24 in the Triumph of the Egg, „I have a wonderful story to tell, but I know no way to tell it“, since his diction, construction, characters, ideas, and emotions are in a most hopeless sprawl. He is, literally, a monotonous pilgrim on the road from nowhere into nothing. In everything in writing that the generation under twenty- five values, he is incomplete. „ . . . what makes us understand the rack and the wheel is the assurance from our friends that if we dropped everything modern we should have a great magazine. Possibly they are right. We will not say that in that case we should have a great dead magazine; but we are certain that we should be doing half our job and no more“. — The Dial. The Dial condescends to include certain young writers, some of whom are both very promising and desperately impecunious. Motives of safety, shall we say since its editors have repudiated commercialism, lead it to insulate them by the cooling remains of pre-war literature and to assign its award to a man with an influential public. It would be less compromising to go one way or the other. Stay on dry land like the Atlantic Monthly or leap headfirst into the contemporary stream. If you wish a good swim, take off your life-belt! I should not like to see the Dial annihilated, but I should enjoy seeing its pretences abandoned. Vulga rization is a legitimate business. Some large^American publisher might well bring out the Dial as Emile Paul Frères publishes Les Ecrits Nouveaux. That would be a frank undertaking. The existence of this Yale -Review- in -a- Harvard - blazer is one of the bitter necessities calling for Secession. G. B. M.