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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #64083 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64083)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Little Review, July 1914 (Vol. 1, No.
-5), by Margaret C. Anderson
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The Little Review, July 1914 (Vol. 1, No. 5)
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: Margaret C. Anderson
-
-Release Date: December 22, 2020 [eBook #64083]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Image source(s): https://library.brown.edu/pdfs/1289240673312500.pdf
-
-Produced by: Jens Sadowski and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
- http://www.pgdp.net. This book was produced from images made
- available by the Modernist Journal Project, Brown and Tulsa
- Universities.
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LITTLE REVIEW, JULY 1914 (VOL.
-1, NO. 5) ***
-
-
-
-
- THE LITTLE REVIEW
-
-
- _Literature Drama Music Art_
-
- MARGARET C. ANDERSON
- EDITOR
-
- JULY, 1914
-
- Poems Charles Ashleigh
- The Renaissance of Parenthood The Editor
- "Des Imagistes" Charles Ashleigh
- Of Rupert Brooke and Other Matters Arthur Davison Ficke
- The New Loyalty George Burman Foster
- The Milliner (Poem) Sade Iverson
- "Nur wer die Sehnsucht kennt" Margaret C. Anderson
- Editorials
- New York Letter George Soule
- Dostoevsky's Novels Maurice Lazar
- Book Discussion:
- An Unreeling Realist De Witt C. Wing
- The Revolt of the "Once Born" Eunice Tietjens
- Verlaine and Tolstoy Alexander S. Kaun
- Conrad's Quote Henry B. Sell
- "Clark's Field" Marguerite Swawite
- The "Savage" Painters A. S. K.
- Sentence Reviews
-
- Published Monthly
-
- 25 cents a copy
-
- MARGARET C. ANDERSON, Publisher
- CHICAGO
- Fine Arts Building
-
- $2.50 a year
-
-
-
-
- THE LITTLE REVIEW
-
-
- Vol. I
-
- JULY, 1914
-
- No. 5
-
-
-
-
- POEMS
-
-
- CHARLES ASHLEIGH
-
-
- BEYOND GOOD AND EVIL
-
- (_A Mystery Rime for Little Children of All Ages_)
-
- The rain comes down and veils the hills.
- Ah, tender rain for aching fields!
-
- The hills are clothed in a mist of rain.
- (My heart is clothed in a mist of pain.)
- Ah, mother rain, that laves the field,
- If I to you my poor soul yield,
- Will you not cleanse it, soothe it, tend it,
- Weep upon it 'til 'tis mended?
- 'Twas sweet to sow, 'tis hard to reap.
- Come, mother rain, and lull me to sleep.
- Lull me to sleep and wash me away,
- Out of the realm of Night and Day,
- Back to the bourne from whence I came,
- Seeming alike yet not the same....
-
- Rain, you are more than rain to me.
- And Lash of Pain may be a Key.
- Ope, then, the door and tread within.
- The double Door of Good and Sin
- Is vanquished. Lo, with bread and wine,
- The table's spread! The feast is Mine!
-
-
- LOVE IN THE ABYSS
-
- Amidst the buzz of bawdy tales
- And the laughter of drinking men,
- I sat and laughed and shouted also.
- Yet was I not content.
- My seared and restless eyes, turning here and there,--
- Like my tired soul,--
- Seeking new joys and finding them not,--
- How oft swept you unseeing.
-
- Until, suddenly,--
- And now I know not how I could have missed it,--
- My eyes saw into yours,
- And plumbed the deep wells of newly born desire.
-
- Ah, dear my heart, what things your eyes did speak!
- Not God's own music of creation's dawn,
- Revealed to mystic in a holy trance,
- Could pleasure me more sweetly.
-
- So dear were your lips--
- Your lips so kind and regal red.
- My memory of your lips I cherish
- As a great possession ...
-
- Ah, flying joy,
- Caught on the wings of Time ...
- Tender oasis,
- Ingemmed in a wilderness of grey!
-
- Kisses, kisses,--
- Kisses upon your red lips in the black night ...
-
- When, alone in the long, quiet street,
- By the door of the tavern,
- Shielded from sight of those within,
- The soft rain falling on our heads like a mother's blessing,--
- We bartered the clinging kisses of new desire.
- And, as I held you to me,
- The whole universe
- Became informed of God,
- And lay within my arms.
-
-
- JEALOUSY
-
- You are possessed by another.
- How I hate him!
-
- Hear the rational people say: "Jealousy is a primitive thing. A
- thing of the emotions; not of reason."
- Fools! You do not know scarlet desire, full-flooded!
-
- Ah, my dearest, Graal of my heart's longing,
- Your stolen kiss is fresh upon my neck.
- My lips are full of my secret kiss upon your neck.
-
- You are with another, whom I hate; whom I like well for himself, but
- hate because he possesses you ...
-
- Your possessor is old and ugly;
- He can not love you as I can.
- I can pour out for you the scented treasures of my young love.
-
- Dear night of hope, when you gave me the whispered promise to come
- to me ...
-
- Stealthy was I and cunning.
- Friendly and attentive was I to your old lover (if lover he may be
- called, who is almost incapable of love).
- And, all the time, I was scheming for you.
- When the old man was away for an instant--
- Oh, golden moment,--
- I poured my whispered passion into your ears.
- When he looked away, or, for a moment, was distracted, with swift
- undertones I declared myself to you.
- How dear was your welcoming glance and your quickly toned assent!
- You had a face so proud.
- So quiet and poised among the throng.
- Yet, for once, you gave me your eyes and, in so doing, gave me your
- priceless body and warm, comradely soul.
- Ah, flash of answering love that transformed your face!
- As a jewel of my memory's treasure-casket may it be preserved.
-
- When the drinking-place was closed, we walked along the dark street.
- Do you remember?
- We were four, luckily, and the old man was kept busy in conversation,
- half drunken as he was.
-
- And we, with our secret between us, walked behind.
- Our hands were tight clasped in the folds of our dress.
- Tight clasped with the clinging hand caress; you and I trying to put
- into our hands all the longing that was in us.
- All the time we were apprehensive of a sudden turning of the old man or
- the other ...
-
- Then, the whispered troth, and the meeting-place appointed.
-
- And, then, later, boldly, so openly and audaciously it brought no
- suspicion,
- Under seeming of wine-induced jollity, we kissed.
- And they laughed; it seemed a trivial jest to them.
- But to us it was a sacrament.
-
- But, best of all, my beloved, was the hurried clasping and kissing
- when we were alone in the dark.
- Promise of joy to come.
- Foretaste of the coming ecstasy.
-
- And then we had to part.
- I and my unaware friend.
- You and the old man.
-
- As I walked home that night,
- How I hated him!
- How I looked up at the pale-golden moon high-hung in the purple sky, and
- sang in my heart your praise and cursed in my heart your
- possessor ...
-
- But we will out-wit him.
-
- Young I am and young are you and the Law of Life bids us mate.
- And a whole world standing between us would be melted and destroyed by
- the fire of our youth's desire.
-
-
- THE GLORIOUS ADVENTURE OF GLORIOUS ME
-
- I swim with the tide of life towards the new;
- I reach out hungered arms to flowing change.--
- I smash the awesome totems of my kind;
- My smarting vision bursts its cramping range.
-
- A thousand voices yell within my soul;
- A thousand hymns are chanting in my heart.--
- I blast the mist of worlds and years apart;
- I sense the blending glory of the whole.
-
- The sap of flowers and trees, it mounts in me.
- I feel the child within me cry and turn;
- The crimson thoughts within me writhe and burn.--
- I stand, with craving arms high-flung, before the rimless sea.
-
- And every whirling, passionate star sings melodies to Me;
- And every bud and every leaf has sought my private ear;
- And to the quickening soul of Me has told its mystery,
- As I sit in state in the heart of the world,
- As I proudly hug the core of the world,
- As I make me a boat of the whole, wide world ...
-
- And then for new worlds steer.
-
-
-
-
- THE RENAISSANCE OF PARENTHOOD
-
-
- MARGARET C. ANDERSON
-
-There seems to be a kind of renaissance of motherhood in the air. Ellen
-Key has just done a book with that title which has come to us too late
-to be reviewed adequately in this issue; Mrs. Gasquoine Hartley has
-written _The Age of Mother Power_ which will be brought out in the fall;
-and in Shaw's new volume of plays (_Misalliance_, _Fanny's First Play_
-and _The Dark Lady of the Sonnets_) there is a preface of over a hundred
-pages devoted to a discussion of parents and children which says some of
-the most refreshing and important things about that relationship I have
-ever read.
-
-The home, as such, is rapidly losing its old functions--perhaps it is
-more accurate to say that it is changing its standards of functioning,
-and that the present distress merely heralds in a wonderful new
-conception of family potentiality. But a generalization of this sort can
-be disputed by any family egotist, so let's get down to particulars.
-It's all right for the enlightened of the older generation to preach
-violently that the family is a humbug, as Shaw does; that the child
-should have all the rights of any other human being, and that there is
-nothing so futile or so stupid as to try to "control" your children.
-It's not only all right; it's glorious! But what I'm more interested in,
-still being of the age that must classify as "daughter," is this:--what
-are "the children" themselves doing about it? Have their rebellions been
-anything more than complaints; have they made any real stand for
-liberty; have they proved themselves worthy of the Shavian championship?
-
-Well--I got hold recently of a human document which answered these
-questions quite in the affirmative. It was a rather startling thing
-because, while it offered nothing new on the theory side of the matter,
-it showed the theory in thoughtful action--which, for all the talk on
-the subject, is still rare. It was a letter of some twenty pages written
-by a girl to her mother at the time of a domestic climax when all the
-bonds of family affection, family idealism and obligation were tending
-to smother the human truth of the situation, as the girl put it. She was
-in her early twenties; she had a sister two or three years younger, and
-both of them had reached at least a sort of economic independence. She
-had come to the conclusion, after a good many years of rebellion, that
-the whole fabric of their family life was wrong; and since it was
-impossible to talk the thing out sensibly--because, as in all families
-where the children grow up without being given the necessary
-revaluations, real talk is no more possible than it is between
-uncongenial strangers--she had decided to discuss it in a letter. That
-medium does away with the patronage of the parents' refusal to listen
-seriously:--that "Oh, come now, what do you know about these things?" If
-the child has anything interesting to say, if he puts any of his
-rebellion into his writing, the chances are that the parent will read
-the letter through; and the result is that he'll know more about his
-child than he has learned in all the years they've been trying to talk
-with each other and not succeeding. I'm enthusiastic about this kind of
-family correspondence; it's good training in expression and it clears
-the air--jolts the "heads" of the family into realizing that the
-thinking and planning are not all on one side. I once did it myself to
-my father--put ten pages of closely-written argument on his office desk
-(so that he'd open it with the same impersonality given to a business
-communication), in which I explained why I wanted to go away from home
-and learn to _work_, and why I thought such a course was an intelligent
-one. The letter accomplished what no amount of talking would have done,
-because in our talk we rarely got beyond the "Oh, now, you're just a
-little excited, it will look different in the morning" stage. Father
-said it was rather a shock to him because he didn't know I had ever
-figured things out to that extent; but we always understood each other
-better after that.
-
-However--not to get lost in personalities--this is the letter the girl
-showed me and which she allows me to quote from partially:
-
- If we are to continue living together in any sort of happiness
- and growth the entire basis of our present life will have to be
- changed. We can do it if we're brave enough to do what people
- usually do only in books:--face the fact squarely that our family
- life is and has been a failure, and set about to remedy it. It
- will mean an entire change of home conditions, and these are the
- terms of the new arrangement:
-
- When I said to you the other day that things would have to go
- _my_ way now, you were horrified at the conceit of it. To get to
- facts, there's no conceit in it--because my way is simply the
- practise of not imposing one's will upon other people. I made the
- remark merely as a common sense suggestion, and made it out of a
- seriousness that is desperate. I say "desperate" because I mean
- that literally: the situation isn't a question of a mere
- temporary adjustment--just some sort of superficial arrangement
- so that we can get on pleasantly for a while before the next
- outbreak comes. The plans Betty and I have discussed have been
- made in the interest of our whole future lives:--whether we're
- going to submit (either by surrender or compromise or by just
- drifting along and not doing anything) to an existence of
- bickering, nagging, hours spent in the discussion of
- non-essentials, hideous lack of harmony--the whole stupid
- programme we've watched working for years and achieving nothing
- but unhappiness, folly, and a terrible "human waste." You ask us
- to continue in your way; but from at least three points of view
- that way has been a failure. I ask you to adopt my way--which has
- not yet failed. That's why I say it's not conceit, but common
- sense.
-
- My way is simply this: that we three can live together and work
- in peace and harmony if this awful bugbear of Authority is
- dropped out of the scheme. Each of us must go her own way; we're
- all different, and there's no reason why one should impose her
- authority on the lives of the others. You say that you should
- because you're our mother. But that's the thing I want to
- discuss.
-
- Motherhood isn't infallibility. If a woman is a wise woman she's
- a wise mother; if she's a foolish woman she's a foolish mother.
- Because you're our mother doesn't mean that you must always be
- right; before being a mother you're a human being, and any human
- being is likely to be wrong. To get down to brutal facts, we
- think you are _not_ right about the whole thing. We've thought so
- for years, but now it's come to the time when our thinking must
- be put into action. We're no longer children; but even as mere
- infants we thought these things--without having the right to
- express them. What I'm trying to do now is to express them not as
- a daughter, but quite impersonally as a human being, as a mere
- friend, a sister, or anyone who might come to you stating that
- she believed with all her soul that you were wrong, and also
- stating, just as impersonally, that she wouldn't think of
- modeling her line of conduct after that pattern which appeared to
- her so wrong. We _must_ face the facts; if you do that squarely
- it doesn't seem so bad, and you stop flinching about it. You get
- to the point where you're not afraid to face them boldly, and
- then you begin to _construct_. And this is the only way to clear
- up the kind of rottenness and decay that flourishes in our family
- life.
-
- It's in the interest of this achievement that I say the thing a
- girl isn't supposed to say to her mother--namely, that Betty and
- I will not any longer subscribe to the things you expect us to.
- The fact to face just as quickly as possible is this: it's the
- starting point. When you realize that we feel it's a question of
- doing this or laying a foundation for lives that are just _half_
- lives--hideous perverted things which miss all the beauty that
- you can put into the short life given you--I think you'll see how
- serious we are. We're at least two intelligent human beings, if
- we're nothing else. And why should you ask or expect that we'll
- submit to a system which to us means stupidity, misery,
- pettiness--all those things which we've seen working out for
- years and which, being at least intelligent, we want to keep away
- from?
-
- That much settled, we can continue to live together in just one
- way--as three sisters or friends; the motherhood, in so far as it
- means authority or an attempt to mould us to _your_ way, must be
- eliminated. A complete new family idealism can be built on such a
- basis. You will say that it's an abnormal basis for any mother to
- accept. Of course it is; but the situation is abnormal, and the
- orthodox remedies aren't applicable.
-
- The reason I say the situation is abnormal is this: usually when
- a mother objects to her daughters' behavior it is on some
- definite basis of opposing the things they _do_--like going to
- too many parties or falling in love with the wrong man. You have
- very little fault to find with the things we do. Your objections
- are on a basis of what we _are_--or, rather, of what we _are
- not_: that we are not orthodox, that we are not hypocrites, that
- we are not the kind of daughters the Victorians approved of.
- "Hypocrites" will sound paradoxical; but you have confessed that
- you would rather have us lie to you than to disagree with you;
- that you would rather have us be sentimental about "the way a
- girl should treat her mother" than to learn how we ought to treat
- ourselves. You call that being "respectful" and think that
- harmony is possible only under such conditions. We call it being
- "insulting," and think that it's the one sure way of destroying
- any chance of harmony. If we respect you it must be because we
- think you worthy of the truth: anything else is degrading to both
- sides.
-
- You'll say you can't be satisfied to live with us and not give
- advice and all the other things that are part of a mother's duty.
- You may give all the advice you want to; the keynote of the new
- situation will be that we'll take the advice if we believe it's
- right; if not we'll ignore it, just as a man ignores his friend's
- advice when he feels it to be wrong. Of course the wise person
- doesn't give much advice; he simply lives his life the best way
- he knows how. That's the only bid he can make for emulation. If
- we tell you that we don't approve of the creed you have made you
- mustn't be surprised if we try to formulate one of our own.
- There's no reason for us to ask you to change just because we're
- your daughters. You must do as you believe. But you must grant us
- the same privilege.
-
- We disagree about fundamentals. If our beliefs were merely the
- vague, unformed ideas of children you might try to change them.
- But it's too late now. So we can live together harmoniously only
- if we give up the foolish attempts at "influencing."
-
- We're not living three generations ago. We've had Shaw since
- then, and parents and children aren't doing the insulting things
- to each other they used to do. Among intelligent people some of
- the old issues can never raise their heads again. And so, it's
- for you to decide:--whether we shall build on the new foundation
- together or separately.
-
-It might be a play; it's certainly rather good for reality. And what
-happened? The mother refused to "accept the terms"--which is not
-surprising, perhaps; and the household broke up into two establishments
-with results that will disappoint the conservative who thinks those
-girls should have been soundly beaten. The first wrench of it, the
-girl said, reminded her of George's parting with Marion in
-_Tono-Bungay_:--that sense of belonging to each other immensely, that
-"profound persuasion of irreparable error" in the midst of what seemed
-profoundly right. "Nothing is simple," Wells wrote in that connection;
-"every wrong done has a certain justice in it, and every good deed has
-dregs of evil." But the girl and her mother have learned to be friends
-as a result of that break, and the latter will tell you now that it was
-the right thing to have done.
-
-The preface to _Misalliance_ has such a wealth of quotable things in it
-that the only way to get them appreciated is to quote. Shaw has said
-much of this before, but it is all so valuable that it ought to be
-shouted from the housetops:
-
- The people against whom children are wholly unprotected are those
- who devote themselves to the very mischievous and cruel sort of
- abortion which is called bringing up a child in the way it should
- go. Now nobody knows the way a child should go.
-
- What is a child? An experiment. A fresh attempt to produce the
- just man made perfect: that is, to make humanity divine. And you
- will vitiate the experiment if you make the slightest attempt to
- abort it into some fancy figure of your own: for example, your
- notion of a good man or a womanly woman. If you treat it as a
- little wild beast to be tamed, or as a pet to be played with, or
- even as a means to save you trouble and to make money for you
- (and these are our commonest ways), it may fight its way through
- in spite of you and save its soul alive; for all its instincts
- will resist you, and possibly be strengthened in the resistance;
- but if you begin with its own holiest aspirations, and suborn
- them for your own purposes, then there is hardly any limit to the
- mischief you may do.
-
- Francis Place tells us that his father always struck his children
- when he found one within his reach.... Francis records the habit
- with bitterness, having reason to thank his stars that his father
- respected the inside of his head whilst cuffing the outside of
- it; and this made it easy for Francis to do yeoman's service to
- his country as that rare and admirable thing, a Free-thinker: the
- only sort of thinker, I may remark, whose thoughts, and
- consequently whose religious convictions, command any respect.
-
- Now Mr. Place, senior, would be described by many as a bad
- father; and I do not contend that he was a conspicuously good
- one. But as compared with the conventionally good father who
- deliberately imposes himself on his son as god; who takes
- advantage of childish credulity and parent worship to persuade
- his son that what he approves of is right and what he disapproves
- of is wrong; who imposes a corresponding conduct on the child by
- a system of prohibitions and penalties, rewards and eulogies, for
- which he claims divine sanction; compared to this sort of
- abortionist and monster maker, I say, Place appears almost as a
- Providence.
-
- A gentleman once wrote to me and said, with an obvious conviction
- that he was being most reasonable and high minded, that the only
- thing he beat his children for was failure in perfect obedience
- and perfect truthfulness. On these attributes, he said, he must
- insist. As one of them is not a virtue at all, and the other is
- the attribute of a god, one can imagine what the lives of this
- gentleman's children would have been if it had been possible for
- him to live down to his monstrous and foolish pretensions.
-
- The cruelty (of beating a child) must be whitewashed by a moral
- excuse, and a pretense of reluctance. It must be for the child's
- good. The assailant must say "This hurts me more than it hurts
- you." There must be hypocrisy as well as cruelty.
-
- The most excusable parents are those who try to correct their own
- faults in their offspring. The parent who says to his child: "I
- am one of the successes of the Almighty: therefore imitate me in
- every particular or I will have the skin off your back" (a quite
- common attitude) is a much more absurd figure than the man who,
- with a pipe in his mouth, thrashes his boy for smoking.
-
- If you must hold yourself up to your children as an object lesson
- (which is not at all necessary), hold yourself up as a warning
- and not as an example. But you had much better let the child's
- character alone. If you once allow yourself to regard a child as
- so much material for you to manufacture into any shape that
- happens to suit your fancy you are defeating the experiment of
- the Life Force. You are assuming that the child does not know its
- own business, and that you do. In this you are sure to be wrong.
- The child feels the drive of the Life Force (often called the
- Will of God); and you cannot feel it for him.
-
- Most children can be, and many are, hopelessly warped and wasted
- by parents who are ignorant and silly enough to suppose that they
- know what a human being ought to be, and who stick at nothing in
- their determination to force their children into their moulds.
-
- Experienced parents, when children's rights are preached to them,
- very naturally ask whether children are to be allowed to do what
- they like. The best reply is to ask whether adults are to be
- allowed to do what they like. The two cases are the same. The
- adult who is nasty is not allowed to do what he likes: neither
- can the child who likes to be nasty. There is no difference in
- principle between the rights of a child and those of an adult:
- the difference in their cases is one of circumstance.
-
- Most working folk today either send their children to day schools
- or turn them out of doors. This solves the problem for the
- parents. It does not solve it for the children, any more than the
- tethering of a goat in the field or the chasing of an unlicensed
- dog in the streets solves it for the goat or the dog; but it
- shows that in no class are people willing to endure the society
- of their children, and consequently it is an error to believe
- that the family provides children with edifying adult society, or
- that the family is a social unit.
-
- The family is in that, as in so many other respects, a humbug.
- Old people and young people cannot walk at the same pace without
- distress and final loss of health to one of the parties.... And
- since our system is nevertheless to pack them all into the same
- house and pretend that they are happy, and that this particular
- sort of happiness is the foundation of virtue, it is found that
- in discussing family life we never speak of actual adults or
- actual children, or of realities of any sort, but always of
- ideals such as The Home, a Mother's Influence, a Father's Care,
- Filial Piety, Duty, Affection, Family Life, etc., etc., which are
- no doubt very comforting phrases, but which beg the question of
- what a home and a mother's influence and a father's care and so
- forth really come to.... Women who cannot bear to be separated
- from their pet dogs send their children to boarding school
- cheerfully. They may say and even believe that in allowing their
- children to leave home they are sacrificing themselves for their
- children's good.... But to allege that children are better
- continually away from home is to give up the whole popular
- sentimental theory of the family....
-
- If you compel an adult and a child to live in one another's
- company either the adult or the child will be miserable. There is
- nothing whatever unnatural or wrong or shocking in this fact, and
- there is no harm in it if only it be sensibly faced and provided
- for. The mischief that it does at present is produced by our
- efforts to ignore it, or to smother it under a heap of
- sentimental and false pretenses.
-
- The child's rights, being clearly those of any other human being,
- are summed up in the right to live.... And the rights of society
- over it clearly extend to requiring it to qualify itself to live
- in society without wasting other people's time....
-
- We must reconcile education with liberty. We must find out some
- means of making men workers and, if need be, warriors, without
- making them slaves.
-
- In dealing with children what is needed is not logic but sense.
-
- A child should begin to assert itself early, and shift for itself
- more and more not only in washing and dressing itself, but in
- opinions and conduct.... And what is a tyrant? Quite simply a
- person who says to another person, young or old, "You shall do as
- I tell you."
-
- Children are extremely cruel without intending it; and in
- ninety-nine cases out of a hundred the reason is that they do not
- conceive their elders as having any human feeling. Serve the
- elders right, perhaps, for posing as superhuman! The penalty of
- the imposter is not that he is found out (he very seldom is) but
- that he is taken for what he pretends to be and treated as such.
-
- The family ideal is a humbug and a nuisance: one might as
- reasonably talk of the barrack ideal, or the forecastle ideal, or
- any other substitution of the machinery of social for the end of
- it, which must always be the fullest and most capable life: in
- short, the most Godly life.
-
- Even apart from its insufferable pretensions, the family needs
- hearty discrediting; for there is hardly any vulnerable part of
- it that could not be amputated with advantage.
-
- Do not for a moment suppose that uncultivated people are merely
- indifferent to high and noble qualities. They hate them
- malignantly....
-
- Whether the risks to which liberty exposes us are moral or
- physical our right to liberty involves the right to run them. A
- man who is not free to risk his neck as an aviator or his soul as
- a heretic is not free at all; and the right to liberty begins,
- not at the age of 21 years, but of 21 seconds.
-
-You may have as much fun at Shaw's expense as you want on the grounds
-that he has never had to train a child and therefore doesn't know the
-difficulties. But if you want to laugh last don't read this preface or
-the play that follows it, because he will make a laughing-stock or a
-convert of you as surely as he will prove that he is far cleverer than
-you can ever hope to be.
-
-Shaw and Ellen Key preach practically the same doctrine about the home;
-both are temperamentally incapable of Charlotte Perkins Gilman's
-programme--education outside the home: Shaw because the school is as big
-a humbug as the family, and Miss Key because "even if institutions can
-thus rough-plane the material that is to become a member of society,
-nevertheless they cannot--if they take in the major part of the child's
-education--accomplish that which is needed first of all if we are to
-lift ourselves to a higher spiritual plane in an economically just
-society: they cannot deepen the emotional life." Her insistence is
-strongly upon the education of the feelings as the most important factor
-in the soul-life. In her vision of the renaissance of motherhood she
-begins with Nietzsche's dictum that "a time will come when men will
-think of nothing except education." Not that any one can be educated
-_to_ motherliness; but that our sentimentalization of motherhood as the
-ever holy, ever infallible power, must be abandoned, and a quality of
-intelligent mother-power cultivated by definite courses of training
-which she lays out in detail.
-
-In view of the number of homes I know of that come legitimately under
-the Shaw denunciation I feel sometimes that any socialization of home
-life is more hopeful than an attempt to remodel the hopeless conditions
-inside the home. Regard the parents you know--the great mass of them
-outside the exceptions that encourage you to believe spasmodically in
-the beauty and noble need of parenthood. If they are not cruel or stupid
-or ignorant or smug or righteous or tyrannical or dishonest or
-unimaginative or weak or quiet ineffectual, they are something else just
-as bad. It has come to the point where a good parent is as hard to find
-as an honest man.
-
-Very seriously, however, there is hope in the situation--there is
-renaissance in the air. And it has its foundation in the sensible and
-healthy (though so far only tacit) admission that it doesn't matter so
-much what your child becomes as that he shall _become something_! You
-can't do much with him, anyhow, and you may as well face it. You can
-give him, during his first few years, the kind of foundation you think
-will help him; and for the rest of the time you can do only one thing
-that he will really need from you: you can develop your own personality
-as richly as you want him to develop his. You can refuse to worry about
-him--since that does neither of you any good--and thereby save stores of
-energy that he may draw upon for _your mutual benefit_. It becomes a
-sort of game for two, instead of the uninteresting kind in which one
-player is given all the advantages. Compared with it the old-fashioned
-game in which the mother sacrificed everything, suffered everything,
-wore herself out trying to help her child win, looks not only very
-unfair and very unnecessary, but very _wasteful_. And have you ever
-noticed how the man who sentimentalizes about the wonderful mothers we
-used to have--his own in particular--is the one whose life is lived at
-the opposite pole of the mother's wise direction?
-
-If you disagree with all this, there is still one other method by which
-you may produce a child who will be a credit to himself and to society.
-You may be so utterly stupid and wrong-headed that he will rebel to the
-point of becoming something different. If you prefer this course no one
-need worry much about your child, because he'll probably found a system
-of child education that will cause him to be famous; and if you have a
-daughter, she'll probably become a Montessori.
-
-The new home is a recognition that the child is not the only factor in
-society that needs educating. It assumes that no one's education is
-finished just because he's been made a parent. It means that we can all
-go on being educated together. It means the elimination of all kinds of
-domestic follies--for one, the ghastly embarrassment of growing up to
-discover that you're different from the rest of your family, and for
-that reason something of a criminal. It means the kind of understanding
-that develops a child's feeling instead of suppressing it, so that he
-won't be ashamed, for instance, of having such glorious things as dreams
-and visions. It means artistic education: and Shaw says that we all grow
-up stupid or mad to just the extent to which we have not been
-artistically educated.
-
-
-
-
- THE SWAN
-
-
- Under the lily shadow
- and the gold
- and the blue and mauve
- that the whin and the lilac
- pour down on the water,
- the fishes quiver.
-
- Over the green cold leaves
- and the rippled silver
- and the tarnished copper
- of its neck and beak,
- toward the deep black water
- beneath the arches,
- the swan floats slowly.
-
- Into the dark of the arch the swan floats
- and into the black depth of my sorrow
- it bears a white rose of flame.
-
- _F. S. Flint._
-
-
-
-
- "DES IMAGISTES"
-
-
- CHARLES ASHLEIGH
-
-A new and well born recruit has been added to the ranks of the
-Insurgents. It is true he appeared before we did, but we welcome him
-before he welcomes us, and thus are things evened. THE LITTLE REVIEW,
-_The Masses_, _Poetry_, _The International_--all bearers of the sacred
-fire,--and now cometh _The Glebe_, heralding his approach with the
-chanting of many-colored strains. And, among the good things which _The
-Glebe_ has put forth, is a book of portent: _Des Imagistes_.
-
-The Imagistes form one of the latest schools, and it is meet that,
-before we read their work, we get some idea of their doctrine. Therefore
-I transcribe here some statements of representative Imagiste poets,
-which I have culled from _Poetry_, _The Egotist_, and other sources.
-Richard Aldington gives the following rules:
-
- I. Direct treatment of subject. We convey an emotion by
- presenting the object and circumstance of the emotion without
- comment. For example, we do not say, "O how I admire that
- exquisite, that beautiful, that--25 more adjectives--woman." But
- we present that woman, we make an "Image" of her, we make the
- scene convey the emotion....
-
- II. As few adjectives as possible.
-
- III. A hardness as of cut stone. No slop, no sentimentality. When
- people say the Imagiste poems are "too hard" ... we know we have
- done something good.
-
- IV. Individuality of rhythm. We make new fashions instead of
- cutting our clothes on the old models.
-
- V. The exact word. We make quite a heavy stress on that. It is
- most important. All great poetry is exact. All the dreariness of
- nineteenth century poetry comes from their not quite knowing what
- they wanted to say and filling up the gaps with portentous
- adjectives and idiotic similes.
-
- Here is a definition by Ezra Pound which helps us: "An Image is
- that which presents an intellectual and emotional complex in an
- instant of time."
-
-The book, _Des Imagistes_, is an anthology, presumably of Imagist (let
-us, once for all, Anglicize the French word and have done with it)
-poetry. Yet, one of the foremost imagists, Richard Aldington, in a
-critique of this book,--comparatively modest, owing to the fact that his
-own poems formed a sumptuous fraction of the volume,--says that five of
-those whose poems are there included are not true Imagists. These are
-Cournos, Hueffer, Upward, Joyce, and Cannell. Mr. Aldington says he
-doesn't mean that these poems are not beautiful--on the contrary, he
-admires them immensely--but they are not, "strictly speaking," Imagist
-poems.
-
-I agree that the poems of these five men are beautiful, especially the
-_I hear an army_ of James Joyce and the _Nocturnes_ of Skipwith Cannell;
-and I also maintain that, all unconsciously, the publishers of _The
-Glebe_ have dealt a deadly blow to sectarian Imagism by including these
-non-Imagist poems in their anthology. Because, unless a school can prove
-that it alone has that unnameable wonder which excites us to deepest
-emotional turmoil, and which we call poetry, it has but little right to
-isolate itself or to separate its adepts from the bulk of poets. This
-may sound sententious, but is, nevertheless, true. Speak you in whatever
-mode or meter you will, if you arouse me to exultation, or to horror, or
-to the high pitch of any feeling,--if in me there is that responsive
-vibration that only true art can produce--then are you a poet.
-
-Whitman does it to me. Poe does it to me. Baudelaire and Henley do it.
-To all of these there is in me a response. I'm awfully sorry, but that's
-how it is. I think them all poets.
-
-The Imagists believe in the direct presentation of emotion, preferably
-in terms of objectivity. They abhor an excess of adjectives, and, after
-a satiety of the pompous Victorian stuff, I am much inclined to
-sympathize with that tenet of their faith.
-
-I wish, however, to make clear my own position, which is the one that
-most counts when I am writing. I am an anarchist in poetry: I recognize
-no rules, no exclusions.
-
-If the expression of a certain thought, vision, or what not, requires
-twenty adjectives, then let us have them. If it be better expressed
-without adjectives, then let us abjure them--temporarily.
-
-I am myself a poet (whether performance equals desire is doubtful). My
-object as a poet is to express the things which are closest to me. This
-sounds banal, but is better than rhetoric; words exist not with which to
-define with superclarity the poet's function, source, and performance.
-
-In the true expression of myself I might write Images which would be
-worshipped for their perfection by the Imagists. A moment after, I might
-gloat and wallow in the joy of my cosmic oneness (anathema to Imagists!)
-and, perhaps recall Whitman. The next minute, chronicling some shadowy
-episode of my variegated past, I may out-decay the decadent Baudelaire.
-But, this is always poetry if, by the magic of its words and the music
-of its arrangement, it speaks directly and beautifully to you, giving
-you that indescribable but unmistakeable sense of liberation and
-soul-expansion which comes on the contemplation of true art.
-
-I think I have made myself clear. There is no quarrel with the Imagists,
-who have done some beautiful work, as such. But, if they claim monopoly
-of inspiration or art, as some of them appear to do, then--! Therefore,
-as a restricted and doctrinaire school, "a bas les Imagistes!" But, as
-an envigored company of the grand army of poets, "Vivent les Imagistes!"
-
-
-
-
- OF RUPERT BROOKE AND OTHER MATTERS
-
-
- ARTHUR DAVISON FICKE
-
-Since even to poets--and poets are erroneously supposed to sing their
-hearts out--there remains a certain right of privacy, I am not sure that
-we do well in writing so much of their personalities and their
-individual views of life. When we read a poem, we feel a temperament
-behind it; but the effort to catalogue and label that mind and its
-"message" is a little impertinent, and very futile. Mr. Rupert Brooke is
-an excellent illustration. His fondness for this or that--whether in
-landscape, food, ideas, or morals--is hardly our concern. He deserves to
-be treated not as a natural-history specimen,--a peculiar group of likes
-and dislikes and convictions,--but as an artist.
-
-Mr. Brooke has the distinction, rare for a young poet, of not having
-written any bad verse, or of not having printed it. His sole volume,
-_Poems_ (Sidgwick and Jackson, London, 1913), manifests in even its
-least notable pieces a creative spirit not allowed to run riot, but
-chastened and restrained by a keen sense of the obscure laws whose
-workings turn passion into a decorative pattern, and the emotions of the
-blood into intelligible designs.
-
-Unless one is deeply concerned with such things, one is not likely to
-recognize the fundamental difference between those poets whose work is
-merely a more or less interesting emotional cry, and those nobler and
-more mature poets in whose work the crude elements of emotion are
-subordinated to the exigencies of an artistic conception. Only the
-latter have written fine poetry. The former may move us, as a crying
-child may move us; but they cannot exalt us to a peak that rises above
-the region of mere sympathetic response. They can never bring us a wind
-of revelation, or a flame from beyond the world. They are never the
-poets to whom other poets--and these are the only final judges--turn for
-inspiration or for fellowship.
-
-For after all, there is no magic in any theme or in the emotion behind
-it; what is magical lies wholly in the design, the mould, in which the
-poet embodies a feeling that is probably common to all. No thought is so
-profound, no intimation so subtle, that it alone suffices as the stuff
-of poetry. But any thought, any intimation, if it be justly correlated
-and moulded into an organic and expressive shape, will serve to awaken
-echoes of a forgotten or unknown loveliness, and pierce its way into the
-very soul of the listener.
-
-This sense of design of which I speak is not a hard, formal, conscious
-thing in the mind of the poet; but rather a carefully trained instinct,
-like the instinct that guides the hand of a fine draughtsman in the
-drawing of a curve of unexpected beauty. There is a right place to begin
-the curve, and a right place to end it; and at every instant of its
-length it is swayed and governed by a sense of relation to preceding and
-succeeding moments,--a sense subject to laws that defy mathematical
-formulation, but are perilously definite nevertheless. This sense of
-control is a rare thing to find in the work of so young a man as Mr.
-Brooke. Most young writers seem to approach their work as an
-unrestrained expression of themselves,--which it should be: but they
-forget that, for real self-expression, the most scrupulous mastery of
-the medium of expression is necessary. They regard the writing of verse
-as something in the nature of a joy-ride with an open throttle,--instead
-of seeing in it a piece of difficult driving, to be achieved only by the
-use of every subtlety of modulated speed and controlled steering that
-the mind is capable of employing.
-
-That Mr. Brooke needs no such warning, let the following fine sonnet
-bear witness:
-
-
- SUCCESS
-
- I think if you had loved me when I wanted;
- If I'd looked up one day, and seen your eyes,
- And found my wild sick blasphemous prayer granted,
- And your brown face, that's full of pity and wise,
- Flushed suddenly; the white godhead in new fear
- Intollerably so struggling, and so shamed;
- Most holy and far, if you'd come all too near,
- If earth had seen Earth's lordliest wild limbs tamed,
- Shaken, and trapped, and shivering, for _my_ touch--
- Myself should I have slain? or that foul you?
- But this the strange gods, who had given so much,
- To have seen and known you, this they might not do.
- One last shame's spared me, one black word's unspoken;
- And I'm alone; and you have not awoken.
-
-It is significant that for his sonnets Mr. Brooke frequently chooses the
-Shakesperian form,--a form which, strangely, English poets have
-generally for at least a century discarded in favor of the Petrarchan
-model. The common feeling appears to be that the Petrarchan (a-b-b-a,
-a-b-b-a, c-d-e-c-d-e or some variation on that scheme) is musical and
-emotional; and that the Shakesperian (a-b-a-b, c-d-c-d, e-f-e-f, g-g) is
-harsh, cold, mechanical, and incapable of subtle harmonies. The exact
-reverse of this is the case. It is perhaps too much to ask the reader to
-write a sequence of a hundred sonnets in each form, as a test; but I am
-confident that after such an experience, he would agree with me. The
-Petrarchan form is capable of only one successful effect; a rising on
-the crest of a wave, whose summit is the end of the eighth line; and a
-subsidence of the wave, in the course of the last six lines. The
-Shakesperian form, on the other hand, is capable of a literally infinite
-variety of effects: no pattern is set arbitrarily in advance, but, as in
-blank verse, any pattern may be created. The first twelve lines--which
-are nothing but three quatrains--can be moulded into a contour that fits
-any shape or size of thought whatsoever; and the couplet at the end--a
-device despised by the ignorant--may be used either to clinch the
-purport of the preceding twelve lines, or to blend with them, or
-startlingly to refute them, or to serve any other end that the genius of
-the writer is capable of imagining. The mere novice will like this form
-because of its simple rhyme-scheme and its superficial ease of working;
-the experienced amateur will prefer the Petrarchan form because, while
-the more complex rhyme-scheme presents for him no difficulties, the
-basic inadequacies of his thought-structure are fairly well concealed by
-the arbitrary sonnet-structure; but the master of imagination and
-expression is likely to follow Shakespeare and the novice in preferring
-the true English form, wherein he can with perfect freedom create a
-subtly modulated movement that will answer to every sway and leap of his
-thought. Mr. Brooke, whose sense of form is keen, is one of those who
-can safely and wisely try the more interesting and more dangerous
-medium.
