College girls
show possibly more maturity of reflective power than do their brothers,
but they are notably weaker in the sense of humor. Fourth, amongst so
much merely graceful verse, there are not wanting touches here and there
of genuine poetry. I shall be disappointed if the reader does not
discover many such in this little book.
While I have confined myself, for the most part, to verse printed in the
college publications of the past five years, I have overstepped this
limit in a few instances. None of the poems in the present book,
however, were included in the first series published in 1892.
Thanks are due Messrs. Andrus & Church, of Ithaca, N.Y., for their
generous loan of bound files of the _Cornell Era_, to the assistant
librarian of Harvard University for numerous courtesies, and to the
editors of many college papers, without whose kind cooperation the
second series of "Cap and Gown" would have been impossible.
F.L.K.
COLLEGE PUBLICATIONS REPRESENTED.
AMHERST COLLEGE _Amherst Literary Monthly, The_.
BALTIMORE, WOMAN'S COLLEGE OF _Kalends, The_.
BOWDOIN COLLEGE _Bowdoin Orient, The._
_Bowdoin Quill, The_.
BROWN UNIVERSITY _Brown Magazine, The_.
_Brunonian, The_.
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