CONTRIBUTORS TO THE JANUARY NUMBER 
Mr. Stork introduces in this number some of the younger poets of Sweden. 
Anders Osteri.ind is, in fact, the youngest member of the Swedish Academy. He 
lias published several volumes of lyrics besides translations from English and German, 
and is poetry critic of Svenska Dagbladet. In one of his reviews he praises with 
much warmth the work of Karin Ek, an earnest and realistic writer generally re¬ 
garded as the foremost of the younger women poets of Sweden. She often chooses 
subjects from among the seafaring people of the southern coast. Erik Lindorm is 
another realistic poet, a resident of Stockholm. Erik Blomberg’s last volume of 
poems The Earth, was reviewed by Dr. Johan Mortensen in our recent Book Number. 
Elizabeth Luther Cary is a writer on subjects relating to art and literature. 
Among her books are Artists Past and Present, The Art of William Blake, and works 
dealing with aspects of the life and works of Tennyson, Browning, the Rosettis, 
William Morris, and Emerson. For the last fourteen years Miss Cary has been art 
critic of the New York Times. In 1920 she contributed an article to the Review on 
the Exhibition by American Artists of Swedish Descent held in New York. 
The narrative poem Adam Homo is the principal work of the great Danish poet, 
Frederik Paludan-Muller, who was born in 1809 and died in 1876. Robert 
Hillyer is a young American poet who studied Danish literature in Copenhagen last 
winter with a special fellowship from the Foundation. 
Thora Knudsen is active in social and philanthropic work in Copenhagen and 
a frequent contributor to Danish newspapers and periodicals, chiefly on subjects 
relating to the position of women. She was a member of the Copenhagen Town Coun¬ 
cil from 1909 to 1912. 
Laurence Marcellus Larson, professor of history at the University of Illinois, 
is translator and author of the preface to The King's Mirror, which was published 
as the third in the series of Scandinavian Monographs, and author of numerous 
historical books including Canute the Great and Short History of England. He was 
born in Bergen, Norway. 
A NEW YEAR’S INVITATION 
1 
It is a matter of pride that the Review is mainly supported by the small annual 
dues of several thousand people who are eager to take part in the educational project 
of which it is the spokesman. Probably many of these regular Associates of the Foun¬ 
dation would welcome an opportunity to place another literary venture of the Founda¬ 
tion—the Scandinavian Classics —on the same sure and independent footing as the 
Review. They can do this by becoming sustaining Associates of the Foundation, pay¬ 
ing annual dues of $10.00 and receiving the Classics each year as well as the Review. 
Regular Associates are therefore invited by the Trustees to enroll as sustaining Asso¬ 
ciates before the completion of our lists for 1922. Those who wish to avoid the 
trouble of remitting dues at the beginning of every year may become life Associates 
upon paying $200.00 once for all. A list of sustaining and life Associates will be 
printed in the March Review. 
