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PAGE 4

The Editor’s Story
by [?]

“Mr. Aram?” asked the editor, tentatively.

The young man nodded, and the two visitors seated themselves.

“I wish to talk to you on a matter of private business,” the editor began. “Wouldn’t it be better to send the little girl away?”

The child shook her head violently at this, and crowded up closely to her father; but he held her away from him gently, and told her to “run and play with Annie.”

She passed the two visitors, with her head held scornfully in air, and left the men together. Mr. Aram seemed to have a most passive and incurious disposition. He could have no idea as to who his anonymous visitors might be, nor did he show any desire to know.

“I am the editor of —-,” the editor began. “My friend also writes for that periodical. I have received several poems from you lately, Mr. Aram, and one in particular which we all liked very much. It was called ‘Bohemia.’ But it is so like one that has appeared under the same title in the ‘—- Magazine’ that I thought I would see you about it, and ask you if you could explain the similarity. You see,” he went on, “it would be less embarrassing if you would do so now than later, when the poem has been published and when people might possibly accuse you of plagiarism.” The editor smiled encouragingly and waited.

Mr. Aram crossed one leg over the other and folded his hands in his lap. He exhibited no interest, and looked drowsily at the editor. When he spoke it was in a tone of unstudied indifference. “I never wrote a poem called ‘Bohemia,'” he said, slowly; “at least, if I did I don’t remember it.”

The editor had not expected a flat denial, and it irritated him, for he recognized it to be the safest course the man could pursue, if he kept to it. “But you don’t mean to say,” he protested, smiling, “that you can write so excellent a poem as ‘Bohemia’ and then forget having done so?”

“I might,” said Mr. Aram, unresentfully, and with little interest. “I scribble a good deal.”

“Perhaps,” suggested the reporter, politely, with the air of one who is trying to cover up a difficulty to the satisfaction of all, “Mr. Aram would remember it if he saw it.”

The editor nodded his head in assent, and took the first page of the two on which the poem was written, and held it out to Mr. Aram, who accepted the piece of foolscap and eyed it listlessly.

“Yes, I wrote that,” he said. “I copied it out of a book called Gems from American Poets.” There was a lazy pause. “But I never sent it to any paper.” The editor and the reporter eyed each other with outward calm but with some inward astonishment. They could not see why he had not adhered to his original denial of the thing in toto. It seemed to them so foolish, to admit having copied the poem and then to deny having forwarded it.

“You see,” explained Mr. Aram, still with no apparent interest in the matter, “I am very fond of poetry; I like to recite it, and I often write it out in order to make me remember it. I find it impresses the words on my mind. Well, that’s what has happened. I have copied this poem out at the office probably, and one of the clerks there has found it, and has supposed that I wrote it, and he has sent it to your paper as a sort of a joke on me. You see, father being so well-known, it would rather amuse the boys if I came out as a poet. That’s how it was, I guess. Somebody must have found it and sent it to you, because I never sent it.”

There was a moment of thoughtful consideration. “I see,” said the editor. “I used to do that same thing myself when I had to recite pieces at school. I found that writing the verses down helped me to remember them. I remember that I once copied out many of Shakespeare’s sonnets. But, Mr. Aram, it never occurred to me, after having copied out one of Shakespeare’s sonnets, to sign my own name at the bottom of it.”