W S7 ' I HE COURIER. L x 11 ! l! i" - .1 V i 4 ' S IB IH II: measured by his intelligence, culture, morality or good health. His good qualities are obscured by airs which westerners especially detest. I think Bostonians in Boston to Bostonians are agreeable. The manner of Bos tonians in Boston to new people wiio have not pro. 'ed their pedigree is not exactly cordial. The manner of Bos tonians to the natives of a town, par ticularly of a western town, when desperate circumstances have driven them to settle in it, is offensive and still prevents the recognition and re ward of those almost disembodied vir tues which disembarked on Plymouth Rock in 1G20 As Paris is France, so is Boston Massachusetts. The char acteristics of the metropolis are re peated perhaps more faintly in the interior counties. There are, of course, many peop'e who have emi grated from Massachusetts who have had the grace to conceal their belief while sojourning among philistines that they were realty the modern etiosen people, and knew more and were better than all the rst. A num ber of these assorted people from Bos ton have lived in Lincoln and are or have been most popular and useful citizens. It is therefore more in sor row than in anger that 1 comment upon the treatment of the Fosburgs and the inveterate and insular egot ism which is the cause of it. Considering the prejudices which a Bostonian takes with him to a new country, prejudices which prevent strangers from emigrating to the hub with too confident anticipations of welcome, it is singular that the strongest society for the encourage ment of the Filipinos exists in Bos ton, that in Boston the club women unanimously insist that the Nation al Federation shall receive negro women Into the fellowship with a warmth which the said Boston wom en have only experienced in litera ture. It may be because all coons look alike to them and they consider that a woman who lives in Nebraska might as well be black, but I suspect rather their strong penchant for re forming us. A drawback to an un prejudiced consideration of the ques tion is the too evident determination or the Massachusetts clubs that the federation must be broad-minded or lose Massachusetts, the good. While the discussion is pending we might investigate Pittstield, Massachusetts, and assign a reason for the ostracism of the Fosburgs whom court and jury acquitted as soon as a decision could be reached. Eleanor. Mrs. Humphrey Ward writes long stories. Her latest novel contains 626 pages. Yet few begin "Eleanor"' without finishing it. In these years when the harvest of books never fails and the press threshes out a tiresome umber of crops each year, a novel 026 pages long is a severe test of an author's story-telling powers. The heart of an imaginative woman is an open book to Mrs. Ward. She reads it without stumbling or stam mering and every woman of the same kind reads her analysis with convic tions of its truth, of its startling accuracy. Eleanor is a widow of thirty who, as the book begins, is just recovering from the suicide of an insane hus band who, when he jumped from a high window into the river Sowing below, took their oung son with him to death. She is visiting a cousin, "Mr. Manisty," a brilliant man who writes books, talks easily, brilliantly, knowingly, and fascinates a world bored by homely, commonplace peo ple. Eleanor is eyes, memory, intui tion and a critic to Manisty. She offers him the constant, silent adula tion which literary men call sympa thy and which to this particular kind of a writer is a necessity. Eleanor herself is a brilliant wo man, with the literary instinct, the subtle, peculiar faculty which dis tinguishes the creative intellect from the receptive mind. Manisty makes use of her critical faculty, her taste and knowledge. He enjoys the en veloping incense of her growing ad miration for himself. He makes love to her and until Miss Lucy Foster, a younger and fresher woman, arrives, he is content to use Eleanor's mind and store of sympathy, knowledge and 'ove as though they were his of right. But when he falls passionate ly in love, simulating love for the sake of its emotional soothing is offensive to him, and lie is brutally cruel to the woman who thought his play was in earnest. Eleanor, gentle and unselfish as she is, decided that she would fight, like all other members of the animal kingdom when their lives are threat ened. Therefore sire tlees with Lucy Foster, the young and innocent cause of the trouble, to an old and abandon ed convent, where until their hiding place is revealed the two women safe ly conceal themselves. Although Lucy Las begun to love Manisty, the sight of Eleanor's dying agonies and her own observation of Manistj's cruel trifling with Eleanor's affec tions and his use of her powers, con vinces her of his brutal indifference to another's pain. Lucy decides never to see him again. When be does ar rive she refuses him. and is only in duced to change her mind by Elea nor's intercession. So the book ends with Lucy's marriage, Eleanor's death and the success of the selfish and al together objectionable man. The triumph of the book is the drawing and modeling of Manisty. In him the type of the author, egotist and tyrant, is drawn without exag geration and without malice. Neith er an emperor nor a king oh no indeed, nothing so useful yet ruling over a small circle absolutely, and with a single eye to his own comfort and growth, Manisty assassinate8 the affections of women as ruthlessly as Jack the Ripper disemboweled them. There are literary men with bowels, but too many lay a heavy tribute on the unfortunates surrounding them and make them victims of nerves and of the fascinations which often ac company the ability to write. The greatest are great enough to be kind. Stevenson, Longfellow, Walter Scott were as kind as the average unen dowed man is to his "folks." The neu rasthenic symbol poets, the novelists who have written one successful novel, all the unwholesome subjective cult of whom D'Annunz:o is chief, who hold their wrists and count their heart-beats as they write, belong to the type and the character of Manis ty. This kind take favors as their due and count the bruises and wrink les, pallors and aches other people receive in serving them as matters of course A king dispenses largess of place; he is giving away all the time little slices of his power to his favorites. This sort of literary man gives nothing all his life except the privilege to serve him. Such a man as Mrs. Ward has drawn is familiar to most of us. He borrows money from a friend and regards any attempt to collect it as an impertinence, an ob tuse, boorish disregard of the privi lege of sacrifice for the gifted. Such a man possesses certain fascinations or he would not succeed in victimiz ing so many people out of money and services of various kinds, but he