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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
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #66336 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/66336)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Little Review, August 1915 (Vol.
-2, 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, August 1915 (Vol. 2, No. 5)
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: Margaret C. Anderson
-
-Release Date: September 18, 2021 [eBook #66336]
-
-Language: English
-
-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, AUGUST
-1915 (VOL. 2, NO. 5) ***
-
-
-
-
-
- THE LITTLE REVIEW
-
-
- _Literature_ _Drama_ _Music_ _Art_
-
- MARGARET C. ANDERSON
- EDITOR
-
- AUGUST, 1915
-
- The American Family Ben Hecht
- Patterns Amy Lowell
- The Piano and Imagism Margaret C. Anderson
- War Impressions Florence Kiper Frank
- Lawson, Caplan, Schmidt Alexander Berkman
- Father and Daughter Edgar Lee Masters
- Poems from the Greek Richard Aldington
- Nudity and the Ideal Will Levington Comfort
- “Rooming” Helen Hoyt
- The Ugliest Man George Burman Foster
- A Photograph of Edgar Lee Masters by Eugene Hutchinson
- Emasculating Ibsen; Death “The Scavenger”
- { Alice Oliver Henderson
- Children’s Poems { Arvia Mackaye
- { Robin Mackaye
- Book Discussion
- The Reader Critic
-
- Published Monthly
-
- 15 cents a copy
-
- MARGARET C. ANDERSON, Publisher
- Fine Arts Building
- CHICAGO
-
- $1.50 a year
-
- Entered as second-class matter at Postoffice, Chicago
-
-
-
-
- THE LITTLE REVIEW
-
-
- Vol. II
-
- AUGUST, 1915
-
- No. 5
-
- Copyright, 1915, by Margaret C. Anderson
-
-
-
-
- The American Family
-
-
- BEN HECHT
-
-The dead fingers of spent passions, spent dreams, spent youth clutch at
-the throat of the rising generation and preserve the integrity of the
-American family. Not that there is a typical American family. There is
-only the typical struggle between the dead and the living, between the
-inert and hideous virtue of decayed souls and the rebellious desires of
-their doomed progeny.
-
-The ambitious and educated American mother is a forceful creature, a
-strong, powerful woman. As an individual she is dead. Once she knew and
-had the desire for beauty. Dead fingers reached into her heart and
-killed it. The force of which she was doomed to become a part crushed
-her. The conventions of the world are stronger than its natural
-destinies. Those conventions—the conventions of the family—are not of
-the man’s making. Woman attends to her own subjugation. She preserves
-the spirit of the family, struggles and labors to keep it a unit, to
-keep its members alike. Moaning with the tyrannical lust for possession
-she enfolds her daughter in her arms. There are certain things in her
-daughter which must be killed. There is a dawning of love for
-“impossible” things in her daughter’s heart. There is an awakened mental
-curiosity, a perceptible inclination to break from the oppressiveness of
-the surrounding dead. In the night the daughter wonders and doubts. She
-would like “to get away”—to go forth free of certain fiercely applied
-restrictions and meet a different kind of folk, a different kind of
-thought. She would like to be—to feel the things she is capable of. It
-is all vague. Always revolt is vague and intangible for the daughters of
-women. Revolt is for souls still living, and the living are weaker than
-the dead. The living soul is a lone, individual force, its yearnings are
-ephemeral and undefined. The mother knows what they are. The dead always
-know what it is they have lost. And in this knowledge the mother is
-strong. But the living cannot say to itself what it wishes to gain, what
-it reaches to attain. Only in the stray geniuses of time has the
-individual soul fought desperately and triumphantly for its
-preservation. And there is no genius in the daughter. There is merely
-the divine and natural instinct for self-realization. Once the mother
-felt it and it was killed. Now the daughter has caught the dread
-disease—the contamination which starts a cold sweat under the corset
-stays of society; the thing which brings down upon it for its
-destruction the phalanxes of fierce fatuities—the moribund mercenaries
-employed by the home for its defense and preservation.
-
-Something happens to crystallize the revolt. It is a man outside the
-pale, a good man, a bad man. It is a book. It is a friend. Often the
-struggle is fought through little things too numerous to mention and the
-struggle itself too casual to classify. Sometimes it wages without a
-word; at other times there are blows. And at such times the enshrouding
-veils are torn aside. One can see the dead rise up, their pasty limbs
-dragging with the mould and slime of their couch. One can see them
-reaching their dead arms out, with the bloodless flesh hanging from them
-in shreds. One can watch them crawl on their bony feet and as they come
-close—these dead—the foul odor that issues from their sightless,
-twisted, rotted faces hangs like a grey smeared canopy above them.