-
-I have thought it worth while to talk a good deal of the sonnet in
-connection with Mr. Brooke for the reason that several of his very
-finest pieces are in this form. The following is one that stands a good
-chance of being in the anthologies a hundred years from now:
-
-
- THE HILL
-
- Breathless, we flung us on the windy hill,
- Laughed in the sun, and kissed the lovely grass.
- You said, "Through glory and ecstasy we pass;
- Wind, sun, and earth remain, the birds sing still,
- When we are old, are old ..." "And when we die
- All's over that is ours; and life burns on
- Through other lovers, other lips," said I,
- "Heart of my heart, our heaven is now, is won!"
-
- "We are Earth's best, that learnt her lesson here.
- Life is our cry. We have kept the faith!" we said;
- "We shall go down with unreluctant tread
- Rose-crowned into the darkness!" ... Proud we were,
- And laughed, that had such brave, true things to say.
- --And then you suddenly cried, and turned away.
-
-Perhaps as magical as any of Mr. Brooke's work is a longer poem called
-_The Fish_,--a remarkable and original piece of fantasy that makes the
-sub-aqueous universe vivid and real to the senses of the reader, and
-opens to him a new world of imaginative experience. Even the opening
-lines will serve to indicate something of the curious trance-quality:
-
- In a cool curving world he lies
- And ripples with dark ecstasies.
- The kind luxurious lapse and steal
- Shapes all his universe to feel
- And know and be; the clinging stream
- Closes his memory, glooms his dream,
- Who lips the roots o' the shore, and glides
- Superb on unreturning tides ...
-
-In other of these poems, one is struck by Mr. Brooke's passion for
-ugliness. He loves to take the most hideous and base facts of life and
-give them a place in his work alongside the things of beauty. It would
-be hard to find anything more humorous and at the same time more
-repulsive than this:
-
-
- WAGNER
-
- Creeps in half wanton, half asleep,
- One with a fat wide hairless face.
- He likes love music that is cheap;
- Likes women in a crowded place;
- And wants to hear the noise they're making.
-
- His heavy eyelids droop half-over,
- Great pouches swing beneath his eyes.
- He listens, thinks himself the lover,
- Heaves from his stomach wheezy sighs;
- He likes to feel his heart's a-breaking.
-
- The music swells. His gross legs quiver.
- His little lips are bright with slime.
- The music swells. The women shiver,
- And all the while, in perfect time
- His pendulous stomach hangs a-shaking.
-
-Now, a passion for ugliness like this is really a revolt against
-ugliness,--not the tender-skinned æsthete's revolt, which consists in
-denying ugliness and escaping into a remote dream, but the strong man's,
-the poet's,--the revolt that is in effect a seizing of ugliness in all
-its repulsiveness and giving it a reason for existence by embodying it
-in a chosen pattern that is beautiful. By this method the poet masters
-emotion, even unpleasant emotion, making it subservient to a decorative
-design dictated by his own sense of proportion. It is thus that he is
-able to endure the world of actualities, and to find it comparable in
-interest with the world of his own thoughts. And by this process he
-saves himself from the sharpest bite of evil. For there is a curious
-consolation in transforming a spontaneous cry into a calculated work of
-art. By such a process one can give, to elements that before seemed only
-parts of a torturing chaos, their ordered places in a known scheme. One
-can impose propitious form upon one's recollections, and create a little
-world of design-relations where the poignancy of experience is lost in
-the discipline of beauty. It is for this reason that the poet must be
-considered, in spite of everything, the happiest of men.
-
-
-
-
- THE NEW LOYALTY
-
-
- GEORGE BURMAN FOSTER
-
-Back to the Old Greek for a starting-point! Two seeds, of the same
-species, though distant in space and time, go through an identical
-development. Root corresponds with root, stem with stem, flower with
-flower, fruit with fruit. Something seems to control all this change. It
-is not mere change. It is change with a plan, a purpose, a pattern.
-Hence the Greek said that there must be an unchanging type, a fixed
-"idea," a spiritual, invisible norm, the "first" and "final" cause of
-all this change, to which all concrete, particular plants of the species
-are true. Back of the visible tangible plant must be its _Eidos_, its
-eternal norm, form, idea, "species." So with everything. An elaboration
-of this conclusion gives the real unchanging, fixed eternal world back
-of, underpinning, supporting this visible changing, temporal world.
-
-Such a world-view as this was made more valuable and more imperative by
-the break-up of the traditional morals and religion of the Greek state.
-The search for the _meaning_ of life was precipitated by the
-disintegration of social sanctions and of the guarantees of custom. This
-search was voiced in the questionings of Socrates. It was made serious
-by the menacing individualism of the sophists. The outcome was that
-stability, security, confidence were found in the Platonic doctrine.
-Back of this ephemeral world is the real world of "ideas," the
-unchanging and eternal, upon which we may rest our minds and hearts amid
-all this disappointing and desperate flux.
-
-Passing by the Middle Ages, which, _mutatis mutandis_, appropriated this
-scheme, we pause over the significance of the Renaissance period. Two
-things are uppermost in one's mind and as one thinks of the tumultuous
-beginnings of modern life which characterized the fourteenth, fifteenth,
-and sixteenth centuries. For one thing, the Renaissance was the
-culmination of a long period of absorption in which men had been
-gradually working their way back, by intellectual assimilation, towards
-the beginnings of the rich tradition which Church and Empire had stored
-up. This period of absorption was that five hundred years during which
-pagan hordes that had conquered Rome were conquered by the knowledge,
-faith, custom, civilization of their victims. From the cultural
-standpoint the new nations were hungry, the larder of the old
-civilization was replete, and hence authority on one side and absorption
-on the other became natural and inevitable. Thus, the philosophical
-preconceptions, the cosmological ground-principles, the whole general
-attitude toward life's problems of the whole old world were fastened
-upon the mind of the young European peoples. _It must not be forgotten_
-that all this was _aat_ the _hatural_ achievement of the new European
-life and genius, but as foreign to it, as inherited (and at first as
-cherished) as grandfatherly ideas are in the mind of a child. If some
-day the child must shake off the old conceptions because he hears the
-call of life to go forth and achieve his own inner world, it would be
-only natural to expect that this young European giant should some day
-struggle to cast aside his intellectual inheritance and go forth to
-conquer reality for himself, in his own way, with his own weapons.
-
-Well--and this is the second matter--it was just that very thing that
-was happening in the early "teens" of our era. The young western world
-began to look at life for itself, and a curious, astonished, wild-eyed
-look it was. Europe had learned at its mother's knee to say: "The true
-world is fixed and final. Reality is static." But looking out now in
-wonderment, seeing farther than the ancient world had ever seen, the new
-world said: "Ah, no! The world is not static. The world _moves_. Things
-change."
-
-Two well-known anecdotes are told of Galileo, which, if not authentic,
-are well invented. The one tells how, in the dome at Pisa during
-worship, the litany or the sermon boring him, he observed the cathedral
-chandelier move by the wind and, studying its vibrations, discovered a
-basic law of mechanics. The profound meaning of this anecdote is,
-obviously, that God spoke to the man more effectively through the
-_self-moving_ pendulum than in the rigid, immobile litany from a rigid,
-immobile, hieratic heart; and that, if we do not understand such litany,
-and it bores us, we may still devoutly worship by meditating upon what
-we can understand.
-
-The other narrative tells how, imprisoned, tortured inwardly by a
-compulsory recantation, Galileo gathered himself together and declared:
-"_E pu se muove_" ("it moves though"). Galileo never uttered these
-words; but the history of the world has uttered them for him! Yes, it
-moves _itself_, this earth, and in its motion it knocks everything down
-that is in its way. Not the earth alone moves--all that is in the world
-is eternal motion!
-
-Man moves--in space, and time, extensively and intensively. Truth moves,
-and, moving, demolishes thrones and altars. Morality moves, making
-ancient good uncouth. Faith moves, the human heart putting into it the
-pulse beat of its life, and there is no way to stop this self moving
-Faith.
-
-Those old stories are not true to fact, but they are true to truth.
-Galileo _did_ say: "It is my opinion that the earth is very noble and
-admirable by reason of so many and so different generations and
-alterations which are incessantly made therein." And Descartes joined
-him: "The nature of things physical is much more easily conceived when
-they are beheld coming gradually into existence, than when they are only
-considered as produced at once in a finished and perfect state." Thus
-these men--and many others--voiced the changed temper that was coming
-over the world,--the transfer of interest from the permanent to the
-changing.
-
-Slowly the new attitude was adopted in many departments of knowledge,
-but the facts of biology were apparently all against its becoming a
-general philosophical movement. The species of plants and animals had
-every appearance of being fixed and final, unchangeably stamped once for
-all upon the sentient world by the Creator. Not only so, but the
-wonderful adaptation of organism to environment, of organ to organism, a
-marvelous and delicate complexity of teleological adjustment, seemed to
-testify unanswerably to the reality of fixed and final types, to a
-static underpinning for all this changing order.
-
-_Origin of_ Species! That was the bomb with which Charles Darwin
-destroyed the last stronghold of a static world-view. "Species" is the
-scholastics' translation of the Greek _Eidos_, the fixed and final type
-or idea which is first and final cause of the changing life of each
-creature. Species is a synonym and epitome of fixity and finality; it is
-the key-word of a static other-world reality. When Darwin said,
-"_Origin_ of Species," he was cramming the conflict of the ancient
-wisdom and the modern knowledge into a bursting phrase. When he said of
-species what Galileo said of the earth, _e pu se muove_, he emancipated
-once for all genetic and experimental ideas as an _organon_ of asking
-questions and looking for explanations. He lifted the biological gates
-which had kept back the flood of change from inundating the old fields
-of fixity.
-
-In sum: The world of thought is slowly, painfully making a change in its
-fundamental attitude toward reality such as is not made oftener than
-once in several millennia: One general conception of reality was
-all-controlling for 2,000 years. Then from Copernicus to Darwin many
-factors in a world-subversive change were struggling for recognition.
-Conceptions that had reigned in the philosophy of nature and of
-knowledge for 2,000 years rested in the superiority of the fixed and
-final: they rested on treating change and origin as signs of defect and
-unreality. In laying hands upon the sacred ark of absolute permanency;
-in treating forms that had been regarded as types of fixity and
-perfection as originating and passing away, the "origin of species"
-introduced a mode of thinking that in the end was bound to transform the
-logic of knowledge, and hence the treatment of all our values and
-verities and virtues.
-
-But heaven and earth and species are not all. Shall there be no
-Copernicus of the moral heavens, no Galileo of the moral earth, no
-Darwin of the moral life?
-
-Hove now Friedrich Nietzsche into sight!
-
-Loyalty has ever been the basic virtue, foundation of life and of law.
-Naturally, in the moral world, the objects to which loyalty shall be
-related will be objects that are real. But, as we have seen, in the old
-world, the real was the unchangeable, the immobile, the finished, the
-final, the absolute. To these, therefore, the old loyalty was directed
-and dedicated.
-
-Comes now Friedrich Nietzsche, a man in whose name the entire moral
-revolution of our time has found its most pregnant expression, and
-declares war upon that old loyalty, and does so in the name of a new
-culture, a new humanity. To him this loyalty is not only an empty folly;
-it is more than that--a crime against life, a weakening of human power.
-To him, not stationariness, but _self-changing_, is the life task of
-man. He feels himself akin only to him who changes. Every moment of life
-has an existence, a right, a content of its own. No present point of
-time has a right to lay claim, on its own account, to the next point.
-From what we now will, think, feel, no man may presume to require us to
-will, think, feel the same way tomorrow. And this preaching of
-Nietzsche's on the duty of change as against the old duty to change
-never has found more ears to listen and more hearts to believe than any
-other preaching of our time. This new preaching is at once most
-influential and most dangerous. But its very dangerousness is a most
-wholesome and necessary part of the modern moral view of life.
-
-Is loyalty, then, something about which there is nothing to be learned?
-Is there no counterfeit and caricature of loyalty? No mask behind which
-men hide their indolence and complacency and thoughtlessness? You meet a
-man whom you have not seen in long years, and you say to him: "Why, you
-have not changed a bit, you are precisely the same as in the old days."
-Have you praised him, necessarily? If he left you as a child, looking
-and speaking and thinking and acting like a child, ought he not to have
-changed? Does a fruit remain what it was as bud and blossom? Life is
-development--but development is a constant _self-changing_. Development
-is an incessant _dis_-loyalty to what is already there. And if man, just
-because he is man, and has a will of his own and can set himself against
-the law of development, should sell his life to the force of
-inertia--would not that be a crime against life? And yet, even such a
-deed men call loyalty! Men say that they want to be faithful to the
-heritage of the fathers. Which is often enough simply to say that they
-mean to store away their heritage where it will be kept from the world's
-light and air that would destroy it--but where, also, it can enter into
-no human intercourse, serve no life, fulfil no end of life. This loyalty
-of unchangeableness to the heritage puts the talent in a napkin, and
-there can be no increase. Men say that they mean to abide faithful to
-their faith unto death. Often enough this is only stubbornness and
-narrowness. It requires no art and no merit to exercise such
-faithfulness. All one needs to do is to close one's eyes and ears to
-what lies beyond the bounds of this faith, to forego the questionings
-and uncertainties that others must pass through,--and then to send in
-one's claim to the reward and gratitude due such loyalty! Today it is
-quite the thing at college commencements to spy out the men who are
-models of such loyalty and to say: "Look how firm and steadfast and
-rock-like they are!" But it cannot be denied that much of this
-illustrious loyalty is nothing but natural or voluntary incapacity to
-think more widely than others have taught them to think, or, for the
-matter of that, permitted them to think. Back of this bragging about
-principles which are vainly declared to be unshakable, there is
-frequently nothing but an ill-natured obstinacy whose so-called
-principles have no other basis than the self-interest to which they are
-contributary. It was this loyalty to the finished,--finished cult,
-finished belief, finished customs and practices, finished religion and
-morality,--that stoned the prophets and crucified Jesus. It was this
-kind of loyalty that the mediaeval church imposed upon the "Faithful,"
-imprisoning the conscience therein for time and for eternity. Bound by
-an oath of loyalty, the priest renounced the world; the monk and nun
-under monastic vows dedicated their lives to the church, their services
-to "heaven." And hence it marked an epoch when Luther called their
-loyalty a sin, and went forth into the world, the home, the vocation,
-the business, breaking the vows of priest and cloister. Was such
-disloyalty to a sacred obligation loyalty in the sixteenth century, and
-shall it be blasphemy in the twentieth? Is it not rather a blasphemy to
-preach to men a loyalty which obligates them to forego the use of their
-best and noblest powers, which condemns them to spiritual standstill in
-the eternal progressive movement of life?
-
-Take some illustrations which will test insight and courage. There is
-the constitution of the United States. Shall we assume toward it the
-loyalty of fixedness and finality, or the loyalty of change? No man of
-veneration and equipoise would favor capricious or precipitate or
-superfluous change in so noble a document. But, for all that, the
-experience of life made the constitution for life's sake, and the maker
-is more than the made. If our national life pass--as pass it has--into
-new seas and under new stars, where life needs a change of the
-constitution, then the principle which prompted the people to frame the
-constitution in the first place requires them to change it to meet the
-new needs of our growing and changing national life. The superficial
-loyalty to the changeless letter must yield to the profound loyalty to
-the ever-changing spirit. The constitution is for the sake of the
-people, not the people for the sake of the constitution. They, rather
-than it, are sacred.
-
-Similarly, there is the modern problem of marriage, the family, and the
-home. Shall ours be the old loyalty that holds the customs of the past
-inviolable, marriage indissoluble, the inherited patterns of home and
-family unchangeable--the loyalty of fixedness and finishedness; or shall
-it be the loyalty of change in all these matters to meet the changing
-needs and situations of our burdened and bewildered modernity? Again, no
-man of sanctity and sanity and stability of soul can favor any arbitrary
-radicalism that is subversive of time-honored institutions _for no
-better reason_ than a fleeting fancy, or the passing of the romance of
-the honeymoon, or raw self-will, or an unanticipated burden or hardship.
-But, for all that, the marriage institution, like all others, is for the
-sake of man and not man for the sake of the institution. It was _life_
-that originated our domestic ideas and customs and conventions and
-codes; and if ever life, in the interest of its well-being and progress,
-requires changes suited to new needs and new days, then the "new
-loyalty" to life that ever changes must replace the old loyalty to codes
-that never change. Codes, too, are for the sake of life, not life for
-the sake of codes. No loyalty to the letter that means disloyalty to the
-spirit.
-
-And there is the everlasting problem of education. Education in the past
-had for its subject matter symbols--reading, writing, arithmetic,
-grammar, rhetoric, logic, and the like. The new education has for its
-subject matter realities--nature and history. The old education taught
-topics or subjects; the new education teaches boys and girls. According
-to the old education, knowledge precedes action; according to the new
-education, action precedes knowledge. In the old education things were
-done to the pupils; in the new education the pupils do things.
-
-The old school teacher was a "star and dwelt apart"--that is, his
-aloofness and superiority were indispensable. He taught from above. The
-new school teacher is down among the students, a democrat of democrats.
-The old school teacher communicated knowledge from without; the new
-school teacher develops interest from within. The old education was
-atomistic, the new organic. The old education was a donation to the
-pupils, the new is an achievement by them. The old education proceeded
-on the assumption that man is primarily intellect; the new that he is
-primarily will. The old education preceded life and fitted for it; the
-new education is a part of life itself.
-
-It is a great change. According to the old theory, there was perfection
-to start with, perfection at the top. All that we needed was to pipe it
-down through aqueducts so well constructed that nothing that was in
-could get out, nothing that was without could get in; and thus--thus
-only--would the vain and empty world and life be filled with value and
-verity and virtue--donation on the one side, reception on the other.
-
-But the time came when men asked: if there is perfection to start with,
-why start? Why paint the lily? And if there is perfection to start with,
-how does there come to be imperfection? How can imperfection come from
-perfection? Ugly questions, these! Soon the world was turned upside
-down.
-
-The new theory holds that matters began very humbly and struggled and
-fought their way slowly upward. Ascent from below, not descent from
-above. No values or verities or virtues donated, all achieved. Education
-an evolution, not a communication.
-
-Some business men favor the old education. Their world is one of
-mechanism and authority. They think that they do not need men with
-initiative, spontaneity, freedom. That is their prerogative, as it was
-of the king of old. They need the mechanical, the automatic, the
-impersonal in man. This fits into their world. This is what the old
-education stands for. The new education unfolds and matures
-personalities. Personalities make good masters but poor servants.
-
-Business men as a class are perhaps our best men. But the very
-conditions of business economy and certainty are the impersonal, the
-unfree, the mechanical. So business has warped the judgment of some good
-men and led them astray on the most fundamental problem in the history
-of the race.
-
-Were it not multiplying illustrations, the same point might be urged as
-to politics. Does not party loyalty often mean personal servility? As a
-matter of fact what is loyalty in one situation, or one age, may be
-simple cowardice or abjectness in another.
-
-The upshot is that the modern man has to endure the reproach of not
-thinking and feeling and judging and acting as men formerly did--the
-reproach of perfidy toward the past, its solutions and its sanctities.
-In consequence, it would not be a bad idea for him to cultivate respect
-for the past, gratitude for its achievements, appreciation for its
-unfinished tasks. Still, he should learn to accept the reproach as
-praise,--recognition that, though problems remain the same, solutions
-change; though sanctity abide, the objects which are sacred change.
-_Evolutionism no longer recognizes any fact as sacred._ Man is inwardly
-working on ever farther, ever overcoming the old and conquering ever the
-new--this must also be recognized.
-
-It is said that we ought to love the old, the finished. But is love
-blind? Does it consist in advocating the point of view of one's friend,
-not because it seems true, but just because love requires it? Is loyalty
-of love the faculty of adaptation with which we remodel ourselves after
-the image of another? Is one disloyal in love if one affirm one's self
-against another, or if another affirm himself against one? Surely
-fidelity of friendship, even of marriage, ought not to be the grave of
-one's own being. Surely loyalty should be the life and not the death of
-one's self! Surely we must all see with our own eyes, hear with our own
-ears, judge with our own judgments, love with our own hearts, for the
-quite plain reason that we have no others with which we can do these
-things.
-
-And so, if we take up this great subject in a large way, as Nietzsche
-has done, we see that we have all broken with the old loyalty, and that
-the consummation of this breach has been life and blessing to us.
-We moderns all somehow live in a disloyalty which we have
-committed--imputed to us as transgression, viewed by us as our strength
-and pride. We have all become unfaithful,--as children to our parents,
-as pupils to our teachers, as disciples to our masters. We felt
-ourselves bound to them; we loosed ourselves from them. The paths they
-walked we have forsaken. In the strange untrodden land whither our
-vagrant feet have wandered, we "came to ourselves" in declaring
-disobedience to the laws of tradition, in breaking loyalty to the rules
-of the schools. It is precisely on this account that once again we have
-won spiritual life, a living art and science, a living religion and
-morality. We have snapped the fetters fastened upon us in the name of
-the old loyalty, and all that is great and fruitful and constructive in
-the life of the modern spirit is a monument of the disloyalty which its
-creators have built thereto. Nothing is gained any longer by our
-screening ourselves behind this word loyalty, and making believe that we
-shall not be found out! We owe it to ourselves and we owe it to the
-world to confess frankly that we have done with the old loyalty to the
-unchangeable and the finished, for that is to be loyal to an unreality,
-_since there is no such thing_. Even God, if he be the living God,
-cannot be the same yesterday, today, and forever. But we owe it even
-more to ourselves and to the world to strive for a clear position in
-reference to this question which is so profoundly agitating our entire
-moral world today. We may not abandon the field to those who would
-demolish the temple of the old goddess simply that they may celebrate
-upon its ruins the orgies of their caprice and inconstancy and
-characterlessness. If ever there was a doctrine whose right is easily
-turned into a wrong, whose truth into an error, whose blessing into a
-curse, it is this Nietzschean doctrine of the right and the duty of
-ceaseless change, of self-dependence, by which we are redeemed from
-slavery to the past. If the old loyalty--loyalty to the past--no longer
-holds men, wherewith shall they be held? Shall they be like the
-weathervane blown hither and thither by every wind of doctrine, or like
-the rudderless ship driven aimless and planless over the high seas by
-the midnight hurricane? Better a thousand times be tethered to the old
-loyalty than to be doomed to such a life of levity and poiselessness and
-flightiness.
-
-But the new loyalty which we seek, without which we go forward into no
-future, should it not be more stable and enduring and loyal than the
-old? If a moment releases itself from what to it is past, and validates
-its right as a self-dependent life to its predecessor, a birth has
-transpired in man, and birth means pain. Without such pain, man has
-changed his situation, but not himself. A new color has come upon the
-motly manifoldness of his life--_he_ has remained the same. Trees do not
-have their roots in the air. Weaklings cannot make the real change--it
-needs a strength that they do not have. The strength to change
-really--only he has this who bears the new loyalty in his own bosom;
-loyalty not to his opinion, not to his learning and heritage, but
-loyalty to his _growth_, to the great eternal goal of life, to the great
-sacred task which he has yet to fulfil in life.
-
-Loyal to ourself? Would that it might be so! But the self that we would
-at first be loyal to is not our self at all. It is foreign wares, loaded
-upon us,--first even in the nursery, slyly slipped subsequently upon our
-shoulders,--foreign words, foreign worths! Loyalty to what satiates, not
-the better loyalty to our hunger! We begin to live only when we live in
-our hunger; our hunger is we ourselves. It is a good satiety only if a
-new hunger comes from it. Loyalty to our self--this is to keep our life
-alive in us--a young glad life, that never grows old, because the old is
-ever transmuted into a new. This loyalty to ourself,--it is to expel
-from every truth its error, from every boundary its limit which blocks
-the vision into the wide world, the blue sky, and the distant sea.
-
-Loyalty to men? Would that it might be so! But such loyalty costs so
-much trouble and toil. For the faithfulness that is genuine and living,
-there is no law, no binding _I must_, only a glorious _I will_. One day
-we shall have done with the loyalty which means master and servant,
-leader and led--the loyalty of the dog that is loyalest to him who feeds
-him best or beats him hardest. One day we shall understand what the
-loyalty of man means--this new loyalty toward man, in which souls meet
-and chime and work together, and live in each other, yet each remains
-itself and true to itself.
-
-So, then, the law of change and of growth is the law of the new loyalty,
-as the law of fixedness and finishedness and finality was of the old. It
-is the duty of such new loyalty to protect itself against the deadening
-force of habit and of petrifaction, to guard itself against any
-obedience by which it would become disloyal to itself. Such loyalty is
-too honorable to humor inertia and laziness under its banner, too
-courageous to conceal cowardice behind a slave's patience.
-
-But thought on our theme is usually lifted up to where the sky keeps
-company with the granite and the grass, to a religious elevation. Nor do
-we need stop short here. Ultimately the new loyalty is loyalty to God,
-the new God, of whom something must be said later. The God in whom all
-fulness dwells summons us to ever new truths, and reveals underground
-wells of living water throwing its spray aloft on life's ferns and
-flowers. To be loyal to him is never to sunder ourselves from his
-fulness and freshness, but to co-work with him who is forever making all
-things new.
-
-And now I think we are at the end. The result? It is needless to state
-it, but I would not shrink from the thankless task. In a word, then, the
-new loyalty--in harmony with the whole great changed view of the world
-and of life--is loyalty to change and becoming rather than to
-finishedness and finality; to the future rather than to the past; to
-ideals rather than to conventions; to freedom rather than to authority;
-to personality rather than to institution; to character rather than to
-respectability; to our hunger rather than to our satiety; to the God
-that is to be rather than to the God that is. Thus the loyalty abides,
-but the objects of loyalty change and pass.
-
-
-
-
- THE MILLINER
-
-
- SADE IVERSON
-
- All the day long I have been sitting in my shop
- Sewing straw on hat-shapes according to the fashion,
- Putting lace and ribbon on according to the fashion,
- Setting out the faces of customers according to fashion.
- Whatever they asked for I tried to give them;
- Over their worldly faces I put mimic flowers
- From out my silk and velvet garden; I bade Spring come
- To those who had seen Autumn; I coaxed faded eyes
- To look bright and hard brows to soften.
-
- Not once, while they were looking in the glass,
- Did I peep over their shoulders to see myself.
- It would have been quite unavailing for me,
- Who have grown grey in service of other women,
- To have used myself as any sort of a model.
- Had I looked in the mirror I should have seen
- Only a bleached face, long housed from sunshine,
- A mouth quick with forced smiles, eyes greyly stagnant,
- And over all, like a night fog creeping,
- Something chill and obscuring and dead--
- The miasmatic mist of the soul of the lonely.
-
- When night comes and the buyers are gone their ways,
- I go into the little room behind my shop.
- It is my home--my silent and lonely home;
- But it has fire, it has food; there is a bed;
- Pictures are on the walls, showing the faces
- I kissed in girlhood. I am myself here;
- All my forced smiles are laid away with the moline
- And the ribbon and roses. I may do as I please.
- If I beat with my fists on the table, no one hears;
- If I lie in my bed, staring, staring,
- No one can know; I shall not suffer the pity
- Of those who, passing, see my light edge the grey curtain.
-
- One night, long ago, merely for madness
- I stripped myself like a dancing girl;
- I draped myself with rose-hued silks
- And set a crimson feather in my hair.
- There were twists of gold lace about my arms
- And a girdle of gold about my waist.
- I danced before the mirror till I dropped!
- (Outside I could hear the rain falling
- And the wind crept in beneath my door
- Along my worn carpet.)
-
- I folded my finery
- And prayed as if kneeling beside my mother.
- Whether there was listening I cannot say.
- There was praying! There was praying!
- Never again shall I dance before the mirror
- Bedizened like a dancing girl--never, my mother!
-
- I have a low voice and quiet movements,
- And early and late I study to please.
- As long as I live I shall be adorning other women,
- I shall be decking them for their lovers
- And sending them upon women's adventures.
- But none of them shall see behind this curtain
- Where I have my little home, where I weep
- When I please, and beat upon the table with my fists.
-
-
-
-
- "NUR WER DIE SEHNSUCHT KENNT"
-
-
- MARGARET C. ANDERSON
-
-In one of Chicago's big department stores of the cheaper type you
-may--provided you're something of a poet--walk straight into the heart
-of a musical adventure. It is that amazing, resentful, and very
-satisfying adventure of discovering genius at work, under the by no
-means unique condition of being unrecognized.
-
-You go to one of the upper floors where the big lunch-room is. You find
-a table near a platform in the center, on which sit four musicians--a
-pianist, a 'cellist, a clarinet_ist_ (if there is such a thing), and a
-second violinist. You expect the usual clamor....
-
-Suddenly you notice a fifth figure who has been sitting quietly in the
-background. She comes forward with a violin in her hand, and stands
-ready to play. There is something still about her--that quality of
-stillness which is invariably the first thing you notice in any dynamic.
-She seems not scornful of her surroundings, but quite indifferent to
-them; not arrogant, but sure of power; not timid, and yet incredibly
-soft and shy and serious. She is plainly foreign; she is German, looks
-French, and plays like a Viennese. Or, to be exact, she merges the
-German "heaviness" with the Viennese gay-sadness, and the result is a
-sensuousness that is both deep and clear, with the haunting wail that
-distinguishes all the music which comes from Vienna. She looks almost
-like a little girl; but you would notice her any place because of that
-stillness and the haunting appeal that always attaches to a certain type
-of eyes and mouth--the kind which seem to say: "I will make music for
-you; I will take you to a new world. I will do it because I can dream
-intensely."
-
-She begins to play, and you understand why you watched her. The depth of
-it startles you at first--it is so big, so moving, so almost uncanny
-coming from such a small person, whose hands seem scarcely large enough
-to hold a violin. It is playing of the Mischa Elman type, without his
-emotional extravagances and with something that is more soul-shaking. If
-I were an Imagist I could find the right word; but this music eludes me.
-It is sure and simple. It grips you till you don't know whether you are
-listening to music or to the urge of some hidden inner self. It is a
-divine thing.
-
-In the midst of it the waitresses rush back and forth, the patrons eat
-their food with interest, only pausing to applaud when some tawdry
-vaudevillian sings a particularly vulgar song. The dishes clang, some
-one upsets a tray with a great crash, and at intervals there is a tango
-outrage by a couple who know nothing about dancing. Underneath it all
-the violin throbs its deep accompaniment.
-
-I wish I could make a poem of it. I have thought of taking my poet
-friends there and having the thing done. But almost without exception
-the poets I know don't care for music essentially; though why a mind
-keyed to the tone qualities of words should be so tone-deaf in another
-medium has always been a mystery to me. And what a poet's opportunity
-here: "the boom and squeal," and out of it music that is as sacred as an
-organ meditation and as passionate as a Russian slave song!
-
-However, generalizations will not serve to give any musician's special
-quality, and this one is so emphatically individual as to make
-description easy. To begin with, she was concertising in Europe as a
-wonder-child at the age of six. For a number of years her playing
-brought forth a chorus of superlatives from the critics: "her full
-blooming tone, her great taste in phrasing, economic use of the bow,
-glowing passion of interpretation; her fiery temperament, remarkable
-earnestness and will power, the soul, life, and emotion in her
-presentations." The verdict of a "a veritable artist soul" appeared to
-be unanimous; and one man summed up with admirable insight and
-simplicity: "Her chief excellence is in this: that she seeks her main
-task to be an artist in the real and earnest sense of the word, and
-whosoever comes to hear music does not go empty from her."
-
-Friedrich Spielhagen wrote a sonnet to her, of which I have a careful,
-but metrically inadequate, translation:
-
- Thou standst before us, a picture of wondrous charm;
- The little violin thou holdst, in tenderess,
- Half maidenly, half like a child in dress
- Hast soared away from Heaven's angel-farm
- Toward where thy large mild eye is dreaming.
-
-And he ended it with these lines:
-
- Thou movest thy bow;
- No sounds are these of nicely movéd strings,
- No, No! Thy own sweet soul rings out and sings
- The melodies that have with you come
- From yon high wide-sphered home,
- To where thy longing soul swings upward now.
-
-Our apologies to Mr. Spielhagen for that more than atrocious twelfth
-line and for the other deficiencies! But the last line is particularly
-keen in its photography. It has the spirit of her.
-
-After much touring in Europe she came to this country and played under
-the same promising conditions. The critics predicted that if she should
-decide to stay here she would probably out-rival our own few noted women
-violinists. And then came a period of sorrow, bereavement, hardship, and
-illness--and in the meantime the problem of living. That problem becomes
-a real one when an artist loves life just a bit more than her art and
-refuses to make that spiritual compromise which life tries to wrest from
-one in the hard places. One must live, and it takes money to do it
-rather than art. The romantic notion that all genius has to do is to
-stand up and make itself heard is one of the silliest notions the great
-public suffers from. Only the hundredth person recognizes genius when it
-proclaims itself; the rest are as blind as this department-store
-audience until the sign-posts have been put up, with letters large
-enough to be easily read. Also, the amount of machinery and money
-involved in the arrangement of concert engagements would surprise the
-public as much as the true stories of what it costs the "wealthy patron"
-to get his artist started toward recognition.
-
-And so this particular genius will continue for a while to cast her
-pearls in a lunch-room, and a few of the discerning will find her out
-and thank their stars that they may hear such beauty at the small cost
-of a bad club sandwich and a worse cup of coffee.
-
-If you go there you will be haunted by music for days afterward. I say
-"haunted" because that is the only word to describe your feeling of
-pursuit by melody. And I think I have discovered the reason for it. A
-poet once said that the only permanent emotion we human beings are
-capable of is--not love, as we like to imagine--but _longing_. And that
-is what this music says to you. It is the very essence of longing--the
-eternal seeking, the rapturous satisfaction, the disappointment, and the
-renewed quest. I have never heard such a quality of _sehnsucht_ in any
-music; it is almost more than you can bear. Of course, in these
-surroundings, you must listen to the complete gamut of new popular
-songs; but at intervals, when the managerial demand for "noise" can be
-ignored for a moment, you will be rewarded by the Thais _Meditation_ or
-a Schutt waltz or that exquisite Saint-Saens poem called _The Swan_--or
-even a Tschaikowsky song. Where does the tone come from, you keep
-wondering? Not from a wooden instrument, not from small human fingers,
-surely. It is tone of such richness and depth that you sometimes have
-the illusion of each note being sung twice. "It transcends music to me
-entirely and becomes a matter of life--or of soul," said a critic who
-listened with me the other day.
-
-Through it all the artist's earnest face is still and unchanging. That
-is part of the fascination--the contrast of that tumultuous singing and
-the thoughtful, dreaming face that seems to control it all. "My violin
-belongs to me--yes," she says, "but that is such a cold word. It is part
-of my body. I feel it is growing on me just like my arms and hands. I
-could not live without it." If you watch her closely you will decide
-that her playing is the result of an extraordinary sensitiveness to
-life. If you know her, as I do, you will expand that judgment to this
-one: an extraordinary strength about life; for she is both deep and
-strong--qualities that are supposed to be inseparable, but which are so
-rarely found together that their combination means--a great spirit.
-
- I am afraid I am too much of a musician not to be a romanticist.
- With out music life to me would be a mistake.--_Nietzsche to
- Brandes, 1888._
-
- * * * * *
-
- All restlessness, misery, all crime, is the result of the
- betrayal of one's inner life.--_Will Lexington Comfort in
- "Midstream."_
-
-
-
-
- EDITORIALS
-
-
- Our New Poet
-
-Charles Ashleigh, who makes his appearance in this issue, was born in
-London twenty-five years ago. He was educated in England, Switzerland,
-and Germany, and speaks French, German, and Spanish, "as well as two or
-three varieties of English and American slang." He has wandered in
-Europe, South America and this country, traveling on foot through
-Argentine, Chile, and Peru, and in the States as a hobo. He has been
-sailor, newspaper man, tramp, actor, farm hand, railroad clerk,
-interpreter, and a few other things. He has written verse, short
-stories, social studies, literary criticism, and lectured on his travels
-as well as on sociological, literary, and dramatic subjects. Quite
-unlike those poets who insist that they have no opinions on any
-subject--that they simply photograph life--Mr. Ashleigh states his creed
-in this way: "I am interested in Labor, literature, and many other
-aspects and angles of Life. Men and deeds are to me of primary
-importance and books secondary." We look for big things from this young
-man.
-
-
- Two Important Books
-
-Mary Austin has written a study of marriage which she calls _Love and
-the Soul Maker_. It appears to be about as big a thing on the subject as
-any American woman has done. Will Lexington Comfort has written an
-autobiographical novel which he calls _Midstream_. It tells the truth
-about a man's life, and is also a big thing. Both will be reviewed in
-the August issue.
-
-
- The Congo
-
-Nicholas Vachel Lindsay's new poem, _The Congo_, is to appear in _The
-Metropolitan_ for August. Mr. Lindsay's opinion is that the best effect
-will be got by reading it aloud.
-
-
- The Basis for a New Painting
-
-Truly these Imagists are enchanting! The following examples are selected
-from the anthology published by _The Glebe_:
-
-
- Fan-Piece for Her Imperial Lord
-
- O fan of white silk,
- clear as frost on the grass-blade,
- You also are laid aside.
-
- Ezra Pound.
-
-
- In A Garden
-
- Gushing from the mouths of stone men
- To spread at ease under the sky
- In granite-lipped basins,
- Where iris dabble their feet
- And rustle to a passing wind,
- The water fills the garden with its rushing,
- In the midst of the quiet of close-clipped lawns.
-
- Damp smell the ferns in tunnels of stone,
- Where trickle and splash the fountains,
- Marble fountains, yellowed with much water.
-
- Splashing down moss-tarnished steps
- It falls, the water;
- And the air is throbbing with it;
- With its gurgling and running;
- With its leaping, and deep, cool murmur.
-
- And I wished for night and you.
- I wanted to see you in the swimming-pool,
- White and shining in the silver-flecked water.
- While the moon rode over the garden
- High in the arch of night,
- And the scent of the lilacs was heavy with stillness.
-
- Night and the water, and you in your whiteness, bathing!
-
- Amy Lowell.
-
-
- Au Vieux Jardin
-
- I have sat here happy in the gardens,
- Watching the still pool and the reeds
- And the dark clouds
- Which the wind of the upper air
- Tore like the green leafy bough
- Of the divers-hued trees of late summer;
- But though I greatly delight
- In these and the water lilies,
- That which sets me nighest to weeping
- Is the rose and white colour of the smooth flag-stones,
- And the pale yellow grasses
- Among them.
-
- Richard Aldington.
-
-
- Ts'ai Chi'h
-
- The petals fall in the fountain,
- the orange coloured rose-leaves,
- Their ochre clings to the stone.
-
- Ezra Pound.
-
-
- Liu Ch'e
-
- The rustling of the silk is discontinued,
- Dust drifts over the courtyard,
- There is no sound of footfall, and the leaves
- Scurry into heaps and lie still,
- And she the rejoicer of the heart is beneath them.
-
- A wet leaf that clings to the threshold.
-
- Ezra Pound.