has no more real integrity than the pro fessional confidence man who would also not succeed if he had not an unusual endowment of that quality which makes a man liked and trusted by other men. Mrs. Ward has drawn her Manisty from life, for every one who has met the type comments upon its startling likeness. J J A Non-Intime. How Jaques came into the Forest ot Arden, an impertinence by Elia W. Peattie, is the modest title of Mrs. Peattie's new book. Jaques, the mel ancholy one, who has found out the bad taste of life, the futility of all things which men strive for and prize till attained, Jaques, who is a great talker and has reduced his phi losophical lectures to epigrams, was the hero of a romance and of a con spiracy which succeeded in depriving liim of his sweetheart long before he found his way into the Forest of Ar den. Mrs. Peattie discovered his love story and the reason for his nausea of life which gave him dyspepsia, coated his tongue, and made him sar castic. The man who can be thwart ed of his heart's desire and not turn the world into a graveyard is nobler and las a more catholic judgment than this Jaques kind who court dys pepsia and all its effects on the vo cabulary as soon as they lose their sweethearts, ortlieir fortunes, or high places which they occupy. Washing tons and Lincolns, Wellingtons and Napoleons lose their sweethearts, ca bals are formed against them, but nothing deters them from making history. Every man and every wo man suffers defeat; misfortune tags them from the cradle to the grave. The weakest men kill themselves, others retire from the world and look upon it from a distance with a claim to know all its lures, while others repine and accuse God of persecution. All these who refuse to accept the rules of the game and play it out to the end are childish. Just as soon as they withdraw from the game the players forget them, aud this is an other grievance. In these days Jaques would find few to listen to his long-winded reading of life. He lives because Shakspere recognized his type and immortalized him in "As You Like It." Shakspere knew that sucli as he never moved the world nor ever truly answered the riddles left on its hard surface as a sign of having existed We can be certain of this because Shakspere was sanest of all poets. He read life large and realized that each man was a billionth of humanity, but. that man is the reason for the existence of everything else. He knew that the man who talks and does nothing, however wise the sounds he makes, is naught but a prattler, and has no influence upon the action of the play, or. if he be a live man, on the world. Considered as a story by itself, Mrs. Peattie's accounting for Jaques' mel ancholy and his persistent disap proval of the way of life, is very in teresting. I only wish Jaques were more worthy of the shower of golden imagination she has courted him with. Mrs. Peattie's Jaques is much more interesting than the dramatist's Jaques. To be sure he has the cen tre of the stage, and we forget while she is telling the stor7 that all men have their woes and that the strong conquer them and that the weak are vanquished by them. "AH the world loves a lover," and Mrs. Peattie's lover tells his story naively and con vinces us that his villain brother was a caitiff and he a pure-hearted Laun celot who dared all men and conquer ed them in open battle before his lady-love deserted him, but after played a hermit's part himself. Mrs. Peattie's style is flowing. The light of a subtle fancy plays over the story and pleases the most fastidious. Under the style and the manner and the matter of her telling, there is an elusive personality; the personality of a "non in'time" who reveals some what grudgingly her feelings and conclusions to the world. It is thi separateness so frankly expressed and indulged by Jaques that attracted Mrs. Peattie. Though whatever in clination she has felt for a hermit's life she has bravely and persistently repressed. Her life has been one of active benediction to her generation: in kindly ministration to the poor, in aid to struggling young authors who are of the poor, too, in stories which never fail to stimulate the imagina tion of the large number who read them, and finally, and most satis factorily of all, in rearing three beau tiful and noble children. This small book is printed on heavy cream laid dekel edge hand-made pa per by the Blue Sky Press of Chicago. On the book cover is a picture of a tree according to the stiff fashion of trees in SLakspere's days. They du not grow so now. Jaques himself wanders through the paths of the forest with his back to us just as it should be and his disdainful cape blowing in our faces. The cover and illustrations were drawn by Mr. Wal ter J. Enright; the initial letters with which each chapter begins were designed by Mr. Harry Everett Town sznd and illuminated by Miss Bar bara Peattie, one of the children I have mentioned who have rewarded Mrs. Peattie for resisting her incli nation to go into retreat. The book is printed in the heavy black letter that suggests the thick black type that the printers used soon after the invention of printing. The five etch ings are clever and fascinating draw ings of the men in the Forest and Jaques' sweetheart and of his wicked brother. The initial letters are col ored in water color shades of green, yellow and gray and add much to the charm of one of the most charming books of the season. Messrs Langworthy and Stevens of the Blue Sky Press are publishers of a magazine, "The Blue Sky,'' tilled with very readable short stories and crisp critiques of an excellent typog raphy and paper, and a worthy com petitor of all short story magazines. Anarchist Reasoning. Emma Goldman declared after the assassination that Czolgosz had shot the President, not the man, and that she would be glad of the opportunity to nurse the man back to health. The President's heart never stopped beating. The last faint fluttering r beat of the faithful heart in McKis ley's breast wa3 immediately followed by the strong regular beats of Presi dent Roosevelt's heart. Not for an instant of time was this country with out a president. The succession is si. remotely established that the Presi dent can never be killed. And every man who is wounded by an anarchit for temporarily holding the office of president will but increase the sever ity of the laws against which the anarchists complain, and because of which they say they murder. Seventy million people are living according to the conventions of the constitution of the United States We have kept our agreement with each other for more than a hundred years. One of the stipulations in tlu people's document is that there sh.il. be a president. It is not within the power of any murderer to alter tlii arrangement, although he can mur der the first choice of a great peep f V