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By

WILLIAM ROSE BENÉT

THAT are your Sundays to you? To me they are heaven.

WHAT are

I do not hurry through breakfast or rise at seven.

I have time to play with Jim,

Who is one and a half, yellow-haired, quite a jolly viking,

With this earth a lot to his liking,

Fond of adventures in words and an artist in whim;

The Marcelline of the infant world, with the heart of a dauntless hero, And also a dash of tears, swift-swirled,

That would soften even Nero.

Then, if my pen is

Slow, and the jobs are done, and she

says I may,

And the year 's too late for a swim together, I ramble off toward the bay To play at tennis.

In the autumn it sets the blood leaping

And clears the brain to a cool, crisp-thinking joy

To swing at the ball and to charge to the net and volley,

Even to race "all out" for a lob to the base-line

Or fizzle a manful smash with a smack "on the wood"!

The cold sweat stings on your forehead, the tape of your racket
Sticks to your hand or grinds too gritty with sand

In your palm; but this cannot irk one for more than an instant,
The play is too hot.

And shuttlecock-battledore leaps the barbarous banter

Of the doubles players. The grunts and the curses and sighs
Of your partner, of your opponent, of you yourself,

Float up like delectable incense.

And his cross-court return forever shoots at my feet!
Why can I only "get in" when the serve is a fault?

The shower-bath starts with a sprinkle of drops that drum
On the slatted floor of the bath-house. Then swish-swish-
SWISH! it is mantling your shoulders, soaking your hair,
Thrusting whole sheaves of icicles under your shuddering skin.
"Yow!" you leap. "Yow! Yow!" and yank at the handle.
SWISH!

The confronting bay is all cold-blue glitter,
But these fields and undulant hills and rich-colored woods
Are wistful with afternoon sunlight, garnet, and bronze.
The smell of the stalks of milkweed and withered grass,

The flaunt of chestnut and beech

And oak, in Assyrian robes, set raiment on God,

And throne Him on high in the ruddying afterglow

That turns such an embered crimson through ash-colored clouds.

He is there!

Lo! with all principalities, angels, and powers of the air,
He is there!

He careers in a chariot drawn by the blazing-eyed beasts

Of St. John's Apocalypse sheer o'er the rioting sky;
His face is the setting sun,

Radiant, but sad, irradiating life,

And solemn with finer meanings, a nobler mien;

A lion-like face, and mournful, with a wild and golden mane,

Yet with intelligence infinite shining in love all-wise

Out of brilliant, not cruel, eyes;

Love in each lineament, majesty dwarfing the skies,
The God that must reign!

On Sunday night

At first we got our own suppers

When even more "on our uppers"

Than now, and the yellow lamp cast its mellow beam

On a table of picnic dream,

And we both spread many a theme

With verbal jam, like our toast. And now we do much the same,

Save for our cook. The babies quiet down,

The street sounds drown

In darkness, the chill stars sentry the sleeping hill.

Hurry and worry are still.

Peace breathes through the town

Like a flicker of lambent flame

Peace and good-will.

We read

According to mood and need

To each other or alone,

Remarks and laughter thrown

Hit or miss in the air to echo around the lamp.

Our enthusiasms come out, nose around, unruffle their wings, and stamp,

Shake their silvery forelocks and curvet about, and champ

The golden oats of some seer's fit phrase

That we feed them, some poet's blossomy, succulent bays.

And then we sit and gaze

Long at a picture, and think that we think instead

Of merely rechewing a chewed-out cud of the last thing said,

And we simply cannot haul a heavy head

Up thought's frail, difficult, gleaming spider-thread.

And it's time for the baby's bottle, and time-to-go-to-bed.

I lie in my bed, and think of my soul, and decide

I am only a mixture of animal spirits and pride

And conventional sleekness and sudden emotional blether,

And I don't know whether

I have a soul; but I lie in my bed and see

A bright-green star in a violet haze through a moon-stark tree.
Whee-ee-ee !

NOBOD

By WILLA SIBERT CATHER Author of "The Joy of Nelly Deane," etc.

Illustrations by Arthur William Brown

WOBODY but the janitor was stirring about the offices of the Remsen Paper Company, and still Percy Bixby sat at his desk, crouched on his high stool and staring out at the tops of the tall buildings flushed with the winter sunset, at the hundreds of windows, so many rectangles of white electric light, flashing against the broad waves of violet that ebbed across the sky. His ledgers were all in their places, his desk was in order, his office coat on its peg, and yet Percy's smooth, thin face wore the look of anxiety and strain which usually meant that he was behind in his work. He was trying to persuade himself to accept a loan from the company without the company's knowledge. As a matter of fact, he had already accepted it. His books were fixed, the money, in a black-leather bill-book, was already inside his waistcoat pocket.

He had still time to change his mind, to rectify the false figures in his ledger, and to tell Stella Brown that they could n't possibly get married next month. There he always halted in his reasoning, and went back to the beginning.