-
-They come. They take their stand at the mother’s back. And the pitiful
-struggle is on.
-
-It is the mother who strikes the blows. Her first weapon (she uses it
-like a poison) is her love. She calls it that. “You are my only
-happiness,” she cries. “I have given you everything, a part of me, all
-you have needed. I have sacrificed everything for you. All my dreams
-have been for you. O, how can you permit anything to come between us?”
-
-The daughter listens. There is a selfish ring to it. But love must be
-forgiven for selfishness. In the schools and the churches the
-preliminaries of the struggle have been insidiously fought. Children owe
-duties to their parents and not to themselves. It was what the daughter
-learned at school. It is what she read between the lines of her books
-and heard from the lips of all around her. And now it is the murmur that
-rolls into her ears. It is the odor of the dead.
-
-Day after day the mother strikes with this weapon. Her red, furious eyes
-dripping tears, she moans it out. Her voice is like the yelp of a
-frantic animal. Her voice is like the whine of a woebegone fice. Her
-voice is cold and hard and hollow like the echo in a tomb.
-
-The beauty that has come to her daughter is a fragile thing. The
-lovliness she visioned is the most delicately mortal of life’s
-treasures. Fiercely the mother hurls herself against it, hurls the
-reproaches of her dead soul, the recriminations of her entombed
-spirit—the odors of the dead.... And her weapons are tangible things.
-They are sentences. They are the moral perversions with which the family
-unit always has fought for its preservation. They are tried things,
-prophetic precedents. And the beauty in the normal being is an
-indefinite force—a vagueness. It has no weapons with which to strike.
-Triumphant revolt is only for martyrs and artists. It is the losing
-force in normal existence.
-
-Gradually it becomes clouded in the daughter’s soul. She feels unclean.
-She imagines it is the beauty which is unclean. She does not know that
-it is the uncleanliness of the dead—the uncleanliness of her mother
-revealed to her in her heart by the divine light that is dying within
-herself. An agony comes into her. The struggle narrows to pain. Cold
-things reach at her heart. It leaps and flutters. She stands, her face
-white and a look of uncanny suffering about her eyes. The dead fingers
-grip fast.
-
-The mother, moaning, shuddering, her eyes gleaming, enfolds her daughter
-in her arms. “I dare you to take her from me,” she cries out to the man,
-to the friend, to the book, to the world of beauty, whatever it is
-toward which her daughter inclined for the divine instant of awakened
-soul. “I dare you. I dare you.”
-
-“Nothing can ever take me from you,” the daughter weeps. Death.
-
-Tears, a form of decomposition now, roll from her cheeks. The struggle
-is over. The unit has been preserved and now one may look at the unit
-and see what it is. The rotted figures of the dead have dragged their
-shredded flesh back to the graves.
-
-There are different kinds of families. Only in the struggle between the
-dead and the living do they become the same even when the contestants
-differ. I will describe only one type. Perhaps it is _the_ American
-family; perhaps it is not.
-
-It is the family which considers culture a matter of polished
-fingernails and emotional suppression and dinner table aphorisms, puns
-and the classics in half morocco. It has bound volumes of _The
-Philistine_ or some other mawkish philosophical twaddle on view in the
-bookcase. It—the spirit of this family—knows the titles of books
-memorized from literary reviews in current magazines and will discourse
-bitingly on the malicious trend of these radical volumes from the
-sweeping knowledge she has of their titles. In the matter of music the
-spirit of this family “plays safe.” It will characterize as “tinkly” or
-“syrupy” anything melodious which secretly pleases it. The rather
-humorous falseness of its culture is inexhaustible.
-
-Introspection is an indecent as well as impossible thing to the spirit
-of this family. To look into her soul and see the diseased and dead
-things that fill it is naturally impossible and naturally indecent.
-Dostoevsky calls man an animal who can get used to anything. And a man’s
-adjustment to hideous things is not so final as a woman’s.
-
-For the spirit of this family to reveal an honest reaction when it is
-contrary to the approved artificial demands of a situation is as heinous
-an exhibition of bad taste as to uncover a thigh. But luckily, this
-concealing of honest feeling is not often required. The spirit of this
-family is incapable in the main of honest feeling. That is a part of the
-beauty killed long ago in her, a part of the beauty she killed in the
-daughter, a part of the beauty the daughter will strangle in her own
-children. And one of the compensations for dead souls is that they
-naturally feel dishonest feeling and do not have to suffer with a
-realization of hypocrisy.
-
-This family thinks of virtue in terms of legs. This family regards art
-and truth with a modulated leer. It is crudely cynical of everything
-outside its range. It sneers and pooh-hoos, it ostracizes and condemns.