-
-
-
-
- NEW YORK LETTER
-
-
- GEORGE SOULE
-
-
- GEORGE BRANDES--A HASTY IMPRESSION
-
-The man who fought the big battle for Ibsen and Nietzsche should have
-filled Madison Square Garden; as it was, the little Comedy Theatre
-wasn't large enough to hold the audience, although Scandinavian
-patriotism accounted for a good deal of it. He came on the stage with
-Brander Matthews, the apotheosis of the academic, and the contrast was
-striking. Matthews was tall, dull, professional. Brandes, with his keen
-face, alert eyes, and shock of grayish hair, was possibly the most fully
-alive person in the room. He radiated interest--human connection with
-anything vital.
-
-We were all a little sorry his subject was Shakespeare; we wanted to
-hear of something modern. And when the first part of the lecture was
-read, couched in scholarly but terse English, we felt cheated. It was
-good criticism, and informing, but it wasn't the sort of thing we had
-expected from Brandes. Suddenly a spark shot out. (The quotation is from
-memory):
-
- We cannot emphasize too strongly the fact that all works of
- literature which have a real effect on mankind, all works which
- endure hundreds of years, find their inspiration not in books,
- but in life.
-
-The words were pronounced with excited intensity. Soon came another:
-
- We used to define the genius as the man who interprets his age;
- now we know that the genius is the man who, working against his
- age, creates new times.
-
-Dr. Brandes broke into a lively sally at the Baconians. He spoke of
-Shakespeare's errors in scholarship. These Bacon would surely have
-avoided, but of Shakespeare's great lines Bacon could not possibly have
-written one. He ended that section with something like this:
-
- The Baconian theory was founded by the uneducated, it was
- developed by the half-educated, and it is now held solely by
- idiots.
-
-The audience was immensely pleased at his sharp fire.
-
-Dr. Brandes' epigrams sometimes sound as if he substituted wit for
-wisdom. But that is because the epigrams stick and are repeated. His
-method is to open with an epigram to catch the attention, to proceed
-with a line of sound argument, and at the end to finish superbly with a
-sentence that contains his conclusions and impales his opponent at the
-same time.
-
-With Frank Harris, Dr. Brandes was no more gentle. By parallel quotation
-Harris was made to appear ridiculous. Brandes showed that whatever in
-his writings is sound has been said before. This was the end of the
-lecture:
-
- Mr. Harris says that it is possible to admire Shakespeare, but
- that it is impossible to worship him. Ladies and gentlemen, I do
- the impossible.
-
-Afterwards came a supper of the Scandinavian Society, at which the guest
-of honor made a speech that looked brilliant and was lively even as a
-piece of pantomime--but it was in Danish. Dr. Brandes was beaming and
-unaffectedly cordial with everybody. He smilingly interrupted one of the
-pompous addresses in his honor to correct a quotation from Goethe. He
-proposed a toast to the charming young lady who acted as his American
-manager, and said that the success of his tour was due entirely to her.
-Later a consul made a highly complimentary, but exceedingly tedious,
-speech. Dr. Brandes fidgeted until he could stand it no longer, then he
-quickly got up, took his champagne glass, ran over to the orator and
-slapped him on the shoulder, saying, "You are a very nice man." The rest
-was drowned in the toast.
-
-
- A NEW LITERATURE
-
-The other day an illustrator saw a hand-mirror in a publisher's office.
-He put the mirror against a book cover and held it at arm's length.
-"There," he said, "is the ideal jacket for a novel. Every woman likes to
-imagine herself the heroine of the book she is reading." But the
-publisher was wiser. "You are half right," he answered. "But she wants
-to be a Gibson heroine. To see her own face, without flattery, would
-startle her into disapproval of the book."
-
-A recent symposium in _The Sun_ bore the impressive title, _The
-Sentimentalization of Woman in American Fiction_. All the authors were
-agreed that realism doesn't go because of the desire of the reader to be
-flattered. If she isn't, the novel is "unpleasant," "depressing." You
-may paint your villainess black, but, as your reader will take her for
-an enemy, you must see that she is properly punished. But if your
-heroine does anything unconventional, it must be of the kind that your
-reader enjoys by imagination, though she wouldn't have the courage to do
-it. Only you must not make the thrills so strong as to shock the reader
-into self-consciousness and self-disapproval. Georg Brandes said that
-our novels are written by old maids for old maids. If we would only put
-into our literature the same genius and daring that we put into our
-skyscrapers!
-
-The thing none of the authors seemed to see is that it is futile to stop
-at blaming the readers. Of course the great public is comparatively
-stupid. It is everywhere, it always has been and always will be. What is
-a leader if he is not someone in advance of the others? And the
-essential act for a leader is to lead. He can't get a following until he
-does that. Only a coward stays behind and flatters the crowd because he
-is afraid they will not come after him. Perhaps they won't follow his
-particular route. But if he goes on fearlessly he has done the best that
-is in him, anyway. The chances are that if he has a sincere conviction
-and marches far enough in one direction they will at least struggle
-along after a while. They may even follow in hordes. What we need first
-is not a more intelligent public, but courageous writers.
-
-Naturally the matter is not simple. Your artist has to be fed and
-clothed. If he is creating a new medium--as did Wagner--he even needs
-large resources to produce his art. The solution used to be the wealthy
-patron. The petty monarch maintained a musician or a painter to enhance
-the glory of his court. The noble supported a writer from personal
-pride. The monastery afforded a refuge for the unworldly creator. It
-would be difficult to find a great artist before the last century who
-did not have some such subsidy, unless he had means of his own.
-
-Since then democracy has permeated the world. Fast presses, advertising,
-and royalties have been invented. Now the public is the writer's patron.
-Music is often subsidized, to be sure, and painters can still sell their
-canvases to the wealthy. But the earnings of the writer are in strict
-proportion to the number of copies of his books that can be sold.
-
-There is a distinct advantage in this situation. The virtue of democracy
-is not the government of the majority, but the opportunity of the
-minority. The minority becomes, not a defensive close corporation, but a
-body of fighting visionaries. The emphasis is placed on growth. The
-eternal impulse of the minority to turn itself into a majority prevents
-a static age. The strongest lead, instead of the highly born.
-
-So it must be with our writers. Difficulty insures heroes. We can
-discount at once the truckling commercial writers. But the others must
-be deeply sincere and strong in order to exist at all. There is little
-room for the dilletante. Let our young people who have something to say
-recognize the situation. They must dedicate themselves to a probable
-poverty. They must gird their loins and sharpen their weapons. They must
-be prepared to wait years, if need be, even for recognition. Every
-energy must be devoted to saying as well as may be the thing that is in
-them. And so, hoping nothing, fearing nothing, living simply, supporting
-themselves as best they may, but always doing the thing that is worth
-while for its own sake, they may produce a literature that has not been
-equalled since the world began.
-
-Others of us can share in this glorious undertaking. Discerning critics
-must sift the true from the false. They must lay aside the twin
-snobberies of praising or blaming a work because of its popularity. They
-must fight eternally for the sincere. They must point out directions,
-they must prize meanings above methods. They must give a nucleus to the
-intelligent reading public and constantly augment it. They must bear
-sturdy witness to the fact that art is not an amusement for idle
-moments, but the consciousness of the race. They must show its relation
-to life as well as to living. They must be predisposed in favor of no
-work on account of its nationality, school or tendency. Just as Brandes
-enlarged the conception of literature by showing it as a world
-phenomenon, they must rid it of petty divisions in the realm of thought.
-No more should such a statement as "Galsworthy is a poet rather than a
-novelist" be allowed to pass as criticism. A novelist may be a poet or a
-philosopher or a psychologist or a historian or a sociologist. Any of
-these may combine the intrinsic abilities of any or all of the others.
-He is greater for doing so. The only test of his work is its
-effectiveness. A work of art is an organism, the highest product of
-nature, infinitely more real, more beautiful, more potent, than any
-flower. Only when we see it as such, and not as a collection of petals
-and stamens, or as a member of a species, shall we know it.
-
-The whole problem of creating a literature, as of doing anything else,
-is one of direction and power. If we blame someone else for our
-deficiencies, if we stand aloof, if we bow to circumstances and are
-afraid to pay for what we want, we shall of course do nothing. And we
-shall not enjoy ourselves or the world much either. But if we fix on a
-goal that is worth a life, and set out for it with the joyous spirit of
-adventurers, risking everything, enduring everything, sleeping under the
-stars, staying hard and keen, we shall command the fates. What more
-could we ask of the world?
-
-
-
-
- DOSTOEVSKY'S NOVELS
-
-
- MAURICE LAZAR
-
- _The Idiot_, _The Brothers Karamazov_, _Crime and Punishment_, etc.,
- translated by Constance Garnett. [The Macmillan Company, New
- York.]
-
- It's not a matter of intellect or logic, it's loving (life) with
- one's inside, with one's stomach....
-
- --Ivan Karamazov.
-
-Chiefly concerned with the fester of civilization, literature, music,
-painting, all the modern forms of individual expression are elliptical
-in the sense that the old æsthetic values of emotional beauty seem to
-have become nullified, or else congealed, in the artist's direct
-application of his instrument to the repudiation of fixed social values
-or moralities; to the expansion of life-interests. We today want more
-than beauty of external form; we want the beauty of depth!
-
-The true artist is such primarily because of his engrossing appetite for
-life, because (as Flaubert said) of the chaos in his soul. And although
-Flaubert kept on chiseling words around the lives of men and women
-totally devoid of inspirating individuality, his dictum has been nobly
-exemplified in the life and writings of Fyodor Dostoevsky, that
-great-hearted epileptic Russian of whose psychological powers Nietzsche
-admittedly availed himself.
-
-Tolstoy was reported to have said, in conversation with a writer for _Le
-Temps_, "A woman who has never suffered pain is a beast." He could have
-stretched the allegation to include the other sex, if only by way of
-illusion to that intense spiritual quality in modern Russian
-literature--a literature that has never been (notably) an off-shoot of,
-as much as a protest against, the retrogressive structures of its
-respective periods.
-
-This spiritual, or psychical, concern with the individual's adjustment
-to the functioning of life has been revealed to highest degree in
-Dostoevsky's novels. It is also manifest in the analytical mould assumed
-by the creative arts of our time.
-
-While Dostoevsky's personality is separably bound up with his work,
-profitable appreciation of the latter can be considerably amplified with
-knowledge of the important facts of his life and the conditions with
-which he struggled. I will record the more essential facts of his life
-as I have gathered them, and try to explain the causes that have made
-for the distinction in his work from that of all other writers.
-
-He was born in a charity-hospital in Moscow, in 1821. His father was an
-army-surgeon, his mother a store-keeper's daughter. I like to think that
-he derived his expressive powers, or rather the nebulæ out of which they
-subsequently developed, from his mother, perhaps partly because of my
-theory that men of acute genius ultimately do transcend the difference
-of sex in the quality of their personalities as well as in that of their
-work.
-
-Like most imaginative youths who come into contact with fine art,
-Dostoevsky was stimulated to literary expression by his study of
-classical and contemporaneous European literature. He had lived
-twenty-three years when he graduated from a St. Petersburg school of
-military engineering. His first novel, _Poor Folk_, was published three
-years later, and served to focus upon him the attention of the critics.
-
-In 1849 Dostoevsky was arrested, with members of a radical organization,
-on governmental charges of sedition. The terrible suffering he sustained
-while awaiting his execution (he was first confined in prison for eight
-months) have been set forth in striking passages of his novels, _The
-Idiot_ and _Letters from a Dead House_. The sentence of death was
-finally, and very unexpectedly, commuted to one of imprisonment in
-Siberia for four years. At the expiration of this period he served
-perforce as a private soldier in the Russian army for three more years.
-When he was permitted to return to St. Petersburg he was accompanied by
-his first wife, whom he had loved and married while in exile.
-
-Dostoevsky's interminable suffering from epileptic seizures (it has been
-suggested that these fits originated in a beating administered to him by
-his father when Fyodor was a boy); his poverty, and the constant
-accumulation of debt; the terrific haste with which he found it
-necessary to write his most profound books--all have made it natural to
-him, in dwelling upon any physiological aspect of his characters, to be
-as unconvincing as the eremite attempting an analysis of conditions of
-sex life.
-
-In short, Dostoevsky's nervous disorders pervaded his "sensual sense" of
-beauty--of beauty in all its manifestations. At the same time it must be
-remarked that this negation of physical responsiveness surely
-intensified the acuteness of his mental vision, which was otherwise
-refined emotionally by the results of his imprisonment and life-long
-hardships. And this also explains why Dostoevsky's novels are lacking so
-singularly in the tingle of the physical contact of his characters; why
-the suffering of his men and women move us so profoundly; why his
-writings are so uneven, his dialogues of such elemental power, and his
-purely descriptive passages so ordinary.
-
-The elemental power in his dialogues is due chiefly to the vigor of
-action accredited his characters. In his work is not to be found the
-picturesque phrase, the adroitly-turned period, the illuminating
-metaphor, the sequence of construction, the tone or shading offered by
-the commingling of his objects. Dostoevsky has no style of form, his
-outlines are amorphous. It is in his power of transcribing the living
-voice, of recording in never-failing reflex emotionalism the lives and
-deeds of his startling figures that he is supreme.
-
-If you have read one of his books you know much of what he has to say.
-His other works are repetitions, mainly. For Dostoevsky does not attempt
-to paint character, and rarely does he stop to show the subtly-reacting
-influence of environment upon his men and women. Always he is concerned
-with the idea of the individual's personal adjustments to life. Each
-book of his throbs with the discordant elements that clash over the
-establishment of this idea; and always its conclusions are recognized.
-That is why I regard Dostoevsky as an optimist. And his emphasis on
-humanity's spiritual conception of life, no matter what the cost, grew
-more and more pronounced in his later works.
-
-His faith in human beings is expressed in one set theme, which can be
-conveniently resolved into terms of comparison: on one hand the
-individual's evasion of life's realities by the exercise of material
-(and therefore fictitious) values; and on the other hand, the frank
-acceptance of life's realities for the attainment of a proportionate
-spiritual balance.
-
-In _Crime and Punishment_, Dr. Raskolnikov is in doubt as to the
-ultimate worth of this attainment, until he expiates his crime
-in killing the old moneylender (I forget her name) not by
-confessing,--Dostoevsky is too fine a realist for that,--but by
-obtaining personal solace from the regenerating qualities of his
-resignation. And it is characteristic of our writer's method that
-Raskolnikov is assisted toward this state of resignation by his love,
-Sonia, the prostitute, whose regard for the murderer is based upon the
-confirmation evidenced in him of the faith that has been stimulated in
-herself.
-
-Similar in thesis, though expressed in terms of minor differences, is
-Dostoevsky's last and unquestionably finest work, _The Brothers
-Karamazov_. It is incomplete, actually one-third as long as he had
-intended it to be. He died before he could finish the book. Nevertheless
-it is compactly-formed material as the work now stands, and superior to
-his other novels not because his outlines are more constrained, his
-movement more co-ordinate, and the actual writing of a more intensive
-quality, but because here he defines his own conception of spiritual
-beauty in a distinctive fashion not to be found in his other books.
-
-He offers us the history of a family,--and what a family! Each figure in
-this domestic (?) group embodies conflicting phases of his great idea.
-Fyodor Karamazov, the father, is a sensualist of the lowest type
-imaginable. His three sons are Dmitri, Ivan, and Alyosha. There is also
-another (illegitimate) son, Smerdyakov, an epileptic.
-
-Dmitri Karamazov inherits his father's passion for wine, women, and
-song, but the son's pursuit of this tame and conventional item is
-tempered by frequent lapses, by periods of misgiving. The second son is
-a materialist and a cynic. He changes his mind after a severe illness,
-and his materialistic beliefs are all but supplanted by intense
-spiritual curiosity. The third and youngest son is an idealist, lovable
-and loving. Here again we have Dostoevsky's discordant elements conveyed
-in terms of human characterizations. The plot of the story is as
-formless as life itself, for it is with life, not with plots, that
-Dostoevsky deals.
-
-Dmitri's hatred of his father is intensified by the rivalry that exists
-between the two in their common pursuit of Grushenka's affections.
-Grushenka is a woman of the demi-monde. The author, I think, tried to
-draw her in lines that would reveal a physical zest of life, as
-evidenced, for example, in Tolstoy's _Anna Karenina_. His failure to
-make Grushenka a convincing individual, as an individual, is typical,
-for the reasons I have already advanced.
-
-Development of the story shows how Dmitri's repeatedly avowed
-determination to kill his father bears fruit. The elder Karamazov is
-found dead one night, with his skull crushed. Dmitri is imprisoned. And
-the rest of the book, which is devoted to Dmitri's trial, the moral
-regeneration of Ivan, and the urge of life in Alyosha, approaches
-psychological heights (or depths) that have not been surpassed to this
-day. Small wonder that Nietzsche referred so affectionately to the
-"giant spirit."
-
-I have made reference to Dostoevsky's "optimism." A better word for it
-is faith--faith of a new high order. He is the most cheerful,
-sunlight-giving writer in Russian literature. "The essence of religious
-feeling," says Prince Myshkin in _The Idiot_, "does not come under any
-sort of reasoning or atheism, and has nothing to do with any crimes or
-misdemeanors."
-
-Prince Myshkin is the central figure of the novel; he is the "idiot,"
-and everybody abuses him. He is insulted and beaten, and robbed and
-deceived and loved. He is the most singular figure in literature--he is
-Dostoevsky himself.
-
-But he is not an idiot in any sense. He is so profoundly simple and
-wise, and has such great faith in human beings, that he is mistaken by
-the men and women of ordinary passions as a fool. While he can be
-readily toyed with by women--a significant phase of the writer's own
-attitude toward the sex--Prince Myshkin is regarded by them from a
-common basis of understanding. For them he holds no quality of sex.
-"Perhaps you don't know that, owing to my illness," he says (he too is
-an epileptic), "I know nothing of women."
-
-It is in _The Idiot_ that Dostoevsky's women are at least life-like. The
-Epanchin sisters, especially the youngest, Aglaia, are not "types" in
-the usual sense, but preconceived studies. The pages devoted to Aglaia's
-love affair with Prince Myshkin are of the happiest in the book.
-
-Besides the books I have already mentioned, the more important works are
-_The Possessed_, in which national politics play a large part; _Poor
-Folk_, the story of a poor clerk's love for a poor woman who eventually
-turns from him; and _Letters from a Dead House_. This last is a book of
-personal experiences, and reveals Dostoevsky's relations with the
-criminals with whom he was imprisoned in Siberia. The mental temper of
-men who disregard and break the common and social laws, is set forth
-with the passionate curiosity that lies behind all his probings of the
-human soul. I am strongly tempted to offer quotations; to show, in this
-passage or that, how deeply Dostoevsky looked into the most extreme
-boundaries of human sensibilities; but on the whole extracts from his
-writings would do more harm than good. His work is so disconnected,
-though not in any sense detached, that extracts could not serve here to
-indicate the amazing clarity of his vision.
-
-His books arouse a feeling of wonder that there can be so many things in
-our own individual emotions with which we never before came into
-contact. He moves us so profoundly because he tears his men and women
-out of their morally-bound lives and makes them confront stupendous
-questions--the questions of life. He plies detail upon detail of human
-misery until one feels that the whole world is reeling from him--then
-grows aware of the sweet white glow of Dostoevsky's faith, and feels
-that life can hold no terrors--that he is above the petty miseries of
-human strife! That is why I say Dostoevsky's optimism is of the new high
-order.
-
-Dostoevsky purges one's mind. He makes you conscious of the beauty of a
-soul.
-
-
-
-
- BOOK DISCUSSION
-
-
- AN UNREELING REALIST
-
- _The Titan_, by Theodore Dreiser [John Lane Company, New York]
-
-Theodore Dreiser possesses none of the standard qualifications for the
-art of fiction writing. He is not imaginative but inventive; he is not
-clever but clear; he is not excited but calm. Whatever the flaws in his
-considerable body of work no fair-minded reader may say that it is made
-to catch popular applause. Its tremendous distinction is sincerity.
-Another characteristic which his novels exhibit is resolute purpose.
-Dreiser is aiming at something, and in _The Titan_, the second book in
-an unfinished trilogy, he takes a long if wobbly step toward it.
-Previously to the publishing of this volume he had not even hinted at
-what he intended to work out. One thing was certain: he was not a
-trifler; he was not trying to write best sellers; literary success was
-not in his mind. He had set out seriously and indefatigably to write,
-not so much what he felt and thought, as what he saw. Some day he would
-try to get at the realities that lay back of their representations. He
-would probably undertake to reveal the soul of the American nation. He
-would pass through the growth stages of a nation, and achieve some kind
-of spiritual national life. In the last two pages of _The Titan_ this
-guess at his purpose receives appreciable encouragement. Moreover, it is
-made evident for the first time, in these concluding paragraphs, that
-Dreiser's prosaic realism springs not only from a vague, deep idealism
-but a large, hidden spirituality. For at the core of him Dreiser is a
-profoundly religious person.
-
-Neither his style nor his stuff is far above the dead level of
-mediocrity; in fact, Dreiser's rhetoric is often inexcusably
-atrocious--intentionally crude, one is tempted to assert. Obviously he
-is not interested in style; he is conscious of something bigger than
-that revealing itself in a huge, ugly, unfinished moving picture--a net
-result symbolical of a young, raw, riotous, unsynthesized national life.
-One is therefore tempted to say that Dreiser, more than any other
-author, is the personification of America. He represents the composite
-personality of Uncle Sam.
-
-After reading _The Financier_ and running far into the interminable
-pages of _The Titan_ I felt that in the absence of cameras, kodaks,
-Baedekers, and historians Dreiser would be worth while. His endless
-reels of pictorial facts did not impress me as possessing sufficient
-animation successfully to compete with these odd rivals, but I admired
-his consistent sincerity and simplicity and felt that something
-important was promised by the mere unfinishedness of his pictures. I was
-sure that he did not write as one inspired, and certainly not as one
-fired. And after finishing _The Titan_ I felt that here was a work
-having the aspects of a seriously performed duty, exacted by fidelity to
-some personal theory of industrial change. I could not imagine the
-author happy as an artist is happy in his creative work; he was too
-conscious of service to a cause. But in the last paragraph I discovered
-a big, personal note which introduced an attitude that extends beyond
-the borders of materialism. It presented another Dreiser--an author who
-was much more than a cinematograph, snapping superficial impressions of
-a vast panorama. Two years ago I should not have attributed the
-following words to Theodore Dreiser:
-
- In a mulch of darkness is bedded the roots of endless
- sorrows--and of endless joys. Canst thou fix thine eye on the
- morning? Be glad. And if in the ultimate it blind thee, be glad
- also! Thou hast lived.
-
-After laboring through arid deserts of description, this memorable
-passage, fraught with recognition, satisfaction, challenge, hope, and
-promise, stands out as an oasis.
-
-_The Titan_, by virtue of its bold, graphic strokes, loses its identity
-as a tree, with sharply defined individual characters, and represents
-the forest. It is more like a jungle, and the jungle is our national
-life, into which the morning sun inevitably will shine.
-
- --DeWitt C. Wing.
-
-
- THE REVOLT OF THE "ONCE BORN"
-
- _Challenge_, by Louis Untermeyer. [The Century Company, New York]
-
-There has recently appeared a volume of verse by Louis Untermeyer which
-is an excellent example of the determinedly young and eupeptic
-philosophy so prevalent today--the philosophy of revolt. The book is
-named _Challenge_ and as challenge it must be considered. To be sure it
-is rhymed, but the fact seems quite incidental. To rhyme a polemic does
-not make it poetry, and one feels sure that Mr. Untermeyer is more proud
-of the spiritual attitude than of the artistry.
-
-The book is a revolt, but a careful perusal of its pages fails to reveal
-against what it revolts. At first glance one might think it socialistic,
-but it is not clearly enough visualized for that. Socialism has at least
-found the enemy. Mr. Untermeyer manfully girds on his armor and sets
-forth to war, shouting his challenge lustily the while. And why, after
-all, be particular about having an actual enemy? Life, with a capital L,
-can do duty for that, or "the scornful and untroubled skies," or the
-"cold complacency of earth." The revolt is the point, and Mr. Untermeyer
-drives it home with all the phrases of frozen impetuosity to be
-discovered in a very useful vocabulary. "Athletic courage," "eager
-night," "Life's lusty banner," "impetuous winds," "raging mirth," etc.,
-are scattered carefully through the pages. But unfortunately,
-virility--with all due respect to the reviewer who mentioned these poems
-in the June number of The Little Review--has a way of oozing out of such
-phrases, leaving them empty of everything save a painful determination
-to be manly at all costs.
-
-But though Mr. Untermeyer is not quite clear on some subjects he is very
-clear on others. Several things seem to have struck him with peculiar
-force--that city streets are dirty, for instance; that strife is tonic
-for young blood; and that it is difficult for the human soul to conceive
-of complete annihilation. These things he proclaims passionately and
-challenges the world to disprove them. A little couplet from Kipling's
-_Jungle Book_ suggests itself rather maliciously as the probable
-attitude of the world towards this outbreak:
-
- "There is none like to me!" says the Cub in the pride of his
- earliest kill;
- But the Jungle is large and the Cub he is small. Let him think and be
- still.
-
-Seriously, however, Mr. Untermeyer's attitude is what William James
-calls the attitude of the "once born." One feels that he thinks in one
-dimension, that he does not see around his subject, nor hear the
-overtones which surround every happening for a man of deep intellect.
-The revolt is Walt Whitman's magnificent revolt, which is overpowering
-in a giant, cropping out in a man of very ordinary stature, where it
-sits a little ridiculously.
-
-As philosophy much of this, printed on a neat little card, would do
-splendidly to hang in a business office for the encouragement of the
-employees. As poetry it is negligible. Mr. Untermeyer lacks entirely the
-one gift which could redeem it--the gift of poignancy. This lack is
-particularly striking in the middle section, called _Interludes_, in
-which he pauses for a little from revolt. These are love songs and
-lyrics, a field in which anything not perfect is no longer acceptable.
-And Mr. Untermeyer's are not perfect. His sense of rhythm is extremely
-primitive and his lyrics are full of words. Only now and then, when he
-forgets for a moment how manly he is, does he say anything simply enough
-to strike home. These lines, for instance, from _Irony_ stick:
-
- There is no kind of death to kill
- the sands that lie so meek and still ...
- But man is great and strong and wise--
- And so he dies.
-
-But in the main it is unfortunate that Mr. Untermeyer, who writes so
-much and so readably on the subject of poetry, should put out so
-pretentious and undeveloped a volume as this is. It is inevitable that
-it should affect his standing as a critic, and there seems little doubt
-that his work in that field is really valuable to the cause of poetry in
-America today.
-
- --Eunice Tietjens.
-
-
- TWO BIOGRAPHIES: VERLAINE AND TOLSTOY
-
- _Paul Verlaine_, by Wilfred Thorley; _Tolstoy: His Life and
- Writings_, by Edward Garnett. [Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston.]
-
-When autumn is in your heart--not that of the golden delirium of exotic
-agony, but bleak weeping autumn of crucifixion and dead leaves--what
-dirge, what note haunts you in accompaniment to your grief? Maddening
-darts from Tchaikowsky's _Pathétique_, or _Weltschmerz_-moans from
-Beethoven's _Marchia Funebre_, or an unuttered accord known only to your
-soul? Or, if you are a brother of mine, do your lips soundlessly mutter
-this?
-
- Les sanglots longs
- Des violons
- De l'automne
- Blessent mon coeur
- D'une langueur
- Monotone.
-
-Don't you hear the resonance of the tolling bells in Chopin's _Funeral
-March_? Your sorrow grows crescendo as you proceed, recalling Massenet's
-_Elégie_:
-
- Tout suffocant
- Et blême, quand
- Sonne l'heure,
- Je me souviens
- Des jours anciens
- Et je pleure;
-
- Et je m'en vais
- Au vent mauvais
- Qui m'emporte
- Deçà, delà
- Pareil à la
- Feuille morte.
-
-When I think of Paul Verlaine I invariably recall Oscar Wilde, despite
-or because of the abysmal dissimilarity of the two personalities. The
-sincere, ingenuous, all-loving child Paul, and the thoroughly
-artificial, paradoxical Oscar; the typical Bohemian with the
-criminal-face like that of Dostoevsky, and the salon-idol, the refined
-and gorgeous bearer of the sun-flower. Fate had somewhat reconciled the
-two contrasts. Both had been "sinners," both were condemned by society
-and imprisoned, both had "repented"--one in _De Profundis_ where the
-haughty humility of the self-enamored artist stirs us with its
-artificial beauty; the other in the primitive-Christian--nay,
-Catholic--_Sagesse_:
-
- _Mon Dieu m'a dit: Mon fils, il faut m'aimer ...._
-
-Some months ago in reviewing Edmond Lepelletier's voluminous book,
-(_Paul Verlaine: His Life and Work_) I remarked that the Poet of
-Absinthe and Violets was still awaiting his Boswell. My view has not
-changed after reading Wilfrid Thorley's monograph on Verlaine; but my
-wish for an adequate biography of the signer of _Romances sans Paroles_
-has now become counterbalanced by an earnest prayer that the memory of
-the poet may be saved from such indelicate manipulators as Mr. Thorley.
-Why this respectable Englishman should have attempted to treat the life
-of the most wayward French poet since Villon can be explained by no
-other reason than that it was a case of "made to order." When a
-Velasquez is pierced by a fanatical suffragette the whole civilized
-world is roused to indignation; but when an honest philistine
-unceremoniously puffs his cheap smoke into the face of a dead poet there
-is not a single protest against that sort of vandalism. Fear of the
-editor's blue pencil restrains me from putting my attitude more
-outspokenly.
-
-A conscientious compilator would have found sufficient material for an
-unpretentious sketch of the life of Verlaine and for an appreciation of
-his works. Lepelletier gives an amazing mass of facts and personal
-reminiscences (you may ignore his naive interpretations); Arthur Symons
-in _The Symbolist Movement in Literature_ has a masterpiece essay on
-Verlaine, not to mention a number of other French and English writers
-who have given us glimpses of the imperceptible image of the
-poet--writers who _knew what they were taking about_. Mr. Thorley has
-made use of various sources, but in a peculiar way. He fished out the
-anecdotal scraps, the piquant details, the filthy hints, and patched up
-a caricature-portrait of a lewd, perverse "undesirable," whose poetry (I
-quote reluctantly) "was born solely of the genitals," whose "life is but
-the trite old story of the emotions developed at the expense of domestic
-peace and civic order; of art for art's sake made to condone the manner
-of its begetting, and the trend of its appeal; of the hushed
-acquiescence in emotion as a sacred thing, whatever the quality of the
-impulse from which it ripens or the level of ideas on which it feeds."
-Out of the ninety-odd pages of stuff seventy-nine are devoted to
-"biography" sufficiently spicy to make any toothless old rake chuckle;
-the rest is given over to "criticism"--a mutilated melange of some of
-the views of Symons, George Moore, and others, flavored with the
-compilator's own commonplaces. I quote from the closing lines:
-
- A specious and high-sounding phrase has been invented to excuse
- the perversities of imaginative genius by speaking of its
- achievement as a "conquest of new realms for the spirit." But the
- worth of such acquisitions depends on the nature of the
- territory, and if it be, morally, a malarial swamp conducive only
- to a human type found subversive in our normal world, it will
- always appear to the English mind that we shall do well to forego
- the new kingdom and to withhold our homage from its
- discoverer.... That "nice is nasty, nasty nice," and the creative
- artist the sole arbiter, must be hotly opposed so long as a
- social conscience survives.
-
-And this was written in Anno Domini 1914!
-
-A sense of fairness urges me to rehabilitate the "English mind" by
-recalling a passage from Mr. Thorley's compatriot, Arthur Symons:
-
- The artist, it cannot be too clearly understood, has no more part
- in society than a monk in domestic life: he cannot be judged by
- its rules, he can be neither praised nor blamed for his
- acceptance or rejection of its conventions. Social rules are made
- by normal people for normal people, and the man of genius is
- fundamentally abnormal.
-
-It is high time that this axiom became a truism and that we cease to
-measure the artist with the yard-stick of conventional morality. "L'art,
-mes enfants, c'est d'être absolument soi-même," sang Verlaine, and
-somewhere else he reveals a bit of that self with his usual sincerity:
-
- I believe, and I sin in thought as in action; I believe, and I
- repent in thought, if no more. Or again, I believe, and I am a
- good Christian at this moment; I believe, and I am a bad
- Christian the instant after. The remembrance, the hope, the
- invocation of a sin delights me, with or without remorse,
- sometimes under the very form of sin, and hedged with all its
- natural consequences.... This delight ... it pleases us to put to
- paper and publish more or less well expressed: we consign it, in
- short, into literary form, forgetting all religious ideas, or not
- letting one of them escape us. Can any one in good faith condemn
- us as poets? A hundred times no.
-
-"And, indeed, I should echo, a hundred times no!" exclaims the
-Englishman, Arthur Symons.
-
-I cannot resist the temptation of quoting the happiest definition of
-Verlaine's personality written by Charles Morice back in 1888:
-
- The soul of an immortal child, that is the soul of Verlaine, with
- all the privileges and all the perils of so being: with the
- sudden despair so easily distracted, the vivid gaieties without a
- cause, the excessive suspicions and the excessive confidences,
- the whims so easily outwearied, the deaf and blind infatuations,
- with, especially, the unceasing renewal of impressions in the
- incorruptible integrity of personal vision and sensation. Years,
- influences, teachings, may pass over a temperament such as this,
- may irritate it, may fatigue it; transform it, never--never so
- much as to alter that particular unity which consists in a
- dualism, in the division of forces between the longing after what
- is evil and the adoration of what is good; or rather, in the
- antagonism of spirit and flesh....
-
-I have not mentioned the most striking "feature" of Mr. Thorley's ...
-production--the appendix. Six of Verlaine's poems are translated by him
-for the benefit of those who do not understand French "intimately." "To
-offer them to other readers, would, of course, be an impertinence," he
-modestly admits. Impertinence is not the word for that outrage. I have
-experienced physical pain at the sight of the Hunnish sacrilege
-committed by this well-wishing moralist. The poet, for whom "De la
-musique avant toute chose; De la musique encore et toujours!" who had
-pleaded, "Car nous voulons la nuance encore, Pas la couleur, rien que
-la nuance!" has been mercilessly crucified in the form of
-quasi-Tennysonian, taffy-like verses. One recalls with gratitude the
-careful albeit pale translations of Gertrude Hall, who at least had the
-sense of æsthetic propriety in endeavoring to remain true to the
-master's meter and rhythm.
-
- * * * * *
-
-From Tolstoy's diary in 1855:
-
- ... a great, a stupendous idea, to the realization of which I
- feel myself capable of devoting all my life. The idea is the
- foundation of a new religion corresponding to the development of
- mankind--_the religion of Jesus, but purified from dogma and
- mysticism; a practical religion, not promising bliss in future,
- but giving happiness on earth_.... To work consciously for _the
- union on earth_ by religion....
-
-From a letter to the poet Fet in 1898:
-
- I am so different to things of this life that life becomes
- uninteresting.... I hope you will love me though I be black.
-
-From the fragment _There are no guilty people_:
-
- There was a time when I tried to change my position which was not
- in harmony with my conscience, but the conditions created by the
- past, by my family and its claims upon me, were so complicated
- that I did not know how to free myself. I had not the strength.
- Now that I am over eighty and have become feeble I have given up
- trying to free myself. Strange to say, as my feebleness increases
- I realize more and more strongly the wrongfulness of my position,
- and it grows more and more intolerable to me.
-
-On his death-bed at the railroad station Astapovo, November, 1910:
-
- I am tired of this world of men.
-
-Tolstoy's failure was inevitable, for he had approached life with the
-uncompromising logic of a child or a god. For fifty years he preached
-his religion, and during all that time he remained splendidly
-inconsistent. He opposed private property and proceeded to live on his
-estate; he had denounced marriage and was a father to thirteen children.
-Notwithstanding his deadly hatred for the Russian government, he
-bitterly denounced the liberals and the revolutionists for their
-"un-Christian" ways of fighting the enemy; but his greatest
-contradiction, to the joy of the intellectual world, consisted in the
-victory of the artist over the moralist as manifested in his numerous
-novels and plays.
-
-The work of Edward Garnett is conscientious and is, to my knowledge, the
-best short biography of Tolstoy. It was a happy idea to discard the
-traditional portrait and use a reproduction of Kramskoy's painting,
-which dates back to the sixties, if I am not mistaken. It is when
-looking at this portrait, a great piece of art in itself, that we
-envisage the author of _War and Peace_. A few words from the description
-of Tolstoy's face by P. A. Terzeyeonvo:
-
- His face was a true peasant's face: simple, rustic, with a broad
- nose, a weather-beaten skin, and thick overhanging brows, from
- beneath which small, keen, grey eyes peered sharply forth.... One
- instantly divines in Tolstoy a man of the highest society--with
- polished, unconstrained manners.
-
- ... On the one hand an insatiable thirst for power over people,
- and on the other an unconquerable ardor for inward purity and the
- sweetness of meekness....
-
- In this chain of seething, imperious instincts linked with
- delicate spiritual organization lies the profound tragicness of
- Tolstoy's personality.
-
-Mr. Garnett succeeds in giving the quintessence of Tolstoy's works and
-teachings in less than a hundred pages. Like most of the Russian's
-eulogistic biographers, Mr. Garnett has not escaped the fallacy of
-exaggerating the moral power that Tolstoy exercised over the government.
-To say that the Czar and his ministers "dared not touch" the outspoken
-anarchist and heretic "out of dread of Europe--nay, of Russia," is to
-reveal one's ignorance of the brazen defiance displayed by Muscovite
-autocrats in regard to public opinion. As the Germans put it: "Herr
-Kossack, schämen Sie sich!" Tolstoy, as a matter of fact, had helped to
-check the revolutionary spirit of his compatriots in a greater degree
-than the tyrannic persecutions of Von-Plehve. Had he not appealed time
-and again to embrace his doctrine of Non-Resistance? Had he not
-denounced the revolutionists as violent prototypes of their hangers?
-Could the government see any danger in a man who wrote in _The Times_
-during the revolution of 1905: "To free oneself from the government it
-is only necessary to abstain from participating in it and supporting it.
-Our consciousness of the law of God demands from us only one thing:
-moral self-perfection, i. e., the liberation of oneself from all those
-weaknesses and vices which make one the slave of governments and the
-participation in their crimes"? Another tragic contradiction of the
-restless soul of the anarchist who, despite himself, renders aid to the
-despots.
-
- --Alexander S. Kaun.
-
-
- INTROSPECTION
-
- _Chance_, by Joseph Conrad. [Doubleday, Page & Company, New
- York.]
-
-Did you ever take supper in the apartments of a dear bachelor friend, on
-a night when the wind howled outside the window, and the rain beat
-against the pane? And after the satisfying meal, whose perfect
-appointment made you forget all save the luxury of living, did you
-retire to the spacious living room, and after accepting an aromatic
-Havana, stretch your feet out to the crackling log fire, and as the
-smoke from your cigar crawled upward listen to the philosophical
-analyses of your cultured host on that marvelously simple and profoundly
-complex servant and master of man, the human mind? Of such an evening is
-the atmosphere of _Chance_. Not academically deep, but deep from the
-standpoint of a full life and an active intelligence.
-
-Everyone loves to analyze his fellow creatures. Some do it well, some do
-it badly, but we all do it. Conrad does it masterfully. There doesn't
-seem to be a type which holds a mystery for him. The village pillar; the
-frail, ill-fated maid; the buxsom housewife; the silent captain ashore
-and afloat; the opinionated, retired old gentleman; the cynical,
-good-natured man of thirty-five; the flat, tintless fraud. Into the
-mental realm of all these he makes expeditions long and short. His
-characters live. They mingle good and bad, and, as strong characters
-should, weave for themselves a charming story of love, adventure, trial,
-and victory, never trite, and always surprising. It is a tale built of
-character studies and garnished with odd conjective philosophy.
