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SERENADE. Translated by NADINE YARINTZOFF

SHREWSBURY. BY STANLEY J. WEYMAN

(Illustrations by CLAUDE A. SHEPPERSON.)

SIME, S. H., INTERVIEW WITH. By A. H. LAWRENCE
SIMS, G. R., INTERVIEW WITH. By A. H. LAWRENCE ...
SINEW AND SENTIMENT. By F. MILLER

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(Illustrated from Prints in the BRITISH MUSEUM COLLECTION.)'

SOLITUDE. By E. T. EDWARDES..

SONG, THE. By MARTIN STAINFORTH

SOUL'S PASSING, THE. BY ANGUS EVAN ABBOTT

SPORT. By BENNETT COLL

(Illustrations by JOSEPH SKELTON.)

STORIES OF THE STONE AGE. By H. G. WELLS ...

(Illustrations by Cosмo Rowe.)

STORY OF THE WAGGONER, THE. By NEIL WYNN WILLIAMS

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61, 207, 382, 541, 609, 715

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"THOU SHALT NOT MAKE TO THYSELF ANY GRAVEN IMAGE.'

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TREATMENT OF OSCAR MERLYN, THIE. By A. J. DAWSON

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WANDERINGS IN BOOKLAND. BY PERCY CROSS STANDING. 124, 261, 411, 491, 637, 831
WANTED. By FRED WHISHAW

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WILL O' THE WISP. By P. C. STANDING

WITH THE BEST INTENTIONS. By F. GILLETT
WHEN THE DOOR OPENED. BY SARAH GRAND

(Illustrations by SYDNEY COWELL.)

WYLLIE, A.R. A., A DAY WITH W. L. By ROY COMPTON...
(Illustrations from VARIOUS SOURCES.)

YACHTING AND YACHT RACING. By CLIVE HOLLAND .....
(Illustrated from PHOTOGRAPHS.)

YOUR LOVE AND MINE. By SWANHILDE BULAU

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FROM THE PAINTING BY D. MAILLART IN THE PARIS SALON.

STORIES OF THE STONE AGE.

BY H. G. WELLS.

ILLUSTRATED BY COSMO ROWE.

IV. THE REIGN OF UYA THE LION.

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HE old lion was in luck. The tribe had a certain pride in their ruler, but that was all the satisfaction they got out of it. He came the very night that Ugh-lomi killed Uya the Cunning, and so it was they named him Uya. It was the old woman, the fire-minder, who first named him Uya. A shower had lowered the fires to a glow, and made the night dark. And as they conversed together, and peered at one another in the darkness, and wondered fearfully what Uya would do to them in their dreams now that he was dead, they heard the mounting reverberations of the lion's roar close at hand. Then everything was still.

They held their breath, so that almost the only sounds were the patter of the rain and the hiss of the raindrops in the ashes. And then, after an interminable time, a crash, and a shriek of fear, and a growling. They sprang to their feet, shouting, screaming, running this way and that, but brands would not burn, and in a minute the victim was being dragged away through the ferns. It was Irk, the brother of Wau. So the lion came.

The ferns were still wet from the rain the next night, and he came and took Click with the red hair. That sufficed for two nights. And then in the dark between the moons he came three nights, night after night, and that though they had good fires. He was an old lion with

stumpy teeth, but very silent and very cool; he knew of fires before; these were not the first of mankind that had ministered to his old age. The third night he came between the outer fire and the inner, and he leapt the flint heap, and pulled down Irm the son of Irk, who had seemed like to be the leader. That was a dreadful night, because they lit great flares of fern and ran screaming, and the lion missed his hold of Irm. By the glare of the fire they saw Irm struggle up, and run a little way towards them, and then the lion in two bounds had him down again. That was the last of Irm.

