Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - May 25, 1932, Winnipeg, Manitoba
Editorial Section Freedom of Trade Liberty of religion Equality of civil rights wednesday mat 25, 1932 printed and published the Winnipeg free press coronary limited a joint Stock a incorporated tinder the Laws of Manitoba at its head office and place of business. Cariton in the City of Winnipeg. Manitoba. E. Macklin. President and general Banarer. Registered Al the general Post office. London eiiff., for transmission through the Post in the United kingdom St the newspaper Rutte of postage. Moving towards the conference Canadian opinion May be regarding the Forth generally speaking Canadian joining As to ii conference is for and will attain there Are fairly Well defined notions about say Are not at All bad. To be found among i or Hin groups of Imperial if a in great Britain. As the conference is conceived by Linker Jim it strikes a Good Deal deeper in its gained. And opens the windows on ideas of a political As Well Asol an intention than is Xis a landscape full of re economic character. A Pamplin just issued by the federation of British entitled Industry and the the necessity 11 the conference is set out with satisfactory Candor of shown in a Light which May not yet have m e quote lir following passage from this a ,.arc an in Meuse stimulus to economic National Dunn tie Host War period this has steadily increased re Trident however with this economic nationalism there is tendency toward economic grouping of adjacent countries. La Reavone can see the Progress made by the United states of v Ric a in strengthening her position on the american con v especially v Means of obtaining control of sources of material Public utilities Etc. The efforts of to con Lii late her position in Manchuria the possibilities of a Central i Ronan Block the development by France of a Strong French Empire to the economic advantages of the French Home reducer the competitive position of great Britain or of no Empire country individually in the face of such economic be i extremely disadvantageous one. On the other hand great Britain has the possibility of creating together with the dominions India and Croven colonies an economic group of unlimited this is an extremely interesting summary of existing world economic trends and an equally interesting diagnosis of How Thev should be treated. We Are shown the great commercial nations under Post War stresses falling into separate economic Hocks and to meet the situation thus created the component parts the British Empire Are urged to come together into an economic Union which can be set tip As the others. World Trade is presented As a Field on which these great economic groups have come into existence for each other s Mutual disadvantage. The Case is plainly put. France and the. United states have developed blocs against British Trade let Britain in her turn develop an Imperial Block of her own. And prance the United states and any other Block now in for mation could be matched and perhaps beaten by the unified resources of the Briti Sii Empire. The possibilities of such a. Scheme As the British industries federation truthfully remarks. English painting while the More Radical and outspoken observer asserts the show is a Dull and wearisome Triumph for obscurantism. With these introductions they then give their opinions on works on exhibition the various which they it is conventional Art criticism in jeer at the Royal and Many progressive artists profess that they would prefer to see their pictures decorating the torrid wails of hades than hanging in berlins Lon House every year however the selection committee of the Academy receives thousands of paintings to choose from and Lon Don puts on its Best clothes to at tend the private opening. Art As such is not a matter of much 3m-j Ortance in the Royal Nice pictures Nice people and successful speeches at the annual dinner Are the objects aimed at. The opening of the exhibition is an event in the English social Calendar and if the Walls were Hung with Art Creyonne instead of Art Canvas its function would scarcely be impeded. The times would still be Able to print its delightful list of important people who were seen at the private View and the Public would find the patterns to be of pleasing design and Good British workmanship. All the Hon est Homespun qualities demanded by Burlington House be pre served. Only by a rigid Observance of its hard Shell tradition can the Royal wife cold of course it looking like a depression from the As cold but that s no reason for opinion. Improved morale of the Farmer by j. H. Metcalfe judging by the financial state ments issued by the Dominion and provincial governments to tiie Complex in Tricia and political character of the Ottawa conference assuming it attempts anything serious can be estimated front the foregoing quotation. The quotation Points. As it happens to facts which really Are of great significance. There Are. Beyond question attempts being made to split the world into a number of nationalistic blocks and France is explicitly named As one of the countries in which this process of Block making is being encouraged. An analysis of european conditions which definitely puts France in opposition to great Britain should be carefully noted As the development of a Brit ish economic imperialism would obviously build itself up against Trench interests and the great cleavages Between the countries ironic become Clear for everybody to see. The plea on those lines for the Success of the economic conference consequently cuts a great Deal deeper than the arrangement