THE COVI.i. )80MMOMO $ :thb passing show: 5 W I LLA GATHER S An hour with Minnio Madriorn Fisko - that is an hour to be singled from among tbo reHt, an hour touched with high lights and standing out boldly in tho long calendar of hours eo gray and so liko each other. It is an hour epont in" a poworhouso where great forces nro gonoratod, nn hour that loaves ono humbled and exhausted, rather glad to deecond into tho street and minglo again with tho common, lazy-going world, to chat with tho noweboy on tho corner and to discuss tho weather with tho street car conductor. For tho most of U3 cannot livo at whito heut all tho time, and a very little of that atmos phere, so Bur-chargod with electric forces, in which genius live?, makes our breath coino hard and reminds ub that wo aro of tho oarth. I found hei very pale and weary look ing, but that did not last for long. A little conversation on tho ono thing on earth or in heaven that matters to hor, and tho color glowed in hor cheeks as in livo coals when you blow upon them. Sho was attired in sntno sort of a looso pink arrangomont that caught uud ac centuated tho colons in that wonderful Titian hair of hers. Sho was seated at hor breakfast table, wboro a place was waiting for mo, and Bhe had a volume of Browning in her hand, reading while sho waited. 1 really think I made a feeble i rowning joko, but I am not sure. Iho furniture swayed around tho room in a rather suspicious manner ai.d on tho whole it was a lather trying mo ment. Apropos of Browning sho re marked: "Ho seems to mo tho most modern and fullgrown of poets. So many of the others aro boys, curried away by their own emotions and enam oured of boyish fancies. But ho has at taiccd hiB majority, tho mauhood of poetry. Play Browning? O no, that would bo midBummor madness. Tho Queon in "Two in a Balcony" is my favorite part, but I Bhall never play it in public. Wo are not so very unaliko, that queon and J." Tbo wholo secret of talking to artists, whether it bo a professional interview or otherwise, is to enter completely into their mood, not to ask them to come to yours; for tho moment to mako their gods your gods, and to make their lifo tho most important thirg on oarth to you. It you ask questions you aro doomed, moreover, that iB importinent. But if )ou can stir a little of that en thuBiusm by which they live, fan a little that lire which mukeB them great, then you no longer feel like an intruder, the hour becomes worth many hours of our comatose existence, and tho day is mado memorable. I saw that, as Bhe spoko. eho glanced again at the volume in her hand and hulf opened it. I know that momont was mine. By tho grace of heavon I remembered the first few linos of one of tho Quoon's speeches to Constance: "O to livo with a thousand boating hearts Around you, sorvicoublo hands Professing they've no caro but for your cuubp, And you the marblo statue all tho time." Thoro sho caught up tho lineB and finished thorn. When sho concluded, hor oyoB woro as bright as tho Queen's, hor cheeks as hot, that fragile, drooping littlo figure which lounged back in tho arm 'aair a momont before, was erect and tenBO, her llngors trembled as sho swept the bttir buck from her forohoad, and I wus to havo an hour, not with tho tirod woman, but with tho artist. Tho brilliancy, tho richneFS of tho experionco I cannot oven suggest. I can ropoat Homo of her wordB, but tho poreonul olomont is loBt. The broakfust wus a name, nothing more. Sho sat besido tho table rolling tho breadcrumbs up into little balls and stacking them up liko rcsorvo ammunition, and talked on Hiid on in that hard, dry staccato which can outmatch in its wonderful effects tho most sonorous elocution. "Of couiso no ono can uct who htiBti't lived tremendously; and yet people who act well can't afford to spend much timo living. But tho littlo of lifo wo got wo take vory hard, wo havo hungry palates and onr tHBto is koon. Tho mcro sug gestion of an experionco is enough to mako us realize it fully. This faculty makes sad havoc of our lives Bometimos but that doesn't muttor. In fact, tho work is all that doeB matter. I think that, wo often livo again momonts of our own lives on tho ptago, experiences wholly different from that which wo por tray, but aliko in kind. Ono hue por haps at Bomotimo accidentally hurt an animal, and then ono knows how it would fool to kill a man, tho nausoa, tho physical rovulsion which would follow. Yes, I think wo food our art with every thing in our lives. Othor thingB come in for a momont and wo pursuo them and clutch nt them, but in tho end we como back, alwuys back, and in ono way and another our experience colors and en riches our work. You see tho work is all, or it is nothing. Ono gives body and brain and soul,oronoiB a dilettante. And then thero iB another thing; it Bounds rather absurd, but I boliovo that to play well ono must have Buffered, Sometimes I think thut it was oorrow which first called any art into being. Such a statement savors of sentimen tality when it is mado boldly, but I be lievo that the trouble with tho work of half our young players iB that life has been too easy for them.'' The talk dtifted to tho new play which Mrs. Fiske is to bring out next year, tho dramatization of Thackaray's "Vanity Fair." Tho adaptation is by Langdon Mitchell, son of Dr. S. Wier Mitchell, of Philadelphia, tho Hugh Wynne mun. Mra. Fiske is already studying her part need I Bay that it is "Becky Sharp?'' and wilf be