-w "'V4- ' u ;" ' K rc ; ,!3L a -v- 8 THE COURIER. &fz?-5Bt n?"' 5 ' 11- listen and to whom they reply in their Her work lacks strength, verillty. own ton cue with a comprehension Atrial flight, descent into the depths that only a poet or another child can of the soul, or that breezy, ironical understand. By a birth gift more view of types that Kipling and his wonderful than that cf second sight humble followers take, is not to be Jean Ingelow has kept the imagina- found in Miss Ingelow's work. It. is tion of a child after having acquired of the school cf Ltngfcllow, Cowper, the technique of maturity. For the Southeyand Wordsworth and these rest her love poetry is apt to be ob- do not interest as they used whether scure though the three times seven because the century is degenerate or girl as she leans out of the window because we have more light, we are breathes a simple wish that is no too near to say. More mysterious than loving. "I leased out of the window, I ssack the white clover, Dark, dark was the garden, I stw not the gate; Now if there be f ooMept, He comes my one lover; Hush aghtiagale, huth, O sweet agatiagale wait Till I later and hear If a step drAweth near, For my love k late." The Courier's" London Corres pondent. Tbe Queen dUlikes tlacLincliam Palace and will oot sleep tliero if she can help it, preferring toifo to Paddington. tuo miles from Bucking. ham, and take the train for Windsor Catle which is twentr-four miles away, even if she has to return the next morning. Ed. As Richard Harding Davis says, London is a show city. There is al ways a uniform or a band or some royalty to be looked at. One of the most interesting scenes Her poems of childhood and to young for an American tourist is a view of Jove sing themselves. Their lyrical the Queen on her way from Bucking- quality makes the work or tue com- lmm paace to Windsor. been admired a bruize medal. After that we were all invited into tbe dining hall and told to order what we wanted to eat or drink." At this point 1 asked the little boy what he ordered, and guess what it' was--a mutton chop and a glass of pop. Tongues of peacocks, exotic fruits, pyramids of cakes; what delicious things we have heard of as being served on a Queen's table, but never before have I pictured a mutton chop and a glass of pop as even finding a place in the royal kitchen. Patriotism ran very high in London before the jubilee. One man in the Royal Institute gardens forgot to lift his hat during the playing of '"God Save the Queen." A kind gentleman knocked it oft for him and then a fight ensued. If '"God Save the Queen" forces every man to take off his hat, let some great musician compose a tune that will make a lady take off her chapeau. poser as easy as putting together the parts of an already fitted whole. ''Off the Skelligs," and "Fated to be Free" are the two best known of her novels. It is announced in the morning paper that Her Majesty will drive through Hyde Park at 4 o'clock, on herwav to Paddington station. So her to write: O Cfllnmhinr open your folded wrapper, IfheK two twin turtle-doves dwell; O ewefceopiat toll me the purple clapper That hanrt m your dear green bell JBut her fame rest upon her ioems of j, three I wander over th egreen childhood. Her point of view enabled grags of the parJc vrliicli has no warn ings to keep off. Here one can seat himself comfortably some where in a penny chair and await the great event. Abont 4 o'clock all t raffle is stopped The pscnycologist knows that a child aiong the route and mounted police dwells in a world of symboK that to ,en gp back and forth with an air him H is a ladder, S a snake. K a farm of ,Vstery. A crowd begins-to-gather gate. O a bowl of bread and milk, a a0g the main road and I realize that row of chairs is a train of airs, a cane i am getting a little excited with all is an untameable steed, etc. Miss In- these prepanitions'going on. gelow remembers the glory that en- First jive or six vans appear, bring vejoped those things and is able inp the royal baggage. The Queen's thus to keep up her communication armchaui which alwajs travels with with that child world that is shut herj is conSpjcm,us in "one van. She pon most ieople and sealed with a n'ever UsCSa rockenperliapslikePatti, hxkwhich will not yield when Welt- si,e believes it will make her grow achmerz cries out 'open." 0d. When Tennyson died Queen Vic- When ti,e vans witn their brown toria was imiortuned to apiwint Jean horses an( scarlet liveried drivers are Ingelow poet laureate. Although not outofthe wav, the carriages come of the same rank with Tennyson, JeanwIt h 0fflcers