of Trade connections Irit Liin the Empire. Imperial politics on the greatest scale stick straight out of it. The conference is regarded As the medium v which the Empire will be Able to consolidate its strength counterpoise against Aca Clenix Llone to keep its exhibitions going. Admission of tie moderns with their radicalism and experimentation would convert the Academy exhibition into an artistic Hyde Park Corner where every sort of Freak notion and absurd extravagance clamoured for the Public s attention and whose general effect would be an unpleasant discord which jarred everybody and Solace no one. The few attempts at "modern1 re produced from this year s exhibition Are rather dreadful warnings of what would result from any thing resembling the encourage ment by the Academy of new ideas among its members. One feature of the 1932 exhibition is the larger number of smal Ler pictures. Large pictures have become hard to and the artists Are making an attempt to meet the new situation. To this extent at least the Academy is bowing to the changing conditions of the modern age. Dreams a the solution for the troubles overseas dominions and great Britain is very simply posed and assert its Posidhon a Aust France and the United states by a writer in one of the existing International struggle the British Peoples on monthlies the reasoning in the quotation above Are losing because they have not yet effected this consolidation. That this is an argument urging Fin flier intensification of the economic nationalism which has been systematically under Imam the commercial life of All the great Industrial countries a the most obvious thing about it. That it would split the. World into great Imperial blocks walled off from each other by Retali Atory tariffs is perfectly Clear too and what the effect of an International condition would have on the peaceful de of the world is an inference that can be drawn by anybody possibility of error. Conceived in the terms Stoat above the conference at Ottawa would be a Success if i to ised a plan which perpetuated and embittered the economics hat Are now strangling world Trade and fertilizing inter National hatred. The Ottawa conference wants Canadia is no economic scheme of this is a great revival of inter Trade not the erection of a chinese Wall against the cell omit the Many Are Canada s valued. The en-1 upon policies in India t be debate on India in the Nelsh House on april 30 showed at government to be fairly Well satisfied truth the results i policies now being my Corae after the turmoils of the War and the situation Hart to Tho Point where ith8 head approval of or. Had the methods now forced by the government adopted earlier the disturb of last year in his opinion net6r have happened. A firmer policy restoring for was in India would be it whether favourable the Price much Progress towards solid peace and settlement has been made in interval however can Only he known when the political prison ers Are released. This is where the Point of Dif Ference lies Between thinkers Liko or. Churchill and the constitutional reformers. The latter would try for a settlement in the making of which the Indian leaders took a hand. Or. Churchill would de cide that India should its own give it that. The attempts of the constitutionalists were attended by serious trouble which aroused extreme indignation in or. Churchill. What has now happened is the remova.1 of the trouble by putting it in prison. It is undoubtedly an effective method of dealing with the Situa Tion while leaving its final Solu Tion a matter of pure speculation. In Exchange for the British mar Ket for their primary prod acts the dominions would Reserve their markets for British manufacturers. They would undertake to Purchase from great Britain All those highly Gether with a Large percentage of municipalities there does not appear to be much improvement in the general situation notwithstanding encouraging comments from time to time. Fortunately however there is in Canada a Large population which pays very Little attention to the accurate balancing u. Finan Cial statement. This Section of the inhabitants of the Dominion is responsible for the production of More than fifty per cent of National wealth year by year. With few exceptions the Farmer keeps very meagre financial records. The records which he has kept in the last few years have shown a huge loss on operations and after he has satisfied himself that his year s operations reveal a loss he throws the Docu ments into the fire goes out into his Garden and pulls a mess of Beann and starts i again to lose some More Money. Notwithstanding All there is at this writing a distinct improvement in the morale of the men and women who Are engaged in agriculture in the province of Manitoba and it is reasonable to suppose that this feeling of optimism extends Over the whole of the three Western provinces. In the fall of 1930 subsequent to the disastrous experiences of the wheat Pool the morale of the Farmer was at a distinctly Low ebb. He Felt that a was being ground Between the upper and the Mill Stone. Heart finished goods the Bull of which Are breaking stories were common to bought at present from her Incus trial apart from the that great Britain circumstances cannot Supply a sufficient Market for th-3 Pri Mary products of the Dominion nor can the dominions take More than a Moiety of the manufacturing output of great Britain there May possibly be something to say for the theory. For people who insist upon indulging in these dreams the eco nomic conference will be a sorry Awakening. Notes and comment did we hear Queen Victoria