-
- Our new acquaintance paused, then added meditatively:
-
- "Queer man. As if it made any difference. Queer man."
-
- "It's certainly unwise to admit any sort of responsibility for
- our actions, whose consequences we are never able to foresee,"
- remarked Marlow by way of assent.
-
- "The consequence of his action was that I got a ship," said the
- other. "That could not do much harm," he added with a laugh which
- argued a probably unconscious contempt of general ideas.
-
- But Marlow was not put off. He was patient and reflective. He had
- been at sea many years and I verily believe he liked sea-life
- because upon the whole it is favourable to reflection. I am
- speaking of the now nearly vanished sea-life under sail. To those
- who may be surprised at the statement I will point out that this
- life secured for the mind of him who embraced it the inestimable
- advantages of solitude and silence. Marlow had the habit of
- pursuing general ideas in a peculiar manner, between jest and
- earnest.
-
- "Oh, I wouldn't suggest," he said, "that your namesake, Mr.
- Powell, the Shipping Master, had done you much harm. Such was
- hardly his intention. And even if it had been he would not have
- had the power. He was but a man, and the incapacity to achieve
- anything distinctly good or evil is inherent in our earthly
- condition. Mediocrity is our mark. And perhaps it's just as well,
- since, for the most part, we cannot be certain of the effect of
- our actions."
-
- "I don't know about the effect," the other stood up to Marlow
- manfully. "What effect did you expect anyhow? I tell you he did
- something uncommonly kind."
-
- "He did what he could," Marlow retorted gently, "and on his own
- showing that was not a very great deal. I cannot help thinking
- that there was some malice in the way he seized the opportunity
- to serve you. He managed to make you uncomfortable. You wanted to
- go to sea, but he jumped on the chance of accommodating your
- desire with a vengeance. I am inclined to think your cheek
- alarmed him. And this was an excellent occasion to suppress you
- altogether. For if you accepted he was relieved of you with every
- appearance of humanity, and if you made objections (after
- requesting his assistance, mind you) it was open to him to drop
- you as a sort of impostor. You might have had to decline that
- berth for some very valid reason. From sheer necessity, perhaps.
- The notice was too uncommonly short. But under the circumstances
- you'd have covered yourself with ignominy."
-
- Our new friend knocked the ashes out of his pipe.
-
-There is something about Conrad which gives a warm feeling about the
-heart. A certain fineness of humor, a certain fullness of sympathy. He
-never mixes his similes; they always take the same tone and the same
-color. For instance:
-
- I took a piece of cake and went out to bribe the Fyne dog into
- some sort of self-control. His sharp, comical yapping was
- unbearable, like stabs through one's brain, and Fyne's deeply
- modulated remonstrances abashed the vivacious animal no more than
- the deep, patient murmur of the sea abashes a nigger minstrel on
- a popular beach. Fyne was beginning to swear at him in low,
- sepulchral tones when I appeared. The dog became at once wildly
- demonstrative, half-strangling himself in his collar, his eyes
- and tongue hanging out in the excess of his uncomprehensible
- affection for me. This was before he caught sight of the cake in
- my hand. A series of vertical springs high up in the air
- followed, and then, when he got the cake, he instantly lost his
- interest in everything else.
-
-No, this illustration is not of Conrad's finest, but in a homely way it
-illustrates a deep sympathy with life, which this strong worker and
-writer gives in such bountiful measure in all his literature; and, to
-quote an eminent writer, "Literature and Conrad are interchangeable
-terms."
-
- --Henry Blackman Sell.
-
-
- AN AMERICAN NOVEL
-
- _Clark's Field_, by Robert Herrick. [Houghton Mifflin Company,
- Boston.]
-
-It was but the other day that Mr. Herrick told us what he thought about
-the American novel. Those who read the trenchant article found not only
-a criticism of our machine-like fictionists and their half-baked
-methods, but also a sturdy conviction that the day was surely
-approaching when we should demand and receive a truer and more vital
-presentation of our national life in our literature. And if Mr. Herrick,
-long since tagged an apostate to our national creed of turgid optimism,
-believes this, we can safely trust to his cool vision and be glad that
-the tide has turned. The rich human material lies ready at hand, and the
-audience is fast growing intelligent and discriminating. As yet,
-however, "we await the writer or writers keen enough to perceive the
-opportunity, powerful enough to interest the public in what it has been
-unwilling to heed, and of course endowed with sufficient insight to
-comprehend our big new world."
-
-Whatever may be said for our other novelists, surely not one of them can
-exhibit a mingling of the powers of insight and artistry equal to that
-of Robert Herrick. His work from the beginning has been an honest and
-incisive attempt to interpret our life in its peculiar and universal
-aspects, in spite of the clamor of the public at his tearing away of the
-veils of sentimentality and prudery. The errors into which he fell were
-due to the ardor of his spiritual vision, which drove him into an
-impassioned taking of sides. He has emerged from that stage into what
-his critics call his "old manner," a more objective treatment of his
-material. But in the process of change something was lost--the element
-of flaming intensity which gave the reader a similar capacity to feel.
-In this latest performance, as well as in _One Woman's Life_, he is
-always cool, clear-sighted, and admirably efficient in the task he sets
-himself; but never passionate. On the contrary, despite the pervading
-atmosphere of earnestness, he often assumes a playful satiric tone,
-mordant but not bitter,--a method well suited to his matter and purpose.
-
-_Clark's Field_ tells the story of the influence of property upon the
-human beings who own it and hope to reap gold from its increasing value.
-All that is left of the great Clark farm is a fifty-acre field in a
-growing New England town, bequeathed jointly to the two brothers, Edward
-and Samuel, the former of whom has emigrated to the West and wholly
-disappeared from the ken of his relatives. So at first the tale is of
-the baleful influence of expectation delayed again and again: in the
-case of Samuel who cannot sell the land because of his brother's
-half-interest, and who in consequence sinks into a sodden inertia; in
-his son's disintegration into a lazy and drunken "Vet"; in his sister
-Addie's sordid and pathetic sally into life resulting in the birth of
-another human being destined to taste of the fruit of their tree and to
-find it, one day, very bitter.
-
-The greater portion of the novel, then, deals with the influence of the
-realized wealth upon the unformed, colorless little girl, Adelle, the
-last of the Clarks. It is a masterly piece of work--the gradual
-development of the pale rooming-house drudge into the silly and insolent
-woman of fashion, and slowly but certainly into a human being with a
-soul. Less promising stuff for a heroine neither fate nor Mr. Herrick
-could have chosen; the latter delights in ample admissions throughout
-the book of Adelle's lack of beauty, brains, and charm. Yet he is always
-sufficiently temperate to escape the danger of caricature. Adelle is a
-convincing figure. The slow dawning upon her consciousness of the power
-of money, her "magic lamp" which she need only rub to gratify any
-desire, is followed by swift and constant use of the new weapon. It
-brings her a fresh assurance, a few scatter-brained friends, some
-stylish clothes, and, at length, a callow youth for a husband. It never
-brings her contact with a real person or friendship with a stimulating
-individual; nor can it save her from the failure of her marriage, nor
-compensate her for the death of her little boy.
-
-Adelle's story, then, turns out to be what we least expected it,--a
-hopeful one. It leaves us with almost a sense of security, for is she
-not one of those who can "derive good from her mistakes," and therefore
-"the safest sort of human being to raise in this garden plot of souls"?
-And although we are still saddled with "that absurd code of inheritance
-and property rights that the Anglo-Saxon peoples have preserved from
-their ancient tribal days in the gloomy forests of the lower Rhine," the
-situation is not without hope, since it has yielded a man of the judge's
-type, in whom the beauty of a past idealism is coupled with the
-freshness of a new vision of responsibility.
-
-To hark back to the recent article in _The Yale Review_, we believe that
-Mr. Herrick himself has given us an American novel--thoroughly American
-in situation, character, treatment, and even in philosophy. We, as a
-people, are beginning to suspect our boastful optimism as we become
-aware of the sordidness beneath the fair exterior of our glorious
-civilization. And in accordance with the western temperament, the
-awareness of wrong leads not to bitter cynicism but to sturdy efforts
-toward amelioration. Such, then, is the spirit of _Clark's Field_--a
-hopefulness in the power of courage, and labor, and a growing sense of
-social responsibility to move mounds that seem to have become immovable
-mountains through a tenacious fostering of tradition.
-
- --Marguerite Swawite.
-
-
- THE "SAVAGE" PAINTERS
-
- _Cubists and Post Impressionism_, by Arthur Jerome Eddy. [A. C.
- McClurg and Company, Chicago.]
-
-An attempt to explain the new schools in art "in plain, every-day
-terms." An earnest appeal for tolerance in regard to seemingly
-perversive forms. The book has a wealth of material and numerous
-quotations from Picasso, Picabia, Cézanne, Matisse, and others,
-considerably more interesting and instructive than Mr. Eddy's own
-truisms. Although the author repeatedly resents any accusation in his
-adherence to Cubism, the reader gets the impression that the Cubistic
-movement has received a more thorough and fair treatment than the other
-new schools. Of the sixty-nine reproductions of Post-Impressionistic
-paintings and sculpture, only five represent the Futurists. Idillon
-Redon, who gave us the greater delight in last year's International
-Exhibition, is totally ignored. Among the Self-Portraits that of Matisse
-is sorely missed--a work that helps greatly in understanding the quaint
-painter of the Woman in Red Madras. Whether Mr. Eddy will succeed in
-convincing the prejudiced conservatives is doubtful; but in those who
-have appreciated the daring attempts of the new schools his book will
-arouse a renewed longing for the foreign "savages" and an ardent hope
-for their further invasions in our "sane and healthful" galleries.
-
-
- THE SAME BOOK FROM ANOTHER STANDPOINT
-
- (With apologies to the author of _Tender Buttons_)
-
- _Oil and Water_
-
-Enough water is plenty and more, more is almost plenty enough.
-Enthusiastically hurting sad size, such size, same size slighter, same
-splendor simpler, same sore sounder. Glazed glitter, eddy eddies
-discover discovered discoveries, discover Mediterranean sea, large print
-large. Small print small, picked plumes painters and penmen, pretty
-pieces Picasso, Picabia plus Plato, Hegel, Cézanne, Kandinsky, more
-plenty more, small print single sign of oil supposing shattering scatter
-and scattering certainly splendidly. Suppose oil surrounded with watery
-sauce, suppose spare solely inside, suppose the rest.
-
- --A. S. K.
-
-
-
-
- SENTENCE REVIEWS
-
-
- (Inclusion in this category does not preclude a more extended
- notice.)
-
-_The Return of the Prodigal_, by May Sinclair. [The Macmillan Company,
-New York.] Eight short stories, all subtly done. _The Cosmopolitan_
-proves beyond a doubt that women, or at least the thousandth woman, is
-capable of a disinterested love of life and of nature. It is a big story
-and a very finished one.
-
-_John Addington Symonds_, by Van Wyck Brooks. [Mitchell Kennerley, New
-York.] A biography of rare charm and distinction in which Mr. Brooks
-builds a clear picture of Symonds's life as it is related to our day.
-
-_The Sister of the Wind_, and _Other Poems_, by Grace Fallow Norton.
-[Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston.] Some of this will disappoint lovers
-of _Little Gray Songs From St. Joseph's_--in fact, none of the poems
-here has such extraordinary poignancy. But there are many that are worth
-knowing.
-
-_The Continental Drama of Today_, by Barrett H. Clark. [Henry Holt and
-Company, New York.] Invaluable to the student of continental drama. A
-half dozen pages of critical analysis devoted to each of thirty modern
-playwrights.
-
-_Stories and Poems and Other Uncollected Writing_, by Bret Harte,
-compiled by Charles Meeker Kozlay, with an introductory account of
-Harte's early contributions to the California press. [Houghton Mifflin
-Company, Boston.] A very beautiful Riverside Press volume with
-photogravures.
-
-_I Should Say So_, by James Montgomery Flagg. [George H. Doran Company,
-New York.] Yes, he is silly; but Mr. Flagg is so nicely naughty and so
-naughtily human that you simply must laugh.
-
-_Broken Music_, by Phyllis Bottome. [Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston.]
-Charming and well done. The story of a young French boy's struggle to
-create music, and his success after the tradition of a "broken heart"
-had been fulfilled.
-
-_The Old Game_, by Samuel G. Blythe. [George H. Doran Company, New
-York.] A temperance tract by a man who knows; minus sanctimoniousness
-and plus a punch.
-
-_Dramatic Portaits_, by P. P. Howe. [Mitchell Kennerley, New York.] One
-man's opinion of the modern dramatists. A "shelf book" for occasional
-reference.
-
-_Billy and Hans_, by W. J. Stillman. [Thomas B. Mosher, Portland,
-Maine.] A charming story of the most temperamental of pets, the
-squirrel. A Mosher book bound in a cover dark enough to stand wear. A
-distinct relief from the Alice blue and pale old rose of Mr. Mosher's
-more delicate periods.
-
-_Billy_, by Maud Thornhill Porter. [Thomas B. Mosher, Portland, Maine.]
-The true story of a canary bird. One of those little documents written
-for the enjoyment of a family circle and read on winter evenings.
-Bright, human, and personal.
-
-_The Social Significance of the Modern Drama_, by Emma Goldman. [Richard
-G. Badger, Boston.] Miss Goldman discusses Ibsen, Strindberg, Sudermann,
-Hauptmann, Wedekind, Maeterlinck, Rostand, Brieux, Shaw, Galsworthy,
-Stanley Houghton, Githa Sowerby, Yeats, Lenox Robinson, T. G. Murray,
-Tolstoy, Tchekhof, Gorki, and Andreyev, outlining the plays of each and
-emphasizing their relation to the problem of modern society. She is the
-interpreter here rather than the propagandist, and her interpretations
-are not academic discourses. They give you the plays partly by
-quotation, partly in crisp narrative, and they are not the kind of
-interpretations that make the authors wish they had never written plays.
-Whether you like Emma Goldman or not, you will get a more compact and
-comprehensive working-knowledge of the modern drama from her book than
-from any other recent compilation we know of.
-
-
-
-
- DEDICATED
- TO THAT HISTORIC MOMENT
- WHEN
- THEODORE ROOSEVELT
- THE GREAT AMERICAN CHANTECLIER
- SHALL AWAKE
- TO FIND
- THE SUN HIGH IN HEAVEN
- AND THAT
- HE
- HAD CROWED NOT
-
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-
-With the August issue, the sixth month of our very flourishing life, we
-have decided to make one important change in _The Little Review_. We are
-reducing the subscription price to $1.50 a year, and that of single
-copies to 15 cents. There will be no change in size or appearance. Those
-whose subscriptions have already been paid on the former basis will be
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-
-Our reason for doing so is this: We have discovered that a great many of
-the people whom we wish to reach cannot afford to pay $2.50 a year for a
-magazine. It happens that we are very emphatic about wanting these
-people in our audience, and we believe they are as sincerely interested
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-
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-announcement. Our success so far has exceeded even our own hopes--and it
-may be remembered that they were rather high. As for our practical
-friends who warned us against starting a literary magazine, even their
-dark prophecies of debt and a speedy demise have had to dissolve before
-our statements that we have paid our bills with what _The Little Review_
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-
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-
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- THE COMPLETE WORKS OF
- WALT WHITMAN
-
- [AUTHORIZED BY THE EXECUTORS]
-
- COMPLETE LEAVES OF GRASS
-
- This edition contains the text and arrangement preferred by Walt
- Whitman. All other editions of "Leaves of Grass" are imperfect in
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-
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-
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- It is particularly valuable to students of the poet, as it
- contains much biographical and other material not to be found
- elsewhere. "Complete Prose" may be had in the following styles:
-
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-
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- eight volumes, of which three are now ready.
-
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-
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-
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-
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- JULY, 1914
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- Poems to be Chanted Nicholas Vachel Lindsay
- The Fireman's Ball--The Santa Fé Trail, A Humoresque--The
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-
- Poems Richard Butler Glaenzer
- From a Club Window--Rodin--Star Magic.
-
- Sitting Blind by the Sea Ruth McEnery Stuart
-
- Roumanian Poems Maurice Aisen
- We Want Land--Peasant Love Songs I-VII--The Conscript I-IV.
-
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- Singing"--Doina--Reviews--Notes.
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-
- _I_
-
- Billy: The True Story of a Canary Bird
-
- By MAUD THORNHILL PORTER
-
- _950 copies, Fcap 8vo. $1.00 net_
-
- This pathetic little story was first issued by Mr. Mosher in a
- privately printed edition of 500 copies and was practically sold
- out before January 1, 1913. The late Dr. Weir Mitchell in a
- letter to the owner of the copyright said among other things:
- "Certainly no more beautiful piece of English has been printed of
- late years." And again: "May I ask if this lady did not leave
- other literary products? The one you print is so unusual in style
- and quality and imagination that after I read it I felt convinced
- there must be other matter of like character."
-
-
- _II_
-
- Billy and Hans: My Squirrel Friends. A True History
-
- By W. J. STILLMAN
-
- _950 copies, Fcap 8vo. 75 cents net_
-
- Reprinted from the revised London edition of 1907 by kind
- permission of Mrs. W. J. Stillman.
-
-
- _III_
-
- Books and the Quiet Life: Being Some Pages from The Private
- Papers of Henry Ryecroft
-
- By GEORGE GISSING
-
- _950 copies, Fcap 8vo. 75 cents net_
-
- To the lover of what may be called spiritual autobiography,
- perhaps no other book in recent English literature appeals with
- so potent a charm as "The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft." It
- is the highest expression of Gissing's genius--a book that
- deserves a place on the same shelf with the Journals of De Guérin
- and Amiel. For the present publication, the numerous passages of
- the "Papers" relating to books and reading have been brought
- together and given an external setting appropriate to their
- exquisite literary flavor.
-
- _Mr. Mosher also begs to state that the following new editions
- are now ready_:
-
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- _I_
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- Under a Fool's Cap: Songs
-
- By DANIEL HENRY HOLMES
-
- _900 copies, Fcap 8vo, old-rose boards. $1.25 net_
-
- For an Appreciation of this book read Mr. Larned's article in the
- February Century.
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- _II_
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- Amphora: A Collection of Prose and Verse chosen by the Editor
- of The Bibelot
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- _925 copies, Fcap 8vo, old-style ribbed boards. $1.75 net_
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- _The Forum_ for January, in an Appreciation by Mr. Richard Le
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- _All books sent postpaid on receipt of price net._
-
- _THOMAS B. MOSHER_ _Portland, Maine_
-
-
-
-
- Nancy The Joyous _By Edith Stow_
-
- For a Lift on the Road to Happiness
- _read_
- Nancy the Joyous
- A Novel of pure Delight
-
- "_Here, at the bend of the road I stop to wave, and to play you a
- gay little snatch of tune on my pipes, like any other true
- gypsy._"--_Nancy._
-
- Nancy the Joyous is a simple little story--simple and clean and
- true--like a ray of sunshine in a bleak corner; like a
- wind-and-rain-and-sun-bathed flower on a steep mountainside. It
- is a story of sentiment, but without weak sentimentality, without
- tears, a kind of "salt-of-the-earth" optimism.
-
- ¶ Brisk with the air of the Tennessee mountains, where Nancy
- finds the "true values of life," and warm with the joy of living
- and loving and laughing, here is a "character" story--a "heart
- interest" story--a "local color" story of a picturesque
- locality--and yet a straightforward, unpretentious romance whose
- charm is based on more than mere uniqueness of characters or
- setting. Nancy is buoyant with life itself. Nancy is a real girl,
- a likable girl, and the love she inspires in her fellow creatures
- of the story is a real affection that shines outside the pages of
- the book and seizes hold of the heart of the reader.
-
- A delightful book to read. An ideal book to give to a friend.
-
- _The make-up of the book is in keeping with the story. A
- frontispiece in cheerful colors of Nancy herself; each chapter
- has a specially drawn initial; each cheery letter has a
- full-width pictorial heading. Bound in extra cloth; decorated
- cover, with ornaments in gold. Pictorial jacket in full color and
- gold. 12mo. $1.00 net._
-
- Publishers Reilly & Britton Chicago
-
-
-
-
- A new novel by
- Robert Herrick
-
- CLARK'S FIELD
-
- "In this virile book, Mr. Herrick studies the part played by
- 'unearned increment' in the life of a girl. A notable
- contribution to American realistic fiction."
-
- "Few will dispute the statement that Robert Herrick is today the
- most significant of our novelists. He is always sincere, and he
- is always worth our while.... Clark's Field is packed with
- meaning."--_New York Tribune._
-
- "The book is one that is worth reading and worth thinking about
- as a study of American life and as an extremely interesting
- depiction of the development of a human soul."--_New York Times._
-
- _$1.40 net. Postage extra._
-
- Boston HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY New York
-
- The Mason & Hamlin is the highest priced piano in the world. But
- spread the cost over the long years of service which you may
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- Recent numbers have contained the following complete plays:
-
- Tagore's "_The King of the Dark Chamber_"
- Dormay's "_The Other Danger_"
- Giacosa's "_The Stronger_"
- Andreyev's "_The Pretty Sabine Woman_"
-
- All phases of drama and of the theatre are regularly and freely
- discussed, important new books are reviewed at length, and
- occasional news notes from foreign art centers are printed.
-
-
-
-
- _Address_ The Little Review
-
- 917 Fine Arts Building :: Chicago
-
- We want circulation solicitors in every city in the country.
- Liberal commissions. For particulars address William Saphier,
- circulation manager, The Little Review, 917 Fine Arts Building,
- Chicago.
-
- _Beginning in August, $1.50 a year; 15 cents a copy_
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber's Notes
-
-
-Advertisements were collected at the end of the text.
-
-The table of contents on the title page was adjusted in order to reflect
-correctly the headings in this issue of THE LITTLE REVIEW.
-
-The article THE NEW LOYALTY--in the print interrupted on page 31--was
-continued on page 66. Page 66 was therefore moved directly after page
-31.
-
-The original spelling was mostly preserved. A few obvious typographical
-errors were silently corrected. All other changes are shown here
-(before/after):
-
- [p. 56]:
- ... Pas la coulem rien que la nuance!" has been mercilessly
- crucified ...
- ... Pas la couleur, rien que la nuance!" has been mercilessly
- crucified ...
-
-
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-<body>
-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold;'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Little Review, July 1914 (Vol. 1, No. 5), by Margaret C. Anderson</div>
-<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Little Review, July 1914 (Vol. 1, No. 5)</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Various</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Editor: Margaret C. Anderson</div>
-<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Release Date: December 22, 2020 [eBook #64083]</div>
-<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Jens Sadowski and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net. This book was produced from images made available by the Modernist Journal Project, Brown and Tulsa Universities.</div>
-<div style='margin-top:2em;margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LITTLE REVIEW, JULY 1914 (VOL. 1, NO. 5) ***</div>
-
-<div class="frontmatter chapter">
-<h1 class="title">
-<span class="smallcaps">The Little Review</span>
-</h1>
-
-<p class="subt">
-<em>Literature Drama Music Art</em>
-</p>
-
-<p class="ed">
-<span class="line1">MARGARET C. ANDERSON</span><br />
-<span class="line2">EDITOR</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="issue">
-JULY, 1914
-</p>
-
- <div class="table">
-<table class="tocn" summary="TOC">
-<tbody>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#POEMS">Poems</a></td>
- <td class="col2"><em>Charles Ashleigh</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#THE_RENAISSANCE_OF_PARENTHOOD">The Renaissance of Parenthood</a></td>
- <td class="col2"><em>The Editor</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#DES_IMAGISTES">&ldquo;Des Imagistes&rdquo;</a></td>
- <td class="col2"><em>Charles Ashleigh</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#OF_RUPERT_BROOKE_AND_OTHER_MATTERS">Of Rupert Brooke and Other Matters</a></td>
- <td class="col2"><em>Arthur Davison Ficke</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#THE_NEW_LOYALTY">The New Loyalty</a></td>
- <td class="col2"><em>George Burman Foster</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#THE_MILLINER_POEM">The Milliner (Poem)</a></td>
- <td class="col2"><em>Sade Iverson</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#NUR_WER_DIE_SEHNSUCHT_KENNT">&ldquo;Nur wer die Sehnsucht kennt&rdquo;</a></td>
- <td class="col2"><em>Margaret C. Anderson</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#EDITORIALS">Editorials</a></td>
- <td class="col2">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#NEW_YORK_LETTER">New York Letter</a></td>
- <td class="col2"><em>George Soule</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#DOSTOEVSKYS_NOVELS">Dostoevsky&rsquo;s Novels</a></td>
- <td class="col2"><em>Maurice Lazar</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#BOOK_DISCUSSION">Book Discussion:</a></td>
- <td class="col2">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr class="i">
- <td class="col1"><a href="#AN_UNREELING_REALIST">An Unreeling Realist</a></td>
- <td class="col2"><em>De Witt C. Wing</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr class="i">
- <td class="col1"><a href="#THE_REVOLT_OF_THE_ONCE_BORN">The Revolt of the &ldquo;Once Born&rdquo;</a></td>
- <td class="col2"><em>Eunice Tietjens</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr class="i">
- <td class="col1"><a href="#VERLAINE_AND_TOLSTOY">Verlaine and Tolstoy</a></td>
- <td class="col2"><em>Alexander S. Kaun</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr class="i">
- <td class="col1"><a href="#CONRADS_QUOTE">Conrad&rsquo;s Quote</a></td>
- <td class="col2"><em>Henry B. Sell</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr class="i">
- <td class="col1"><a href="#CLARKS_FIELD">&ldquo;Clark&rsquo;s Field&rdquo;</a></td>
- <td class="col2"><em>Marguerite Swawite</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr class="i">
- <td class="col1"><a href="#THE_SAVAGE_PAINTERS">The &ldquo;Savage&rdquo; Painters</a></td>
- <td class="col2"><em>A. S. K.</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#SENTENCE_REVIEWS">Sentence Reviews</a></td>
- <td class="col2">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
-</tbody>
-</table>
- </div>
-<p class="monthly">
-Published Monthly
-</p>
-
- <div class="table">
- <div class="footer">
-<p class="pricel">
-25 cents a copy
-</p>
-
-<p class="pub">
-MARGARET C. ANDERSON, Publisher<br />
-CHICAGO<br />
-Fine Arts Building
-</p>
-
-<p class="pricer">
-$2.50 a year
-</p>
-
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="frontmatter chapter">
-<p class="tit">
-<a id="page-1" class="pagenum" title="1"></a>
-<span class="smallcaps">The Little Review</span>
-</p>
-
- <div class="table">
- <div class="issue">
-<p class="vol">
-Vol. I
-</p>
-
-<p class="issue">
-JULY, 1914
-</p>
-
-<p class="number">
-No. 5
-</p>
-
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class="article1" id="POEMS">
-POEMS
-</h2>
-
-<p class="aut">
-CHARLES ASHLEIGH
-</p>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="BEYOND_GOOD_AND_EVIL">
-BEYOND GOOD AND EVIL
-</h3>
-
-<p class="subt">
-(<em>A Mystery Rime for Little Children of All Ages</em>)
-</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">The rain comes down and veils the hills.</p>
- <p class="verse">Ah, tender rain for aching fields!</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">The hills are clothed in a mist of rain.</p>
- <p class="verse">(My heart is clothed in a mist of pain.)</p>
- <p class="verse">Ah, mother rain, that laves the field,</p>
- <p class="verse">If I to you my poor soul yield,</p>
- <p class="verse">Will you not cleanse it, soothe it, tend it,</p>
- <p class="verse">Weep upon it &rsquo;til &rsquo;tis mended?</p>
- <p class="verse">&rsquo;Twas sweet to sow, &rsquo;tis hard to reap.</p>
- <p class="verse">Come, mother rain, and lull me to sleep.</p>
- <p class="verse">Lull me to sleep and wash me away,</p>
- <p class="verse">Out of the realm of Night and Day,</p>
- <p class="verse">Back to the bourne from whence I came,</p>
- <p class="verse">Seeming alike yet not the same....</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Rain, you are more than rain to me.</p>
- <p class="verse">And Lash of Pain may be a Key.</p>
- <p class="verse">Ope, then, the door and tread within.</p>
- <p class="verse">The double Door of Good and Sin</p>
- <p class="verse">Is vanquished. Lo, with bread and wine,</p>
- <p class="verse">The table&rsquo;s spread! The feast is Mine!</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="LOVE_IN_THE_ABYSS">
-<a id="page-2" class="pagenum" title="2"></a>
-LOVE IN THE ABYSS
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Amidst the buzz of bawdy tales</p>
- <p class="verse">And the laughter of drinking men,</p>
- <p class="verse">I sat and laughed and shouted also.</p>
- <p class="verse">Yet was I not content.</p>
- <p class="verse">My seared and restless eyes, turning here and there,&mdash;</p>
- <p class="verse">Like my tired soul,&mdash;</p>
- <p class="verse">Seeking new joys and finding them not,&mdash;</p>
- <p class="verse">How oft swept you unseeing.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Until, suddenly,&mdash;</p>
- <p class="verse">And now I know not how I could have missed it,&mdash;</p>
- <p class="verse">My eyes saw into yours,</p>
- <p class="verse">And plumbed the deep wells of newly born desire.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Ah, dear my heart, what things your eyes did speak!</p>
- <p class="verse">Not God&rsquo;s own music of creation&rsquo;s dawn,</p>
- <p class="verse">Revealed to mystic in a holy trance,</p>
- <p class="verse">Could pleasure me more sweetly.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">So dear were your lips&mdash;</p>
- <p class="verse">Your lips so kind and regal red.</p>
- <p class="verse">My memory of your lips I cherish</p>
- <p class="verse">As a great possession ...</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Ah, flying joy,</p>
- <p class="verse">Caught on the wings of Time ...</p>
- <p class="verse">Tender oasis,</p>
- <p class="verse">Ingemmed in a wilderness of grey!</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Kisses, kisses,&mdash;</p>
- <p class="verse">Kisses upon your red lips in the black night ...</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">When, alone in the long, quiet street,</p>
- <p class="verse">By the door of the tavern,</p>
- <p class="verse">Shielded from sight of those within,</p>
- <p class="verse">The soft rain falling on our heads like a mother&rsquo;s blessing,&mdash;</p>
- <p class="verse">We bartered the clinging kisses of new desire.</p>
-<a id="page-3" class="pagenum" title="3"></a>
- <p class="verse">And, as I held you to me,</p>
- <p class="verse">The whole universe</p>
- <p class="verse">Became informed of God,</p>
- <p class="verse">And lay within my arms.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="JEALOUSY">
-JEALOUSY
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">You are possessed by another.</p>
- <p class="verse">How I hate him!</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Hear the rational people say: &ldquo;Jealousy is a primitive thing. A thing of the emotions; not of reason.&rdquo;</p>
- <p class="verse">Fools! You do not know scarlet desire, full-flooded!</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Ah, my dearest, Graal of my heart&rsquo;s longing,</p>
- <p class="verse">Your stolen kiss is fresh upon my neck.</p>
- <p class="verse">My lips are full of my secret kiss upon your neck.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">You are with another, whom I hate; whom I like well for himself, but hate because he possesses you ...</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Your possessor is old and ugly;</p>
- <p class="verse">He can not love you as I can.</p>
- <p class="verse">I can pour out for you the scented treasures of my young love.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Dear night of hope, when you gave me the whispered promise to come to me ...</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Stealthy was I and cunning.</p>
- <p class="verse">Friendly and attentive was I to your old lover (if lover he may be called, who is almost incapable of love).</p>
- <p class="verse">And, all the time, I was scheming for you.</p>
- <p class="verse">When the old man was away for an instant&mdash;</p>
- <p class="verse">Oh, golden moment,&mdash;</p>
- <p class="verse">I poured my whispered passion into your ears.</p>
- <p class="verse">When he looked away, or, for a moment, was distracted, with swift undertones I declared myself to you.</p>
- <p class="verse">How dear was your welcoming glance and your quickly toned assent!</p>
-<a id="page-4" class="pagenum" title="4"></a>
- <p class="verse">You had a face so proud.</p>
- <p class="verse">So quiet and poised among the throng.</p>
- <p class="verse">Yet, for once, you gave me your eyes and, in so doing, gave me your priceless body and warm, comradely soul.</p>
- <p class="verse">Ah, flash of answering love that transformed your face!</p>
- <p class="verse">As a jewel of my memory&rsquo;s treasure-casket may it be preserved.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">When the drinking-place was closed, we walked along the dark street.</p>
- <p class="verse">Do you remember?</p>
- <p class="verse">We were four, luckily, and the old man was kept busy in conversation, half drunken as he was.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">And we, with our secret between us, walked behind.</p>
- <p class="verse">Our hands were tight clasped in the folds of our dress.</p>
- <p class="verse">Tight clasped with the clinging hand caress; you and I trying to put into our hands all the longing that was in us.</p>
- <p class="verse">All the time we were apprehensive of a sudden turning of the old man or the other ...</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Then, the whispered troth, and the meeting-place appointed.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">And, then, later, boldly, so openly and audaciously it brought no suspicion,</p>
- <p class="verse">Under seeming of wine-induced jollity, we kissed.</p>
- <p class="verse">And they laughed; it seemed a trivial jest to them.</p>
- <p class="verse">But to us it was a sacrament.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">But, best of all, my beloved, was the hurried clasping and kissing when we were alone in the dark.</p>
- <p class="verse">Promise of joy to come.</p>
- <p class="verse">Foretaste of the coming ecstasy.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">And then we had to part.</p>
- <p class="verse">I and my unaware friend.</p>
- <p class="verse">You and the old man.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">As I walked home that night,</p>
- <p class="verse">How I hated him!</p>
-<a id="page-5" class="pagenum" title="5"></a>
- <p class="verse">How I looked up at the pale-golden moon high-hung in the purple sky, and sang in my heart your praise and cursed in my heart your possessor ...</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">But we will out-wit him.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Young I am and young are you and the Law of Life bids us mate.</p>
- <p class="verse">And a whole world standing between us would be melted and destroyed by the fire of our youth&rsquo;s desire.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="THE_GLORIOUS_ADVENTURE_OF_GLORIOUS_ME">
-THE GLORIOUS ADVENTURE OF GLORIOUS ME
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">I swim with the tide of life towards the new;</p>
- <p class="verse2">I reach out hungered arms to flowing change.&mdash;</p>
- <p class="verse">I smash the awesome totems of my kind;</p>
- <p class="verse2">My smarting vision bursts its cramping range.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">A thousand voices yell within my soul;</p>
- <p class="verse2">A thousand hymns are chanting in my heart.&mdash;</p>
- <p class="verse2">I blast the mist of worlds and years apart;</p>
- <p class="verse">I sense the blending glory of the whole.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">The sap of flowers and trees, it mounts in me.</p>
- <p class="verse2">I feel the child within me cry and turn;</p>
- <p class="verse2">The crimson thoughts within me writhe and burn.&mdash;</p>
- <p class="verse">I stand, with craving arms high-flung, before the rimless sea.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">And every whirling, passionate star sings melodies to Me;</p>
- <p class="verse2">And every bud and every leaf has sought my private ear;</p>
- <p class="verse">And to the quickening soul of Me has told its mystery,</p>
- <p class="verse5">As I sit in state in the heart of the world,</p>
- <p class="verse5">As I proudly hug the core of the world,</p>
- <p class="verse5">As I make me a boat of the whole, wide world ...</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse5">And then for new worlds steer.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="THE_RENAISSANCE_OF_PARENTHOOD">
-<a id="page-6" class="pagenum" title="6"></a>
-THE RENAISSANCE OF PARENTHOOD
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="aut">
-MARGARET C. ANDERSON
-</p>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">T</span><span class="postfirstchar">here</span> seems to be a kind of renaissance of motherhood in the air.
-Ellen Key has just done a book with that title which has come to
-us too late to be reviewed adequately in this issue; Mrs. Gasquoine
-Hartley has written <em>The Age of Mother Power</em> which will be brought
-out in the fall; and in Shaw&rsquo;s new volume of plays (<em>Misalliance</em>,
-<em>Fanny&rsquo;s First Play</em> and <em>The Dark Lady of the Sonnets</em>) there is a
-preface of over a hundred pages devoted to a discussion of parents and
-children which says some of the most refreshing and important things
-about that relationship I have ever read.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The home, as such, is rapidly losing its old functions&mdash;perhaps it
-is more accurate to say that it is changing its standards of functioning,
-and that the present distress merely heralds in a wonderful new conception
-of family potentiality. But a generalization of this sort can
-be disputed by any family egotist, so let&rsquo;s get down to particulars. It&rsquo;s
-all right for the enlightened of the older generation to preach violently
-that the family is a humbug, as Shaw does; that the child should have
-all the rights of any other human being, and that there is nothing so
-futile or so stupid as to try to &ldquo;control&rdquo; your children. It&rsquo;s not only
-all right; it&rsquo;s glorious! But what I&rsquo;m more interested in, still being of
-the age that must classify as &ldquo;daughter,&rdquo; is this:&mdash;what are &ldquo;the children&rdquo;
-themselves doing about it? Have their rebellions been anything
-more than complaints; have they made any real stand for liberty; have
-they proved themselves worthy of the Shavian championship?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Well&mdash;I got hold recently of a human document which answered
-these questions quite in the affirmative. It was a rather startling thing
-because, while it offered nothing new on the theory side of the matter,
-it showed the theory in thoughtful action&mdash;which, for all the talk on
-the subject, is still rare. It was a letter of some twenty pages written
-by a girl to her mother at the time of a domestic climax when all the
-bonds of family affection, family idealism and obligation were tending
-to smother the human truth of the situation, as the girl put it. She
-was in her early twenties; she had a sister two or three years younger,
-and both of them had reached at least a sort of economic independence.
