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_ KENTUCKY ALUMNUS 21     "
sr  . DAWN I looked at Dawn,     —
is. L Her eyes were brilliant as the stars,     i
.W ` Her face was like the rising sun. i   t
of - I met her on the mountain side . I thought of Aphrodite in her loveliness    
_h — Descending softly to the vale below; New—risen from the sea,     d I
“ A wreath of purple rhododendron "You -are no priestess of the Morn," ._i,p T   K
iii i Crowned her head: I said; "but goddess of transcendent Day," K   i 2
US  d A spray of mountain ivy For everywhere I saw   s      
il- j Clowed upon her breast: The sons and daughters of a noble race ·'·v ;      
do _‘ And in her hand she held a flaming torch. ` Transfigured as by miracle- Yi] »i   1 g  
dy . _ The spirit, broken and enslaved   · it      
as  i "I am Priestess of the Morn," BY etiiei poVei`tY· Wit  
qt. t She Said; amy name is Dawny Made whole by knowledge   _' t Q i
At this she lifted high her torch Ami set tree by truth? E ,   i {
No A d · t d toward the East The eye that had been dull and lusterless,   l E
nes   U mm Q .   Afla th r th - it ·  -‘
HAM yonder IS my Templd me wi a1 and hope and love, Ig, i .
on 4 The sunken and the sallow cheek `   3 .
he _ The flakes of darkness glilicebinlore aglow with health; t   E  
be . Were dissolving into viewless air, B t O. y’ Wtttptd and ttacktd . '_· i *
· . . . . y f1`l.l1i1l€SS and despotic toil, - ri  
ley Q And thiigush tiig tiéiigiiiiig mists Restored to beauty and to strength.     i
in I  _ I Sew t 8 sects it i ct' And all the landscape, far as eye could see, · 1  ·· _
y . _ C Hillside, mountain-top and valley, -  
Ot . Mis that a figment of the miiidxi Was blooming orchard now, t   i ,
of I said, "on yonder hill above town? A terraced Vineyard,    A:
OW   A structure, as it seems to me, O1. 3 golden harvest Held hggi    
 . As beautiful as the Parthenon of Pallas." t   L 
We ‘ And when I turned to speak again ft,.   X i
me l And she replied: Lo, Dawn, the priestess of the Morn, · ,  _
stm I "Its beauty may be largely in the mind, Had disappeared,— {  Y
i€W · But every stone is real A Triumphant Day ,   T
ere  P As Pentelic marble. Stood tip-toe '/   _ 
be-  i "There is an altar in that Temple On a sun-crowned peak. ‘»    gt
the Y Of a thousand candles. ` -—By COTTON NOE. _   Q
>ld-  i 1 gh to light them with my mystic torch? _____   .. 
my ·   ‘i 
tm,  U And tts., as it she sw 3 Vsm of the yeas. U°U‘s‘UUUU: KUNTUUKK KUUNNi UUUU ii i i 
ted , She Spoke again: Meeting date: Second Monday of every month I , i t 1* 
`tut . _ in the year at 6:30 p. in., in the dining room of ._ ,.  
ion- ; "Devoted priests and acolytes the University Club in the Brown office building, r   . 
?mg , i From noted shrines of learning in Kentucky, 321 West Broadway   U. 
but   Ami from mstitiitioiis of the North end South Officers: President, Tom A. Ballantine, ’25,   · 
i Ot   Aiio East and West Law; vice-president, J . Donald Dinning, ’21, Law;   — 
met  i Siiaii tiieie administer secretary, Mrs. Tom A. Ballantine (nee: Marie    
Xtt’  ` The iioiy Kites ef Literature and Ate Pfeiffer, Louisville), ex-’27; treasurer, A. Pete   i 
tht  i Ot Science and of HiStOiiy’ (Little Pete) Lee, ’15, Arts and Sciences.    
*“°i‘ ·  ‘i Of C<>mm€r<¤e and Philesophy All grads and rm-mer students living in and    
who i ANU mtmy students . near Louisville and those passing through are ex-   i
tht  f Fttm the hiiis and plains . tended a welcome to attend the meetings. 2;- * i
O- And from remotest regions of the state,   1 
tts;  J Stltiailteiogieottetttvtiittethtiitihtnenn Mr. Berley Winton is the author of `a bulleliin d   ·
fox —  . And bear sway the iight entitled, "Ten Years of Poultry _Re<=<>1d Wet -  
. .· Mr. Winton who was graduated in 1922, is now   y y
the . To d11ve the darkness _  
 ‘· From 3 thousand homes · Extension Associate Professor of PQ>¤itY`Y H“s‘ d _   g
grag · And bring the joys of life bendry at the Missouri College of Agriculture and I _ ii d i
K T0 myriads of SOulS·’, has made a success of his work 1n that state.