sit Ting on her throne outside the Manitoba legislature contemplating her surroundings say we Are not the final culminating blow now would be for someone to the fact that Ivar Krugar the match King used an automatic lighter. Every locality and men with tears in their eyes tears running Down their Cheeks Strong Able bodied vouchsafed the information time and again that they had not even the wherewithal to cloths their children and Send them to school. The spirit of revolution against person or persons unknown or vaguely visualized was Rife and the whole province would have been at that , fruitful ground for soviet propaganda. Gradually Reform. Lord As Viceroy had done k in restoring Tran the country. Admitted had been of s of the Indian con some 2 fact has on the 01 the Sutler n is an open ques the . Exhibition this year s Royal Academy exhibition judging from the reports in such solid British newspapers As the times and the observer appears to have carried the conservative tradition in Art a few Miles farther than usual. The times is frankly concerned about the Iron Clad exclusion of creative and. In an Quillicy depends Agi native artists by the selection oppression of political committee remarking that the n continue while exhibition reveals practically Noth suppressed. How ing of. The contemporary spirit of however the attributes of indomitable perseverance High courage and abiding Faith began to assert themselves. No matter it they could t buy clothes they were still Abaft to get a Little pork out of. The barrel some potatoes out o f the cellar some bread from four ground at the local Mill put their legs under their own table three times a Day unearth and get enough to eat. True they could not pay any debts and their tenure of the land for a time was exceedingly precarious owing to the doubt in their minds As to the every married woman will be in 1 attitude of the mortgage Corpora cordial agreement with professor tons and in their extremity tha Ineson s declaration that in j Bankers and mortgage company sects can be tamed and trained to men sitting in office chairs and do tricks. Over Fiat topped desks advised them to feed their Barley to pigs one of the minor troubles con fronting the ambitious person anxious to Start at the Bottom acid work up is to find the Bottom. The momentous discovery that the atom can be split should be useful to Heads of families trying to operate on current salaries. On reliable authority from Aber Deen it is stated that some Golf ers Are seriously considering Wear ing plus three s instead of four s. From the Golden books from Morte d Arthur t. Malory 15th right so Fareth love nowadays soon hot soon cold this is no stability. But the old love was not so men and women could love together and then was love truth and and to in like Wise was1 used love in. King a thur s Days. Rather than sell it for a few cents a Bushel together with the usual line of gratuitous advice on other matters which was just about As futile As their advice about pigs. What did develop however was a definite scaling Down in the style of living and a determination to Purchase nothing but what was absolutely necessary. Subsequently the depression spread to Indus trial concerns and Large employers of labor and the Farmers saw. As. The months went by armies of men thrown out of employment and immediately becoming a charge on the Public funds. The Farmer s satisfaction with his lot improved in direct ratio with the scaling Down of Industrial Active he saved a Little Money. He took advantage of every Avenue in order to sell a Little produce which did not deplete his re sources at All but which gave him enough Money to live along. This Spring of .1932 he Steps into the seeding operations hav ing made All his Spring arrange ments without having to go to his Bank to borrow the Money partly because he knew he would t get it he and partly because he had saved a few dollars and he was determined to buy nothing except absolute necessities. The local Farmer s markets established in a number of places throughout the province have materially assisted him and the farm women Are taking up their share of the Burden and courageously contributing their quota to a More economic method of life. The Farmer sees increasing numbers men out of employ ment he hears heartbreaking stories of distress and actual want of food and comparing his own lot with those unfortunate unemployed he has arrived at the conclusion that he is probably not so badly off As he thought he was. Given a reasonable crop with sympathetic treatment from his creditors he is going to be Able to pull through and eventually discharge Bis financial obligations. His whole Outlook is better his morale is on a higher plane and he is going out to sow his crop this Spring with courage and High Hope and an invincible determination to do his share in the midst of very trying conditions. These observations have been suggested after making a reason ably comprehensive analysis of the situation extending Over Many districts in the province of Mani Toba and it is further reasonably Safe to say that the obligations of the Farmer to the Banks is not now giving the Banks grief. The troubles of the banking fraternity have shifted from the agriculturist to industrialist and manufacturer whose borrowings run into the millions the suspension of whose banking credits would have disastrous results. Once again for history repeats itself the Farmer is sitting on the Fence swinging his heels and let Ting the rest of the world go by. The creditor organizations realize the position Security of tenure is reasonably assured. And