-She had come to the conclusion, after a good many years of rebellion,
-<a id="page-7" class="pagenum" title="7"></a>
-that the whole fabric of their family life was wrong; and since it was
-impossible to talk the thing out sensibly&mdash;because, as in all families
-where the children grow up without being given the necessary revaluations,
-real talk is no more possible than it is between uncongenial
-strangers&mdash;she had decided to discuss it in a letter. That medium does
-away with the patronage of the parents&rsquo; refusal to listen seriously:&mdash;that
-&ldquo;Oh, come now, what do you know about these things?&rdquo; If the
-child has anything interesting to say, if he puts any of his rebellion into
-his writing, the chances are that the parent will read the letter through;
-and the result is that he&rsquo;ll know more about his child than he has
-learned in all the years they&rsquo;ve been trying to talk with each other and
-not succeeding. I&rsquo;m enthusiastic about this kind of family correspondence;
-it&rsquo;s good training in expression and it clears the air&mdash;jolts the
-&ldquo;heads&rdquo; of the family into realizing that the thinking and planning are
-not all on one side. I once did it myself to my father&mdash;put ten pages
-of closely-written argument on his office desk (so that he&rsquo;d open it
-with the same impersonality given to a business communication), in
-which I explained why I wanted to go away from home and learn to
-<em>work</em>, and why I thought such a course was an intelligent one. The
-letter accomplished what no amount of talking would have done, because
-in our talk we rarely got beyond the &ldquo;Oh, now, you&rsquo;re just a little
-excited, it will look different in the morning&rdquo; stage. Father said it
-was rather a shock to him because he didn&rsquo;t know I had ever figured
-things out to that extent; but we always understood each other better
-after that.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-However&mdash;not to get lost in personalities&mdash;this is the letter the
-girl showed me and which she allows me to quote from partially:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
-<p class="noindent">
-If we are to continue living together in any sort of happiness and growth
-the entire basis of our present life will have to be changed. We can do it if
-we&rsquo;re brave enough to do what people usually do only in books:&mdash;face the
-fact squarely that our family life is and has been a failure, and set about to
-remedy it. It will mean an entire change of home conditions, and these are
-the terms of the new arrangement:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When I said to you the other day that things would have to go <em>my</em> way
-now, you were horrified at the conceit of it. To get to facts, there&rsquo;s no conceit
-in it&mdash;because my way is simply the practise of not imposing one&rsquo;s will
-upon other people. I made the remark merely as a common sense suggestion,
-and made it out of a seriousness that is desperate. I say &ldquo;desperate&rdquo; because
-I mean that literally: the situation isn&rsquo;t a question of a mere temporary adjustment&mdash;just
-some sort of superficial arrangement so that we can get on pleasantly
-for a while before the next outbreak comes. The plans Betty and I
-have discussed have been made in the interest of our whole future lives:&mdash;whether
-<a id="page-8" class="pagenum" title="8"></a>
-we&rsquo;re going to submit (either by surrender or compromise or by
-just drifting along and not doing anything) to an existence of bickering, nagging,
-hours spent in the discussion of non-essentials, hideous lack of harmony&mdash;the
-whole stupid programme we&rsquo;ve watched working for years and achieving
-nothing but unhappiness, folly, and a terrible &ldquo;human waste.&rdquo; You ask us
-to continue in your way; but from at least three points of view that way has
-been a failure. I ask you to adopt my way&mdash;which has not yet failed. That&rsquo;s
-why I say it&rsquo;s not conceit, but common sense.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-My way is simply this: that we three can live together and work in peace
-and harmony if this awful bugbear of Authority is dropped out of the scheme.
-Each of us must go her own way; we&rsquo;re all different, and there&rsquo;s no reason
-why one should impose her authority on the lives of the others. You say that
-you should because you&rsquo;re our mother. But that&rsquo;s the thing I want to discuss.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Motherhood isn&rsquo;t infallibility. If a woman is a wise woman she&rsquo;s a wise
-mother; if she&rsquo;s a foolish woman she&rsquo;s a foolish mother. Because you&rsquo;re our
-mother doesn&rsquo;t mean that you must always be right; before being a mother
-you&rsquo;re a human being, and any human being is likely to be wrong. To get
-down to brutal facts, we think you are <em>not</em> right about the whole thing. We&rsquo;ve
-thought so for years, but now it&rsquo;s come to the time when our thinking must be
-put into action. We&rsquo;re no longer children; but even as mere infants we
-thought these things&mdash;without having the right to express them. What I&rsquo;m
-trying to do now is to express them not as a daughter, but quite impersonally
-as a human being, as a mere friend, a sister, or anyone who might come to
-you stating that she believed with all her soul that you were wrong, and also
-stating, just as impersonally, that she wouldn&rsquo;t think of modeling her line of
-conduct after that pattern which appeared to her so wrong. We <em>must</em> face the
-facts; if you do that squarely it doesn&rsquo;t seem so bad, and you stop flinching
-about it. You get to the point where you&rsquo;re not afraid to face them boldly,
-and then you begin to <em>construct</em>. And this is the only way to clear up the
-kind of rottenness and decay that flourishes in our family life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It&rsquo;s in the interest of this achievement that I say the thing a girl isn&rsquo;t
-supposed to say to her mother&mdash;namely, that Betty and I will not any longer
-subscribe to the things you expect us to. The fact to face just as quickly as
-possible is this: it&rsquo;s the starting point. When you realize that we feel it&rsquo;s a
-question of doing this or laying a foundation for lives that are just <em>half</em> lives&mdash;hideous
-perverted things which miss all the beauty that you can put into the
-short life given you&mdash;I think you&rsquo;ll see how serious we are. We&rsquo;re at least
-two intelligent human beings, if we&rsquo;re nothing else. And why should you ask
-or expect that we&rsquo;ll submit to a system which to us means stupidity, misery,
-pettiness&mdash;all those things which we&rsquo;ve seen working out for years and which,
-being at least intelligent, we want to keep away from?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That much settled, we can continue to live together in just one way&mdash;as
-three sisters or friends; the motherhood, in so far as it means authority or an
-attempt to mould us to <em>your</em> way, must be eliminated. A complete new family
-idealism can be built on such a basis. You will say that it&rsquo;s an abnormal basis
-for any mother to accept. Of course it is; but the situation is abnormal, and
-the orthodox remedies aren&rsquo;t applicable.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The reason I say the situation is abnormal is this: usually when a mother
-objects to her daughters&rsquo; behavior it is on some definite basis of opposing the
-things they <em>do</em>&mdash;like going to too many parties or falling in love with the
-wrong man. You have very little fault to find with the things we do. Your
-objections are on a basis of what we <em>are</em>&mdash;or, rather, of what we <em>are not</em>: that
-we are not orthodox, that we are not hypocrites, that we are not the kind of
-<a id="page-9" class="pagenum" title="9"></a>
-daughters the Victorians approved of. &ldquo;Hypocrites&rdquo; will sound paradoxical;
-but you have confessed that you would rather have us lie to you than to disagree
-with you; that you would rather have us be sentimental about &ldquo;the way
-a girl should treat her mother&rdquo; than to learn how we ought to treat ourselves.
-You call that being &ldquo;respectful&rdquo; and think that harmony is possible only under
-such conditions. We call it being &ldquo;insulting,&rdquo; and think that it&rsquo;s the one sure
-way of destroying any chance of harmony. If we respect you it must be because
-we think you worthy of the truth: anything else is degrading to both
-sides.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-You&rsquo;ll say you can&rsquo;t be satisfied to live with us and not give advice and
-all the other things that are part of a mother&rsquo;s duty. You may give all the
-advice you want to; the keynote of the new situation will be that we&rsquo;ll take the
-advice if we believe it&rsquo;s right; if not we&rsquo;ll ignore it, just as a man ignores his
-friend&rsquo;s advice when he feels it to be wrong. Of course the wise person
-doesn&rsquo;t give much advice; he simply lives his life the best way he knows how.
-That&rsquo;s the only bid he can make for emulation. If we tell you that we don&rsquo;t
-approve of the creed you have made you mustn&rsquo;t be surprised if we try to
-formulate one of our own. There&rsquo;s no reason for us to ask you to change
-just because we&rsquo;re your daughters. You must do as you believe. But you
-must grant us the same privilege.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We disagree about fundamentals. If our beliefs were merely the vague,
-unformed ideas of children you might try to change them. But it&rsquo;s too late
-now. So we can live together harmoniously only if we give up the foolish
-attempts at &ldquo;influencing.&rdquo;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We&rsquo;re not living three generations ago. We&rsquo;ve had Shaw since then,
-and parents and children aren&rsquo;t doing the insulting things to each other they
-used to do. Among intelligent people some of the old issues can never raise
-their heads again. And so, it&rsquo;s for you to decide:&mdash;whether we shall build on
-the new foundation together or separately.
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-It might be a play; it&rsquo;s certainly rather good for reality. And
-what happened? The mother refused to &ldquo;accept the terms&rdquo;&mdash;which is
-not surprising, perhaps; and the household broke up into two establishments
-with results that will disappoint the conservative who thinks
-those girls should have been soundly beaten. The first wrench of it,
-the girl said, reminded her of George&rsquo;s parting with Marion in <em>Tono-Bungay</em>:&mdash;that
-sense of belonging to each other immensely, that &ldquo;profound
-persuasion of irreparable error&rdquo; in the midst of what seemed
-profoundly right. &ldquo;Nothing is simple,&rdquo; Wells wrote in that connection;
-&ldquo;every wrong done has a certain justice in it, and every good
-deed has dregs of evil.&rdquo; But the girl and her mother have learned to be
-friends as a result of that break, and the latter will tell you now that
-it was the right thing to have done.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The preface to <em>Misalliance</em> has such a wealth of quotable things
-in it that the only way to get them appreciated is to quote. Shaw has
-said much of this before, but it is all so valuable that it ought to be
-shouted from the housetops:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
-<p class="noindent">
-<a id="page-10" class="pagenum" title="10"></a>
-The people against whom children are wholly unprotected are those
-who devote themselves to the very mischievous and cruel sort of abortion
-which is called bringing up a child in the way it should go. Now nobody
-knows the way a child should go.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What is a child? An experiment. A fresh attempt to produce the just
-man made perfect: that is, to make humanity divine. And you will vitiate the
-experiment if you make the slightest attempt to abort it into some fancy figure
-of your own: for example, your notion of a good man or a womanly woman.
-If you treat it as a little wild beast to be tamed, or as a pet to be played with,
-or even as a means to save you trouble and to make money for you (and
-these are our commonest ways), it may fight its way through in spite of you
-and save its soul alive; for all its instincts will resist you, and possibly be
-strengthened in the resistance; but if you begin with its own holiest aspirations,
-and suborn them for your own purposes, then there is hardly any limit
-to the mischief you may do.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Francis Place tells us that his father always struck his children when he
-found one within his reach.... Francis records the habit with bitterness,
-having reason to thank his stars that his father respected the inside of
-his head whilst cuffing the outside of it; and this made it easy for Francis to
-do yeoman&rsquo;s service to his country as that rare and admirable thing, a Free-thinker:
-the only sort of thinker, I may remark, whose thoughts, and consequently
-whose religious convictions, command any respect.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now Mr. Place, senior, would be described by many as a bad father;
-and I do not contend that he was a conspicuously good one. But as compared
-with the conventionally good father who deliberately imposes himself
-on his son as god; who takes advantage of childish credulity and parent worship
-to persuade his son that what he approves of is right and what he disapproves
-of is wrong; who imposes a corresponding conduct on the child by a
-system of prohibitions and penalties, rewards and eulogies, for which he
-claims divine sanction; compared to this sort of abortionist and monster maker,
-I say, Place appears almost as a Providence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A gentleman once wrote to me and said, with an obvious conviction
-that he was being most reasonable and high minded, that the only thing he
-beat his children for was failure in perfect obedience and perfect truthfulness.
-On these attributes, he said, he must insist. As one of them is not a virtue at
-all, and the other is the attribute of a god, one can imagine what the lives of
-this gentleman&rsquo;s children would have been if it had been possible for him to
-live down to his monstrous and foolish pretensions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The cruelty (of beating a child) must be whitewashed by a moral excuse,
-and a pretense of reluctance. It must be for the child&rsquo;s good. The assailant
-must say &ldquo;This hurts me more than it hurts you.&rdquo; There must be hypocrisy
-as well as cruelty.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The most excusable parents are those who try to correct their own faults in
-their offspring. The parent who says to his child: &ldquo;I am one of the successes
-of the Almighty: therefore imitate me in every particular or I will have the
-skin off your back&rdquo; (a quite common attitude) is a much more absurd figure
-than the man who, with a pipe in his mouth, thrashes his boy for smoking.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If you must hold yourself up to your children as an object lesson (which
-is not at all necessary), hold yourself up as a warning and not as an example.
-But you had much better let the child&rsquo;s character alone. If you once allow
-yourself to regard a child as so much material for you to manufacture into any
-shape that happens to suit your fancy you are defeating the experiment of the
-<a id="page-11" class="pagenum" title="11"></a>
-Life Force. You are assuming that the child does not know its own business,
-and that you do. In this you are sure to be wrong. The child feels the
-drive of the Life Force (often called the Will of God); and you cannot feel it
-for him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Most children can be, and many are, hopelessly warped and wasted by
-parents who are ignorant and silly enough to suppose that they know what a
-human being ought to be, and who stick at nothing in their determination to
-force their children into their moulds.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Experienced parents, when children&rsquo;s rights are preached to them, very
-naturally ask whether children are to be allowed to do what they like. The best
-reply is to ask whether adults are to be allowed to do what they like. The two
-cases are the same. The adult who is nasty is not allowed to do what he likes:
-neither can the child who likes to be nasty. There is no difference in principle
-between the rights of a child and those of an adult: the difference in their
-cases is one of circumstance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Most working folk today either send their children to day schools or
-turn them out of doors. This solves the problem for the parents. It does not
-solve it for the children, any more than the tethering of a goat in the field or
-the chasing of an unlicensed dog in the streets solves it for the goat or the dog;
-but it shows that in no class are people willing to endure the society of their
-children, and consequently it is an error to believe that the family provides
-children with edifying adult society, or that the family is a social unit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The family is in that, as in so many other respects, a humbug. Old people
-and young people cannot walk at the same pace without distress and final
-loss of health to one of the parties.... And since our system is nevertheless
-to pack them all into the same house and pretend that they are happy,
-and that this particular sort of happiness is the foundation of virtue, it is
-found that in discussing family life we never speak of actual adults or actual
-children, or of realities of any sort, but always of ideals such as The Home, a
-Mother&rsquo;s Influence, a Father&rsquo;s Care, Filial Piety, Duty, Affection, Family Life,
-etc., etc., which are no doubt very comforting phrases, but which beg the question
-of what a home and a mother&rsquo;s influence and a father&rsquo;s care and so forth
-really come to.... Women who cannot bear to be separated from their
-pet dogs send their children to boarding school cheerfully. They may say
-and even believe that in allowing their children to leave home they are sacrificing
-themselves for their children&rsquo;s good.... But to allege that children
-are better continually away from home is to give up the whole popular
-sentimental theory of the family....
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If you compel an adult and a child to live in one another&rsquo;s company
-either the adult or the child will be miserable. There is nothing whatever unnatural
-or wrong or shocking in this fact, and there is no harm in it if only it
-be sensibly faced and provided for. The mischief that it does at present is
-produced by our efforts to ignore it, or to smother it under a heap of sentimental
-and false pretenses.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The child&rsquo;s rights, being clearly those of any other human being, are
-summed up in the right to live.... And the rights of society over it
-clearly extend to requiring it to qualify itself to live in society without wasting
-other people&rsquo;s time....
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We must reconcile education with liberty. We must find out some means
-of making men workers and, if need be, warriors, without making them
-slaves.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In dealing with children what is needed is not logic but sense.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<a id="page-12" class="pagenum" title="12"></a>
-A child should begin to assert itself early, and shift for itself more and
-more not only in washing and dressing itself, but in opinions and conduct.... And
-what is a tyrant? Quite simply a person who says to another
-person, young or old, &ldquo;You shall do as I tell you.&rdquo;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Children are extremely cruel without intending it; and in ninety-nine cases
-out of a hundred the reason is that they do not conceive their elders as having
-any human feeling. Serve the elders right, perhaps, for posing as superhuman!
-The penalty of the imposter is not that he is found out (he very seldom is)
-but that he is taken for what he pretends to be and treated as such.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The family ideal is a humbug and a nuisance: one might as reasonably
-talk of the barrack ideal, or the forecastle ideal, or any other substitution of
-the machinery of social for the end of it, which must always be the fullest
-and most capable life: in short, the most Godly life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Even apart from its insufferable pretensions, the family needs hearty
-discrediting; for there is hardly any vulnerable part of it that could not be
-amputated with advantage.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Do not for a moment suppose that uncultivated people are merely indifferent
-to high and noble qualities. They hate them malignantly....
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whether the risks to which liberty exposes us are moral or physical our
-right to liberty involves the right to run them. A man who is not free to risk
-his neck as an aviator or his soul as a heretic is not free at all; and the right to
-liberty begins, not at the age of 21 years, but of 21 seconds.
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-You may have as much fun at Shaw&rsquo;s expense as you want on
-the grounds that he has never had to train a child and therefore doesn&rsquo;t
-know the difficulties. But if you want to laugh last don&rsquo;t read this
-preface or the play that follows it, because he will make a laughing-stock
-or a convert of you as surely as he will prove that he is far cleverer
-than you can ever hope to be.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shaw and Ellen Key preach practically the same doctrine about
-the home; both are temperamentally incapable of Charlotte Perkins
-Gilman&rsquo;s programme&mdash;education outside the home: Shaw because the
-school is as big a humbug as the family, and Miss Key because &ldquo;even
-if institutions can thus rough-plane the material that is to become a
-member of society, nevertheless they cannot&mdash;if they take in the major
-part of the child&rsquo;s education&mdash;accomplish that which is needed first
-of all if we are to lift ourselves to a higher spiritual plane in an economically
-just society: they cannot deepen the emotional life.&rdquo; Her insistence
-is strongly upon the education of the feelings as the most
-important factor in the soul-life. In her vision of the renaissance of
-motherhood she begins with Nietzsche&rsquo;s dictum that &ldquo;a time will come
-when men will think of nothing except education.&rdquo; Not that any one
-can be educated <em>to</em> motherliness; but that our sentimentalization of
-motherhood as the ever holy, ever infallible power, must be abandoned,
-<a id="page-13" class="pagenum" title="13"></a>
-and a quality of intelligent mother-power cultivated by definite
-courses of training which she lays out in detail.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In view of the number of homes I know of that come legitimately
-under the Shaw denunciation I feel sometimes that any socialization
-of home life is more hopeful than an attempt to remodel the hopeless
-conditions inside the home. Regard the parents you know&mdash;the
-great mass of them outside the exceptions that encourage you to believe
-spasmodically in the beauty and noble need of parenthood. If
-they are not cruel or stupid or ignorant or smug or righteous or tyrannical
-or dishonest or unimaginative or weak or quiet ineffectual, they
-are something else just as bad. It has come to the point where a good
-parent is as hard to find as an honest man.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Very seriously, however, there is hope in the situation&mdash;there is
-renaissance in the air. And it has its foundation in the sensible and
-healthy (though so far only tacit) admission that it doesn&rsquo;t matter so
-much what your child becomes as that he shall <em>become something</em>! You
-can&rsquo;t do much with him, anyhow, and you may as well face it. You
-can give him, during his first few years, the kind of foundation you
-think will help him; and for the rest of the time you can do only one
-thing that he will really need from you: you can develop your own
-personality as richly as you want him to develop his. You can refuse
-to worry about him&mdash;since that does neither of you any good&mdash;and
-thereby save stores of energy that he may draw upon for <em>your mutual
-benefit</em>. It becomes a sort of game for two, instead of the uninteresting
-kind in which one player is given all the advantages. Compared with
-it the old-fashioned game in which the mother sacrificed everything,
-suffered everything, wore herself out trying to help her child win, looks
-not only very unfair and very unnecessary, but very <em>wasteful</em>. And
-have you ever noticed how the man who sentimentalizes about the
-wonderful mothers we used to have&mdash;his own in particular&mdash;is the one
-whose life is lived at the opposite pole of the mother&rsquo;s wise direction?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If you disagree with all this, there is still one other method by
-which you may produce a child who will be a credit to himself and to
-society. You may be so utterly stupid and wrong-headed that he will
-rebel to the point of becoming something different. If you prefer
-this course no one need worry much about your child, because he&rsquo;ll
-probably found a system of child education that will cause him to be
-famous; and if you have a daughter, she&rsquo;ll probably become a Montessori.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<a id="page-14" class="pagenum" title="14"></a>
-The new home is a recognition that the child is not the only factor
-in society that needs educating. It assumes that no one&rsquo;s education
-is finished just because he&rsquo;s been made a parent. It means that
-we can all go on being educated together. It means the elimination of
-all kinds of domestic follies&mdash;for one, the ghastly embarrassment of
-growing up to discover that you&rsquo;re different from the rest of your family,
-and for that reason something of a criminal. It means the kind of
-understanding that develops a child&rsquo;s feeling instead of suppressing
-it, so that he won&rsquo;t be ashamed, for instance, of having such glorious
-things as dreams and visions. It means artistic education: and Shaw
-says that we all grow up stupid or mad to just the extent to which we
-have not been artistically educated.
-</p>
-
-<div class="filler">
-<h2 class="filler" id="THE_SWAN">
-THE SWAN
-</h2>
-
- <div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Under the lily shadow</p>
- <p class="verse">and the gold</p>
- <p class="verse">and the blue and mauve</p>
- <p class="verse">that the whin and the lilac</p>
- <p class="verse">pour down on the water,</p>
- <p class="verse">the fishes quiver.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Over the green cold leaves</p>
- <p class="verse">and the rippled silver</p>
- <p class="verse">and the tarnished copper</p>
- <p class="verse">of its neck and beak,</p>
- <p class="verse">toward the deep black water</p>
- <p class="verse">beneath the arches,</p>
- <p class="verse">the swan floats slowly.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Into the dark of the arch the swan floats</p>
- <p class="verse">and into the black depth of my sorrow</p>
- <p class="verse">it bears a white rose of flame.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza attr">
- <p class="verse"><em>F. S. Flint.</em></p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="DES_IMAGISTES">
-<a id="page-15" class="pagenum" title="15"></a>
-&ldquo;DES IMAGISTES&rdquo;
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="aut">
-CHARLES ASHLEIGH
-</p>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">A</span> new and well born recruit has been added to the ranks of the
-Insurgents. It is true he appeared before we did, but we welcome
-him before he welcomes us, and thus are things evened.
-<span class="smallcaps">The Little Review</span>, <em>The Masses</em>, <em>Poetry</em>, <em>The International</em>&mdash;all bearers
-of the sacred fire,&mdash;and now cometh <em>The Glebe</em>, heralding his approach
-with the chanting of many-colored strains. And, among the
-good things which <em>The Glebe</em> has put forth, is a book of portent: <em>Des
-Imagistes</em>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Imagistes form one of the latest schools, and it is meet that,
-before we read their work, we get some idea of their doctrine. Therefore
-I transcribe here some statements of representative Imagiste
-poets, which I have culled from <em>Poetry</em>, <em>The Egotist</em>, and other sources.
-Richard Aldington gives the following rules:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
-<p class="noindent">
-I. Direct treatment of subject. We convey an emotion by presenting
-the object and circumstance of the emotion without comment. For example,
-we do not say, &ldquo;O how I admire that exquisite, that beautiful, that&mdash;25 more
-adjectives&mdash;woman.&rdquo; But we present that woman, we make an &ldquo;Image&rdquo;
-of her, we make the scene convey the emotion....
-</p>
-
-<p>
-II. As few adjectives as possible.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-III. A hardness as of cut stone. No slop, no sentimentality. When
-people say the Imagiste poems are &ldquo;too hard&rdquo; ... we know we have
-done something good.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-IV. Individuality of rhythm. We make new fashions instead of cutting
-our clothes on the old models.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-V. The exact word. We make quite a heavy stress on that. It is
-most important. All great poetry is exact. All the dreariness of nineteenth
-century poetry comes from their not quite knowing what they wanted to say
-and filling up the gaps with portentous adjectives and idiotic similes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Here is a definition by Ezra Pound which helps us: &ldquo;An Image is that
-which presents an intellectual and emotional complex in an instant of time.&rdquo;
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-The book, <em>Des Imagistes</em>, is an anthology, presumably of Imagist
-(let us, once for all, Anglicize the French word and have done with
-it) poetry. Yet, one of the foremost imagists, Richard Aldington, in
-a critique of this book,&mdash;comparatively modest, owing to the fact
-that his own poems formed a sumptuous fraction of the volume,&mdash;says
-that five of those whose poems are there included are not true
-<a id="page-16" class="pagenum" title="16"></a>
-Imagists. These are Cournos, Hueffer, Upward, Joyce, and Cannell.
-Mr. Aldington says he doesn&rsquo;t mean that these poems are not beautiful&mdash;on
-the contrary, he admires them immensely&mdash;but they are
-not, &ldquo;strictly speaking,&rdquo; Imagist poems.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I agree that the poems of these five men are beautiful, especially
-the <em>I hear an army</em> of James Joyce and the <em>Nocturnes</em> of Skipwith
-Cannell; and I also maintain that, all unconsciously, the publishers
-of <em>The Glebe</em> have dealt a deadly blow to sectarian Imagism by
-including these non-Imagist poems in their anthology. Because, unless
-a school can prove that it alone has that unnameable wonder which
-excites us to deepest emotional turmoil, and which we call poetry,
-it has but little right to isolate itself or to separate its adepts from
-the bulk of poets. This may sound sententious, but is, nevertheless,
-true. Speak you in whatever mode or meter you will, if you arouse
-me to exultation, or to horror, or to the high pitch of any feeling,&mdash;if
-in me there is that responsive vibration that only true art can produce&mdash;then
-are you a poet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whitman does it to me. Poe does it to me. Baudelaire and
-Henley do it. To all of these there is in me a response. I&rsquo;m awfully
-sorry, but that&rsquo;s how it is. I think them all poets.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Imagists believe in the direct presentation of emotion, preferably
-in terms of objectivity. They abhor an excess of adjectives,
-and, after a satiety of the pompous Victorian stuff, I am much inclined
-to sympathize with that tenet of their faith.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I wish, however, to make clear my own position, which is the
-one that most counts when I am writing. I am an anarchist in poetry:
-I recognize no rules, no exclusions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If the expression of a certain thought, vision, or what not, requires
-twenty adjectives, then let us have them. If it be better expressed
-without adjectives, then let us abjure them&mdash;temporarily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I am myself a poet (whether performance equals desire is doubtful).
-My object as a poet is to express the things which are closest
-to me. This sounds banal, but is better than rhetoric; words exist
-not with which to define with superclarity the poet&rsquo;s function, source,
-and performance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the true expression of myself I might write Images which
-would be worshipped for their perfection by the Imagists. A moment
-after, I might gloat and wallow in the joy of my cosmic oneness
-<a id="page-17" class="pagenum" title="17"></a>
-(anathema to Imagists!) and, perhaps recall Whitman. The
-next minute, chronicling some shadowy episode of my variegated
-past, I may out-decay the decadent Baudelaire. But, this is always
-poetry if, by the magic of its words and the music of its arrangement,
-it speaks directly and beautifully to you, giving you that indescribable
-but unmistakeable sense of liberation and soul-expansion which
-comes on the contemplation of true art.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I think I have made myself clear. There is no quarrel with the
-Imagists, who have done some beautiful work, as such. But, if they
-claim monopoly of inspiration or art, as some of them appear to do,
-then&mdash;! Therefore, as a restricted and doctrinaire school, &ldquo;a bas les
-Imagistes!&rdquo; But, as an envigored company of the grand army of
-poets, &ldquo;Vivent les Imagistes!&rdquo;
-</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="OF_RUPERT_BROOKE_AND_OTHER_MATTERS">
-OF RUPERT BROOKE AND OTHER
-MATTERS
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="aut">
-ARTHUR DAVISON FICKE
-</p>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">S</span><span class="postfirstchar">ince</span> even to poets&mdash;and poets are erroneously supposed to
-sing their hearts out&mdash;there remains a certain right of privacy, I am
-not sure that we do well in writing so much of their personalities and
-their individual views of life. When we read a poem, we feel a
-temperament behind it; but the effort to catalogue and label that mind
-and its &ldquo;message&rdquo; is a little impertinent, and very futile. Mr. Rupert
-Brooke is an excellent illustration. His fondness for this or that&mdash;whether
-in landscape, food, ideas, or morals&mdash;is hardly our concern.
-He deserves to be treated not as a natural-history specimen,&mdash;a peculiar
-group of likes and dislikes and convictions,&mdash;but as an artist.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Brooke has the distinction, rare for a young poet, of not
-having written any bad verse, or of not having printed it. His sole
-volume, <em>Poems</em> (Sidgwick and Jackson, London, 1913), manifests
-in even its least notable pieces a creative spirit not allowed to run riot,
-but chastened and restrained by a keen sense of the obscure laws
-whose workings turn passion into a decorative pattern, and the
-emotions of the blood into intelligible designs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<a id="page-18" class="pagenum" title="18"></a>
-Unless one is deeply concerned with such things, one is not likely
-to recognize the fundamental difference between those poets whose
-work is merely a more or less interesting emotional cry, and those
-nobler and more mature poets in whose work the crude elements of
-emotion are subordinated to the exigencies of an artistic conception.
-Only the latter have written fine poetry. The former may move
-us, as a crying child may move us; but they cannot exalt us to a
-peak that rises above the region of mere sympathetic response. They
-can never bring us a wind of revelation, or a flame from beyond the
-world. They are never the poets to whom other poets&mdash;and these
-are the only final judges&mdash;turn for inspiration or for fellowship.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For after all, there is no magic in any theme or in the emotion
-behind it; what is magical lies wholly in the design, the mould, in
-which the poet embodies a feeling that is probably common to all.
-No thought is so profound, no intimation so subtle, that it alone suffices
-as the stuff of poetry. But any thought, any intimation, if it be
-justly correlated and moulded into an organic and expressive shape,
-will serve to awaken echoes of a forgotten or unknown loveliness,
-and pierce its way into the very soul of the listener.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This sense of design of which I speak is not a hard, formal, conscious
-thing in the mind of the poet; but rather a carefully trained
-instinct, like the instinct that guides the hand of a fine draughtsman
-in the drawing of a curve of unexpected beauty. There is a right
-place to begin the curve, and a right place to end it; and at every
-instant of its length it is swayed and governed by a sense of relation
-to preceding and succeeding moments,&mdash;a sense subject to laws that
-defy mathematical formulation, but are perilously definite nevertheless.
-This sense of control is a rare thing to find in the work of so
-young a man as Mr. Brooke. Most young writers seem to approach
-their work as an unrestrained expression of themselves,&mdash;which it
-should be: but they forget that, for real self-expression, the most
-scrupulous mastery of the medium of expression is necessary. They
-regard the writing of verse as something in the nature of a joy-ride
-with an open throttle,&mdash;instead of seeing in it a piece of difficult driving,
-to be achieved only by the use of every subtlety of modulated
-speed and controlled steering that the mind is capable of employing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That Mr. Brooke needs no such warning, let the following fine
-sonnet bear witness:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
-<h3 class="excerpt" id="SUCCESS">
-<a id="page-19" class="pagenum" title="19"></a>
-SUCCESS
-</h3>
-
- <div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">I think if you had loved me when I wanted;</p>
- <p class="verse">If I&rsquo;d looked up one day, and seen your eyes,</p>
- <p class="verse">And found my wild sick blasphemous prayer granted,</p>
- <p class="verse">And your brown face, that&rsquo;s full of pity and wise,</p>
- <p class="verse">Flushed suddenly; the white godhead in new fear</p>
- <p class="verse">Intollerably so struggling, and so shamed;</p>
- <p class="verse">Most holy and far, if you&rsquo;d come all too near,</p>
- <p class="verse">If earth had seen Earth&rsquo;s lordliest wild limbs tamed,</p>
- <p class="verse">Shaken, and trapped, and shivering, for <em>my</em> touch&mdash;</p>
- <p class="verse">Myself should I have slain? or that foul you?</p>
- <p class="verse">But this the strange gods, who had given so much,</p>
- <p class="verse">To have seen and known you, this they might not do.</p>
- <p class="verse">One last shame&rsquo;s spared me, one black word&rsquo;s unspoken;</p>
- <p class="verse">And I&rsquo;m alone; and you have not awoken.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-It is significant that for his sonnets Mr. Brooke frequently chooses
-the Shakesperian form,&mdash;a form which, strangely, English poets have
-generally for at least a century discarded in favor of the Petrarchan
-model. The common feeling appears to be that the Petrarchan (a-b-b-a,
-a-b-b-a, c-d-e-c-d-e or some variation on that scheme) is musical and
-emotional; and that the Shakesperian (a-b-a-b, c-d-c-d, e-f-e-f, g-g)
-is harsh, cold, mechanical, and incapable of subtle harmonies. The
-exact reverse of this is the case. It is perhaps too much to ask the
-reader to write a sequence of a hundred sonnets in each form, as a
-test; but I am confident that after such an experience, he would
-agree with me. The Petrarchan form is capable of only one successful
-effect; a rising on the crest of a wave, whose summit is the
-end of the eighth line; and a subsidence of the wave, in the course
-of the last six lines. The Shakesperian form, on the other hand, is
-capable of a literally infinite variety of effects: no pattern is set arbitrarily
-in advance, but, as in blank verse, any pattern may be
-created. The first twelve lines&mdash;which are nothing but three quatrains&mdash;can
-be moulded into a contour that fits any shape or size
-of thought whatsoever; and the couplet at the end&mdash;a device despised
-by the ignorant&mdash;may be used either to clinch the purport
-of the preceding twelve lines, or to blend with them, or startlingly to
-refute them, or to serve any other end that the genius of the writer
-is capable of imagining. The mere novice will like this form because
-of its simple rhyme-scheme and its superficial ease of working;
-the experienced amateur will prefer the Petrarchan form because,
-while the more complex rhyme-scheme presents for him no difficulties,
-<a id="page-20" class="pagenum" title="20"></a>
-the basic inadequacies of his thought-structure are fairly well concealed
-by the arbitrary sonnet-structure; but the master of imagination
-and expression is likely to follow Shakespeare and the novice in
-preferring the true English form, wherein he can with perfect freedom
-create a subtly modulated movement that will answer to every
-sway and leap of his thought. Mr. Brooke, whose sense of form is
-keen, is one of those who can safely and wisely try the more interesting
-and more dangerous medium.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I have thought it worth while to talk a good deal of the sonnet
-in connection with Mr. Brooke for the reason that several of his very
-finest pieces are in this form. The following is one that stands a
-good chance of being in the anthologies a hundred years from now:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
-<h3 class="excerpt" id="THE_HILL">
-THE HILL
-</h3>
-
- <div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Breathless, we flung us on the windy hill,</p>
- <p class="verse">Laughed in the sun, and kissed the lovely grass.</p>
- <p class="verse">You said, &ldquo;Through glory and ecstasy we pass;</p>
- <p class="verse">Wind, sun, and earth remain, the birds sing still,</p>
- <p class="verse">When we are old, are old ...&rdquo; &ldquo;And when we die</p>
- <p class="verse">All&rsquo;s over that is ours; and life burns on</p>
- <p class="verse">Through other lovers, other lips,&rdquo; said I,</p>
- <p class="verse">&ldquo;Heart of my heart, our heaven is now, is won!&rdquo;</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">&ldquo;We are Earth&rsquo;s best, that learnt her lesson here.</p>
- <p class="verse">Life is our cry. We have kept the faith!&rdquo; we said;</p>
- <p class="verse">&ldquo;We shall go down with unreluctant tread</p>
- <p class="verse">Rose-crowned into the darkness!&rdquo; ... Proud we were,</p>
- <p class="verse">And laughed, that had such brave, true things to say.</p>
- <p class="verse">&mdash;And then you suddenly cried, and turned away.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Perhaps as magical as any of Mr. Brooke&rsquo;s work is a longer poem
-called <em>The Fish</em>,&mdash;a remarkable and original piece of fantasy that
-makes the sub-aqueous universe vivid and real to the senses of the
-reader, and opens to him a new world of imaginative experience.
-Even the opening lines will serve to indicate something of the curious
-trance-quality:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
- <div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">In a cool curving world he lies</p>
- <p class="verse">And ripples with dark ecstasies.</p>
- <p class="verse">The kind luxurious lapse and steal</p>
- <p class="verse">Shapes all his universe to feel</p>
- <p class="verse">And know and be; the clinging stream</p>
- <p class="verse">Closes his memory, glooms his dream,</p>
- <p class="verse">Who lips the roots o&rsquo; the shore, and glides</p>
- <p class="verse">Superb on unreturning tides ...</p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a id="page-21" class="pagenum" title="21"></a>
-In other of these poems, one is struck by Mr. Brooke&rsquo;s passion
-for ugliness. He loves to take the most hideous and base facts of
-life and give them a place in his work alongside the things of beauty.
-It would be hard to find anything more humorous and at the same
-time more repulsive than this:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
-<h3 class="excerpt" id="WAGNER">
-WAGNER
-</h3>
-
- <div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Creeps in half wanton, half asleep,</p>
- <p class="verse1">One with a fat wide hairless face.</p>
- <p class="verse">He likes love music that is cheap;</p>
- <p class="verse1">Likes women in a crowded place;</p>
- <p class="verse2">And wants to hear the noise they&rsquo;re making.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">His heavy eyelids droop half-over,</p>
- <p class="verse1">Great pouches swing beneath his eyes.</p>
- <p class="verse">He listens, thinks himself the lover,</p>
- <p class="verse1">Heaves from his stomach wheezy sighs;</p>
- <p class="verse2">He likes to feel his heart&rsquo;s a-breaking.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">The music swells. His gross legs quiver.</p>
- <p class="verse1">His little lips are bright with slime.</p>
- <p class="verse">The music swells. The women shiver,</p>
- <p class="verse1">And all the while, in perfect time</p>
- <p class="verse2">His pendulous stomach hangs a-shaking.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Now, a passion for ugliness like this is really a revolt against
-ugliness,&mdash;not the tender-skinned æsthete&rsquo;s revolt, which consists in
-denying ugliness and escaping into a remote dream, but the strong
-man&rsquo;s, the poet&rsquo;s,&mdash;the revolt that is in effect a seizing of ugliness
-in all its repulsiveness and giving it a reason for existence by embodying
-it in a chosen pattern that is beautiful. By this method the poet
-masters emotion, even unpleasant emotion, making it subservient to
-a decorative design dictated by his own sense of proportion. It is
-thus that he is able to endure the world of actualities, and to find it
-comparable in interest with the world of his own thoughts. And by
-this process he saves himself from the sharpest bite of evil. For there
-is a curious consolation in transforming a spontaneous cry into a calculated
-work of art. By such a process one can give, to elements
-that before seemed only parts of a torturing chaos, their ordered
-places in a known scheme. One can impose propitious form upon
-one&rsquo;s recollections, and create a little world of design-relations where
-the poignancy of experience is lost in the discipline of beauty. It is
-for this reason that the poet must be considered, in spite of everything,
-the happiest of men.
-</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="THE_NEW_LOYALTY">
-<a id="page-22" class="pagenum" title="22"></a>
-THE NEW LOYALTY
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="aut">
-GEORGE BURMAN FOSTER
-</p>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">B</span><span class="postfirstchar">ack</span> to the Old Greek for a starting-point! Two seeds, of the same
-species, though distant in space and time, go through an identical
-development. Root corresponds with root, stem with stem,
-flower with flower, fruit with fruit. Something seems to control all this
-change. It is not <b>mere</b> change. It is change with a plan, a purpose, a
-pattern. Hence the Greek said that there must be an unchanging
-type, a fixed &ldquo;idea,&rdquo; a spiritual, invisible norm, the &ldquo;first&rdquo; and &ldquo;final&rdquo;
-cause of all this change, to which all concrete, particular plants of the
-species are true. Back of the visible tangible plant must be its <em>Eidos</em>,
-its eternal norm, form, idea, &ldquo;species.&rdquo; So with everything. An elaboration
-of this conclusion gives the real unchanging, fixed eternal
-world back of, underpinning, supporting this visible changing, temporal
-world.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such a world-view as this was made more valuable and more imperative
-by the break-up of the traditional morals and religion of the
-Greek state. The search for the <em>meaning</em> of life was precipitated by
-the disintegration of social sanctions and of the guarantees of custom.
-This search was voiced in the questionings of Socrates. It was made
-serious by the menacing individualism of the sophists. The outcome
-was that stability, security, confidence were found in the Platonic doctrine.
