids, tone up toft, tender, flabby gums, arretU decay, pro duce tound, white toe to and a clean, healthy tooutb. It it soluble, contains no acids, grit; Is a thorough germicide and a harmless bleach for discolored teetb. Mot dniftfUs both tfonotid. Tooth Powder and If your bu no I, we'll mill either one port free from our labor, torle for tie. A Iutl booklet "The Care of the TeethVfre on resueet. THE MONOXIDE COMPANY Denver, Ceto. that man has ever had In the physical world It Is spectrum analysis. Your crowded eyelashes become an astronomi cal Instrument and analyse the light for you into Its primary colors. The multl tude of narrow silts through which this light passes as you squint your eyes, act like a 'diffraction grating' and change the direction of the various wave's of light, in accordance with their length. "The red waves are long, one SD.OOOOih of an Inch In length nnd they keep on without much change of direction, but tho violet waves aro short, ono 67,000th ot an inch In length, and they are consider ably turned out of a straight line. All the Intermediate waves, from orange, through yellow, green, blue and Indigo, decrease In length, and are more and more turned aside as they get shorter. The consequence Is that you see through your nealy closed eyelashes, a band of colors, which is nothing but the famous spectrum of the astronomers." Hy the discovery of that spectrum and tito reasoning that it led to, we have found out what the sun and the stars ) are made of. Kvery known element of matter, when It Is made to shine, gives out wave- lengths peculiar to Itself. Spec troscepi instruments, more perfect that . the eylnshes. reveal these special waves , in the light ot the sun and the stars, and I by that revelation enable us to -detect tht incandescent clouds, composed of the hoi sapors of Iron, copper, nickel, platinum. carbon, calcium, sodium and muny other substances, which glow in the atmos phere of tho heavenly bodies.- We find these things In stars so far away that I their flight may require a thousand years to come to us, although It flies with a i speed ot 186,300 miles per second. I I.,ook around you when you enter brilliantly lighted parlor with crystal chandeliers hanging from the celling. The mysterious spectrum flashea at you from a hundred different directions at once The glass crystals of the chandeliers ar also spectroscopes, and they, too, separ ate the various colored waves, thougl on a somewhat different principle. The act not aa diffraction gratings, but u prisms, but the effect la nearly the same 1 When light goes through a prism th red waves are less bent out of their course than the orange, the orumre iu 1 undertook love verses. Canon Fulbert discovered the affair between Alielard and Helolse und Insisted that they be married. Abelard, In case such a marriage became public, would lose ul chance of preferment In he church. Helolse. knowing this, protested against the murrluge with him and objected us long us she could. Nevertheless, Abehird. hold by ills pro mise to Kulbert, made Hilolso his wire. She returned to Purls with her uncle' uftur the ceremony and Kulburt, despite. his promise of keeping tho marriage 1 secret, announced It to tho world. Helolso promptly denied It, knowing that public sentiment would condemn tho legal part of his dereliction, whllo It would condone his, amatory sin. So en raged was the uiiclo by her denials that lie BUbJecfed tho poor girl to the greatest abuses. Abelard, informed of the situation, sent Helolso to tho Convent of Argenteull, and. there sho donned the robe of the sisters, with tho exception ot the veil, und, lived Published In June, 1771 ostensibly tho religious life ot tho holy sisters Tho two lovers still met, and this com ing to tlm ears of Kulbrrt caused him to wreuk a fiendish VKiigeunco on Abo laid. Slioitly after Abelard entered the monastery of SI. Denis, anil Helolse, at his wish, took the veil Ufa In the Con vtnt of Argenteull And now hero was I approaching that very convent, no longer u reinvent, but an ordinary Parisian house set hark in u court, and hearing the placard, "A I.oiicr." A pretty concierge walked In tho gar den, and when I explained my errand, 1 er furo lighted with sympathy, and tak lngdowu a bunch of keys from a nail on the Inner wall, she unlocked the door of a room opening upon a small enclosed garden. "This," she said, "was the sleeping room of Helolse, Her ihm stood In that oleove. lly the window was once a door which led lo the confessional and out sldo was Iter gnrden, where sho walked." It was overwhelming the thought of it all Here Helolse hail first studied, a happy, brilliant, carcfreo girl. Hero sho had teturiied after her marriage to escape the cruelty of her uncle, and hero had, sho tukeii her vows for life In tho bloont of her youth, saying as she accepted the oil whloh shut her In forever from tho world : "Criminal that I was to bring such mis fortune on thee; reeelvo now my expia tion In tills chastisement which I must ' bear forever." i liven In thut solemn hour It was her devotion to Abchud, not to heaven, whloh ciigagud her thought. U wus many yeeffy before her heart was given to Uod. Later 1 vUltcd the convent again with ' a photographer, nnd was shown, by Mr. Jules Provln, Its owner, the subterranean tusKiign through which Abelard used to mako his ai'Ciut intranet', unit the old Worn stone staircase which his Impatient ftet trod. This passage, now partly walled up, to fin