Given a. Fair Chance the Western Farmer will come Back to his own with chastened ideas with some lost ground to recover but with the spirit of him who triumphantly emerges from what appeared to be an overwhelming disaster. Hats off to the Farmer and More Power to him Portage la Prairie May 1932. The nearest planet special London correspondence the discovery of a new planet nearer to the than any previously known is announced by or. A. C. D. Crommelin formerly president the Royal astronomical society. Although the planet is Only about three Miles in diameter it is said that it will be possible to determine from it the scale of the entire universe with greater accuracy than has hitherto been practicable. The Hody was first noted by. An assistant at the Royal Observatory in Belgium and was at first thought to be a Comet. Later however or. Crommelin verified the fact that the body was a planet. Its discovery has de throned from its. Place of Honor the Little planet which was previously the nearest planet to the Earth and was therefore the one used As a basis for All Celes tial calculations. Speaking to a correspondent of the morning Crommelin said that the planet was at present Only Miles from the nearest that any Celes tial body Ever approaches with the exception of the Moon and occasional comets. It has been seen by amateurs with Good Tele is in the Constellation bootees above the Star. Arcturus. When it recedes to its furthest distance from the Earth it will probably is invisible to observers Here. No name has yet been Given to the Little planet for the Honor of doing this belongs the Bel Gian observer who first saw it. As a planet of irregular motion however it will by be Given a male name. Today s scripture from Ezekiel thou will i Sprinkle clean water upon you and be shall be clean from All your filthiness and from All your idols will 1 cleanse you. A new heart also will i give you and a new spirit will i put within you and i will take away the Stony heart out of your flesh and i will give you a heart of flesh. And i will put my spirit within you and cause you to walk in my statutes and be shall keep my judgments and do them. Movies and crime the relationship Between mov ing pictures and crime entered a debate in the British House of commons. The Home Secretary the right Hon. Herbert Samuel devoted a lengthy speech to the subject and in part said there were some who thought that the Cinema was another fac Tor contributing to crime especially among the Young but there was much division of opinion As to his very expert Ami experienced advisers at the Home office were of the opinion that on the whole the Cinema conduced More to the prevention of crime than to its commission. It kept boys out of mischief and gave them something to think about. Of course if films were of a character giving technical instruction in efficient methods of the commission crimes that would have an opposite effect but the Board of film censors made it their duty to prevent propaganda of that the objections that might have been made some years ago under that head were now Seldom heard. In general the Home office opinion was that if the cinemas had not existed there would probably be More crime than there was Al though at the same time they were far from saying that it was not necessary to raise the Stan Dard of the films which were produced. No one suggested that they were by any Means free from objection in. Many cases at present. The Cinema Industry was now one of very great importance and the effect of the films that it exhibited was profound upon the National life. There was now much greater Liberty in expression than was considered proper in victorian times and the con sequence had been. The introduce. Tion not Only into the Cinema but elsewhere to a degree unprecedented in modern times of the sex element. There was a growing opinion that that had been Over stressed whether on the stage in fiction or in the Cinema and there was a wholesome reaction of Public opinion. The Board of film censors which was Anion official body but which acted in co operation with the local author throughput the country Hac had this matter very much in and it had issued new instructions with regard to the permissible limits of films. The Home office had to Deal in relation to cinemas in relation to other performances and cer Tain classes of and publications with Many matters which touched some of the worst features in modern civilization. There were in our midst certain tendencies of an indecent and de grading kind. We had got rid to a great extent of drunkenness As a National vice but there were still dangers in other directions. The British people was As it had always been on its guard against those tendencies. It was easy to scoff at the Bourgeois respect ability of the but there was a Good Deal of healthy instinct in those conventions it was a reaction from the looseness the period of the which had preceded it. There was in the British people now As there had always been a very Earnest desire for clean living for decent ordered family life. It was essential that we should maintain that charac for the Sake not Only of our influence in the world but for the Sake of our influence own Commonwealth. How far the state could intervene by the Power of the Law to repress the manifestations of these undesirable Tenden cies was another matter. Freedom also was of importance and was an integral element in the British character and Between these two conflicting claims the position of the Home Secretary of the Day was never an easy one. Without exercising the Power to suppress by Force of Law