-Back of this ephemeral world is the real world of &ldquo;ideas,&rdquo; the
-unchanging and eternal, upon which we may rest our minds and hearts
-amid all this disappointing and desperate flux.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Passing by the Middle Ages, which, <em>mutatis mutandis</em>, appropriated
-this scheme, we pause over the significance of the Renaissance
-period. Two things are uppermost in one&rsquo;s mind and as one thinks of
-the tumultuous beginnings of modern life which characterized the
-fourteenth, fifteenth, and sixteenth centuries. For one thing, the
-Renaissance was the culmination of a long period of absorption in
-which men had been gradually working their way back, by intellectual
-assimilation, towards the beginnings of the rich tradition which Church
-and Empire had stored up. This period of absorption was that five
-hundred years during which pagan hordes that had conquered Rome
-<a id="page-23" class="pagenum" title="23"></a>
-were conquered by the knowledge, faith, custom, civilization of their
-victims. From the cultural standpoint the new nations were hungry,
-the larder of the old civilization was replete, and hence authority on
-one side and absorption on the other became natural and inevitable.
-Thus, the philosophical preconceptions, the cosmological ground-principles,
-the whole general attitude toward life&rsquo;s problems of the whole
-old world were fastened upon the mind of the young European peoples.
-<em>It must not be forgotten</em> that all this was <em>aat</em> the <em>hatural</em> achievement
-of the new European life and genius, but as foreign to it, as inherited
-(and at first as cherished) as grandfatherly ideas are in the mind
-of a child. If some day the child must shake off the old conceptions
-because he hears the call of life to go forth and achieve his own inner
-world, it would be only natural to expect that this young European
-giant should some day struggle to cast aside his intellectual inheritance
-and go forth to conquer reality for himself, in his own way, with
-his own weapons.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Well&mdash;and this is the second matter&mdash;it was just that very thing
-that was happening in the early &ldquo;teens&rdquo; of our era. The young western
-world began to look at life for itself, and a curious, astonished,
-wild-eyed look it was. Europe had learned at its mother&rsquo;s knee to
-say: &ldquo;The true world is fixed and final. Reality is static.&rdquo; But looking
-out now in wonderment, seeing farther than the ancient world had
-ever seen, the new world said: &ldquo;Ah, no! The world is not static. The
-world <em>moves</em>. Things change.&rdquo;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Two well-known anecdotes are told of Galileo, which, if not
-authentic, are well invented. The one tells how, in the dome at Pisa
-during worship, the litany or the sermon boring him, he observed the
-cathedral chandelier move by the wind and, studying its vibrations,
-discovered a basic law of mechanics. The profound meaning of this
-anecdote is, obviously, that God spoke to the man more effectively
-through the <em>self-moving</em> pendulum than in the rigid, immobile litany
-from a rigid, immobile, hieratic heart; and that, if we do not understand
-such litany, and it bores us, we may still devoutly worship by
-meditating upon what we can understand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The other narrative tells how, imprisoned, tortured inwardly by
-a compulsory recantation, Galileo gathered himself together and declared:
-&ldquo;<em>E pu se muove</em>&rdquo; (&ldquo;it moves though&rdquo;). Galileo never uttered
-these words; but the history of the world has uttered them for him!
-<a id="page-24" class="pagenum" title="24"></a>
-Yes, it moves <em>itself</em>, this earth, and in its motion it knocks everything
-down that is in its way. Not the earth alone moves&mdash;all that is in
-the world is eternal motion!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Man moves&mdash;in space, and time, extensively and intensively.
-Truth moves, and, moving, demolishes thrones and altars. Morality
-moves, making ancient good uncouth. Faith moves, the human heart
-putting into it the pulse beat of its life, and there is no way to stop
-this self moving Faith.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Those old stories are not true to fact, but they are true to truth.
-Galileo <em>did</em> say: &ldquo;It is my opinion that the earth is very noble and
-admirable by reason of so many and so different generations and alterations
-which are incessantly made therein.&rdquo; And Descartes joined
-him: &ldquo;The nature of things physical is much more easily conceived
-when they are beheld coming gradually into existence, than when they
-are only considered as produced at once in a finished and perfect
-state.&rdquo; Thus these men&mdash;and many others&mdash;voiced the changed
-temper that was coming over the world,&mdash;the transfer of interest
-from the permanent to the changing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Slowly the new attitude was adopted in many departments of
-knowledge, but the facts of biology were apparently all against its
-becoming a general philosophical movement. The species of plants
-and animals had every appearance of being fixed and final, unchangeably
-stamped once for all upon the sentient world by the Creator. Not
-only so, but the wonderful adaptation of organism to environment,
-of organ to organism, a marvelous and delicate complexity of teleological
-adjustment, seemed to testify unanswerably to the reality of
-fixed and final types, to a static underpinning for all this changing
-order.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<em>Origin of</em> Species! That was the bomb with which Charles Darwin
-destroyed the last stronghold of a static world-view. &ldquo;Species&rdquo;
-is the scholastics&rsquo; translation of the Greek <em>Eidos</em>, the fixed and final
-type or idea which is first and final cause of the changing life of each
-creature. Species is a synonym and epitome of fixity and finality;
-it is the key-word of a static other-world reality. When Darwin said,
-&ldquo;<em>Origin</em> of Species,&rdquo; he was cramming the conflict of the ancient wisdom
-and the modern knowledge into a bursting phrase. When he
-said of species what Galileo said of the earth, <em>e pu se muove</em>, he
-emancipated once for all genetic and experimental ideas as an <em>organon</em>
-<a id="page-25" class="pagenum" title="25"></a>
-of asking questions and looking for explanations. He lifted
-the biological gates which had kept back the flood of change from
-inundating the old fields of fixity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In sum: The world of thought is slowly, painfully making a
-change in its fundamental attitude toward reality such as is not made
-oftener than once in several millennia: One general conception of
-reality was all-controlling for 2,000 years. Then from Copernicus
-to Darwin many factors in a world-subversive change were struggling
-for recognition. Conceptions that had reigned in the philosophy of
-nature and of knowledge for 2,000 years rested in the superiority of
-the fixed and final: they rested on treating change and origin as signs
-of defect and unreality. In laying hands upon the sacred ark of absolute
-permanency; in treating forms that had been regarded as types
-of fixity and perfection as originating and passing away, the &ldquo;origin of
-species&rdquo; introduced a mode of thinking that in the end was bound to
-transform the logic of knowledge, and hence the treatment of all our
-values and verities and virtues.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But heaven and earth and species are not all. Shall there be no
-Copernicus of the moral heavens, no Galileo of the moral earth, no
-Darwin of the moral life?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hove now Friedrich Nietzsche into sight!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Loyalty has ever been the basic virtue, foundation of life and of
-law. Naturally, in the moral world, the objects to which loyalty shall
-be related will be objects that are real. But, as we have seen, in the
-old world, the real was the unchangeable, the immobile, the finished,
-the final, the absolute. To these, therefore, the old loyalty was directed
-and dedicated.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Comes now Friedrich Nietzsche, a man in whose name the entire
-moral revolution of our time has found its most pregnant expression,
-and declares war upon that old loyalty, and does so in the name of
-a new culture, a new humanity. To him this loyalty is not only an
-empty folly; it is more than that&mdash;a crime against life, a weakening
-of human power. To him, not stationariness, but <em>self-changing</em>, is
-the life task of man. He feels himself akin only to him who changes.
-Every moment of life has an existence, a right, a content of its own.
-No present point of time has a right to lay claim, on its own account,
-to the next point. From what we now will, think, feel, no man may
-presume to require us to will, think, feel the same way tomorrow.
-<a id="page-26" class="pagenum" title="26"></a>
-And this preaching of Nietzsche&rsquo;s on the duty of change as against
-the old duty to change never has found more ears to listen and more
-hearts to believe than any other preaching of our time. This new
-preaching is at once most influential and most dangerous. But its
-very dangerousness is a most wholesome and necessary part of the
-modern moral view of life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Is loyalty, then, something about which there is nothing to be
-learned? Is there no counterfeit and caricature of loyalty? No mask
-behind which men hide their indolence and complacency and thoughtlessness?
-You meet a man whom you have not seen in long years,
-and you say to him: &ldquo;Why, you have not changed a bit, you are
-precisely the same as in the old days.&rdquo; Have you praised him, necessarily?
-If he left you as a child, looking and speaking and thinking
-and acting like a child, ought he not to have changed? Does a fruit
-remain what it was as bud and blossom? Life is development&mdash;but
-development is a constant <em>self-changing</em>. Development is an incessant
-<em>dis</em>-loyalty to what is already there. And if man, just because
-he is man, and has a will of his own and can set himself against the
-law of development, should sell his life to the force of inertia&mdash;would
-not that be a crime against life? And yet, even such a deed men
-call loyalty! Men say that they want to be faithful to the heritage
-of the fathers. Which is often enough simply to say that they mean
-to store away their heritage where it will be kept from the world&rsquo;s
-light and air that would destroy it&mdash;but where, also, it can enter into
-no human intercourse, serve no life, fulfil no end of life. This loyalty
-of unchangeableness to the heritage puts the talent in a napkin,
-and there can be no increase. Men say that they mean to abide faithful
-to their faith unto death. Often enough this is only stubbornness
-and narrowness. It requires no art and no merit to exercise such
-faithfulness. All one needs to do is to close one&rsquo;s eyes and ears to
-what lies beyond the bounds of this faith, to forego the questionings
-and uncertainties that others must pass through,&mdash;and then to send in
-one&rsquo;s claim to the reward and gratitude due such loyalty! Today it is
-quite the thing at college commencements to spy out the men who are
-models of such loyalty and to say: &ldquo;Look how firm and steadfast
-and rock-like they are!&rdquo; But it cannot be denied that much of this
-illustrious loyalty is nothing but natural or voluntary incapacity to
-think more widely than others have taught them to think, or, for the
-<a id="page-27" class="pagenum" title="27"></a>
-matter of that, permitted them to think. Back of this bragging about
-principles which are vainly declared to be unshakable, there is frequently
-nothing but an ill-natured obstinacy whose so-called principles
-have no other basis than the self-interest to which they are contributary.
-It was this loyalty to the finished,&mdash;finished cult, finished
-belief, finished customs and practices, finished religion and morality,&mdash;that
-stoned the prophets and crucified Jesus. It was this kind of loyalty
-that the mediaeval church imposed upon the &ldquo;Faithful,&rdquo; imprisoning
-the conscience therein for time and for eternity. Bound by an
-oath of loyalty, the priest renounced the world; the monk and nun
-under monastic vows dedicated their lives to the church, their services
-to &ldquo;heaven.&rdquo; And hence it marked an epoch when Luther called
-their loyalty a sin, and went forth into the world, the home, the vocation,
-the business, breaking the vows of priest and cloister. Was
-such disloyalty to a sacred obligation loyalty in the sixteenth century,
-and shall it be blasphemy in the twentieth? Is it not rather a
-blasphemy to preach to men a loyalty which obligates them to forego
-the use of their best and noblest powers, which condemns them to
-spiritual standstill in the eternal progressive movement of life?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Take some illustrations which will test insight and courage.
-There is the constitution of the United States. Shall we assume
-toward it the loyalty of fixedness and finality, or the loyalty of change?
-No man of veneration and equipoise would favor capricious or precipitate
-or superfluous change in so noble a document. But, for all
-that, the experience of life made the constitution for life&rsquo;s sake, and
-the maker is more than the made. If our national life pass&mdash;as pass
-it has&mdash;into new seas and under new stars, where life needs a change
-of the constitution, then the principle which prompted the people to
-frame the constitution in the first place requires them to change it
-to meet the new needs of our growing and changing national life.
-The superficial loyalty to the changeless letter must yield to the profound
-loyalty to the ever-changing spirit. The constitution is for
-the sake of the people, not the people for the sake of the constitution.
-They, rather than it, are sacred.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Similarly, there is the modern problem of marriage, the family,
-and the home. Shall ours be the old loyalty that holds the customs
-of the past inviolable, marriage indissoluble, the inherited patterns of
-home and family unchangeable&mdash;the loyalty of fixedness and finishedness;
-<a id="page-28" class="pagenum" title="28"></a>
-or shall it be the loyalty of change in all these matters to meet
-the changing needs and situations of our burdened and bewildered
-modernity? Again, no man of sanctity and sanity and stability of
-soul can favor any arbitrary radicalism that is subversive of time-honored
-institutions <em>for no better reason</em> than a fleeting fancy, or the
-passing of the romance of the honeymoon, or raw self-will, or an unanticipated
-burden or hardship. But, for all that, the marriage institution,
-like all others, is for the sake of man and not man for the sake
-of the institution. It was <em>life</em> that originated our domestic ideas and
-customs and conventions and codes; and if ever life, in the interest
-of its well-being and progress, requires changes suited to new needs
-and new days, then the &ldquo;new loyalty&rdquo; to life that ever changes must
-replace the old loyalty to codes that never change. Codes, too, are
-for the sake of life, not life for the sake of codes. No loyalty to the
-letter that means disloyalty to the spirit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And there is the everlasting problem of education. Education
-in the past had for its subject matter symbols&mdash;reading, writing, arithmetic,
-grammar, rhetoric, logic, and the like. The new education has
-for its subject matter realities&mdash;nature and history. The old education
-taught topics or subjects; the new education teaches boys and
-girls. According to the old education, knowledge precedes action;
-according to the new education, action precedes knowledge. In the
-old education things were done to the pupils; in the new education the
-pupils do things.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The old school teacher was a &ldquo;star and dwelt apart&rdquo;&mdash;that is,
-his aloofness and superiority were indispensable. He taught from
-above. The new school teacher is down among the students, a democrat
-of democrats. The old school teacher communicated knowledge
-from without; the new school teacher develops interest from within.
-The old education was atomistic, the new organic. The old education
-was a donation to the pupils, the new is an achievement by them.
-The old education proceeded on the assumption that man is primarily
-intellect; the new that he is primarily will. The old education preceded
-life and fitted for it; the new education is a part of life itself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is a great change. According to the old theory, there was perfection
-to start with, perfection at the top. All that we needed was
-to pipe it down through aqueducts so well constructed that nothing
-that was in could get out, nothing that was without could get in;
-<a id="page-29" class="pagenum" title="29"></a>
-and thus&mdash;thus only&mdash;would the vain and empty world and life be
-filled with value and verity and virtue&mdash;donation on the one side, reception
-on the other.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the time came when men asked: if there is perfection to
-start with, why start? Why paint the lily? And if there is perfection
-to start with, how does there come to be imperfection? How
-can imperfection come from perfection? Ugly questions, these! Soon
-the world was turned upside down.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The new theory holds that matters began very humbly and
-struggled and fought their way slowly upward. Ascent from below,
-not descent from above. No values or verities or virtues donated,
-all achieved. Education an evolution, not a communication.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some business men favor the old education. Their world is one
-of mechanism and authority. They think that they do not need men
-with initiative, spontaneity, freedom. That is their prerogative, as
-it was of the king of old. They need the mechanical, the automatic,
-the impersonal in man. This fits into their world. This is what the
-old education stands for. The new education unfolds and matures
-personalities. Personalities make good masters but poor servants.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Business men as a class are perhaps our best men. But the very
-conditions of business economy and certainty are the impersonal, the
-unfree, the mechanical. So business has warped the judgment of some
-good men and led them astray on the most fundamental problem in
-the history of the race.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Were it not multiplying illustrations, the same point might be
-urged as to politics. Does not party loyalty often mean personal
-servility? As a matter of fact what is loyalty in one situation, or
-one age, may be simple cowardice or abjectness in another.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The upshot is that the modern man has to endure the reproach
-of not thinking and feeling and judging and acting as men formerly
-did&mdash;the reproach of perfidy toward the past, its solutions and its sanctities.
-In consequence, it would not be a bad idea for him to cultivate
-respect for the past, gratitude for its achievements, appreciation for
-its unfinished tasks. Still, he should learn to accept the reproach as
-praise,&mdash;recognition that, though problems remain the same, solutions
-change; though sanctity abide, the objects which are sacred
-change. <em>Evolutionism no longer recognizes any fact as sacred.</em>
-<a id="page-30" class="pagenum" title="30"></a>
-Man is inwardly working on ever farther, ever overcoming the old
-and conquering ever the new&mdash;this must also be recognized.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is said that we ought to love the old, the finished. But is love
-blind? Does it consist in advocating the point of view of one&rsquo;s friend,
-not because it seems true, but just because love requires it? Is loyalty
-of love the faculty of adaptation with which we remodel ourselves
-after the image of another? Is one disloyal in love if one affirm
-one&rsquo;s self against another, or if another affirm himself against one?
-Surely fidelity of friendship, even of marriage, ought not to be the
-grave of one&rsquo;s own being. Surely loyalty should be the life and not
-the death of one&rsquo;s self! Surely we must all see with our own eyes,
-hear with our own ears, judge with our own judgments, love with
-our own hearts, for the quite plain reason that we have no others
-with which we can do these things.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so, if we take up this great subject in a large way, as
-Nietzsche has done, we see that we have all broken with the old loyalty,
-and that the consummation of this breach has been life and
-blessing to us. We moderns all somehow live in a disloyalty which
-we have committed&mdash;imputed to us as transgression, viewed by us as
-our strength and pride. We have all become unfaithful,&mdash;as children
-to our parents, as pupils to our teachers, as disciples to our masters.
-We felt ourselves bound to them; we loosed ourselves from
-them. The paths they walked we have forsaken. In the strange untrodden
-land whither our vagrant feet have wandered, we &ldquo;came to
-ourselves&rdquo; in declaring disobedience to the laws of tradition, in breaking
-loyalty to the rules of the schools. It is precisely on this account
-that once again we have won spiritual life, a living art and science,
-a living religion and morality. We have snapped the fetters fastened
-upon us in the name of the old loyalty, and all that is great and fruitful
-and constructive in the life of the modern spirit is a monument
-of the disloyalty which its creators have built thereto. Nothing is
-gained any longer by our screening ourselves behind this word loyalty,
-and making believe that we shall not be found out! We owe it to
-ourselves and we owe it to the world to confess frankly that we have
-done with the old loyalty to the unchangeable and the finished, for
-that is to be loyal to an unreality, <em>since there is no such thing</em>. Even
-God, if he be the living God, cannot be the same yesterday, today,
-and forever. But we owe it even more to ourselves and to the world
-to strive for a clear position in reference to this question which is so
-<a id="page-31" class="pagenum" title="31"></a>
-profoundly agitating our entire moral world today. We may not
-abandon the field to those who would demolish the temple of the old
-goddess simply that they may celebrate upon its ruins the orgies of
-their caprice and inconstancy and characterlessness. If ever there was
-a doctrine whose right is easily turned into a wrong, whose truth
-into an error, whose blessing into a curse, it is this Nietzschean doctrine
-of the right and the duty of ceaseless change, of self-dependence,
-by which we are redeemed from slavery to the past. If the old loyalty&mdash;loyalty
-to the past&mdash;no longer holds men, wherewith shall they be
-held? Shall they be like the weathervane blown hither and thither
-by every wind of doctrine, or like the rudderless ship driven aimless
-and planless over the high seas by the midnight hurricane? Better
-a thousand times be tethered to the old loyalty than to be doomed to
-such a life of levity and poiselessness and flightiness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the new loyalty which we seek, without which we go forward
-into no future, should it not be more stable and enduring and
-<b>loyal</b> than the old? If a moment releases itself from what to it is past,
-and validates its right as a self-dependent life to its predecessor, a
-birth has transpired in man, and birth means pain. Without such
-pain, man has changed his situation, but not himself. A new color
-has come upon the motly manifoldness of his life&mdash;<em>he</em> has remained
-the same. Trees do not have their roots in the air. Weaklings cannot
-make the real change&mdash;it needs a strength that they do not have.
-The strength to change really&mdash;only he has this who bears the new
-loyalty in his own bosom; loyalty not to his opinion, not to his learning
-and heritage, but loyalty to his <em>growth</em>, to the great eternal goal
-of life, to the great sacred task which he has yet to fulfil in life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Loyal to ourself? Would that it might be so! But the self that
-we would at first be loyal to is not <b>our</b> self at all. It is foreign wares,
-loaded upon us,&mdash;first even in the nursery, slyly slipped subsequently
-upon our shoulders,&mdash;foreign words, foreign worths! Loyalty to what
-satiates, not the better loyalty to our hunger! We begin to live only
-when we live in our hunger; our hunger is we ourselves. It is a good
-satiety only if a new hunger comes from it. Loyalty to our self&mdash;this
-is to keep <b>our</b> life alive in us&mdash;a young glad life, that never grows
-old, because the old is ever transmuted into a new. This loyalty to
-ourself,&mdash;it is to expel from every truth its error, from every boundary
-<a id="page-66" class="pagenum" title="66"></a>
-its limit which blocks the vision into the wide world, the blue
-sky, and the distant sea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Loyalty to men? Would that it might be so! But such loyalty
-costs so much trouble and toil. For the faithfulness that is genuine
-and living, there is no law, no binding <em>I must</em>, only a glorious <em>I will</em>.
-One day we shall have done with the loyalty which means master and
-servant, leader and led&mdash;the loyalty of the dog that is loyalest to him
-who feeds him best or beats him hardest. One day we shall understand
-what the loyalty of man means&mdash;this new loyalty toward man,
-in which souls meet and chime and work together, and live in each
-other, yet each remains itself and true to itself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So, then, the law of change and of growth is the law of the new
-loyalty, as the law of fixedness and finishedness and finality was of
-the old. It is the duty of such new loyalty to protect itself against
-the deadening force of habit and of petrifaction, to guard itself against
-any obedience by which it would become disloyal to itself. Such
-loyalty is too honorable to humor inertia and laziness under its banner,
-too courageous to conceal cowardice behind a slave&rsquo;s patience.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But thought on our theme is usually lifted up to where the sky
-keeps company with the granite and the grass, to a religious elevation.
-Nor do we need stop short here. Ultimately the new loyalty
-is loyalty to God, the new God, of whom something must be said
-later. The God in whom all fulness dwells summons us to ever new
-truths, and reveals underground wells of living water throwing its
-spray aloft on life&rsquo;s ferns and flowers. To be loyal to him is never
-to sunder ourselves from his fulness and freshness, but to co-work
-with him who is forever making all things new.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now I think we are at the end. The result? It is needless
-to state it, but I would not shrink from the thankless task. In a word,
-then, the new loyalty&mdash;in harmony with the whole great changed
-view of the world and of life&mdash;is loyalty to change and becoming
-rather than to finishedness and finality; to the future rather than to
-the past; to ideals rather than to conventions; to freedom rather than
-to authority; to personality rather than to institution; to character
-rather than to respectability; to our hunger rather than to our satiety;
-to the God that is to be rather than to the God that is. Thus the
-loyalty abides, but the objects of loyalty change and pass.
-</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="THE_MILLINER_POEM">
-<a id="page-32" class="pagenum" title="32"></a>
-THE MILLINER
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="aut">
-SADE IVERSON
-</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">All the day long I have been sitting in my shop</p>
- <p class="verse">Sewing straw on hat-shapes according to the fashion,</p>
- <p class="verse">Putting lace and ribbon on according to the fashion,</p>
- <p class="verse">Setting out the faces of customers according to fashion.</p>
- <p class="verse">Whatever they asked for I tried to give them;</p>
- <p class="verse">Over their worldly faces I put mimic flowers</p>
- <p class="verse">From out my silk and velvet garden; I bade Spring come</p>
- <p class="verse">To those who had seen Autumn; I coaxed faded eyes</p>
- <p class="verse">To look bright and hard brows to soften.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Not once, while they were looking in the glass,</p>
- <p class="verse">Did I peep over their shoulders to see myself.</p>
- <p class="verse">It would have been quite unavailing for me,</p>
- <p class="verse">Who have grown grey in service of other women,</p>
- <p class="verse">To have used myself as any sort of a model.</p>
- <p class="verse">Had I looked in the mirror I should have seen</p>
- <p class="verse">Only a bleached face, long housed from sunshine,</p>
- <p class="verse">A mouth quick with forced smiles, eyes greyly stagnant,</p>
- <p class="verse">And over all, like a night fog creeping,</p>
- <p class="verse">Something chill and obscuring and dead&mdash;</p>
- <p class="verse">The miasmatic mist of the soul of the lonely.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">When night comes and the buyers are gone their ways,</p>
- <p class="verse">I go into the little room behind my shop.</p>
- <p class="verse">It is my home&mdash;my silent and lonely home;</p>
- <p class="verse">But it has fire, it has food; there is a bed;</p>
- <p class="verse">Pictures are on the walls, showing the faces</p>
- <p class="verse">I kissed in girlhood. I am myself here;</p>
- <p class="verse">All my forced smiles are laid away with the moline</p>
- <p class="verse">And the ribbon and roses. I may do as I please.</p>
- <p class="verse">If I beat with my fists on the table, no one hears;</p>
- <p class="verse">If I lie in my bed, staring, staring,</p>
- <p class="verse">No one can know; I shall not suffer the pity</p>
- <p class="verse">Of those who, passing, see my light edge the grey curtain.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
-<a id="page-33" class="pagenum" title="33"></a>
- <p class="verse">One night, long ago, merely for madness</p>
- <p class="verse">I stripped myself like a dancing girl;</p>
- <p class="verse">I draped myself with rose-hued silks</p>
- <p class="verse">And set a crimson feather in my hair.</p>
- <p class="verse">There were twists of gold lace about my arms</p>
- <p class="verse">And a girdle of gold about my waist.</p>
- <p class="verse">I danced before the mirror till I dropped!</p>
- <p class="verse">(Outside I could hear the rain falling</p>
- <p class="verse">And the wind crept in beneath my door</p>
- <p class="verse">Along my worn carpet.)</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse11">I folded my finery</p>
- <p class="verse">And prayed as if kneeling beside my mother.</p>
- <p class="verse">Whether there was listening I cannot say.</p>
- <p class="verse">There was praying! There was praying!</p>
- <p class="verse">Never again shall I dance before the mirror</p>
- <p class="verse">Bedizened like a dancing girl&mdash;never, my mother!</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">I have a low voice and quiet movements,</p>
- <p class="verse">And early and late I study to please.</p>
- <p class="verse">As long as I live I shall be adorning other women,</p>
- <p class="verse">I shall be decking them for their lovers</p>
- <p class="verse">And sending them upon women&rsquo;s adventures.</p>
- <p class="verse">But none of them shall see behind this curtain</p>
- <p class="verse">Where I have my little home, where I weep</p>
- <p class="verse">When I please, and beat upon the table with my fists.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="NUR_WER_DIE_SEHNSUCHT_KENNT">
-<a id="page-34" class="pagenum" title="34"></a>
-&ldquo;NUR WER DIE SEHNSUCHT KENNT&rdquo;
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="aut">
-MARGARET C. ANDERSON
-</p>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">I</span><span class="postfirstchar">n</span> one of Chicago&rsquo;s big department stores of the cheaper type you
-may&mdash;provided you&rsquo;re something of a poet&mdash;walk straight into the
-heart of a musical adventure. It is that amazing, resentful, and very
-satisfying adventure of discovering genius at work, under the by no
-means unique condition of being unrecognized.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-You go to one of the upper floors where the big lunch-room is.
-You find a table near a platform in the center, on which sit four
-musicians&mdash;a pianist, a &rsquo;cellist, a clarinet<em>ist</em> (if there is such a thing),
-and a second violinist. You expect the usual clamor....
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Suddenly you notice a fifth figure who has been sitting quietly in
-the background. She comes forward with a violin in her hand, and
-stands ready to play. There is something still about her&mdash;that quality
-of stillness which is invariably the first thing you notice in any dynamic.
-She seems not scornful of her surroundings, but quite indifferent to
-them; not arrogant, but sure of power; not timid, and yet incredibly
-soft and shy and serious. She is plainly foreign; she is German, looks
-French, and plays like a Viennese. Or, to be exact, she merges the
-German &ldquo;heaviness&rdquo; with the Viennese gay-sadness, and the result is a
-sensuousness that is both deep and clear, with the haunting wail that
-distinguishes all the music which comes from Vienna. She looks
-almost like a little girl; but you would notice her any place because
-of that stillness and the haunting appeal that always attaches to a
-certain type of eyes and mouth&mdash;the kind which seem to say: &ldquo;I
-will make music for you; I will take you to a new world. I will do
-it because I can dream intensely.&rdquo;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She begins to play, and you understand why you watched her.
-The depth of it startles you at first&mdash;it is so big, so moving, so almost
-uncanny coming from such a small person, whose hands seem
-scarcely large enough to hold a violin. It is playing of the Mischa
-Elman type, without his emotional extravagances and with something
-that is more soul-shaking. If I were an Imagist I could find the
-right word; but this music eludes me. It is sure and simple. It grips
-<a id="page-35" class="pagenum" title="35"></a>
-you till you don&rsquo;t know whether you are listening to music or to the
-urge of some hidden inner self. It is a divine thing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the midst of it the waitresses rush back and forth, the patrons
-eat their food with interest, only pausing to applaud when some tawdry
-vaudevillian sings a particularly vulgar song. The dishes clang,
-some one upsets a tray with a great crash, and at intervals there is a
-tango outrage by a couple who know nothing about dancing. Underneath
-it all the violin throbs its deep accompaniment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I wish I could make a poem of it. I have thought of taking my
-poet friends there and having the thing done. But almost without
-exception the poets I know don&rsquo;t care for music essentially; though
-why a mind keyed to the tone qualities of words should be so tone-deaf
-in another medium has always been a mystery to me. And what
-a poet&rsquo;s opportunity here: &ldquo;the boom and squeal,&rdquo; and out of it music
-that is as sacred as an organ meditation and as passionate as a Russian
-slave song!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-However, generalizations will not serve to give any musician&rsquo;s
-special quality, and this one is so emphatically individual
-as to make description easy. To begin with, she was concertising in
-Europe as a wonder-child at the age of six. For a number of years her
-playing brought forth a chorus of superlatives from the critics: &ldquo;her
-full blooming tone, her great taste in phrasing, economic use of the
-bow, glowing passion of interpretation; her fiery temperament, remarkable
-earnestness and will power, the soul, life, and emotion in
-her presentations.&rdquo; The verdict of a &ldquo;a veritable artist soul&rdquo; appeared
-to be unanimous; and one man summed up with admirable insight and
-simplicity: &ldquo;Her chief excellence is in this: that she seeks her main
-task to be an artist in the real and earnest sense of the word, and whosoever
-comes to hear music does not go empty from her.&rdquo;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Friedrich Spielhagen wrote a sonnet to her, of which I have a
-careful, but metrically inadequate, translation:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
- <div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Thou standst before us, a picture of wondrous charm;</p>
- <p class="verse">The little violin thou holdst, in tenderess,</p>
- <p class="verse">Half maidenly, half like a child in dress</p>
- <p class="verse">Hast soared away from Heaven&rsquo;s angel-farm</p>
- <p class="verse">Toward where thy large mild eye is dreaming.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-And he ended it with these lines:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
- <div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
-<a id="page-36" class="pagenum" title="36"></a>
- <p class="verse">Thou movest thy bow;</p>
- <p class="verse">No sounds are these of nicely movéd strings,</p>
- <p class="verse">No, No! Thy own sweet soul rings out and sings</p>
- <p class="verse">The melodies that have with you come</p>
- <p class="verse">From yon high wide-sphered home,</p>
- <p class="verse">To where thy longing soul swings upward now.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Our apologies to Mr. Spielhagen for that more than atrocious
-twelfth line and for the other deficiencies! But the last line is particularly
-keen in its photography. It has the spirit of her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After much touring in Europe she came to this country and
-played under the same promising conditions. The critics predicted
-that if she should decide to stay here she would probably out-rival our
-own few noted women violinists. And then came a period of sorrow,
-bereavement, hardship, and illness&mdash;and in the meantime the problem
-of living. That problem becomes a real one when an artist loves life
-just a bit more than her art and refuses to make that spiritual compromise
-which life tries to wrest from one in the hard places. One
-must live, and it takes money to do it rather than art. The romantic notion
-that all genius has to do is to stand up and make itself heard is
-one of the silliest notions the great public suffers from. Only the
-hundredth person recognizes genius when it proclaims itself; the rest
-are as blind as this department-store audience until the sign-posts have
-been put up, with letters large enough to be easily read. Also, the
-amount of machinery and money involved in the arrangement of concert
-engagements would surprise the public as much as the true stories
-of what it costs the &ldquo;wealthy patron&rdquo; to get his artist started toward
-recognition.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so this particular genius will continue for a while to cast her
-pearls in a lunch-room, and a few of the discerning will find her out
-and thank their stars that they may hear such beauty at the small cost
-of a bad club sandwich and a worse cup of coffee.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If you go there you will be haunted by music for days afterward.
-I say &ldquo;haunted&rdquo; because that is the only word to describe your feeling
-of pursuit by melody. And I think I have discovered the reason
-for it. A poet once said that the only permanent emotion we human
-beings are capable of is&mdash;not love, as we like to imagine&mdash;but <em>longing</em>.
-And that is what this music says to you. It is the very essence of longing&mdash;the
-eternal seeking, the rapturous satisfaction, the disappointment,
-<a id="page-37" class="pagenum" title="37"></a>
-and the renewed quest. I have never heard such a quality of
-<em>sehnsucht</em> in any music; it is almost more than you can bear. Of
-course, in these surroundings, you must listen to the complete gamut
-of new popular songs; but at intervals, when the managerial demand
-for &ldquo;noise&rdquo; can be ignored for a moment, you will be rewarded by
-the Thais <em>Meditation</em> or a Schutt waltz or that exquisite Saint-Saens
-poem called <em>The Swan</em>&mdash;or even a Tschaikowsky song. Where does
-the tone come from, you keep wondering? Not from a wooden instrument,
-not from small human fingers, surely. It is tone of such
-richness and depth that you sometimes have the illusion of each note
-being sung twice. &ldquo;It transcends music to me entirely and becomes
-a matter of life&mdash;or of soul,&rdquo; said a critic who listened with me the
-other day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Through it all the artist&rsquo;s earnest face is still and unchanging.
-That is part of the fascination&mdash;the contrast of that tumultuous singing
-and the thoughtful, dreaming face that seems to control it all. &ldquo;My
-violin belongs to me&mdash;yes,&rdquo; she says, &ldquo;but that is such a cold word.
-It is part of my body. I feel it is growing on me just like my arms
-and hands. I could not live without it.&rdquo; If you watch her closely you
-will decide that her playing is the result of an extraordinary sensitiveness
-to life. If you know her, as I do, you will expand that judgment
-to this one: an extraordinary strength about life; for she is both deep
-and strong&mdash;qualities that are supposed to be inseparable, but which
-are so rarely found together that their combination means&mdash;a great
-spirit.
-</p>
-
-<div class="filler">
-<p class="noindent">
-I am afraid I am too much of a musician not to be a romanticist. With
-out music life to me would be a mistake.&mdash;<em>Nietzsche to Brandes, 1888.</em>
-</p>
-
-<p class="tb">
-&nbsp;
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-All restlessness, misery, all crime, is the result of the betrayal of one&rsquo;s
-inner life.&mdash;<em>Will Lexington Comfort in &ldquo;Midstream.&rdquo;</em>
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="editorials chapter">
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="editorials" id="EDITORIALS">
-<a id="page-38" class="pagenum" title="38"></a>
-EDITORIALS
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="OUR_NEW_POET">
-Our New Poet
-</h3>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">C</span><span class="postfirstchar">harles</span> Ashleigh, who makes his appearance in this issue, was born in
-London twenty-five years ago. He was educated in England, Switzerland, and
-Germany, and speaks French, German, and Spanish, &ldquo;as well as two or three
-varieties of English and American slang.&rdquo; He has wandered in Europe, South
-America and this country, traveling on foot through Argentine, Chile, and Peru,
-and in the States as a hobo. He has been sailor, newspaper man, tramp, actor,
-farm hand, railroad clerk, interpreter, and a few other things. He has written
-verse, short stories, social studies, literary criticism, and lectured on his travels
-as well as on sociological, literary, and dramatic subjects. Quite unlike those poets
-who insist that they have no opinions on any subject&mdash;that they simply photograph
-life&mdash;Mr. Ashleigh states his creed in this way: &ldquo;I am interested in
-Labor, literature, and many other aspects and angles of Life. Men and deeds are
-to me of primary importance and books secondary.&rdquo; We look for big things
-from this young man.
-</p>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="TWO_IMPORTANT_BOOKS">
-Two Important Books
-</h3>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">M</span><span class="postfirstchar">ary</span> Austin has written a study of marriage which she calls <em>Love and the
-Soul Maker</em>. It appears to be about as big a thing on the subject as any
-American woman has done. Will Lexington Comfort has written an autobiographical
-novel which he calls <em>Midstream</em>. It tells the truth about a man&rsquo;s life,
-and is also a big thing. Both will be reviewed in the August issue.
-</p>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="THE_CONGO">
-The Congo
-</h3>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">N</span><span class="postfirstchar">icholas</span> Vachel Lindsay&rsquo;s new poem, <em>The Congo</em>, is to appear in <em>The
-Metropolitan</em> for August. Mr. Lindsay&rsquo;s opinion is that the best effect will be
-got by reading it aloud.
-</p>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="THE_BASIS_FOR_A_NEW_PAINTING">
-The Basis for a New Painting
-</h3>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">T</span><span class="postfirstchar">ruly</span> these Imagists are enchanting! The following examples are selected
-from the anthology published by <em>The Glebe</em>:
-</p>
-
- <div class="excerpt">
-<h4 class="excerpt" id="FAN-PIECE_FOR_HER_IMPERIAL_LORD">
-Fan-Piece for Her Imperial Lord
-</h4>
-
- <div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">O fan of white silk,</p>
- <p class="verse6">clear as frost on the grass-blade,</p>
- <p class="verse">You also are laid aside.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza attr">
- <p class="verse">Ezra Pound.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-<h4 class="excerpt" id="IN_A_GARDEN">
-In A Garden
-</h4>
-
- <div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Gushing from the mouths of stone men</p>
- <p class="verse">To spread at ease under the sky</p>
- <p class="verse">In granite-lipped basins,</p>
- <p class="verse">Where iris dabble their feet</p>
- <p class="verse">And rustle to a passing wind,</p>
-<a id="page-39" class="pagenum" title="39"></a>
- <p class="verse">The water fills the garden with its rushing,</p>
- <p class="verse">In the midst of the quiet of close-clipped lawns.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Damp smell the ferns in tunnels of stone,</p>
- <p class="verse">Where trickle and splash the fountains,</p>
- <p class="verse">Marble fountains, yellowed with much water.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Splashing down moss-tarnished steps</p>
- <p class="verse">It falls, the water;</p>
- <p class="verse">And the air is throbbing with it;</p>
- <p class="verse">With its gurgling and running;</p>
- <p class="verse">With its leaping, and deep, cool murmur.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">And I wished for night and you.</p>
- <p class="verse">I wanted to see you in the swimming-pool,</p>
- <p class="verse">White and shining in the silver-flecked water.</p>
- <p class="verse">While the moon rode over the garden</p>
- <p class="verse">High in the arch of night,</p>
- <p class="verse">And the scent of the lilacs was heavy with stillness.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Night and the water, and you in your whiteness, bathing!</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza attr">
- <p class="verse">Amy Lowell.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-<h4 class="excerpt" id="AU_VIEUX_JARDIN">
-Au Vieux Jardin
-</h4>
-
- <div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">I have sat here happy in the gardens,</p>
- <p class="verse">Watching the still pool and the reeds</p>
- <p class="verse">And the dark clouds</p>
- <p class="verse">Which the wind of the upper air</p>
- <p class="verse">Tore like the green leafy bough</p>
- <p class="verse">Of the divers-hued trees of late summer;</p>
- <p class="verse">But though I greatly delight</p>
- <p class="verse">In these and the water lilies,</p>
- <p class="verse">That which sets me nighest to weeping</p>
- <p class="verse">Is the rose and white colour of the smooth flag-stones,</p>
- <p class="verse">And the pale yellow grasses</p>
- <p class="verse">Among them.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza attr">
- <p class="verse">Richard Aldington.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-<h4 class="excerpt" id="TSAI_CHIH">
-Ts&rsquo;ai Chi&rsquo;h
-</h4>
-
- <div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">The petals fall in the fountain,</p>
- <p class="verse5">the orange coloured rose-leaves,</p>
- <p class="verse">Their ochre clings to the stone.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza attr">
- <p class="verse">Ezra Pound.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-<h4 class="excerpt" id="LIU_CHE">
-Liu Ch&rsquo;e
-</h4>
-
- <div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">The rustling of the silk is discontinued,</p>
- <p class="verse">Dust drifts over the courtyard,</p>
- <p class="verse">There is no sound of footfall, and the leaves</p>
- <p class="verse">Scurry into heaps and lie still,</p>
- <p class="verse">And she the rejoicer of the heart is beneath them.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">A wet leaf that clings to the threshold.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza attr">
- <p class="verse">Ezra Pound.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="NEW_YORK_LETTER">
-<a id="page-40" class="pagenum" title="40"></a>
-NEW YORK LETTER
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="aut">
-GEORGE SOULE
-</p>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="GEORGE_BRANDESA_HASTY_IMPRESSION">
-GEORGE BRANDES&mdash;A HASTY IMPRESSION
-</h3>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">T</span><span class="postfirstchar">he</span> man who fought the big battle for Ibsen and Nietzsche should
-have filled Madison Square Garden; as it was, the little Comedy
-Theatre wasn&rsquo;t large enough to hold the audience, although Scandinavian
-patriotism accounted for a good deal of it. He came on the
-stage with Brander Matthews, the apotheosis of the academic, and the
-contrast was striking. Matthews was tall, dull, professional. Brandes,
-with his keen face, alert eyes, and shock of grayish hair, was possibly
-the most fully alive person in the room. He radiated interest&mdash;human
-connection with anything vital.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We were all a little sorry his subject was Shakespeare; we wanted
-to hear of something modern. And when the first part of the lecture
-was read, couched in scholarly but terse English, we felt cheated. It
-was good criticism, and informing, but it wasn&rsquo;t the sort of thing we
-had expected from Brandes. Suddenly a spark shot out. (The quotation
-is from memory):
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
-<p class="noindent">
-We cannot emphasize too strongly the fact that all works of literature
-which have a real effect on mankind, all works which endure hundreds of
-years, find their inspiration not in books, but in life.