hard at it all summer. In October she will put tho piece on in Now York, afterward taking it to Chicago and Boston only. Tho following summer she will go abroad to remain ono or perhaps two season's. The production will be sump tuously staged and the cast will include thirty livo people. Tho scenario calls for five acts, tho ttrst is laid in tho home of Mrs. Crawley, tho second at the ball in BruBsolB closing under tho cloud of tho impending battle. Tho third and fourth acts take place in the Curzon street houBO after Becky's marriage with Rawden Crawley, tho fifth is concerned with Becky's lifo in PumpernicHe, after the fall of her fortunes. "The second act'" said Mrs Fiske" is ono of the strongest. The scene in which Becky, who iB quite without irrcsistable personal charms, makes herself irre6ist ablo to Georgo by sheer force of will, BeduceB him by intellect, as it woro, iB a vory groat opportunity. Throughout tho wholo novel, Thackeray never allows you to lose your respect for Becky's into ligonco for a moment. In a sneak ing sort of way, you even liko hor, at least I do. This regard is just what I shall try to keep for hor. In tho old English comedioB you are mado to sym pathize with women who aro "either virtuouB nor sentimentally naughty, who nevor deceived ;ho'iiBelves or called their vices by potty names. Tho eamo thing can bo dono to day. Sho was a woman posBOBBod of power, and force is force, it tells, it moves, it commands irrespec tive of morality, just as electricity does." The hour had passed, and several of them, and I rose to go looking long at that strango littlo wiBp of a woman with tho Titian bair, tho compressed lips, the searching ayes, and tho bright spot burning on oithor cheok, upon whose frail Bhouldors tho hope of our stage so largoly rests.And tho old question came back to mo, how long can eo slight a body onduro tho friction of a mind bo groat and so incessantly active. When one thinks of tho red blood that is wast ed all ovor tho world every day, of the health and strougth and Btrungtli that aro squaudorod, ono protests at tho in justice of it. Ah well, "Other heights in othor Hvob, God willing," when 1 havo boon for n littlo whilo with minds liko that, thon I know that somewhero, sometimo thero is a resurrection and a lifo, that nothing can destroy or ontlroly disintegrato a personality so unique, so dominating. bo pregnant with power. What a straugo figure sho ib among our gay mummkks and masquers, that pulo, fragile littlo ono with tho thin tier voub lips, and eyes fixed always upon tho distance. And life has nover been oasy for her. No player ovor reBorved a harder novitiate. Sho began life on tho stage; she hHS nevor known anything oUo. Her cradlo was one of the theatre trunks in her mother's dressing room, and tho trunk lid wub propped up to keep the light out of her eyes. But that wub not for long, she loved that florco light even as a baby, and could stare at it without Llinking. Sho whs not un easy child to taku care of, and as Bhe was more contented at tho theatre thun ut tho hotel, hor mother alwuys took her along. Tho play ground sho loved best was that dusty green carpet behind tho footlights. Tbo hurd pitiloes light of tho calcium wus tbo sunlight of her childhood, uud in it Bhe shot up as palo and slender hb a collar grown pluut, and thiB world grew to bo very real to hor; tho painteu ekios nnd BoaB and tho can vaB trees wore to hor what tho real Bkios and woods aro toother children, and sho learned to think und dream and live with them. So from tho first the un reul waB roulity to hor, and tho lifo of the imagination her only life. All her most acuta needs and desires und ex periences were those of tho imagination. When sho wus but seven years old sho was already going with her father's company, u poor, bedraggled little com pany of strolling players, wandering fiom town to town across tbo prairies of tho blizzard swept west, performing on tables lashed together in tavern dining rooms, often stranded and without mon ey for days together, The child dancod the highland lling, brought up tie rear of the Amazon march, played the Duko of York in "Richard III.," played in Ten Nights in a Bar Room,"' iu short went through tbo whole reportorio of irk some duties attendant on the lower walks of tho profession she loads today. When sho was ten she was doing tho child prodigy with Burry Sullivan in Now Orlouns, and a sad timo of it tho poor follow had with her. It took tbo moBt persistent coaxing to make her learn hor linos, as she always insisted that Bhe could improvise somothing.quite as good, and held the text of the play wright in utter contempt. Even in Shukesperian plays she frequently im provised in blank verso to tho astonish montof tho audionco and tbo utter con founding of her follow players. One night she was cast for the apparition which bids Macbeth be ''lion mettled," and tho appearance of this funny littlo ghost in a white night-gown sent the audience into a convulsion of laughter. Then came the long, hard, hopeless hopeless year of wandering about the frontier, starving in cheap tnelo dramas, living at cheap botelB, in the compan ionship of cheap people. She played only soubrette parts and she did not play them remarkably well. Sho was poor, unknown, unnoticed, nnattraclive. "Tees of the d'Ubervillos" had not been written then, Ibsen had not been trans lated into English. What noble faith, what miracle of hopo supported her in a