Front:
EXCLUSIVELY FOR EDITORS
LITERARY NOTES
Rudyard Kipling's new story, which The Ladies'
Home Journal is about to begin, is a romance of India-
really a strong love story-and has for its title "William
the Conqueror."
James Whitcomb Rilèy has completed a new series of
poems in which he varies the treatment of each one to
sucly an extent that they are said to show the Hoosier
poet's versatility to a remarkable degree. He has given
the series to The Ladies' Home Journal, in which the first
is about to be published. A. B. Frost has been engaged
by the magazine to illustrate the poems.
-Not long before his death the poet Longfellow told
Hezekiah Butterworth one evening in his library how he
came to write "The Psalm of Life,"
"Excelsior," "Hiawatha," "The Old Clock on the
Stairs," and some of his other great poems. Mr. Butter-
worth has now embodied the evening's talk in an article
How Longfellow Wrote His Best-known Poems,"
which The Ladies' Home Journal will publish in its next
number.
"The Bridge,"
Poems,"
on
The Ladies' Home Journal
Philadelphia
*** Editors are kindly requested to forward marked copies of their papers,
containing notices, or any references to the JOURNAL.
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