Are undesirable the state could exercise a very powerful influence and Power of. Leadership in help ing to set the tone of National life. But it must mainly rest with pub Lic opinion itself. It should not be chary in exp Essing itself to help to remove whatever was. Unwholesome and ignoble in our drama in our cinemas or in our Litera Ture and so to restore and main Tain the cleanliness and dignity which were essential elements in National Canada in the air by z. Z. The first of two articles aviation appropriations passed by the British parliament in March were based on s triage at Economy without Tion from the fixed policy successive British governments the overriding aim in this policy is to link the Empire with airways in regular operation. Most of the do minions and Many of the British overseas possessions have endeavoured to conform with this aim. Its accomplishment is left strictly o civil aviation aided by unsubsidized Means intelligently devised by the British. This assistance has chiefly the form of contracts awarded for ser vices rendered the Public. By this Means As sir Philip Sassoon under Secretary of state for air said in the British House of com Mons latest evidence of the pro Gress attained has that was la March been the inauguration of through services to the Cape in South Africa As a step taken to build up on solid foundations the network of Imperial air routes which could one Day link together All parts the British air mileage flown in some parts of the Empire last year naturally declined As in Australia and can Ada where the. Commercial de Mand for air transport reacted to the prevailing economic conditions. But throughout the Empire As a whole the mileage flown increased nearly 0 per cent Over that flown in 1930. This was particularly shown along air routes established or being established in regular operation to India to East and South Africa and by sections to Australia. The British mean shortly to bring another Miles into flying operation an i when these Are organized Miles will be in regular operation in the British Empire. The ques Tion Here asked is is Canada actively contemplating being embraced within this Empire net work of air the immense Rovance in Empire airways has resulted from British adherence to avoiding undue coddling of civil air transport by state financial assistance and by following conscientiously the plan of encouraging air transport in such a Way that it might be Able at the earliest possible moment to Fly by itself " in this Way the British have succeeded in organizing the second biggest regularly operated air mileage in the world. That mileage is exceeded by that of the United states Only. But great Britain and especially has aided civil aviation circumspectly and a a tediously the United states endowed its commercial flying lavishly for several years under its air Commerce and air mail con tract acts. This became so Evi Dent that air mail contracts awarded at excessive rates had. To be Cut to More reasonable proportions by the postmaster general at Washington a year or so ago. Canada s air development can not escape becoming involved be tween the immediate intention of the British and the equally imme Diate performances of the United states. Canada cannot stand aside without missing an. Opportunity vital to her future. She has alter natives either or both of which she May accept. She May work into the British network of. Air communications and so develop her own entity As a transatlantic link. She May take Steps actively to co operate As a needed Factor in the ambitious schemes for an arc tic route projected by United states aviation interests. And by doing both Canada develop her own internal airways at least Cost and to greatest efficiency. But should she stand by impassively while these projects Are being under taken she cannot Brook the loss she will sustain for unless she1 participates she must lose out and she be not trodden on must at least be flown by. This would be a. Lamentable conclusion to the splendid strides Canada had been making in civil aviation before her development along this line was unfortunately Cut Short. It May indeed be comparisons be ing any other people had been More practically successful in the adaptation of civil aviation to National needs. And equally legitimately it May be doubted whether any other people have accomplished a Simi Lar Advance at so Low a Public Cost. The urgent necessity for can Ada to co operate with the Briti Sii in organizing the or inc land Greenland Canada Airway was emphasized on this Page recently. An air Alliance with the United states May Here be touched on. It is an International co operation that need not be evaded where Competition is avoided through Iho ground Frontier being so Plain. But either country needs to in beyond its own Borders it the greatest advantage is to be gained. Take the United states. After it had criss crossed itself with air lines it had to look to the South. The government at Washington sent colonel Lindbergh on a Good will tour to Mexico that later took him into the republics of Soutsi America. That May be said to have initiated an air policy that has brought Concrete results to Day for a pan America air service is control1 de and operated in the United Stales. The South has been linked with the North. The. Next step is a link with the East with Europe. This is being forged out of the so called Arctic route. Its addition is nearing accomplish ment. The organization of this latent development in pan american flying has reaching the stage which should awake Canada to a Lively awareness to what she May is about to