in n cellar, used to extend through to tho Seine, which Is only u short distance from the convent. Mr. l'rovln assured me that Abelard mude his entrance by boat, und showed ine III the roof of the cellar u hook which hud probably served aa un iiiichorage for tying the bark of Cupid, Mr. l'rovln did not stem to rtnllte the fortuiiu lying umiHiied In his grusp Un dislrmt to lent ills property for some thing less thun SX) u year, but could out helluvo that by making Its history known und turning It Into a goal for tourists, charging a frano entrance feo, he would Miort be independent for life. Argrntct'll Is only tvjpn'y rstt-it, Paris, and thousands of tourists would glady Journey thither und pay their fiano did tho guluo boiiks uiiui h.i-.ii ... convent, where begun the long martyi tlom of Helolso, thut terrible llfu ot soil tUdo and Buffering for which she was so unfitted; thut crucifixion of tho passion uto woman on the ultur of the (for many years) Indifferent recluse. Sixteen yeurs uftcrwurd sho wrote to Abelard, "I took the voll to obey .you not to please God." ' . I' ll was not from this convent, hut from tho l'araclet the famous letters of Hel olse were written. Thero Abelaid's body was brought after his dcuth at tho priory of St. Marcel In 1142, and there Helolso was hurled beside him twenty-two years later. No stone remains of the Para ch't; It was destroyed In IStX) nnd the 'omb and Its contents conveyed to Tens Lu chaise. It Is believed that Abelard and Helolse never met ater she took the veil, iavo during the public ceremonies attending1 the dedication of the l'araclet to her service, dedication of the l'nraolct to hor service. Ani other Impression falls to the ground as Improbable, after perusing the letters of Helolso written long yearn afters she became a nun letters which Bre re proaches for his nbnence nnd silence, during all these years and wild patlt'.6n for his favor and affection; letters flllod with burning memories of a love that would not die and with pawlonate pleas for some word of recognition from the man for whom she had sacrificed honor, name, liberty and the world, In the morn ing ot life. Abelard trnvelled and gave discourses nt various periods ufter ho took tho mon astic vows. Hnlnlno wrote a book of rules for the women of the convents, which was blessed by tho court ot Home, and entered Into tho constitution of all the monasteries of the time. Bhe was famed for her erudition ana her wisdom during her era, But It is by her letters to Abelard that she re. membered, because those letters reveal the heart of a woman loving with abso-. lute abandon, unselfishness and loyalty, and of consocratlng her life to tho mem ory of that love. It proves how much greater Is a lover than a philosopher, when we realUe what 'a renowned man was Abelard In his day,, yet how utterly he, is forgotten save as tho lover of Helolse. He was the first orator, the first philosopher, the first poet, arid one of tile first musicians of the twelfth century. He was so broad and so brilliant and so courageous in ma ideas mat ne brought a revolution Into the religious world and untugonlzed the entire tradl-tton-bound clergy. He was persecuted in consequenco, but his name grew In glory, and his school of philosophy, the first to teach tho liberty of human thought, could not accommodate his vast audiences, and he was obliged to ad dress them In the open air. It Is no wonder that this man seemed to Helolse, then 17 years of nge, a verit able god, or that she forgot the world In his love. And so great wan that lovo, that It alone, of all Abclard's glory, is remembered today. Philosophies change religions alter creeds die the minds of men are revolu tionized nn these subjects, but love lives on, and passion endures tho samo yes terday, today, nnd forever In the human heart. Only ho who loveB Is immortal. than the yellow, the yellow less than th? green, tho green less than tho blue, the blue less than the Indigo, and the Indigo less than tho violet. Tho lesult Is that what was white light, with all Its wuves Intermingled, when It entered the prlBin, comes out In beautiful sheaves of color. A similar effect Is produced hy the bevelled edge of a mirror, or the facets of 'a piece of cut-glass, glittering on a dinner table. The beauty of Jewels depends upon their spectroscopic powers, livery transparent subfctancc has Its own "Index of refrac tion." which means its peculiar power of turning light waves aside. The dia mond, as the king of gems, possesses this power In the highest degree. Calling tho refractive Index of nil 1.00, that of glass Is from 1.E1 to 1.71, according to Its den sity, while that of the diamond is 2.457. This property alone furnishes n means of detecting the genuineness of n dia mond. Taking ndvnntage ot Us high re-ff-ctlvo power, and shaping Its facets accordingly, the Jeweler can vastly In crease tho brilliancy of a diamond by proper cutting. He can hrlng nhout In ternal reflections that mako tho atone blaze as If Its atoms were all afire. The shimmer of colors In an opal Is due to the existence vf invisibly minute fis sures, which spilt up the light waves and scatter their hues In delicate, Inter mingled rainbows. Nature has been doing these things for thousands of years, in plain sight, heforo man found out that ho coultl uso thn prlncple on which sho acted to uncover tho secrets of the unlvorsc. Very likely she Is giving us many other equally vnluablo hints which we are still