The Daily Bulletin/Reveille. (College Station, Tex.) 1916-1938, March 15, 1931, Image 2

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    THE WIND BLOW
By
VETH
Donn Byrne
viewed by F. K. Peyton,
231
its fluency,
with prejudice.
Ireland,
Imost poetical in
almost rotten
ne be a native of
must
ring from the passion
ich he
Being an Irishman he writes
vind bloweth.” One can 1-
it as it whistles thru the
valleye of life, and when
can almost hear his
thunderously
Vi
attacks his own conutry-
“th
hear
ills and
e
ceases one
{ )
vn thoughts ro-
laiming oir rulent need of es-
coping from the doldrums in which
they have been placed.
bad that the beautiful
3 its peregrinations, for
almost
the wind
ceases, and
is too
1 ©
ce af
ce
only wi
beauty
That
of
onacy
is
1en ceases
is when
living and
of petty thoughts,
and petty actions
playful wreckage of
life.
ends,
sta petty
humors,
a
vho
and t
things,
can
1e. blue of" the sky he
of and
i head
birth.
from
2in
be-
nensity
its vir
down
rasps and sucks the very
disgusts it. Pqor
It lives only when
its caressing breath
it forget
aterial which
flower.
wind bl¢
and
little,
the WS
makes
moods.
all the
Strong in
appealing
1
upon it, its
trivi little
The book has quality of
love and
in the
powers,
his
r'isnl
nan.
: ait his own
lily ime to the kicks of
erem:es
hai
and contemptuous of
and thoughts.
Although the
man, yet he
soul of an
Campbell’s
the
poet.
has
Irish
hates are
his loves
has
in
Shane
perfectly
are
He the
life conjunction
little dark place in the
his soul, that
sadly and almost
watch the wreckage
with eyes of burning
and
ine.
genuine,
ge?
love of
ches of
to
1/1] . +
1aeails
with |
| land
will pro
majestic. |
vir,
thoughts
the ethereal |
the
toood book.
start |
per- |
races |
here is a practical
passionate |
| Late
more |
Irish- |
sorrow: Sturdy, upright and con-
another. I
I should!
is the key-
and the Waterloo
mawkishly
staunchly
Irish-
obstacle after
say obstacle.
for
mecca
almost
Irishman.
| one
shouldn’t
say woman;
the
this
woman
note,
of senti-
IY nental
1ides his hurts for he is
He
out
He
an
|
!
steals a certain e
life by
No one
but why should
1 himself
pride. njoy-
| feeling
begrudges
that be
just
and
ment of Sorry
| for himself.
him that,
an to
little above the common
11d it
himself.
The lovely poetry of motion,
petty thoughts and fact that Mr.
Byrne is a native of Northern Ire-
to be the
A Southern
take offense
the my
excuse set a
herd,
why shot raise his estimation
of
keynote of
Irishman
it,
dea
seems
book.
bably
consider
consider the source.
If it weren’t the f:
ry NXT £
pyrne enjoys
this
e
of
but source,
wet that
what
Fd v
LOY
himself and
he stands for, it would be
a
A
A PLUM
Spring and 1
Shall take my winter
Out the clean
Sp is come and I
Shall take last y
Out walking in the meadows.
Spring and I
S
come
dreams
in t sunshine.
ring
Jove
my ear’'s
is come
Am full of plans and foolish fan- |
» ripe plum hanging
bough.
Waiting some
on
soft hand to pluck |
me.
| As the summer’s heat draws on,
| Shall T like a plum unplucl
ced,
in the sun?
cracking
Shrivel and dry
Twisting and to wood:
pulp,
And a seed.
George Wrenn
NO PLACE TO WANDER
in a
When the
shadow
summer’s afternoon,
sun pointing long
at the eastern
is
fingers
sky,
And night flies begin to dance,
Was not the time for me to wan-
der
Amid the mounds
cemetery.
in a country
| scientious he goes thru life hitting |
darn |
a |
| Here a headstone was slanted for-
ward
As if to tell
Some forgetful inmate he
| Was once Jonathan J.
There another marble slab face up,
Mutely reads to heaven
“Maria M.
Wife of Tobias M.”
And the wife of old Tobias
Is a sunken hole full of lush green
weeds!
There are two stones leaning
to each,
As if whispering.
The dusk trembled
vard whispered
In the depening
I fled.
each
and the dead
shadows.
George Wrenn, ’31
A. W. — 1120 ke
Sunday, March 15, 1931, 11:00 a.m.
Regular Sunday
ces in Guion Hall. Preacher,
Norman Anderson, Pastor,
| Presbyterian Church, College Sta-
| tion, Texas.
Musie
morning church
servi
Rev.
by the Glee Club.
Monday, March 16, 1931, 11:00 a.m.
Musie.
| Country Club Girls to living at
| Home, first talk, Miss Kate Adele
| Hill, District Agent,
i Service.
Extension
Musie.
What is your building program
this year? D. Scoates, Head
the Agricultural Engineering
| Department,
| Music.
|
| SPECIAL MATH PROBLEM :—
| When an Aggie travels five miles
to the shop of ROSS, Tailors in
| Bryan and saves $7.50 on his new
{spring suit, what is the saving per
| mile? Get the answer and we will
{prove it beyond contradiction.
LaSalle Block, Bryan.
50¢ IS ENOUGH to save on a
a necktie so it will cost you $1.00
each for any one the handsome
new spring ties displayed here and
sold most places at $1.50. Silk
lined and hand made.
GEORGE ROSS, T
ailors, Bryan.