struggle which seemed eo hopeless? When sho was fifteen she was married to Legrand Whito, un xylophone soloist she met somewhere in the west. It seems that the FuteB have a senso of humor after all. Her Now York debut was no moro successful than hor western starving ventures. She appeared in a soubrette part in a wretched play. Fogg's Ferry," and played it indifferently. Then sho married Harrison Gray Fisko, editor of tho Dramatic Mirror, and woary, dis heartened, disgusted, sho left the stage, Baying that ebo was loaving it forever. Then came nearly six years of retire ment, recuperation, ceaseless and tire less study. It was during tboso years that she found herself, found within her own breast tho power she had thirsted und starved for. When she came back upon us, it waB liko the coming of a storm. So great a reputation wus novet built so quickly. Since then her career, covering lees than five years, has beou one of constant triumph, her talent tho moBt conspicuous und the most hopeful on the American fctago. Who has u bet tor right to say that to be groat, one must have suffered? Pittbjiurci, Pa. ''HIIIIMIIIIIMIIIIIH LtlBS- l.OWIHA I, HIOKKTTH. I WHAT CAN THE LIBRARY DO FOR TUB WOMAN'S OLUB? As libraries in difforontflaccs vary so much in tho ground covered by thoir work, and in thoir resources and in torostfi, it has sr emed best to conflno tho dlscusBion to some of tho problems wo havo boon trying to salvo in Omaha. l'or while visiting in and noar Chicago rooontly it was impiops-d upon mo that ouch library has after all quostionB no culiur to itsollf thut uiixt hi worked out according to locul conditions, for in Btanco, I saw in two libraries -separated by only twonty-flvo miles of suburban railway two ontiroly different systems, each oporating to all uppoarancos suc cessful in its own field. Neither of thorn could bo poBeiblo in the similar institutions of our own Btuto. And einooitis in tho interests of our own librariopand clubs that wo are working, lot ub without any appoaraneo of vanitj. relate our experiences in tho efort to bring tbo two into closo and mutually helpful relation. In bringing about this reBult.tt sof primary importance that the public library bo mado tho workshop, not alono of tho Woman's club, but of ovory study and dobating club, literary society and university oxtenBion class in tho community. To accomplish this is not easy, tho' it may reasonably soom so. lor tho library whi.m is fortunato enough to havg a lecture room or large committee room, tho difllculty is not so groat. Clubs of varying interests may thon bo invited to make tho library L mooting place and whon onco tho mj. ing public has formod tho hRbit oft ing in at her doorB, tho librarian has it in her power to mako tho atmosphere of intelligent helpfulness felt and an predated. l Tho taxpayer (and his namo is leaionl who has never been inside the buildinir before is called to attend a meeting in tho lecture room. Ho arrives ten rain utes too early and drifting into the cir cu lating department nonchalantly in. quiring about tho rules for borrowing books, remarking that ho would some times like to read up a littlo when he has to give a talk b-foro a clab or some thing of hat sort, but then ho never "happens" to huvo a card to use. The quick-witted attendant will see hor on portunity and assure him that eho will gludly lay any number of books before him for consultation in tho reference room at any timo. This is a new idea to your "First Citizen; and the next morn ing his daughter will come in and ask if you have "any books on music," she ie to read a paper before the musical de partmont of the club and "Papa mIH why didn't shego to the library and Ob if she could get any help there." She and more especially her mother, who cornea next week for something on Alaskan missions, must have erorythinir mudo easy for thtm the first time-the" will dislike the formality of looking thro' catHlogsand mdlcee, signing the insin uating oference slip, and waiting in turn at the deak. But remember, they are forming the insidious "library habit." and before long the bright young worn an and her mother will become ac customed to the rules and learn to help themselves. ' It is a beginning of mutual benefit for tho librarian to joiu local clubs, where it :s possible, and so to come into persona! contact with the townspeople. If. in hr relations with these club, she dis plays proper willingnesa, she will in evitably be cboBon chairman of the com mittoo for suggesting courses of study and preparing outline?, and lo! another opportunity. She calls in the members or her comm ttee and opens to them new possibilities by showing them her tools and how to use them. For of course our model lioruriun, or reference atton dant as tho case may be, is well equip' pod with bibliographies, best book lists, handbooks of history, literature and art, as well ub outlines and club programs tied in previous years, and reading lists clipped from periodicals. By bio graphies I mean rather the helpful notes and essays that appear frequently in library bulletins, than more exhaustive and pretentious works of that kind. At this point the matter ontera her peculiar province of helpfulness. With her thorough knowledged of the material required by the club for ita course of study, she glances over the amount of material already on her shelves, and, making a careful study of the Data I have mentioned, orders at once the books Contiauad on page 6.