let slip or to what she gain. Two actions Are imperative first co operation in. Establishing the British Northern. Atlantic Empire Airway and second co operation within can Ada in the United states trans Atlantic Airway project. The lat Ter can be the subject of the succeeding article. Kipling made a fellow the London times or. We should say or Hull Yard Kipling has honorary doctor ates in eight universities in eng land Scotland Canada France and Greece but it must be rather a lonely thing being a doctor but having no College to Call one s own no quadrangle or Hall in. Which one May feel Onuseit at Home. And now it is announced that Magdalene College Cam Bridge has filled that Lack in the life of her litt.d., Rudyard Kip Ling by electing him to an Honor Ary Fellowship. Magdalene is the College of Samuel Pepys who entered it As a Sizar in 1651. When his Shade and or. Kipling get to certainly they Between Midnight and Dawn what glorious warning there will to about ships and shipping and books and ciphers and workers and shirker and a score of other subjects interest to these two lovers of life and of the men. And things that fill it Char is Kings Ley May look in. Too and perhaps pass a word or two about horses and dogs and rhymes but the new fellow is not Likely to let talk with the former Rector of Evers Ley prevent his having a Chat with the Shade of the vicar Romsey the inventive or. Berthon who gave us. With much else the collapsible boat. There will be others eager to Welcome the great poet and prose writer who has won Charles Lamb would his collegiate Worth without the. Usual approach through under graduate life. And Magdalene col lege has not Only done an Honor to itself and. To its new member which will make Many thousands of far from can Tarigian people glad. The College May have done something to express the modern. University spirit by drawing Iii j an academic fold the almost violently a academic master of All the arts of writing who has enriched the English language with a manifold and multicoloured treas Ury. Books Are a finer world within the the wife an. Ill tempered husband blame him but should diet him. If he is not too far gone a week s fast and a month on a diet herbs and milk will make a new Man of him. Josiah Oldfield. In Twenty five families in which both parents were bad tempered the number of Good tempered Chil Dren was Only 4 per while in the King s College Hospital really bad tempered children amounted to 52 per still Gazette. The world is writhing in a Purgatory of its own Revelstoke. Birthday congratulations to e w. Kneeland Winnipeg born Minnesota May 25, 1.sb6. Normant. Dingman Winnipeg born Picton ont., May 25, 1s45. Lord Beaver roof London born new Brunswick May. 25, Robert by Udo y. Has published with Harrap a selection of great love stories from All edited with an introduction. Twenty nine nations and seventy love stories from the ancient s Down to Katherine mans Field. About Twenty years ago t. P. O Connor published a Little Book of actual love stories such As that of Carlyle Lincoln but Hawthorne. Is not there nor Browning. After All what Busi Ness has the Public with. The love affairs of eminent persons later than the Middle Ages it would take a considerable Library to hold them were they All in bold print. We May. Well Hope author and publisher will Ever invade that intimate experience of lord Haldane s of which he has told Good for us to. Know and no More. The love stories in imaginative literature belong to All the world. Or. Giants love Story is not George Eliot s greatest but it is her most dealing As it does with element in the passion of love. Or. Lynd defines a love Story As including almost any kind of preference temporary or life Long human being or divine person of one sex for a human being or divine person the and he has concluded the famous romances set Forth in his Book with the cupid and psyche As contained in ass by Apuleius a latin writer of the second Cen Tury. You will get that Story in Pater s Marius the one of the old spiritual romances of real life in the Selec Tion is Dante s passion for Bea Trice which is unfolded in the Vita it is now. In several reprints. Also or. Lynd recalls the troubadour Huguel Prince of. Blaye whose adored countess of Tripoli has been likened to Dante s Beatrice in that she was not. A lady of flesh and blood. We re member that some have considered Beatrice As philosophy or an abstraction of a kind in the Divina the lady of Tripoli has been named the Church. At All Rudel was a crusader and a mystical writer. Or. tells the Story briefly. The Prince of Blaye. Was a. Very Noble Man who fell in love with a lady whom he had never seen All on account by pilgrims. He com posed Many songs about her with few words and Good melodies. But hearing was not he tools the Cross and sailed away to see her. On the voyage he fell ill and those on the ship thought he was dead but they carried him to an. Inn in. Tripoli. When the. Countess was told she came to the inn and took him in her arms. He ered. Consciousness knew that she was his lady praised and thanked. having let him Jive to see her and then died in her arms. She had her Lover buried in this Church of the templars and on. That very Day became a nun so. Great was her grief for his death the love of Dante for Beatrice was on the other hand a Case of reciprocity All on one Side. Carlyle s phrase when he first , both were nine years old. From that time Forward. Love quite governed my so guv. The prose parts of Vita new written Long after sonnets Are in the vein Memoir. The
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