Page:Ephemera, Greek prose poems (IA ephemeragreek00buckrich).pdf/70

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grim humor. "One of the most interesting literary studies of crime since Dostoieffsky's Crime and Punishment."—Chicago Evening Post.
DISCORDS. A volume of poems by Donald Evans. With the publication of this volume must end the oft-repeated complaint that real English poetry is no longer being written. These poems have no sermon to preach, no evils to arraign, no new scheme of things to propound. They are poems written in the sincere joy of artistic creation, and they possess a compelling music and an abiding beauty. This poet, who is singing only for the pleasure of singing, in his sixty or more poems that make up the volume, offers vivid glimpses of the stress and strain of modern life. He thinks frankly, and his utterances are full of free sweep and a passionate intensity. Dark green boards, $1.00 net; postage, 8 cents.
SWANWHITE. By August Strindberg. A Fairy Drama, translated by Francis J. Ziegler. Second edition. Printed on deckle edge paper and attractively bound in cloth, 75 cents net; postage, 8 cents. "A poetic idyl, which is charming in its sweet purity, delightful in its optimism, elusive in its complete symbolism, but wholesome in its message that pure love can conquer evil. So out of the cold North, out of the mouth of the world's most terrible misogynist, comes a strange message—one which is as sweet as it is unexpected. And August Strindberg, the enemy of love, sings that pure love is all powerful and all-conquering."—Springfield, Mass., Republican.
THE WOMAN AND THE FIDDLER. A play in three acts by Arne Norrevang. Translated from the Norwegian by Mrs. Herman Sandby. Cloth, uncut edges, 75 cents net. By mail, 83 cents. This play is based upon one of the legends of the fiddlers who used to go about from valley to valley, playing for the peasants at their festivities.
FOR A NIGHT. A novelette by Emile Zola. Translated from the French by Alison M. Lederer. 75 cents net. Postage, 10 cents. The imaginative realism, the poetic psychology, of this story of the abnormal Thérèse who kills her lover; of the simple minded Julien who becomes an accessory after the fact for love of her, and finally "let himself fall" into the river, having first dropped the body of Colombel over, are gripping and intense. The masochism at the basis of the love of Thérèse and Colombel, resulting in the murder, is depicted with won-