-It is vulgarly contemptuous of the factors in life superior to it. The
-spirit of this family would have shrieked in outrage at the presence of
-Verlaine in its home—unless he could have reflected social distinction
-on it. It would have closed the doors to Ibsen,—except for the social
-distinction,—to every triumphant soul that had escaped the dead fingers
-and realized itself. And by some inexplicable trick of self-adjustment
-the spirit of this family looks upon thought as an undesirable
-affectation.
-
-Social success means to this family a speaking acquaintance with any
-wealthier unit which originally considered itself “above” this family.
-Moral success means to this family an exemption from the prosecution of
-the forces it has reared for its own protection—keeping out of jail, out
-of scandal-mongering newspapers, out of the malicious after-dinner
-gossip of its friends.
-
-Of an evening you will find this family in the living room. The husband
-and father reads a newspaper. He has worked in his office all day and is
-tired. Life long ago ceased to mean anything to him. He is an animal
-husk in fine linen. He has his little prejudices and his little
-conventions. Indeed, he is a part of the system of the unit but not much
-interested in it. He never was possessed of the capacity for beauty
-which his women folk once had and which they found it necessary to kill
-in each other. Man is a more natural part of the world’s ugliness. He is
-coarser stuff in general. For him it is not necessary to wage any
-struggle. He accepted matrimony because of a concentrated physical
-curiosity in one woman, and because it was the thing to do at his age.
-Love suffered epileptic dissolution in the nuptial couch. Honor toward
-his woman expired when the mysteries of her flesh paled. Obedience is
-his natural state—that is, long ago he established a line of least
-resistance and inoculated his women folk with the fable that adherence
-to _this_ line was the obedience and respect he owed them. If a latent
-instinct awakens suddenly in him he indulges himself. He finds it rather
-difficult to be immoral, but as he hesitates a latent strength overcomes
-his fear and thus he is able to be immoral and unfaithful to his own
-convenient restrictions in a natural manner and with no great loss of
-sleep.
-
-One man in ten thousand inherits the beauty of the woman who bore him
-and he becomes an artist. It is not necessary for him to revolt. His
-fathers have taken care of that. There is an assured place in the world
-for him—not in the living room here in front of the fireplace but
-elsewhere, in places of which poets sing.
-
-The family man keeps posted. He knows what is going on in the world but
-does not understand it. He is not capable of understanding. But
-sometimes understanding and reason coincide with his prejudices and he
-is then as liable to hold minority views as not. He is dry, sometimes
-clever. But always he jogs, jogs, jogs along. He can even sleep night
-after night in the same bed with his wife without feeling annoyance. His
-bluntedness is complete. Dostoevsky is right.
-
-His wife and the mother of his children is a part of the furniture of
-existence for him. In his own way he is quite dead, but it was not
-necessary to kill him. If his son revolts the instinct of his mother is
-communicated to him and he fights. He borrows the mother’s weapons and
-he blasphemes in a half-hearted way about the duty to parents. But the
-beauty which the mother found easy to kill in the daughter usually
-discovers a hardier citadel in the son and usually he carries it safely
-into the world.
-
-The room—this living room—is dimly and “artistically” lighted. The fire
-in the grate glows. The daughter sits in a corner speaking to a friend.
-At the other side sits the father—reading blankly. The wife enters. She
-surveys the scene from the doorway with a feeling of warm satisfaction.
-She comes in and sits down. They talk about nothing, they think about
-nothing. The daughter and the young man, beneath the smooth surface of
-the artificial moments, are playing at the eternal indecency. The mother
-leads the conversation. Neighbors are discussed. Friends are derided.
-Social inferiors are laughed to scorn. Social superiors are spoken of
-with adulation and veneration. At last the father climbs to his bed like
-an ox. He is tired, poor fellow. The mother follows him into the
-bedroom. A victor, utterly triumphant, she hugs her dead soul to herself
-and smiles. The daughter retires after being desperately kissed by the
-physically curious young man, and she lies awake a while wishing in
-moments of provoked sex that she too was married and meditating in
-calmer spaces upon the advantages of the family unit, the fireplace, the
-party calls. O, this daughter! She is the one who had the vision of
-beauty. She is the one whose soul sang for a day with the capacity for
-all the world’s lovliness. Honesty, purity, fineness burned in her with
-their divine radiance. The lights are turned out. Death reigns supreme.
-
-
-
-
- Patterns
-
-
- AMY LOWELL
-
- I walk down the garden paths,
- And all the daffodils
- Are blowing, and the bright blue squills.
- I walk down the patterned garden paths
- In my stiff, brocaded gown.
- With my powdered hair and jewelled fan,
- I too am a rare
- Pattern. As I wander down
- The garden paths.