too stupid to understand. A Famous Conflagration lly KKV. THOMAS IJ. (JHICOOUV. The burning or Surdls, the royal city of Asia Minor, by the Athenians and lotilans i013- yCars ago. March 24, GOO B. C, was attended by larger results than ny other flro'that was ever kindled on this ourth. The "Great Fire" of lndon. tho Chi cago fire, the Bos ton fire, as well as nil the other fires that might be men tioned, pale Into In significance, t h t historical c o n s e quenocs duly con sidered, before thlB flro of Sardls. The Ionian Ireeks. Inhabiting the Islands along the Vslatlc coast, were, at the time Indicated above. BUbJectB of the Persian king. But It is difficult to 1iold Greeks In bondage. The Greek Is, and ever has been, a great lover of liberty, and whenever ill fortune plated him under foreign rule, he hiiH always chafed like a eaged lion. It was not strange, therefore, that the Ionian Greeks thought of revolting against the great oriental despot, Darius. The start was made ly Arlstagorus of Miletus. Arli-tagotHS applied for aid to Spuria and was turned down with the curt reply that "Spartans would enguge In no undertaking that would carry them a three-months' Journey from the t-ea." Aristngoros then turned to Athens -and wus successful. Touched by the envoys' story, tho Athenians Immediately Vutetf to scmtl n fleet of twenty ships to aid in tho good cause of Jonlnn freedom. HaFfpnIng hack, Arlhtngoras gatherod a force of lnspalnnn, which, In conjunc tion with the men of Athena, made a dcBcent upon tho Islan roast, left their vossel at a point near Ivphesus, and with characteristic courage tet out upon an Invasion f the Persian dominion. Upon reaching Sardls. the capital of Asia Minor, they made It a heap of ashen, and were thinking of their next move, when they suddenly found themselves In u pre dicament. The united Greek force was a small one, and Artapheinen, the klng'a non tenant In the province, was fast sur rounding them with an army many tlnvw tho size of their own.. An Instant start was made for their tleet, Hevcnty-fivu miles awny, but they were overtaken near Kpheeus by the king's army and de feated. Betaking themselves to their ships, the Greeks salW'd away, and for the time be ing the Ionian revolt was over. But Sardls was destroyed. The royal city was u heap of charred ruins. The great kings anger was furious. "Who burnt SaidlsT' he uslitd, "The Athenians, oh king," ho was told. He had a very vacuo Idea ns to who tho. Athenians were, hut he instantly repolved to punish them, and he commanded those who waited upon him ut table to say to him overy day, "Remember the Athenians." He did remember them and thn result wuh Marathon. And his successor re membered them and the result was Platen nnd Salainls and Mycalc. And out of tho grand enthusiasm (a true "divine afflatus," If thrre ever wbb one) born of these vletorlOH iroen the "Glory that wan Orrcc-p" tho drama of Arschvltis and Sophocles, tho eloquence of Pericles, the matchless sculpture of PhldliiH, tho Inimitable painting of Zeuvls and Anelles; In a won!, the flrht leal civilization that the world ever saw. It Is interesting to give free reins to the imagination Just here, ami to ask our selves thti question: "Would all this have been had irdln not been burnt?" It mighty and thou again It iv!g t. One thing Is certain, hut for tho minify r f Sardls it would not have born when It was. Lnter on-wn know not how much later thero might have ronio an "Age of Perlcle.," and. following that an empire of Alexander, Blinking thn sleepy old Orient Into life; hut this Is only conjec ture. WJiat we know Is this: The audacious Athenians-burnt Surdls. anil because they burnt Sardls the Kusslnn monarch at tempted the ehaBtlsement of them, whleh rwulted In tho Owk vlltnries which oreatwl the enthusiasm out of which came the civilization thnt is still tho mliuHe find glory of history. Ballad hi Gypsy Call J lly WILLIAM I KIKK. I. You uBk mo if our love will change when you uro old and gray; You ask me If our dream of bllas In time., will fado away And so I einlle away your fears and kiss away your tears, For such a love aa ours, dear heart, cares nothing for tho years. ' CHOnuS: I must have loved you long ago when all tho world waB now, When o'er the flowers of Edon's bowers the birds all sang for you; In agoa gono wo know the dawn of pleasure and of pain; I loved you then, I lovo you now, and wo shall love again. Lart nlcut I drcumcd tho sunset gleamed ulong the ancient Nile, And oli, your smile was swooter far than Cleopatra's smile. Wo strolled along boneath the palms- and when the twilight came I kissed you long and tenderly; I kins' jou ncv the same. DPI Jiy JUAN' liltOOKK HITUT. Gypsy wind, gypsy wind, over the hills Away on the lure o' the trail. Gypsy wind, gypsy wind, follow my dream To the Country of Iivo-Never-Kall. Follow It, follow It. Will o' the Wisp. And hurry away to the land Where ralries and flowers and thistle downs vpak In a way I would fain understand. Gypiry wltid, gypsy wind, play in the hair Of a dear little maid whom I knuw. Anil whisper her secrets 1 whisper to you. And-tell her the reason I go: Tell, hen uii. tell her. wise Summer wind Though 1 go to the end of the trail. My dear little maid will rail me from there To her rountrv nf Ui'-u-Ntvu-Fall, fromfV mSKA When the children come home : school give them a cup of hot bouillon made from Armour's Bouillon Cubes. 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