of state, ladies in wait- Ingelow's appointment would at leat in tne royai children and last, but have been the recognition of jv-poet. not least, four Indian attendants. She is incapable of the afciurd sole- gome ten 0r" fifteen minutes have cisms which the present laureate .IKlsse(i before, through the trees, is commits withoutr&mpunction on the sn the shimmer of the uniform of nation's aniyc-rearies. But Queen tne KovaI jor!?e Guards. Seven at- "Victoriaioes not believe in recog- tempts" have been made on Queen Vic- teinsanything feminine. Her toria"s life so it is no wonder they are ministers, poets, playwrights and commanded to ride fast, the - guards gillies are men and if she knows W!th their cuns nointed and a mili- ier mind her appointees will be tarv clank of armor which is quite 3ascu1in, to the end of her reign, thrilling. Jean Jngelow's work is not so When he Queen. dressed in black, popular as it was ten years'ago. Like appears in her open carriage. lam de. Mrs. Oliphant, she felt that her day lighted to see that she looks' exactly -was over. With the modern school 1:1-0 lior natures. Her daughter. of art for art's sake they had not much to do. The style which made them the -vogue may come again but just now it-is for hilltop novels, im pressionism and realism. Rudyard Beatrice, is always with her. Two Scotch attendants in full Highland uniforms are in the carriage. The people hardly have time to cheer le- fore her Majesty is past. The crowd Kipling and short story writers of the coses irij the delayed traffic moves on jastenaoi tue century nave maae and we wander home to discuss roy people impatient with the classicism altv in a familiar manner at the din f twenty or fifteen years ago. Itis idle ner tabie m the evening. to predict wnat anotuer ten years win do. Therefore it is only safe to say that tbe children will go on commit ting "Songs of Seven" for they are jMt influenced by fads or schools, havior and a good drawing to visit her Mother Goose is as popular as she was ilajesty at Windsor. he told me, I once had the honor to meet a small boy, who. along with fifty other blue coat boys, was chosen for good be- "When we arrived." 'we were all taken into a long hall where we knelt on one knee holding up our drawing. Then a little hip-pity-tippity old lady came in, dressed before language songs, lesson songs and all kinds of kindergarten methods laid siege to the heart of a child. Jean -Ingelow died at the age of sixty seven a gentle, pink cheeked old lady. "We are personally attached to her as in black -who did not look as well as we. were to Longfellow, for his good- mother. She walked down the line Bees and sweetness. When Mrs. examining the drawings through her Browning died it was predicted that lorgnettes and occasionally saying one Mise Ingelow would take her place, was good. When the end of the line -Critks do not admit Miss Ingelow's was reached she left the room, but a werkxiowlo so distinguished a place, very gorgeous looking man appeared She has not fulfilled her early promise, and gave every boy whose work had fund which they aadpoo'ed in starting, and he of the three knew how the fi nances stood. He ran his hands down through all his pockets and brought out some Ioo3e silver. Then he Cdlled on the others and they added a few dimeB and nickels. He counted the money over and pushed it across tbe counter. "Two ninety. That's all we've got. and no way of getting any more ULtil we reach home. Send the rest to ou then." And then the three filed out the door and headed down tbe mountain and that-, night took the Rock Island for Lincoln which place they reached the following afternoon, ravenous as wolves, for that four dollar and seventy-five cent lunch on'the Peak had deprived them of every chance of anything to eat for twenty four hours. STORIES IN PASSING. Three Lincoln young men wetit out to Colorado for a month la-t summer and many and varied were their experiences. The last week of their stay they spent at and around Colorado Springs and Man itou and the last dny was devoted to the assent of Pike's P ak on foot. They had put this off until theJast that they might tbe better he able to stand the walk and as a ri:ticg climax to the trip. Tbe sfcent was to them what it is to every one who makes it on foot one jonr continuation of magnificent scenery little showers, cog-road, and constant knee-action at an angle of eixty degrees. Of course they took a lunch from Mani tou out, or rather up boded eggs and doughnuts and sandwiches and tbe like bulging out their potkets; but what with munching continually on the way and losing