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-The words were pronounced with excited intensity. Soon came
-another:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
-<p class="noindent">
-We used to define the genius as the man who interprets his age; now
-we know that the genius is the man who, working against his age, creates new
-times.
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Dr. Brandes broke into a lively sally at the Baconians. He spoke
-of Shakespeare&rsquo;s errors in scholarship. These Bacon would surely
-have avoided, but of Shakespeare&rsquo;s great lines Bacon could not possibly
-have written one. He ended that section with something like this:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
-<p class="noindent">
-The Baconian theory was founded by the uneducated, it was developed
-by the half-educated, and it is now held solely by idiots.
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-The audience was immensely pleased at his sharp fire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dr. Brandes&rsquo; epigrams sometimes sound as if he substituted wit
-for wisdom. But that is because the epigrams stick and are repeated.
-His method is to open with an epigram to catch the attention, to proceed
-with a line of sound argument, and at the end to finish superbly
-<a id="page-41" class="pagenum" title="41"></a>
-with a sentence that contains his conclusions and impales his opponent
-at the same time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With Frank Harris, Dr. Brandes was no more gentle. By parallel
-quotation Harris was made to appear ridiculous. Brandes showed
-that whatever in his writings is sound has been said before. This was
-the end of the lecture:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
-<p class="noindent">
-Mr. Harris says that it is possible to admire Shakespeare, but that it
-is impossible to worship him. Ladies and gentlemen, I do the impossible.
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Afterwards came a supper of the Scandinavian Society, at which
-the guest of honor made a speech that looked brilliant and was lively
-even as a piece of pantomime&mdash;but it was in Danish. Dr. Brandes was
-beaming and unaffectedly cordial with everybody. He smilingly interrupted
-one of the pompous addresses in his honor to correct a quotation
-from Goethe. He proposed a toast to the charming young lady
-who acted as his American manager, and said that the success of his
-tour was due entirely to her. Later a consul made a highly complimentary,
-but exceedingly tedious, speech. Dr. Brandes fidgeted until
-he could stand it no longer, then he quickly got up, took his champagne
-glass, ran over to the orator and slapped him on the shoulder,
-saying, &ldquo;You are a very nice man.&rdquo; The rest was drowned in the toast.
-</p>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="A_NEW_LITERATURE">
-A NEW LITERATURE
-</h3>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-The other day an illustrator saw a hand-mirror in a publisher&rsquo;s
-office. He put the mirror against a book cover and held it at arm&rsquo;s
-length. &ldquo;There,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;is the ideal jacket for a novel. Every
-woman likes to imagine herself the heroine of the book she is reading.&rdquo;
-But the publisher was wiser. &ldquo;You are half right,&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;But
-she wants to be a Gibson heroine. To see her own face, without flattery,
-would startle her into disapproval of the book.&rdquo;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A recent symposium in <em>The Sun</em> bore the impressive title, <em>The
-Sentimentalization of Woman in American Fiction</em>. All the authors
-were agreed that realism doesn&rsquo;t go because of the desire of the reader
-to be flattered. If she isn&rsquo;t, the novel is &ldquo;unpleasant,&rdquo; &ldquo;depressing.&rdquo;
-You may paint your villainess black, but, as your reader will take her
-for an enemy, you must see that she is properly punished. But if your
-heroine does anything unconventional, it must be of the kind that your
-reader enjoys by imagination, though she wouldn&rsquo;t have the courage
-<a id="page-42" class="pagenum" title="42"></a>
-to do it. Only you must not make the thrills so strong as to shock the
-reader into self-consciousness and self-disapproval. Georg Brandes
-said that our novels are written by old maids for old maids. If we
-would only put into our literature the same genius and daring that we
-put into our skyscrapers!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The thing none of the authors seemed to see is that it is futile to
-stop at blaming the readers. Of course the great public is comparatively
-stupid. It is everywhere, it always has been and always will be.
-What is a leader if he is not someone in advance of the others? And the
-essential act for a leader is to lead. He can&rsquo;t get a following until he
-does that. Only a coward stays behind and flatters the crowd because
-he is afraid they will not come after him. Perhaps they won&rsquo;t follow
-his particular route. But if he goes on fearlessly he has done the best
-that is in him, anyway. The chances are that if he has a sincere conviction
-and marches far enough in one direction they will at least
-struggle along after a while. They may even follow in hordes. What
-we need first is not a more intelligent public, but courageous writers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Naturally the matter is not simple. Your artist has to be fed and
-clothed. If he is creating a new medium&mdash;as did Wagner&mdash;he even
-needs large resources to produce his art. The solution used to be the
-wealthy patron. The petty monarch maintained a musician or a
-painter to enhance the glory of his court. The noble supported a
-writer from personal pride. The monastery afforded a refuge for the
-unworldly creator. It would be difficult to find a great artist before the
-last century who did not have some such subsidy, unless he had means
-of his own.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Since then democracy has permeated the world. Fast presses,
-advertising, and royalties have been invented. Now the public is
-the writer&rsquo;s patron. Music is often subsidized, to be sure, and painters
-can still sell their canvases to the wealthy. But the earnings of the
-writer are in strict proportion to the number of copies of his books that
-can be sold.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There is a distinct advantage in this situation. The virtue of
-democracy is not the government of the majority, but the opportunity
-of the minority. The minority becomes, not a defensive close corporation,
-but a body of fighting visionaries. The emphasis is placed on
-growth. The eternal impulse of the minority to turn itself into a
-majority prevents a static age. The strongest lead, instead of the
-highly born.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<a id="page-43" class="pagenum" title="43"></a>
-So it must be with our writers. Difficulty insures heroes. We can
-discount at once the truckling commercial writers. But the others must
-be deeply sincere and strong in order to exist at all. There is little
-room for the dilletante. Let our young people who have something
-to say recognize the situation. They must dedicate themselves to a
-probable poverty. They must gird their loins and sharpen their
-weapons. They must be prepared to wait years, if need be, even for
-recognition. Every energy must be devoted to saying as well as may
-be the thing that is in them. And so, hoping nothing, fearing nothing,
-living simply, supporting themselves as best they may, but always
-doing the thing that is worth while for its own sake, they may produce
-a literature that has not been equalled since the world began.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Others of us can share in this glorious undertaking. Discerning
-critics must sift the true from the false. They must lay aside the twin
-snobberies of praising or blaming a work because of its popularity.
-They must fight eternally for the sincere. They must point out directions,
-they must prize meanings above methods. They must give a
-nucleus to the intelligent reading public and constantly augment it.
-They must bear sturdy witness to the fact that art is not an amusement
-for idle moments, but the consciousness of the race. They must show
-its relation to life as well as to living. They must be predisposed in
-favor of no work on account of its nationality, school or tendency.
-Just as Brandes enlarged the conception of literature by showing it
-as a world phenomenon, they must rid it of petty divisions in the realm
-of thought. No more should such a statement as &ldquo;Galsworthy is a
-poet rather than a novelist&rdquo; be allowed to pass as criticism. A novelist
-may be a poet or a philosopher or a psychologist or a historian or a
-sociologist. Any of these may combine the intrinsic abilities of any or
-all of the others. He is greater for doing so. The only test of his work
-is its effectiveness. A work of art is an organism, the highest product
-of nature, infinitely more real, more beautiful, more potent, than any
-flower. Only when we see it as such, and not as a collection of petals
-and stamens, or as a member of a species, shall we know it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The whole problem of creating a literature, as of doing anything
-else, is one of direction and power. If we blame someone else for our
-deficiencies, if we stand aloof, if we bow to circumstances and are
-afraid to pay for what we want, we shall of course do nothing. And
-we shall not enjoy ourselves or the world much either. But if we fix
-<a id="page-44" class="pagenum" title="44"></a>
-on a goal that is worth a life, and set out for it with the joyous spirit
-of adventurers, risking everything, enduring everything, sleeping under
-the stars, staying hard and keen, we shall command the fates. What
-more could we ask of the world?
-</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="DOSTOEVSKYS_NOVELS">
-DOSTOEVSKY&rsquo;S NOVELS
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="aut">
-MAURICE LAZAR
-</p>
-
-<p class="book">
-<em>The Idiot</em>, <em>The Brothers Karamazov</em>, <em>Crime and Punishment</em>, etc.,
-translated by Constance Garnett. [The Macmillan Company, New
-York.]
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
-<p class="noindent">
-It&rsquo;s not a matter of intellect or logic, it&rsquo;s loving (life) with one&rsquo;s inside,
-with one&rsquo;s stomach....
-</p>
-
-<p class="attr">
-&mdash;Ivan Karamazov.
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Chiefly concerned with the fester of civilization, literature, music,
-painting, all the modern forms of individual expression are elliptical
-in the sense that the old æsthetic values of emotional beauty seem to
-have become nullified, or else congealed, in the artist&rsquo;s direct application
-of his instrument to the repudiation of fixed social values or moralities;
-to the expansion of life-interests. We today want more than
-beauty of external form; we want the beauty of depth!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The true artist is such primarily because of his engrossing appetite
-for life, because (as Flaubert said) of the chaos in his soul. And
-although Flaubert kept on chiseling words around the lives of men
-and women totally devoid of inspirating individuality, his dictum has
-been nobly exemplified in the life and writings of Fyodor Dostoevsky,
-that great-hearted epileptic Russian of whose psychological powers
-Nietzsche admittedly availed himself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Tolstoy was reported to have said, in conversation with a writer
-for <em>Le Temps</em>, &ldquo;A woman who has never suffered pain is a beast.&rdquo;
-He could have stretched the allegation to include the other sex, if only
-by way of illusion to that intense spiritual quality in modern Russian
-literature&mdash;a literature that has never been (notably) an off-shoot of,
-as much as a protest against, the retrogressive structures of its respective
-periods.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This spiritual, or psychical, concern with the individual&rsquo;s adjustment
-to the functioning of life has been revealed to highest degree in
-<a id="page-45" class="pagenum" title="45"></a>
-Dostoevsky&rsquo;s novels. It is also manifest in the analytical mould assumed
-by the creative arts of our time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While Dostoevsky&rsquo;s personality is separably bound up with his
-work, profitable appreciation of the latter can be considerably amplified
-with knowledge of the important facts of his life and the conditions
-with which he struggled. I will record the more essential facts
-of his life as I have gathered them, and try to explain the causes that
-have made for the distinction in his work from that of all other writers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was born in a charity-hospital in Moscow, in 1821. His father
-was an army-surgeon, his mother a store-keeper&rsquo;s daughter. I like to
-think that he derived his expressive powers, or rather the nebulæ out
-of which they subsequently developed, from his mother, perhaps partly
-because of my theory that men of acute genius ultimately do transcend
-the difference of sex in the quality of their personalities as well as in
-that of their work.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Like most imaginative youths who come into contact with fine
-art, Dostoevsky was stimulated to literary expression by his study of
-classical and contemporaneous European literature. He had lived
-twenty-three years when he graduated from a St. Petersburg school of
-military engineering. His first novel, <em>Poor Folk</em>, was published three
-years later, and served to focus upon him the attention of the critics.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In 1849 Dostoevsky was arrested, with members of a radical organization,
-on governmental charges of sedition. The terrible suffering
-he sustained while awaiting his execution (he was first confined in
-prison for eight months) have been set forth in striking passages of his
-novels, <em>The Idiot</em> and <em>Letters from a Dead House</em>. The sentence of
-death was finally, and very unexpectedly, commuted to one of imprisonment
-in Siberia for four years. At the expiration of this period he
-served perforce as a private soldier in the Russian army for three more
-years. When he was permitted to return to St. Petersburg he was
-accompanied by his first wife, whom he had loved and married while
-in exile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dostoevsky&rsquo;s interminable suffering from epileptic seizures (it
-has been suggested that these fits originated in a beating administered
-to him by his father when Fyodor was a boy); his poverty, and the
-constant accumulation of debt; the terrific haste with which he found
-it necessary to write his most profound books&mdash;all have made it natural
-to him, in dwelling upon any physiological aspect of his characters,
-<a id="page-46" class="pagenum" title="46"></a>
-to be as unconvincing as the eremite attempting an analysis of conditions
-of sex life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In short, Dostoevsky&rsquo;s nervous disorders pervaded his &ldquo;sensual
-sense&rdquo; of beauty&mdash;of beauty in all its manifestations. At the same
-time it must be remarked that this negation of physical responsiveness
-surely intensified the acuteness of his mental vision, which was otherwise
-refined emotionally by the results of his imprisonment and life-long
-hardships. And this also explains why Dostoevsky&rsquo;s novels are
-lacking so singularly in the tingle of the physical contact of his characters;
-why the suffering of his men and women move us so profoundly;
-why his writings are so uneven, his dialogues of such elemental
-power, and his purely descriptive passages so ordinary.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The elemental power in his dialogues is due chiefly to the vigor
-of action accredited his characters. In his work is not to be found the
-picturesque phrase, the adroitly-turned period, the illuminating metaphor,
-the sequence of construction, the tone or shading offered by the
-commingling of his objects. Dostoevsky has no style of form, his outlines
-are amorphous. It is in his power of transcribing the living voice,
-of recording in never-failing reflex emotionalism the lives and deeds
-of his startling figures that he is supreme.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If you have read one of his books you know much of what he
-has to say. His other works are repetitions, mainly. For Dostoevsky
-does not attempt to paint character, and rarely does he stop to show the
-subtly-reacting influence of environment upon his men and women.
-Always he is concerned with the idea of the individual&rsquo;s personal adjustments
-to life. Each book of his throbs with the discordant elements
-that clash over the establishment of this idea; and always its
-conclusions are recognized. That is why I regard Dostoevsky as an
-optimist. And his emphasis on humanity&rsquo;s spiritual conception of
-life, no matter what the cost, grew more and more pronounced in his
-later works.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His faith in human beings is expressed in one set theme, which
-can be conveniently resolved into terms of comparison: on one hand
-the individual&rsquo;s evasion of life&rsquo;s realities by the exercise of material
-(and therefore fictitious) values; and on the other hand, the frank
-acceptance of life&rsquo;s realities for the attainment of a proportionate spiritual
-balance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In <em>Crime and Punishment</em>, Dr. Raskolnikov is in doubt as to the
-<a id="page-47" class="pagenum" title="47"></a>
-ultimate worth of this attainment, until he expiates his crime in killing
-the old moneylender (I forget her name) not by confessing,&mdash;Dostoevsky
-is too fine a realist for that,&mdash;but by obtaining personal solace
-from the regenerating qualities of his resignation. And it is characteristic
-of our writer&rsquo;s method that Raskolnikov is assisted toward this
-state of resignation by his love, Sonia, the prostitute, whose regard
-for the murderer is based upon the confirmation evidenced in him of
-the faith that has been stimulated in herself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Similar in thesis, though expressed in terms of minor differences,
-is Dostoevsky&rsquo;s last and unquestionably finest work, <em>The Brothers
-Karamazov</em>. It is incomplete, actually one-third as long as he had intended
-it to be. He died before he could finish the book. Nevertheless
-it is compactly-formed material as the work now stands, and superior
-to his other novels not because his outlines are more constrained,
-his movement more co-ordinate, and the actual writing of a more intensive
-quality, but because here he defines his own conception of spiritual
-beauty in a distinctive fashion not to be found in his other books.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He offers us the history of a family,&mdash;and what a family! Each
-figure in this domestic (?) group embodies conflicting phases of his
-great idea. Fyodor Karamazov, the father, is a sensualist of the lowest
-type imaginable. His three sons are Dmitri, Ivan, and Alyosha.
-There is also another (illegitimate) son, Smerdyakov, an epileptic.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dmitri Karamazov inherits his father&rsquo;s passion for wine, women,
-and song, but the son&rsquo;s pursuit of this tame and conventional item is
-tempered by frequent lapses, by periods of misgiving. The second son
-is a materialist and a cynic. He changes his mind after a severe illness,
-and his materialistic beliefs are all but supplanted by intense spiritual
-curiosity. The third and youngest son is an idealist, lovable and loving.
-Here again we have Dostoevsky&rsquo;s discordant elements conveyed
-in terms of human characterizations. The plot of the story is as formless
-as life itself, for it is with life, not with plots, that Dostoevsky deals.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dmitri&rsquo;s hatred of his father is intensified by the rivalry that
-exists between the two in their common pursuit of Grushenka&rsquo;s affections.
-Grushenka is a woman of the demi-monde. The author, I
-think, tried to draw her in lines that would reveal a physical zest of
-life, as evidenced, for example, in Tolstoy&rsquo;s <em>Anna Karenina</em>. His failure
-to make Grushenka a convincing individual, as an individual, is
-typical, for the reasons I have already advanced.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<a id="page-48" class="pagenum" title="48"></a>
-Development of the story shows how Dmitri&rsquo;s repeatedly avowed
-determination to kill his father bears fruit. The elder Karamazov is
-found dead one night, with his skull crushed. Dmitri is imprisoned.
-And the rest of the book, which is devoted to Dmitri&rsquo;s trial, the moral
-regeneration of Ivan, and the urge of life in Alyosha, approaches psychological
-heights (or depths) that have not been surpassed to this day.
-Small wonder that Nietzsche referred so affectionately to the &ldquo;giant
-spirit.&rdquo;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I have made reference to Dostoevsky&rsquo;s &ldquo;optimism.&rdquo; A better
-word for it is faith&mdash;faith of a new high order. He is the most cheerful,
-sunlight-giving writer in Russian literature. &ldquo;The essence of religious
-feeling,&rdquo; says Prince Myshkin in <em>The Idiot</em>, &ldquo;does not come
-under any sort of reasoning or atheism, and has nothing to do with
-any crimes or misdemeanors.&rdquo;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Prince Myshkin is the central figure of the novel; he is the &ldquo;idiot,&rdquo;
-and everybody abuses him. He is insulted and beaten, and robbed and
-deceived and loved. He is the most singular figure in literature&mdash;he is
-Dostoevsky himself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But he is not an idiot in any sense. He is so profoundly simple
-and wise, and has such great faith in human beings, that he is mistaken
-by the men and women of ordinary passions as a fool. While he can
-be readily toyed with by women&mdash;a significant phase of the writer&rsquo;s
-own attitude toward the sex&mdash;Prince Myshkin is regarded by them
-from a common basis of understanding. For them he holds no quality
-of sex. &ldquo;Perhaps you don&rsquo;t know that, owing to my illness,&rdquo; he says
-(he too is an epileptic), &ldquo;I know nothing of women.&rdquo;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is in <em>The Idiot</em> that Dostoevsky&rsquo;s women are at least life-like.
-The Epanchin sisters, especially the youngest, Aglaia, are not &ldquo;types&rdquo;
-in the usual sense, but preconceived studies. The pages devoted to
-Aglaia&rsquo;s love affair with Prince Myshkin are of the happiest in the
-book.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Besides the books I have already mentioned, the more important
-works are <em>The Possessed</em>, in which national politics play a large part;
-<em>Poor Folk</em>, the story of a poor clerk&rsquo;s love for a poor woman who
-eventually turns from him; and <em>Letters from a Dead House</em>. This last
-is a book of personal experiences, and reveals Dostoevsky&rsquo;s relations
-with the criminals with whom he was imprisoned in Siberia. The mental
-temper of men who disregard and break the common and social
-<a id="page-49" class="pagenum" title="49"></a>
-laws, is set forth with the passionate curiosity that lies behind all his
-probings of the human soul. I am strongly tempted to offer quotations;
-to show, in this passage or that, how deeply Dostoevsky looked into the
-most extreme boundaries of human sensibilities; but on the whole
-extracts from his writings would do more harm than good. His work
-is so disconnected, though not in any sense detached, that extracts
-could not serve here to indicate the amazing clarity of his vision.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His books arouse a feeling of wonder that there can be so many
-things in our own individual emotions with which we never before
-came into contact. He moves us so profoundly because he tears his
-men and women out of their morally-bound lives and makes them
-confront stupendous questions&mdash;the questions of life. He plies detail
-upon detail of human misery until one feels that the whole world is
-reeling from him&mdash;then grows aware of the sweet white glow of Dostoevsky&rsquo;s
-faith, and feels that life can hold no terrors&mdash;that he is above
-the petty miseries of human strife! That is why I say Dostoevsky&rsquo;s
-optimism is of the new high order.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dostoevsky purges one&rsquo;s mind. He makes you conscious of the
-beauty of a soul.
-</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="BOOK_DISCUSSION">
-BOOK DISCUSSION
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="AN_UNREELING_REALIST">
-AN UNREELING REALIST
-</h3>
-
-<p class="book">
-<em>The Titan</em>, by Theodore Dreiser
-[John Lane Company, New York]
-</p>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">T</span><span class="postfirstchar">heodore</span> Dreiser possesses none of the standard qualifications
-for the art of fiction writing. He is not imaginative but
-inventive; he is not clever but clear; he is not excited but calm. Whatever
-the flaws in his considerable body of work no fair-minded reader
-may say that it is made to catch popular applause. Its tremendous
-distinction is sincerity. Another characteristic which his novels exhibit
-<a id="page-50" class="pagenum" title="50"></a>
-is resolute purpose. Dreiser is aiming at something, and in <em>The
-Titan</em>, the second book in an unfinished trilogy, he takes a long if
-wobbly step toward it. Previously to the publishing of this volume
-he had not even hinted at what he intended to work out. One thing
-was certain: he was not a trifler; he was not trying to write best
-sellers; literary success was not in his mind. He had set out seriously
-and indefatigably to write, not so much what he felt and thought,
-as what he saw. Some day he would try to get at the realities that lay
-back of their representations. He would probably undertake to reveal
-the soul of the American nation. He would pass through the
-growth stages of a nation, and achieve some kind of spiritual national
-life. In the last two pages of <em>The Titan</em> this guess at his purpose
-receives appreciable encouragement. Moreover, it is made evident
-for the first time, in these concluding paragraphs, that Dreiser&rsquo;s
-prosaic realism springs not only from a vague, deep idealism but a
-large, hidden spirituality. For at the core of him Dreiser is a profoundly
-religious person.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Neither his style nor his stuff is far above the dead level of
-mediocrity; in fact, Dreiser&rsquo;s rhetoric is often inexcusably atrocious&mdash;intentionally
-crude, one is tempted to assert. Obviously he is not
-interested in style; he is conscious of something bigger than that revealing
-itself in a huge, ugly, unfinished moving picture&mdash;a net result
-symbolical of a young, raw, riotous, unsynthesized national life.
-One is therefore tempted to say that Dreiser, more than any other
-author, is the personification of America. He represents the composite
-personality of Uncle Sam.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After reading <em>The Financier</em> and running far into the interminable
-pages of <em>The Titan</em> I felt that in the absence of cameras, kodaks,
-Baedekers, and historians Dreiser would be worth while. His endless
-reels of pictorial facts did not impress me as possessing sufficient
-animation successfully to compete with these odd rivals, but I admired
-his consistent sincerity and simplicity and felt that something
-important was promised by the mere unfinishedness of his pictures.
-I was sure that he did not write as one inspired, and certainly not as
-one fired. And after finishing <em>The Titan</em> I felt that here was a work
-having the aspects of a seriously performed duty, exacted by fidelity
-to some personal theory of industrial change. I could not imagine
-the author happy as an artist is happy in his creative work; he was
-<a id="page-51" class="pagenum" title="51"></a>
-too conscious of service to a cause. But in the last paragraph I discovered
-a big, personal note which introduced an attitude that extends
-beyond the borders of materialism. It presented another
-Dreiser&mdash;an author who was much more than a cinematograph,
-snapping superficial impressions of a vast panorama. Two years ago
-I should not have attributed the following words to Theodore Dreiser:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
-<p class="noindent">
-In a mulch of darkness is bedded the roots of endless sorrows&mdash;and of
-endless joys. Canst thou fix thine eye on the morning? Be glad. And if
-in the ultimate it blind thee, be glad also! Thou hast lived.
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-After laboring through arid deserts of description, this memorable
-passage, fraught with recognition, satisfaction, challenge, hope,
-and promise, stands out as an oasis.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<em>The Titan</em>, by virtue of its bold, graphic strokes, loses its identity
-as a tree, with sharply defined individual characters, and represents
-the forest. It is more like a jungle, and the jungle is our national
-life, into which the morning sun inevitably will shine.
-</p>
-
-<p class="sign">
-&mdash;DeWitt C. Wing.
-</p>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="THE_REVOLT_OF_THE_ONCE_BORN">
-THE REVOLT OF THE &ldquo;ONCE BORN&rdquo;
-</h3>
-
-<p class="book">
-<em>Challenge</em>, by Louis Untermeyer.
-[The Century Company, New York]
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-There has recently appeared a volume of verse by Louis Untermeyer
-which is an excellent example of the determinedly young
-and eupeptic philosophy so prevalent today&mdash;the philosophy of revolt.
-The book is named <em>Challenge</em> and as challenge it must be considered.
-To be sure it is rhymed, but the fact seems quite incidental.
-To rhyme a polemic does not make it poetry, and one feels sure that
-Mr. Untermeyer is more proud of the spiritual attitude than of the
-artistry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The book is a revolt, but a careful perusal of its pages fails to
-reveal against what it revolts. At first glance one might think it
-socialistic, but it is not clearly enough visualized for that. Socialism
-has at least found the enemy. Mr. Untermeyer manfully girds on
-his armor and sets forth to war, shouting his challenge lustily the
-while. And why, after all, be particular about having an actual enemy?
-Life, with a capital L, can do duty for that, or &ldquo;the scornful
-<a id="page-52" class="pagenum" title="52"></a>
-and untroubled skies,&rdquo; or the &ldquo;cold complacency of earth.&rdquo; The revolt
-is the point, and Mr. Untermeyer drives it home with all the
-phrases of frozen impetuosity to be discovered in a very useful vocabulary.
-&ldquo;Athletic courage,&rdquo; &ldquo;eager night,&rdquo; &ldquo;Life&rsquo;s lusty banner,&rdquo;
-&ldquo;impetuous winds,&rdquo; &ldquo;raging mirth,&rdquo; etc., are scattered carefully
-through the pages. But unfortunately, virility&mdash;with all due respect
-to the reviewer who mentioned these poems in the June number of
-The Little Review&mdash;has a way of oozing out of such phrases, leaving
-them empty of everything save a painful determination to be manly at
-all costs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But though Mr. Untermeyer is not quite clear on some subjects
-he is very clear on others. Several things seem to have struck him
-with peculiar force&mdash;that city streets are dirty, for instance; that strife
-is tonic for young blood; and that it is difficult for the human soul
-to conceive of complete annihilation. These things he proclaims passionately
-and challenges the world to disprove them. A little couplet
-from Kipling&rsquo;s <em>Jungle Book</em> suggests itself rather maliciously as the
-probable attitude of the world towards this outbreak:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
- <div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">&ldquo;There is none like to me!&rdquo; says the Cub in the pride of his earliest kill;</p>
- <p class="verse">But the Jungle is large and the Cub he is small. Let him think and be still.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Seriously, however, Mr. Untermeyer&rsquo;s attitude is what William
-James calls the attitude of the &ldquo;once born.&rdquo; One feels that he thinks
-in one dimension, that he does not see around his subject, nor hear
-the overtones which surround every happening for a man of deep intellect.
-The revolt is Walt Whitman&rsquo;s magnificent revolt, which is
-overpowering in a giant, cropping out in a man of very ordinary
-stature, where it sits a little ridiculously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As philosophy much of this, printed on a neat little card, would
-do splendidly to hang in a business office for the encouragement of
-the employees. As poetry it is negligible. Mr. Untermeyer lacks
-entirely the one gift which could redeem it&mdash;the gift of poignancy.
-This lack is particularly striking in the middle section, called <em>Interludes</em>,
-in which he pauses for a little from revolt. These are love songs
-and lyrics, a field in which anything not perfect is no longer acceptable.
-And Mr. Untermeyer&rsquo;s are not perfect. His sense of rhythm
-is extremely primitive and his lyrics are full of words. Only now and
-then, when he forgets for a moment how manly he is, does he say
-<a id="page-53" class="pagenum" title="53"></a>
-anything simply enough to strike home. These lines, for instance,
-from <em>Irony</em> stick:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
- <div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">There is no kind of death to kill</p>
- <p class="verse">the sands that lie so meek and still ...</p>
- <p class="verse">But man is great and strong and wise&mdash;</p>
- <p class="verse7">And so he dies.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-But in the main it is unfortunate that Mr. Untermeyer, who
-writes so much and so readably on the subject of poetry, should put
-out so pretentious and undeveloped a volume as this is. It is inevitable
-that it should affect his standing as a critic, and there seems little
-doubt that his work in that field is really valuable to the cause of poetry
-in America today.
-</p>
-
-<p class="sign">
-&mdash;Eunice Tietjens.
-</p>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="VERLAINE_AND_TOLSTOY">
-TWO BIOGRAPHIES: VERLAINE
-AND TOLSTOY
-</h3>
-
-<p class="book">
-<em>Paul Verlaine</em>, by Wilfred Thorley; <em>Tolstoy: His Life and Writings</em>,
-by Edward Garnett. [Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston.]
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-When autumn is in your heart&mdash;not that of the golden delirium of
-exotic agony, but bleak weeping autumn of crucifixion and dead
-leaves&mdash;what dirge, what note haunts you in accompaniment to your
-grief? Maddening darts from Tchaikowsky&rsquo;s <em>Pathétique</em>, or <em>Weltschmerz</em>-moans
-from Beethoven&rsquo;s <em>Marchia Funebre</em>, or an unuttered
-accord known only to your soul? Or, if you are a brother of mine, do
-your lips soundlessly mutter this?
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
- <div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Les sanglots longs</p>
- <p class="verse">Des violons</p>
- <p class="verse2">De l&rsquo;automne</p>
- <p class="verse">Blessent mon coeur</p>
- <p class="verse">D&rsquo;une langueur</p>
- <p class="verse2">Monotone.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Don&rsquo;t you hear the resonance of the tolling bells in Chopin&rsquo;s
-<em>Funeral March</em>? Your sorrow grows crescendo as you proceed, recalling
-Massenet&rsquo;s <em>Elégie</em>:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
- <div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
-<a id="page-54" class="pagenum" title="54"></a>
- <p class="verse">Tout suffocant</p>
- <p class="verse">Et blême, quand</p>
- <p class="verse2">Sonne l&rsquo;heure,</p>
- <p class="verse">Je me souviens</p>
- <p class="verse">Des jours anciens</p>
- <p class="verse2">Et je pleure;</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Et je m&rsquo;en vais</p>
- <p class="verse">Au vent mauvais</p>
- <p class="verse2">Qui m&rsquo;emporte</p>
- <p class="verse">Deçà, delà</p>
- <p class="verse">Pareil à la</p>
- <p class="verse2">Feuille morte.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-When I think of Paul Verlaine I invariably recall Oscar Wilde,
-despite or because of the abysmal dissimilarity of the two personalities.
-The sincere, ingenuous, all-loving child Paul, and the thoroughly artificial,
-paradoxical Oscar; the typical Bohemian with the criminal-face
-like that of Dostoevsky, and the salon-idol, the refined and gorgeous
-bearer of the sun-flower. Fate had somewhat reconciled the two contrasts.
-Both had been &ldquo;sinners,&rdquo; both were condemned by society and
-imprisoned, both had &ldquo;repented&rdquo;&mdash;one in <em>De Profundis</em> where the
-haughty humility of the self-enamored artist stirs us with its artificial
-beauty; the other in the primitive-Christian&mdash;nay, Catholic&mdash;<em>Sagesse</em>:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
- <div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse"><em>Mon Dieu m&rsquo;a dit: Mon fils, il faut m&rsquo;aimer ....</em></p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Some months ago in reviewing Edmond Lepelletier&rsquo;s voluminous
-book, (<em>Paul Verlaine: His Life and Work</em>) I remarked that the Poet of
-Absinthe and Violets was still awaiting his Boswell. My view has not
-changed after reading Wilfrid Thorley&rsquo;s monograph on Verlaine; but
-my wish for an adequate biography of the signer of <em>Romances sans
-Paroles</em> has now become counterbalanced by an earnest prayer that the
-memory of the poet may be saved from such indelicate manipulators
-as Mr. Thorley. Why this respectable Englishman should have attempted
-to treat the life of the most wayward French poet since Villon
-can be explained by no other reason than that it was a case of &ldquo;made to
-order.&rdquo; When a Velasquez is pierced by a fanatical suffragette the
-whole civilized world is roused to indignation; but when an honest
-philistine unceremoniously puffs his cheap smoke into the face of a
-dead poet there is not a single protest against that sort of vandalism.
-Fear of the editor&rsquo;s blue pencil restrains me from putting my attitude
-more outspokenly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<a id="page-55" class="pagenum" title="55"></a>
-A conscientious compilator would have found sufficient material
-for an unpretentious sketch of the life of Verlaine and for an appreciation
-of his works. Lepelletier gives an amazing mass of facts and
-personal reminiscences (you may ignore his naive interpretations);
-Arthur Symons in <em>The Symbolist Movement in Literature</em> has a masterpiece
-essay on Verlaine, not to mention a number of other French
-and English writers who have given us glimpses of the imperceptible
-image of the poet&mdash;writers who <em>knew what they were taking about</em>.
-Mr. Thorley has made use of various sources, but in a peculiar way.
-He fished out the anecdotal scraps, the piquant details, the filthy hints,
-and patched up a caricature-portrait of a lewd, perverse &ldquo;undesirable,&rdquo;
-whose poetry (I quote reluctantly) &ldquo;was born solely of the genitals,&rdquo;
-whose &ldquo;life is but the trite old story of the emotions developed at the
-expense of domestic peace and civic order; of art for art&rsquo;s sake made
-to condone the manner of its begetting, and the trend of its appeal;
-of the hushed acquiescence in emotion as a sacred thing, whatever the
-quality of the impulse from which it ripens or the level of ideas on
-which it feeds.&rdquo; Out of the ninety-odd pages of stuff seventy-nine are
-devoted to &ldquo;biography&rdquo; sufficiently spicy to make any toothless old
-rake chuckle; the rest is given over to &ldquo;criticism&rdquo;&mdash;a mutilated
-melange of some of the views of Symons, George Moore, and others,
-flavored with the compilator&rsquo;s own commonplaces. I quote from the
-closing lines:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
-<p class="noindent">
-A specious and high-sounding phrase has been invented to excuse the
-perversities of imaginative genius by speaking of its achievement as a &ldquo;conquest
-of new realms for the spirit.&rdquo; But the worth of such acquisitions depends
-on the nature of the territory, and if it be, morally, a malarial swamp
-conducive only to a human type found subversive in our normal world, it will
-always appear to the English mind that we shall do well to forego the new
-kingdom and to withhold our homage from its discoverer.... That
-&ldquo;nice is nasty, nasty nice,&rdquo; and the creative artist the sole arbiter, must be
-hotly opposed so long as a social conscience survives.
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-And this was written in Anno Domini 1914!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A sense of fairness urges me to rehabilitate the &ldquo;English mind&rdquo;
-by recalling a passage from Mr. Thorley&rsquo;s compatriot, Arthur Symons:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
-<p class="noindent">
-The artist, it cannot be too clearly understood, has no more part in society
-than a monk in domestic life: he cannot be judged by its rules, he can
-be neither praised nor blamed for his acceptance or rejection of its conventions.
-Social rules are made by normal people for normal people, and the
-man of genius is fundamentally abnormal.
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a id="page-56" class="pagenum" title="56"></a>
-It is high time that this axiom became a truism and that we cease
-to measure the artist with the yard-stick of conventional morality.
-&ldquo;L&rsquo;art, mes enfants, c&rsquo;est d&rsquo;être absolument soi-même,&rdquo; sang Verlaine,
-and somewhere else he reveals a bit of that self with his usual sincerity:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
-<p class="noindent">
-I believe, and I sin in thought as in action; I believe, and I repent in
-thought, if no more. Or again, I believe, and I am a good Christian at this
-moment; I believe, and I am a bad Christian the instant after. The remembrance,
-the hope, the invocation of a sin delights me, with or without remorse,
-sometimes under the very form of sin, and hedged with all its natural consequences....
-This delight ... it pleases us to put to paper
-and publish more or less well expressed: we consign it, in short, into literary
-form, forgetting all religious ideas, or not letting one of them escape us. Can
-any one in good faith condemn us as poets? A hundred times no.
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-&ldquo;And, indeed, I should echo, a hundred times no!&rdquo; exclaims the
-Englishman, Arthur Symons.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I cannot resist the temptation of quoting the happiest definition
-of Verlaine&rsquo;s personality written by Charles Morice back in 1888:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
-<p class="noindent">
-The soul of an immortal child, that is the soul of Verlaine, with all the
-privileges and all the perils of so being: with the sudden despair so easily distracted,
-the vivid gaieties without a cause, the excessive suspicions and the
-excessive confidences, the whims so easily outwearied, the deaf and blind infatuations,
-with, especially, the unceasing renewal of impressions in the incorruptible
-integrity of personal vision and sensation. Years, influences, teachings,
-may pass over a temperament such as this, may irritate it, may fatigue
-it; transform it, never&mdash;never so much as to alter that particular unity which
-consists in a dualism, in the division of forces between the longing after what
-is evil and the adoration of what is good; or rather, in the antagonism of spirit
-and flesh....