So fear came, and all the delight of spring passed out of their lives. Already there were five gone out of the tribe, and four nights added three more to the number. Food-seeking became. spiritless, none knew who might go next, and all day the women toiled, even the favourite women, gathering litter and sticks for the night fires. And the hunters hunted ill in the warm spring-time hunger came again as though it was still winter. The tribe might have moved, had they had a leader, but they had no leader, and none knew where to go that the lion could not follow them. So the old lion waxed fat and thanked heaven for the race of men. Two of the children and a youth died while the moon was still new, and then it was the shrivelled old fire-minder first bethought herself in a dream of Eudena and Ugh-lomi, and of the way Uya had been slain. She had lived in fear of Uya all her days, and now

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she lived in fear of the lion. That Ughlomi could kill Uya for good-Ugh-lomi whom she had seen born-was impossible. It was Uya still seeking his enemy!

And then came the strange return of Ugh-lomi, a wonderful animal seen galloping far across the river, that suddenly changed into two animals, a horse and a man. Following this portent, the vision of Ugh-lomi on the farther bank of the river. Yes, it was all plain to her. Uya was punishing them, because they had not hunted down Ugh-lomi and Eudena.

The men came straggling back to the chances of the night while the sun was still golden in the sky. They were received with the story of Ugh-lomi. She went across the river with them and showed them his spoor hesitating on the farther bank. Siss the Tracker knew the feet for Ugh-lomi's. "Uya needs Ughlomi," cried the old woman, standing on the left of the bend, a gesticulating figure of flaring bronze in the sunset. Her cries were strange sounds, flitting to and fro on the borderland of speech, but this was the sense they carried: "The lion needs Eudena. He comes night after night seeking Eudena and Ugh-lomi. When he cannot find Eudena and Ugh-lomi, he grows angry and he kills. Hunt Eudena and Ugh-lomi, Eudena whom he pursued, and Ugh-lomi for whom he gave the deathword! Hunt Eudena and Ugh-lomi!"

She turned to the distant reed-bed, as sometimes she had turned to Uya in his life. "Is it not so, my lord?" she cried. And, as if in answer, the tall reeds bowed before a breath of wind.

Far into the twilight the sound of hacking was heard from the squatting places. It was the men sharpening their ashen spears against the hunting of the morrow. And in the night, early before the moon rose, the lion came and took the girl of Siss the Tracker.

In the morning before the sun had risen, Siss the Tracker, and the lad Wau

hau, who now chipped flints, and One Eye, and Bo, and the snail-eater, the two red-haired men, and Cat's-skin and Snake, all the men that were left alive of the Sons of Uya, taking their ash spears and their smiting-stones, and with throwing stones in the beast-paw bags, started forth upon the trail of Ugh-lomi through the hawthorn thickets where Yaaa the Rhinoceros and his brothers were feeding, and up the bare downland towards the beechwoods.

That night the fires burnt high and fierce, as the waxing moon set, and the lion left the crouching women and children in peace.

And the next day, while the sun was still high, the hunters returned-all save One Eye, who lay dead with a smashed skull at the foot of the ledge. (When Ugh-lomi came back that evening from stalking the horses, he found the vultures already busy over him.) And with them the hunters brought Eudena bruised and wounded, but alive. That had been the strange order of the shrivelled old woman, that she was to be brought alive-"She is no kill for us. She is for Uya the Lion." Her hands were tied with thongs, as though she had been a man, and she came weary and drooping her hair over her eyes and matted with blood. They walked about her, and ever and again the SnailEater, whose name she had given, would laugh and strike her with his ashen spear. And after he had struck her with his spear, he would look over his shoulder like one who had done an over-bold deed. The others, too, looked over their shoulders ever and again, and all were in a hurry save Eudena. When the old woman saw them coming, she cried aloud with joy.

They made Eudena cross the river with her hands tied, although the current was strong, and when she slipped the old woman screamed, first with joy and then for fear she might be drowned. And when they had dragged Eudena to shore, she could not stand for a time, albeit they beat

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