part by one of the young fel lows slipping down a ravine into the broik, and thochecsjaao the doughnuts getting ground up into a mealy mass with the eggs, there wa3 lit le of that lunch left by the tm 3 the three etruck the red section house that is the real half-way retting place up the mountain. From there on it is a long, steady, up ward pull, mile after mile, with the end seemingly never in Eight until you made that last turn and 1 anting, falling, cold, faint, exhausted and dead-beat, you tumble into the stone house at the top and call for a lunch. Everybody feels about the same and everybody eats and thinke about the same if they are not too ill to look at food. These three Lincoln young men were not ill the atmosphere made little dif ference to them but they were cold and wet and hungry, and they ordered near ly everything at hand whole pots of coffee, cakes, steak, potatoes, toast and more coffee. Now. if you have ever vis ited that eating house on the summit of Pise's Peak, you know the place and you have had experience with the prices. The young men had never been there before and no one had even told them about it So when they called for the bill and the waiter counted up and said, 'four dollars and seventy-five cents,' it took their breath away in earnest and for the moment at least tbey'felt the al titude. . "Ob, Lord!' said the big; brown-haired fellow who is a foot ball man and had eaten as much as the other two. "Four dollars and seventy-five cents," said his brother, "well, at that price we can let nothing go to waste," and he fell to again, cutting off a bit of steak close to the bone. But the third young man was silent, for he alone realized the gravity of th? situation, He was treasurer of the Two other young men had an expe ri-' ence over a lunch but it was in coining out from Chicago and in quite a differ ent way. They bad left Chicago in the evening with nothing but their tickets and seven cents between them. The next morning the train stopped at Pa cific Junction for breakfast and the two young men waiKed into the lunch room- "I'll just take a cup of coffes," said the taller of the two, he of the five-cent-piece, "What'll jou have. Will?" "Oh, nothing," said Will, "I'm not feeling very well this morning and don't believe I could stand anything to eat." And he went over to the ice-watar tanVr took a drink, and bought two sticks of gum with his pennies. Then he leaned up against the wall and watched his friend drink the coffee, and looked lov ingly ut a large package of lunch tbe waitress had wrapped up and placed on the counter near bis friend, evidently for someone in the adjoining dining room. Will thought his companion hung over his coffee-cup an unusually long time, but the youcg man had a purpoce. Ho kept 'pouring in a little more cream and sipping slowly until the engine gave a shriek and the bell clanged. Then in the genera! rush of passengers from the lunch room the two young men reached tbe car. When they took their seats Will saw that hiB friend had the package of lunch which had been placed on the counter so conveniently near. They found fried chicken, bread and butter sandwiches, a half of pie and some devilled eggs. TLey washed it down with ica-water and thci walked through the train. But save a florid old gentleman who told his wife gruffly to go into the diner for break fast while be took a smoke, they found no one who seemed to havo lost a lunch in the general stampede from the station. It is a big, barn-like structure just to the west of the depot at the little tows of Greenwood down on the Burlington between here and Omaha. Years have passed since it served its purpose, for the windows are panelesa and the doors stand gaping. The wind sways the hanging shutters and keeps up a mourn ful tattoo on the loos3ned weather boarding, The bricks of the chimney have fallen away until merely a stump remains. There is a big rent in the roof which admits rain, sun, dust and the birds that haunt an old houee. At the side tne remains of a "lean-to" still stand, but threatening to collapse at any moment. Tall weeds and sun-flow, era hide the approaches and choke the doorways. Through this growth a dog sometimes noses its way, or a boy and his companions play hide-and seek" there but not often, for the old building has an evil name among the young of the village. It has never been occupied within their memory and that is enough to suggest almost anything in their imaginative little brains. To the older inhabitants of the town it brings back early years of prosperity and business and high hopes, now gone. They gaze V i, y ..