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-I have not mentioned the most striking &ldquo;feature&rdquo; of Mr. Thorley&rsquo;s
-... production&mdash;the appendix. Six of Verlaine&rsquo;s poems are
-translated by him for the benefit of those who do not understand
-French &ldquo;intimately.&rdquo; &ldquo;To offer them to other readers, would, of
-course, be an impertinence,&rdquo; he modestly admits. Impertinence is not
-the word for that outrage. I have experienced physical pain at the
-sight of the Hunnish sacrilege committed by this well-wishing moralist.
-The poet, for whom &ldquo;De la musique avant toute chose; De la musique
-encore et toujours!&rdquo; who had pleaded, &ldquo;Car nous voulons la nuance
-encore,
-Pas la <a id="corr-32"></a>couleur, rien que la nuance!&rdquo; has been mercilessly crucified
-in the form of quasi-Tennysonian, taffy-like verses. One recalls
-with gratitude the careful albeit pale translations of Gertrude Hall, who
-at least had the sense of æsthetic propriety in endeavoring to remain
-true to the master&rsquo;s meter and rhythm.
-</p>
-
-<p class="tb">
-&nbsp;
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a id="page-57" class="pagenum" title="57"></a>
-From Tolstoy&rsquo;s diary in 1855:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
-<p class="noindent">
-... a great, a stupendous idea, to the realization of which I feel
-myself capable of devoting all my life. The idea is the foundation of a new
-religion corresponding to the development of mankind&mdash;<em>the religion of Jesus,
-but purified from dogma and mysticism; a practical religion, not promising bliss in future,
-but giving happiness on earth</em>.... To work consciously
-for <em>the union on earth</em> by religion....
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-From a letter to the poet Fet in 1898:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
-<p class="noindent">
-I am so different to things of this life that life becomes uninteresting....
-I hope you will love me though I be black.
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-From the fragment <em>There are no guilty people</em>:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
-<p class="noindent">
-There was a time when I tried to change my position which was not in
-harmony with my conscience, but the conditions created by the past, by my
-family and its claims upon me, were so complicated that I did not know how
-to free myself. I had not the strength. Now that I am over eighty and have
-become feeble I have given up trying to free myself. Strange to say, as my
-feebleness increases I realize more and more strongly the wrongfulness of my
-position, and it grows more and more intolerable to me.
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-On his death-bed at the railroad station Astapovo, November,
-1910:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
-<p class="noindent">
-I am tired of this world of men.
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Tolstoy&rsquo;s failure was inevitable, for he had approached life with
-the uncompromising logic of a child or a god. For fifty years he
-preached his religion, and during all that time he remained splendidly
-inconsistent. He opposed private property and proceeded to live on
-his estate; he had denounced marriage and was a father to thirteen
-children. Notwithstanding his deadly hatred for the Russian government,
-he bitterly denounced the liberals and the revolutionists for their
-&ldquo;un-Christian&rdquo; ways of fighting the enemy; but his greatest contradiction,
-to the joy of the intellectual world, consisted in the victory of
-the artist over the moralist as manifested in his numerous novels and
-plays.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The work of Edward Garnett is conscientious and is, to my knowledge,
-the best short biography of Tolstoy. It was a happy idea to
-discard the traditional portrait and use a reproduction of Kramskoy&rsquo;s
-painting, which dates back to the sixties, if I am not mistaken. It is
-when looking at this portrait, a great piece of art in itself, that we
-envisage the author of <em>War and Peace</em>. A few words from the description
-of Tolstoy&rsquo;s face by P. A. Terzeyeonvo:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
-<p class="noindent">
-His face was a true peasant&rsquo;s face: simple, rustic, with a broad nose, a
-weather-beaten skin, and thick overhanging brows, from beneath which small,
-keen, grey eyes peered sharply forth.... One instantly divines in Tolstoy
-<a id="page-58" class="pagenum" title="58"></a>
-a man of the highest society&mdash;with polished, unconstrained manners.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-... On the one hand an insatiable thirst for power over people, and
-on the other an unconquerable ardor for inward purity and the sweetness of
-meekness....
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In this chain of seething, imperious instincts linked with delicate spiritual
-organization lies the profound tragicness of Tolstoy&rsquo;s personality.
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Mr. Garnett succeeds in giving the quintessence of Tolstoy&rsquo;s
-works and teachings in less than a hundred pages. Like most of the
-Russian&rsquo;s eulogistic biographers, Mr. Garnett has not escaped the fallacy
-of exaggerating the moral power that Tolstoy exercised over the
-government. To say that the Czar and his ministers &ldquo;dared not touch&rdquo;
-the outspoken anarchist and heretic &ldquo;out of dread of Europe&mdash;nay, of
-Russia,&rdquo; is to reveal one&rsquo;s ignorance of the brazen defiance displayed
-by Muscovite autocrats in regard to public opinion. As the Germans
-put it: &ldquo;Herr Kossack, schämen Sie sich!&rdquo; Tolstoy, as a matter of
-fact, had helped to check the revolutionary spirit of his compatriots in
-a greater degree than the tyrannic persecutions of Von-Plehve. Had
-he not appealed time and again to embrace his doctrine of Non-Resistance?
-Had he not denounced the revolutionists as violent prototypes
-of their hangers? Could the government see any danger in a man who
-wrote in <em>The Times</em> during the revolution of 1905: &ldquo;To free oneself
-from the government it is only necessary to abstain from participating
-in it and supporting it. Our consciousness of the law of God demands
-from us only one thing: moral self-perfection, i. e., the liberation of
-oneself from all those weaknesses and vices which make one the slave
-of governments and the participation in their crimes&rdquo;? Another tragic
-contradiction of the restless soul of the anarchist who, despite himself,
-renders aid to the despots.
-</p>
-
-<p class="sign">
-&mdash;Alexander S. Kaun.
-</p>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="CONRADS_QUOTE">
-INTROSPECTION
-</h3>
-
-<p class="book">
-<em>Chance</em>, by Joseph Conrad.
-[Doubleday, Page &amp; Company, New York.]
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Did you ever take supper in the apartments of a dear bachelor
-friend, on a night when the wind howled outside the window, and the
-rain beat against the pane? And after the satisfying meal, whose
-<a id="page-59" class="pagenum" title="59"></a>
-perfect appointment made you forget all save the luxury of living,
-did you retire to the spacious living room, and after accepting an
-aromatic Havana, stretch your feet out to the crackling log fire, and
-as the smoke from your cigar crawled upward listen to the philosophical
-analyses of your cultured host on that marvelously simple and
-profoundly complex servant and master of man, the human mind?
-Of such an evening is the atmosphere of <em>Chance</em>. Not academically
-deep, but deep from the standpoint of a full life and an active intelligence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Everyone loves to analyze his fellow creatures. Some do it well,
-some do it badly, but we all do it. Conrad does it masterfully. There
-doesn&rsquo;t seem to be a type which holds a mystery for him. The village
-pillar; the frail, ill-fated maid; the buxsom housewife; the silent
-captain ashore and afloat; the opinionated, retired old gentleman;
-the cynical, good-natured man of thirty-five; the flat, tintless
-fraud. Into the mental realm of all these he makes expeditions long
-and short. His characters live. They mingle good and bad, and, as
-strong characters should, weave for themselves a charming story of
-love, adventure, trial, and victory, never trite, and always surprising.
-It is a tale built of character studies and garnished with odd conjective
-philosophy.
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
-<p class="noindent">
-Our new acquaintance paused, then added meditatively:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-&ldquo;Queer man. As if it made any difference. Queer man.&rdquo;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-&ldquo;It&rsquo;s certainly unwise to admit any sort of responsibility for our actions,
-whose consequences we are never able to foresee,&rdquo; remarked Marlow by way
-of assent.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-&ldquo;The consequence of his action was that I got a ship,&rdquo; said the other.
-&ldquo;That could not do much harm,&rdquo; he added with a laugh which argued a
-probably unconscious contempt of general ideas.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But Marlow was not put off. He was patient and reflective. He had
-been at sea many years and I verily believe he liked sea-life because upon
-the whole it is favourable to reflection. I am speaking of the now nearly
-vanished sea-life under sail. To those who may be surprised at the statement
-I will point out that this life secured for the mind of him who embraced
-it the inestimable advantages of solitude and silence. Marlow had the habit
-of pursuing general ideas in a peculiar manner, between jest and earnest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-&ldquo;Oh, I wouldn&rsquo;t suggest,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that your namesake, Mr. Powell,
-the Shipping Master, had done you much harm. Such was hardly his intention.
-And even if it had been he would not have had the power. He was but
-a man, and the incapacity to achieve anything distinctly good or evil is inherent
-in our earthly condition. Mediocrity is our mark. And perhaps it&rsquo;s just as
-well, since, for the most part, we cannot be certain of the effect of our
-actions.&rdquo;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know about the effect,&rdquo; the other stood up to Marlow manfully.
-<a id="page-60" class="pagenum" title="60"></a>
-&ldquo;What effect did you expect anyhow? I tell you he did something
-uncommonly kind.&rdquo;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-&ldquo;He did what he could,&rdquo; Marlow retorted gently, &ldquo;and on his own showing
-that was not a very great deal. I cannot help thinking that there was
-some malice in the way he seized the opportunity to serve you. He managed
-to make you uncomfortable. You wanted to go to sea, but he jumped
-on the chance of accommodating your desire with a vengeance. I am inclined
-to think your cheek alarmed him. And this was an excellent occasion
-to suppress you altogether. For if you accepted he was relieved of you with
-every appearance of humanity, and if you made objections (after requesting
-his assistance, mind you) it was open to him to drop you as a sort of impostor.
-You might have had to decline that berth for some very valid
-reason. From sheer necessity, perhaps. The notice was too uncommonly
-short. But under the circumstances you&rsquo;d have covered yourself with ignominy.&rdquo;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our new friend knocked the ashes out of his pipe.
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-There is something about Conrad which gives a warm feeling
-about the heart. A certain fineness of humor, a certain fullness of
-sympathy. He never mixes his similes; they always take the same
-tone and the same color. For instance:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
-<p class="noindent">
-I took a piece of cake and went out to bribe the Fyne dog into some
-sort of self-control. His sharp, comical yapping was unbearable, like stabs
-through one&rsquo;s brain, and Fyne&rsquo;s deeply modulated remonstrances abashed
-the vivacious animal no more than the deep, patient murmur of the sea abashes
-a nigger minstrel on a popular beach. Fyne was beginning to swear at him
-in low, sepulchral tones when I appeared. The dog became at once wildly
-demonstrative, half-strangling himself in his collar, his eyes and tongue hanging
-out in the excess of his uncomprehensible affection for me. This was
-before he caught sight of the cake in my hand. A series of vertical springs
-high up in the air followed, and then, when he got the cake, he instantly
-lost his interest in everything else.
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-No, this illustration is not of Conrad&rsquo;s finest, but in a homely
-way it illustrates a deep sympathy with life, which this strong worker
-and writer gives in such bountiful measure in all his literature; and,
-to quote an eminent writer, &ldquo;Literature and Conrad are interchangeable
-terms.&rdquo;
-</p>
-
-<p class="sign">
-&mdash;Henry Blackman Sell.
-</p>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="CLARKS_FIELD">
-AN AMERICAN NOVEL
-</h3>
-
-<p class="book">
-<em>Clark&rsquo;s Field</em>, by Robert Herrick.
-[Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston.]
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-It was but the other day that Mr. Herrick told us what he thought
-about the American novel. Those who read the trenchant article
-found not only a criticism of our machine-like fictionists and their
-half-baked methods, but also a sturdy conviction that the day was
-surely approaching when we should demand and receive a truer and
-<a id="page-61" class="pagenum" title="61"></a>
-more vital presentation of our national life in our literature. And if
-Mr. Herrick, long since tagged an apostate to our national creed of
-turgid optimism, believes this, we can safely trust to his cool vision and
-be glad that the tide has turned. The rich human material lies ready
-at hand, and the audience is fast growing intelligent and discriminating.
-As yet, however, &ldquo;we await the writer or writers keen enough
-to perceive the opportunity, powerful enough to interest the public in
-what it has been unwilling to heed, and of course endowed with sufficient
-insight to comprehend our big new world.&rdquo;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whatever may be said for our other novelists, surely not one of
-them can exhibit a mingling of the powers of insight and artistry equal
-to that of Robert Herrick. His work from the beginning has been an
-honest and incisive attempt to interpret our life in its peculiar and
-universal aspects, in spite of the clamor of the public at his tearing
-away of the veils of sentimentality and prudery. The errors into
-which he fell were due to the ardor of his spiritual vision, which drove
-him into an impassioned taking of sides. He has emerged from that
-stage into what his critics call his &ldquo;old manner,&rdquo; a more objective
-treatment of his material. But in the process of change something
-was lost&mdash;the element of flaming intensity which gave the reader a
-similar capacity to feel. In this latest performance, as well as in <em>One
-Woman&rsquo;s Life</em>, he is always cool, clear-sighted, and admirably efficient
-in the task he sets himself; but never passionate. On the contrary,
-despite the pervading atmosphere of earnestness, he often assumes a
-playful satiric tone, mordant but not bitter,&mdash;a method well suited to
-his matter and purpose.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<em>Clark&rsquo;s Field</em> tells the story of the influence of property upon the
-human beings who own it and hope to reap gold from its increasing
-value. All that is left of the great Clark farm is a fifty-acre field in a
-growing New England town, bequeathed jointly to the two brothers,
-Edward and Samuel, the former of whom has emigrated to the West
-and wholly disappeared from the ken of his relatives. So at first the
-tale is of the baleful influence of expectation delayed again and again:
-in the case of Samuel who cannot sell the land because of his brother&rsquo;s
-half-interest, and who in consequence sinks into a sodden inertia; in
-his son&rsquo;s disintegration into a lazy and drunken &ldquo;Vet&rdquo;; in his sister
-Addie&rsquo;s sordid and pathetic sally into life resulting in the birth of another
-human being destined to taste of the fruit of their tree and to find
-it, one day, very bitter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<a id="page-62" class="pagenum" title="62"></a>
-The greater portion of the novel, then, deals with the influence of
-the realized wealth upon the unformed, colorless little girl, Adelle, the
-last of the Clarks. It is a masterly piece of work&mdash;the gradual development
-of the pale rooming-house drudge into the silly and insolent
-woman of fashion, and slowly but certainly into a human being with a
-soul. Less promising stuff for a heroine neither fate nor Mr. Herrick
-could have chosen; the latter delights in ample admissions throughout
-the book of Adelle&rsquo;s lack of beauty, brains, and charm. Yet he is always
-sufficiently temperate to escape the danger of caricature. Adelle is a
-convincing figure. The slow dawning upon her consciousness of the
-power of money, her &ldquo;magic lamp&rdquo; which she need only rub to gratify
-any desire, is followed by swift and constant use of the new weapon.
-It brings her a fresh assurance, a few scatter-brained friends, some
-stylish clothes, and, at length, a callow youth for a husband. It never
-brings her contact with a real person or friendship with a stimulating
-individual; nor can it save her from the failure of her marriage, nor
-compensate her for the death of her little boy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Adelle&rsquo;s story, then, turns out to be what we least expected it,&mdash;a
-hopeful one. It leaves us with almost a sense of security, for is she
-not one of those who can &ldquo;derive good from her mistakes,&rdquo; and therefore
-&ldquo;the safest sort of human being to raise in this garden plot of
-souls&rdquo;? And although we are still saddled with &ldquo;that absurd code of
-inheritance and property rights that the Anglo-Saxon peoples have
-preserved from their ancient tribal days in the gloomy forests of
-the lower Rhine,&rdquo; the situation is not without hope, since it has yielded
-a man of the judge&rsquo;s type, in whom the beauty of a past idealism is
-coupled with the freshness of a new vision of responsibility.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To hark back to the recent article in <em>The Yale Review</em>, we believe
-that Mr. Herrick himself has given us an American novel&mdash;thoroughly
-American in situation, character, treatment, and even in philosophy.
-We, as a people, are beginning to suspect our boastful optimism
-as we become aware of the sordidness beneath the fair exterior of our
-glorious civilization. And in accordance with the western temperament,
-the awareness of wrong leads not to bitter cynicism but to sturdy
-efforts toward amelioration. Such, then, is the spirit of <em>Clark&rsquo;s Field</em>&mdash;a
-hopefulness in the power of courage, and labor, and a growing
-sense of social responsibility to move mounds that seem to have become
-immovable mountains through a tenacious fostering of tradition.
-</p>
-
-<p class="sign">
-&mdash;Marguerite Swawite.
-</p>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="THE_SAVAGE_PAINTERS">
-<a id="page-63" class="pagenum" title="63"></a>
-THE &ldquo;SAVAGE&rdquo; PAINTERS
-</h3>
-
-<p class="book">
-<em>Cubists and Post Impressionism</em>, by Arthur Jerome Eddy.
-[A. C. McClurg and Company, Chicago.]
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-An attempt to explain the new schools in art &ldquo;in plain, every-day
-terms.&rdquo; An earnest appeal for tolerance in regard to seemingly perversive
-forms. The book has a wealth of material and numerous quotations
-from Picasso, Picabia, Cézanne, Matisse, and others, considerably
-more interesting and instructive than Mr. Eddy&rsquo;s own truisms.
-Although the author repeatedly resents any accusation in his adherence
-to Cubism, the reader gets the impression that the Cubistic movement
-has received a more thorough and fair treatment than the other
-new schools. Of the sixty-nine reproductions of Post-Impressionistic
-paintings and sculpture, only five represent the Futurists. Idillon
-Redon, who gave us the greater delight in last year&rsquo;s International
-Exhibition, is totally ignored. Among the Self-Portraits that of Matisse
-is sorely missed&mdash;a work that helps greatly in understanding the quaint
-painter of the Woman in Red Madras. Whether Mr. Eddy will succeed
-in convincing the prejudiced conservatives is doubtful; but in those
-who have appreciated the daring attempts of the new schools his book
-will arouse a renewed longing for the foreign &ldquo;savages&rdquo; and an ardent
-hope for their further invasions in our &ldquo;sane and healthful&rdquo; galleries.
-</p>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="THE_SAME_BOOK_FROM_ANOTHER_STANDPOINT">
-THE SAME BOOK FROM ANOTHER STANDPOINT
-</h3>
-
-<p class="subt">
-(With apologies to the author of <em>Tender Buttons</em>)
-</p>
-
-<p class="subt">
-<em>Oil and Water</em>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Enough water is plenty and more, more is almost plenty enough.
-Enthusiastically hurting sad size, such size, same size slighter, same
-splendor simpler, same sore sounder. Glazed glitter, eddy eddies discover
-discovered discoveries, discover Mediterranean sea, large print
-large. Small print small, picked plumes painters and penmen, pretty
-pieces Picasso, Picabia plus Plato, Hegel, Cézanne, Kandinsky, more
-plenty more, small print single sign of oil supposing shattering scatter
-and scattering certainly splendidly. Suppose oil surrounded with
-watery sauce, suppose spare solely inside, suppose the rest.
-</p>
-
-<p class="sign">
-&mdash;A. S. K.
-</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="SENTENCE_REVIEWS">
-<a id="page-64" class="pagenum" title="64"></a>
-SENTENCE REVIEWS
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="sentrev">
-<p class="note">
-(Inclusion in this category does not preclude a more extended notice.)
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<em>The Return of the Prodigal</em>, by May Sinclair. [The Macmillan Company,
-New York.] Eight short stories, all subtly done. <em>The Cosmopolitan</em>
-proves beyond a doubt that women, or at least the thousandth woman, is capable
-of a disinterested love of life and of nature. It is a big story and a very
-finished one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<em>John Addington Symonds</em>, by Van Wyck Brooks. [Mitchell Kennerley,
-New York.] A biography of rare charm and distinction in which Mr. Brooks
-builds a clear picture of Symonds&rsquo;s life as it is related to our day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<em>The Sister of the Wind</em>, and <em>Other Poems</em>, by Grace Fallow Norton.
-[Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston.] Some of this will disappoint lovers
-of <em>Little Gray Songs From St. Joseph&rsquo;s</em>&mdash;in fact, none of the poems here has
-such extraordinary poignancy. But there are many that are worth knowing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<em>The Continental Drama of Today</em>, by Barrett H. Clark. [Henry Holt and
-Company, New York.] Invaluable to the student of continental drama. A
-half dozen pages of critical analysis devoted to each of thirty modern playwrights.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<em>Stories and Poems and Other Uncollected Writing</em>, by Bret Harte, compiled
-by Charles Meeker Kozlay, with an introductory account of Harte&rsquo;s early
-contributions to the California press. [Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston.]
-A very beautiful Riverside Press volume with photogravures.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<em>I Should Say So</em>, by James Montgomery Flagg. [George H. Doran
-Company, New York.] Yes, he is silly; but Mr. Flagg is so nicely naughty
-and so naughtily human that you simply must laugh.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<em>Broken Music</em>, by Phyllis Bottome. [Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston.]
-Charming and well done. The story of a young French boy&rsquo;s struggle
-to create music, and his success after the tradition of a &ldquo;broken heart&rdquo; had
-been fulfilled.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<em>The Old Game</em>, by Samuel G. Blythe. [George H. Doran Company,
-New York.] A temperance tract by a man who knows; minus sanctimoniousness
-and plus a punch.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<em>Dramatic Portaits</em>, by P. P. Howe. [Mitchell Kennerley, New York.]
-One man&rsquo;s opinion of the modern dramatists. A &ldquo;shelf book&rdquo; for occasional
-reference.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<em>Billy and Hans</em>, by W. J. Stillman. [Thomas B. Mosher, Portland,
-Maine.] A charming story of the most temperamental of pets, the squirrel. A
-<a id="page-65" class="pagenum" title="65"></a>
-Mosher book bound in a cover dark enough to stand wear. A distinct relief
-from the Alice blue and pale old rose of Mr. Mosher&rsquo;s more delicate periods.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<em>Billy</em>, by Maud Thornhill Porter. [Thomas B. Mosher, Portland,
-Maine.] The true story of a canary bird. One of those little documents written
-for the enjoyment of a family circle and read on winter evenings. Bright,
-human, and personal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<em>The Social Significance of the Modern Drama</em>, by Emma Goldman.
-[Richard G. Badger, Boston.] Miss Goldman discusses Ibsen, Strindberg,
-Sudermann, Hauptmann, Wedekind, Maeterlinck, Rostand, Brieux, Shaw,
-Galsworthy, Stanley Houghton, Githa Sowerby, Yeats, Lenox Robinson, T. G.
-Murray, Tolstoy, Tchekhof, Gorki, and Andreyev, outlining the plays of each
-and emphasizing their relation to the problem of modern society. She is
-the interpreter here rather than the propagandist, and her interpretations are
-not academic discourses. They give you the plays partly by quotation, partly
-in crisp narrative, and they are not the kind of interpretations that make
-the authors wish they had never written plays. Whether you like Emma
-Goldman or not, you will get a more compact and comprehensive working-knowledge
-of the modern drama from her book than from any other recent
-compilation we know of.
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="container">
-<p class="ded">
-DEDICATED<br />
-TO THAT HISTORIC MOMENT<br />
-WHEN<br />
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-THE GREAT AMERICAN CHANTECLIER<br />
-SHALL AWAKE<br />
-TO FIND<br />
-THE SUN HIGH IN HEAVEN<br />
-AND THAT<br />
-HE<br />
-HAD CROWED NOT
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="editorials chapter">
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="editorials" id="A_CHANGE_OF_PRICE">
-<a id="page-67" class="pagenum" title="67"></a>
-A CHANGE OF PRICE
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>
-With the August issue, the sixth month of our very flourishing
-life, we have decided to make one important change in <em>The Little Review</em>.
-We are reducing the subscription price to $1.50 a year, and that
-of single copies to 15 cents. There will be no change in size or appearance.
-Those whose subscriptions have already been paid on the
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-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our reason for doing so is this: We have discovered that a great
-many of the people whom we wish to reach cannot afford to pay $2.50
-a year for a magazine. It happens that we are very emphatic about
-wanting these people in our audience, and we believe they are as
-sincerely interested in <em>The Little Review</em> as we are stimulated by having
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-</p>
-
-<p>
-With characteristic lack of modesty we wish also to make another
-announcement. Our success so far has exceeded even our own
-hopes&mdash;and it may be remembered that they were rather high. As for
-our practical friends who warned us against starting a literary magazine,
-even their dark prophecies of debt and a speedy demise have had
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-</p>
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-<p class="h1 adh">
-THE COMPLETE WORKS OF<br />
-WALT WHITMAN
-</p>
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-[AUTHORIZED BY THE EXECUTORS]
-</p>
-
-<p class="adb">
-COMPLETE LEAVES OF GRASS
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This edition contains the text and arrangement preferred by Walt Whitman. All
-other editions of &ldquo;Leaves of Grass&rdquo; are imperfect in this respect and incomplete.
-There are one hundred and six poems in &ldquo;Complete Leaves of Grass&rdquo; not contained
-in any other edition.
-</p>
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-&ldquo;Complete Leaves of Grass&rdquo; may be had in the following styles:
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-COMPLETE PROSE
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-<p>
-This is the only complete collection of Whitman&rsquo;s prose writings. It is particularly
-valuable to students of the poet, as it contains much biographical and other material
-not to be found elsewhere. &ldquo;Complete Prose&rdquo; may be had in the following styles:
-</p>
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-BY HORACE TRAUBEL
-</p>
-
-<p>
-&ldquo;The most truthful biography in the language.&rdquo; To be complete in eight volumes,
-of which three are now ready.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Large octavo, gilt tops, uncut edges, and fully illustrated
-</p>
-
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-</p>
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-WALT WHITMAN: A Critical Study
-</p>
-
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-BY BASIL DE SELINCOURT
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The latest book on Whitman (April, 1914). A study of unusual penetration.
-</p>
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-<span class="larger">MITCHELL KENNERLEY, PUBLISHER</span><br />
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-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="ads chapter">
-<p class="h2 adh">
-<a id="page-68" class="pagenum" title="68"></a>
-Vol. IV · PRICE 15 CENTS · No. IV
-</p>
-
-<div class="centerpic poetry">
-<img src="images/poetry.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="h1 hidden adh">
-Poetry
-</p>
-
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-A Magazine of Verse
-</p>
-
-<p class="hidden ada">
-Edited by Harriet Monroe
-</p>
-
-<p class="h3 adh">
-JULY, 1914
-</p>
-
- <div class="table">
-<table class="tablepoetry" summary="Table-1">
-<tbody>
- <tr class="br">
- <td class="col1">Poems to be Chanted</td>
- <td class="col2">Nicholas Vachel Lindsay</td>
- </tr>
- <tr class="i">
- <td class="col1" colspan="2">The Fireman&rsquo;s Ball&mdash;The Santa Fé Trail, A Humoresque&mdash;The Black Hawk War of the Artists.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr class="br">
- <td class="col1">Poems</td>
- <td class="col2">Richard Butler Glaenzer</td>
- </tr>
- <tr class="i">
- <td class="col1" colspan="2">From a Club Window&mdash;Rodin&mdash;Star Magic.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr class="br">
- <td class="col1">Sitting Blind by the Sea</td>
- <td class="col2">Ruth McEnery Stuart</td>
- </tr>
- <tr class="br">
- <td class="col1">Roumanian Poems</td>
- <td class="col2">Maurice Aisen</td>
- </tr>
- <tr class="i">
- <td class="col1" colspan="2">We Want Land&mdash;Peasant Love Songs I-VII&mdash;The Conscript I-IV.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr class="br">
- <td class="col1">Comments and Reviews</td>
- <td class="col2">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr class="i">
- <td class="col1" colspan="2">A French Poet on Tradition&mdash;Mr. Lindsay on &ldquo;Primitive Singing&rdquo;&mdash;Doina&mdash;Reviews&mdash;Notes.</td>
- </tr>
-</tbody>
-</table>
- </div>
-<p class="ade">
-543 Cass Street, Chicago
-</p>
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-To Be Published August Fifteenth
-</p>
-
- <div class="table">
-<table class="table069" summary="Table-2">
-<tbody>
- <tr class="t">
- <td class="col1">THE LAY ANTHONY: A ROMANCE</td>
- <td class="col2">&nbsp;</td>
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- <td class="col1">By John Trevena</td>
- <td class="col2">$1.35 net</td>
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- <td class="col1">ADVENTURES WHILE PREACHING THE GOSPEL OF BEAUTY</td>
- <td class="col2">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr class="i">
- <td class="col1">By Nicholas Vachel Lindsay</td>
- <td class="col2">$1.00 net</td>
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- <td class="col1">MYLADY&rsquo;S BOOK: POEMS</td>
- <td class="col2">&nbsp;</td>
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- <tr class="i">
- <td class="col1">By Gerald Gould</td>
- <td class="col2">$1.00 net</td>
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-policy of diversity of interest, so that it will appeal, not only to
-the expert, but to every intelligent reader. It will touch every
-side of experience, and it will print the best essays and articles,
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-<a id="page-70" class="pagenum" title="70"></a>
-<em>The Mosher Books</em>
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-<p class="c">
-<em>LATEST ANNOUNCEMENTS</em>
-</p>
-
-<p class="h3 adh">
-<em>I</em>
-</p>
-
-<p class="adb">
-<span class="larger">Billy</span>: The True Story of a Canary Bird
-</p>
-
-<p class="ada">
-By <span class="smallcaps">Maud Thornhill Porter</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="r adp">
-<em>950 copies, Fcap 8vo. $1.00 net</em>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This pathetic little story was first issued by Mr. Mosher in a privately printed edition
-of 500 copies and was practically sold out before January 1, 1913. The late Dr. Weir
-Mitchell in a letter to the owner of the copyright said among other things: &ldquo;Certainly
-no more beautiful piece of English has been printed of late years.&rdquo; And again: &ldquo;May
-I ask if this lady did not leave other literary products? The one you print is so unusual
-in style and quality and imagination that after I read it I felt convinced there must be
-other matter of like character.&rdquo;
-</p>
-
-<p class="h3 adh">
-<em>II</em>
-</p>
-
-<p class="adb">
-<span class="larger">Billy and Hans</span>: My Squirrel Friends. A True History
-</p>
-
-<p class="ada">
-By <span class="smallcaps">W. J. Stillman</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="r adp">
-<em>950 copies, Fcap 8vo. 75 cents net</em>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Reprinted from the revised London edition of 1907 by kind permission of Mrs. W. J.
-Stillman.
-</p>
-
-<p class="h3 adh">
-<em>III</em>
-</p>
-
-<p class="adb">
-<span class="larger">Books and the Quiet Life</span>: Being Some Pages from The Private
-Papers of Henry Ryecroft
-</p>
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-<p class="ada">
-By <span class="smallcaps">George Gissing</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="r adp">
-<em>950 copies, Fcap 8vo. 75 cents net</em>
-</p>
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-<p>
-To the lover of what may be called spiritual autobiography, perhaps no other book in
-recent English literature appeals with so potent a charm as &ldquo;The Private Papers of
-Henry Ryecroft.&rdquo; It is the highest expression of Gissing&rsquo;s genius&mdash;a book that deserves
-a place on the same shelf with the Journals of De Guérin and Amiel. For the
-present publication, the numerous passages of the &ldquo;Papers&rdquo; relating to books and reading
-have been brought together and given an external setting appropriate to their exquisite
-literary flavor.
-</p>
-
-<hr class="hr10" />
-
-<p class="c">
-<em>Mr. Mosher also begs to state that the following new editions are now ready</em>:
-</p>
-
-<p class="h3 adh">
-<em>I</em>
-</p>
-
-<p class="adb">
-<span class="larger">Under a Fool&rsquo;s Cap</span>: Songs
-</p>
-
-<p class="ada">
-By <span class="smallcaps">Daniel Henry Holmes</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="r adp">
-<em>900 copies, Fcap 8vo, old-rose boards. $1.25 net</em>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For an Appreciation of this book read Mr. Larned&rsquo;s article in the February Century.
-</p>
-
-<p class="h3 adh">
-<em>II</em>
-</p>
-
-<p class="adb">
-<span class="larger">Amphora</span>: A Collection of Prose and Verse chosen by the Editor of
-The Bibelot
-</p>
-
-<p class="r adp">
-<em>925 copies, Fcap 8vo, old-style ribbed boards. $1.75 net</em>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<em>The Forum</em> for January, in an Appreciation by Mr. Richard Le Gallienne, pays tribute
-to this book in a most convincing manner.
-</p>
-
-<p class="s c">
-<em>All books sent postpaid on receipt of price net.</em>
-</p>
-
-<p class="ade">
-<em>THOMAS B. MOSHER</em> <em>Portland, Maine</em>
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="ads chapter">
-<p class="h1 adh">
-<a id="page-71" class="pagenum" title="71"></a>
-Nancy The Joyous <em>By Edith Stow</em>
-</p>
-
-<div class="centerpic nancy">
-<img src="images/nancy.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="u hidden c">
-For a Lift on the Road to Happiness<br />
-<em>read</em><br />
-Nancy the Joyous<br />
-A Novel of pure Delight
-</p>
-
-<p class="narrow">
-&ldquo;<em>Here, at the bend of the road I stop to wave,
-and to play you a gay little snatch of tune on
-my pipes, like any other true gypsy.</em>&rdquo;&mdash;<em>Nancy.</em>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nancy the Joyous is a simple little story&mdash;simple and
-clean and true&mdash;like a ray of sunshine in a bleak corner;
-like a wind-and-rain-and-sun-bathed flower on a steep mountainside.
-It is a story of sentiment, but without weak sentimentality,
-without tears, a kind of &ldquo;salt-of-the-earth&rdquo; optimism.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-¶ Brisk with the air of the Tennessee mountains, where Nancy finds the
-&ldquo;true values of life,&rdquo; and warm with the joy of living and loving and laughing,
-here is a &ldquo;character&rdquo; story&mdash;a &ldquo;heart interest&rdquo; story&mdash;a &ldquo;local color&rdquo;
-story of a picturesque locality&mdash;and yet a straightforward, unpretentious romance
-whose charm is based on more than mere uniqueness of characters or
-setting. Nancy is buoyant with life itself. Nancy is a real girl, a likable girl,
-and the love she inspires in her fellow creatures of the story is a real affection
-that shines outside the pages of the book and seizes hold of the heart of the
-reader.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A delightful book to read. An ideal book to give to a friend.
-</p>
-
-<p class="s narrow">
-<em>The make-up of the book is in keeping with the story. A
-frontispiece in cheerful colors of Nancy herself; each chapter
-has a specially drawn initial; each cheery letter has a full-width
-pictorial heading. Bound in extra cloth; decorated cover, with
-ornaments in gold. Pictorial jacket in full color and gold.
-12mo. $1.00 net.</em>
-</p>
-
-<p class="ade">
-Publishers <span class="larger">Reilly &amp; Britton</span> Chicago
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="ads chapter">
-<p class="h1 adh">
-<a id="page-72" class="pagenum" title="72"></a>
-<span class="s">A new novel by</span><br />
-Robert Herrick
-</p>
-
-<div class="centerpic herrick">
-<img src="images/herrick.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="adb">
-CLARK&rsquo;S FIELD
-</p>
-
-<p class="s narrow">
-&ldquo;In this virile book, Mr. Herrick studies the part played
-by &lsquo;unearned increment&rsquo; in the life of a girl. A notable
-contribution to American realistic fiction.&rdquo;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-&ldquo;Few will dispute the statement that Robert Herrick is today the most significant
-of our novelists. He is always sincere, and he is always worth our while.... Clark&rsquo;s
-Field is packed with meaning.&rdquo;&mdash;<em>New York Tribune.</em>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-&ldquo;The book is one that is worth reading and worth thinking about as a study of
-American life and as an extremely interesting depiction of the development of a
-human soul.&rdquo;&mdash;<em>New York Times.</em>
-</p>
-
-<p class="adp">
-<em>$1.40 net. Postage extra.</em>
-</p>
-
-<p class="s ade">
-Boston <span class="larger">HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY</span> New York
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="ads chapter">
-<div class="centerpic mason">
-<a id="page-73" class="pagenum" title="73"></a><img src="images/mason.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>
-The <b>Mason &amp; Hamlin</b> is the highest priced
-piano in the world. But spread the cost
-over the long years of service which you
-may confidently expect of it and your
-investment is one of proved economy.
-</p>
-
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-Yet above every consideration of cost is
-the supreme satisfaction of owning the
-piano which is the final choice of the
-world&rsquo;s greatest artists.
-</p>
-
-<p class="u ade">
-<b>Mason &amp; Hamlin</b> Pianos are on<br />
-sale only at the warerooms of the<br />
-<span class="larger"><em><span class="underline">Cable Piano Company</span></em></span><br />
-WABASH AND JACKSON
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="ads chapter">
-<p class="h1 adh">
-<a id="page-74" class="pagenum" title="74"></a>
-THE DRAMA
-</p>
-
-<p class="ads">
-A QUARTERLY DEVOTED TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF A WIDE
-AND INTELLIGENT INTEREST IN DRAMA LITERATURE
-</p>
-
-<p class="ade">
-736 MARQUETTE BLDG., CHICAGO :: $3.00 PER YEAR, 75 CENTS PER COPY
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Recent numbers have contained the following complete plays:
-</p>
-
- <div class="table">
-<table class="table074" summary="Table-3">
-<tbody>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1">Tagore&rsquo;s</td>
- <td class="col2">&ldquo;<em>The King of the Dark Chamber</em>&rdquo;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1">Dormay&rsquo;s</td>
- <td class="col2">&ldquo;<em>The Other Danger</em>&rdquo;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1">Giacosa&rsquo;s</td>
- <td class="col2">&ldquo;<em>The Stronger</em>&rdquo;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1">Andreyev&rsquo;s</td>
- <td class="col2">&ldquo;<em>The Pretty Sabine Woman</em>&rdquo;</td>
- </tr>
-</tbody>
-</table>
- </div>
-<p>
-All phases of drama and of the theatre are regularly and freely discussed, important
-new books are reviewed at length, and occasional news notes from
-foreign art centers are printed.
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="ads chapter">
-<p class="h1 adh">
-<em>Address</em> The Little Review
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="ade">
-917 Fine Arts Building :: Chicago
-</p>
-
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-<p class="narrow">
-We want circulation solicitors in
-every city in the country. Liberal
-commissions. For particulars address
-William Saphier, circulation
-manager, The Little Review, 917
-Fine Arts Building, Chicago.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="adp">
-<em>Beginning in August, $1.50 a year; 15 cents a copy</em>
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="trnote chapter">
-<p class="transnote">
-Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Advertisements were collected at the end of the text.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The table of contents on the title page was adjusted in order to reflect correctly the
-headings in this issue of <span class="smallcaps">The Little Review</span>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The article THE NEW LOYALTY&mdash;in the print interrupted on
-<a href="#page-31">page 31</a>&mdash;was continued on <a href="#page-66">page 66</a>.
-Page 66 was therefore moved directly after page 31.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The original spelling was mostly preserved. A few obvious typographical errors
-were silently corrected. All other changes are shown here (before/after):
-</p>
-
-
-
-<ul>
-
-<li>
-... Pas la <span class="underline">coulem</span> rien que la nuance!&rdquo; has been mercilessly crucified ...<br />
-... Pas la <a href="#corr-32"><span class="underline">couleur,</span></a> rien que la nuance!&rdquo; has been mercilessly crucified ...<br />
-</li>
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-
-
-<div style='display:block;margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LITTLE REVIEW, JULY 1914 (VOL. 1, NO. 5) ***</div>
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