The Remsen Paper Company was a very wealthy concern, with easy, old-fashioned working methods. They did a longtime credit business with safe customers, who never thought of paying up very close on their large indebtedness. From the payments on these large accounts Percy had taken a hundred dollars here and two hundred there until he had made up the thousand he needed. So long as he stayed by the books himself and attended to the mail-orders he could n't possibly be found out. He could move these little shortages about from account to account indefinitely. He could have all the time he needed to pay back the deficit, and more time than he needed.

Although he was so far along in one course of action, his mind still clung resolutely to the other. He did not believe he was going to do it. He was the least of a sharper in the world. Being scrupulously honest even in the most trifling matters was a pleasure to him. He was the sort of young man that Socialists hate more than they hate capitalists. He loved his desk, he loved his books, which had no handwriting in them but his own. He never thought of resenting the fact that he had written away in those books the good red years between twenty-one and twentyseven. He would have hated to let any one else put so much as a pen-scratch in them. He liked all the boys about the office; his desk, worn smooth by the sleeves of his alpaca coat; his rulers and inks and pens and calendars. He had a great pride in working economics, and he always got so far ahead when supplies were distributed that he had drawers full of pencils and pens and rubber bands against a rainy day.

Percy liked regularity: to get his work done on time, to have his half-day off every Saturday, to go to the theater Saturday night, to buy a new necktie twice a month, to appear in a new straw hat on the right day in May, and to know what was going on in New York. He read the morning and evening papers coming and going on the elevated, and preferred journals of approximate reliability. He got excited about ball-games and elections and business failures, was not above an interest in murders and divorce scandals, and he checked the news off as neatly as he checked his mail-orders. In short, Percy Bixby was like the model pupil who is satisfied with his lessons and his teachers and his holidays, and who would gladly go to school all his life. He had never

wanted anything outside his routine until he wanted Stella Brown to marry him, and that had upset everything.

It was n't, he told himself for the hundredth time, that she was extravagant. Not a bit of it. She was like all girls. Moreover, she made good money, and why should she marry unless she could better herself? The trouble was that he had lied to her about his salary. There were a lot of fellows rushing Mrs. Brown's five daughters, and they all seemed to have fixed on Stella as first choice and this or that one of the sisters as second. Mrs. Brown thought it proper to drop an occasional hint in the presence of these young men to the effect that she expected Stella to "do well." It went without saying that hair and complexion like Stella's could scarcely be expected to do poorly. Most of the boys who went to the house and took the girls out in a bunch to dances and movies seemed to realize this. They merely wanted a whirl with Stella before they settled down to one of her sisters. It was tacitly understood that she came too high for them. Percy had sensed all this through those slumbering instincts which awake in us all to befriend us in love or in danger.

But there was one of his rivals, he knew, who was a man to be reckoned with. Charley Greengay was a young salesman who wore tailor-made clothes and spotted waistcoats, and had a necktie for every day in the month. His air was that of a young man who is out for things that come high and who is going to get them. Mrs. Brown was ever and again dropping a word before Percy about how the girl that took Charley would have her flat furnished by the best furniture people, and her china-closet stocked with the best ware, and would have nothing to worry about but nicks and scratches. It was because he felt himself pitted against this pulling power of Greengay's that Percy had brazenly lied to Mrs. Brown, and told her that his salary had been raised to fifty a week, and that now he wanted to get married.

When he threw out this challenge to

Mother Brown, Percy was getting thirtyfive dollars a week, and he knew well enough that there were several hundred thousand young men in New York who would do his work as well as he did for thirty.

These were the factors in Percy's present situation. He went over them again and again as he sat stooping on his tall stool. He had quite lost track of time when he heard the janitor call good night to the watchman. Without thinking what he was doing, he slid into his overcoat, caught his hat, and rushed out to the ele vator, which was waiting for the janitor The moment the car dropped, it occurred to him that the thing was decided without his having made up his mind at all. The familiar floors passed him, ten, nine, eight, seven. By the time he reached the fifth, there was no possibility of going back; the click of the drop-lever seemed to settle that. The money was in his pocket. Now, he told himself as he hurried out into the exciting clamor of the street, he was not going to worry about it any more.

WHEN Percy reached the Browns' flat on 123d Street that evening he felt just the slightest chill in Stella's greeting. He could make that all right, he told himself, as he kissed her lightly in the dark three-by-four entrance-hall. Percy's courting had been prosecuted mainly in the Bronx or in winged pursuit of a Broadway car. When he entered the crowded sitting-room he greeted Mrs. Brown respectfully and the four girls playfully. They were all piled on one couch, reading the continued story in the evening paper, and they did n't think it necessary to assume more formal attitudes for Percy. They looked up over the smeary pink sheets of paper, and handed him, as Percy said, the same old jolly:

"Hullo, Perc'! Come to see me, ain't you? So flattered!"

"Any sweet goods on you, Perc'? Anything doing in the bong-bong line tonight?"

"Look at his new neckwear! Say, Perc',

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