-
- My dress is richly figured,
- And the train
- Makes a pink and silver stain
- On the gravel, and the thrift
- Of the borders.
- Just a plate of current fashion,
- Tripping by in high-heeled, ribboned shoes.
- Not a softness anywhere about me,
- Only whale-bone and brocade.
- And I sink on a seat in the shade
- Of a lime tree. For my passion
- Wars against the stiff brocade.
- The daffodils and squills
- Flutter in the breeze
- As they please.
- And I weep;
- For the lime tree is in blossom
- And one small flower has dropped upon my bosom.
-
- And the splashing of waterdrops
- In the marble fountain
- Comes down the garden paths.
- The dripping never stops.
- Underneath my stiffened gown
- Is the softness of a woman bathing in a marble basin,
- A basin in the midst of hedges grown
- So thick, she cannot see her lover hiding,
- But she guesses he is near,
- And the sliding of the water
- Seems the stroking of a dear
- Hand upon her.
- What is Summer in a fine brocaded gown!
- I should like to see it lying in a heap upon the ground.
- All the pink and silver crumpled up on the ground.
-
- I would be the pink and silver as I ran along the paths,
- And he would stumble after,
- Bewildered by my laughter.
- I should see the sun flashing from his sword hilt and the buckles on his
- shoes.
- I would choose
- To lead him in a maze along the patterned paths,
- A bright and laughing maze for my heavy-booted lover,
- Till he caught me in the shade,
- And the buttons of his waistcoat bruised my body as he clasped me,
- Aching, melting, unafraid.
- With the shadows of the leaves and the sundrops,
- And the plopping of the waterdrops,
- All about us in the open afternoon—
- I am very like to swoon
- With the weight of this brocade,
- For the sun sifts through the shade.
-
- Underneath the fallen blossom
- In my bosom,
- Is a letter I have hid.
- It was brought to me this morning by a rider from the Duke.
- “Madam, we regret to inform you that Lord Hartwell
- Died in action Thursday sen’night.”
- As I read it in the white, morning sunlight,
- The letters squirmed like snakes.
- “Any answer, Madam,” said my footman.
- “No,” I told him.
- “See that the messenger takes some refreshment.
- No, no answer.”
- And I walked into the garden,
- Up and down the patterned paths,
- In my stiff, correct brocade.
- The blue and yellow flowers stood up proudly in the sun,
- Each one.
- I stood upright too,
- Held rigid to the pattern
- By the stiffness of my gown.
- Up and down I walked,
- Up and down.
-
- In a month he would have been my husband.
- In a month, here, underneath this lime,
- We would have broke the pattern;
- He for me, and I for him,
- He as Colonel, I as Lady,
- On this shady seat.
- He had a whim
- That sunlight carried blessing.
- And I answered, “It shall be as you have said.”
- Now he is dead.
-
- In Summer and in Winter I shall walk
- Up and down
- The patterned garden paths
- In my stiff, brocaded gown.
- The squills and daffodils
- Will give place to pillared roses, and to asters, and to snow.
- I shall go
- Up and down,
- In my gown.
- Gorgeously arrayed,
- Boned and stayed.
- And the softness of my body will be guarded from embrace
- By each button, hook, and lace.
- For the man who should loose me is dead,
- Fighting with the Duke in Flanders,
- In a pattern called a war.
- Christ! What are patterns for?
-
-
-
-
- The Piano and Imagism
-
-
- MARGARET C. ANDERSON
-
-Once I said something vague about the piano music of the future. There
-is something very definite to be said about it. I think the next music
-written for the piano will have in it a high concentration of clear
-color-sound and that the new pianist will focus his technique to just
-one end: to the clearest expression of this color-sound identity. Sea
-mist, for instance, has certain colors and certain smells; if you are
-keen-sensed it has certain sounds. You may say it has been the aim of
-all composers and musicians to put nature into music. Well, it has been
-the aim of most poets to put nature into poetry, but the Imagists _have
-done it_: their medium is not only a more direct one: the point is that
-they seem to have dispensed with a medium. Their words don’t merely
-convey color to you; they _are_ the color. The new musician can do
-this—and I believe he can do it on the piano better than on any other
-instrument. His music will be all these things:[1]
-
-Sea orchards, and lilac on the water, and color dragged up from the
-sand; drenched grasses, and early roses, and wind-harps in the cedar
-trees; flame-flowers, and the sliding rain; frail sea-birds, and blue
-still rocks, and bright winds treading the sunlight; silver hail stones,
-and the scattering of gold crocus petals; blackbirds in the grass, and
-fountains in the rain; lily shadows, and green cold waves, and the
-rose-fingered moon; pine cones, and yellow grasses, and a restless green
-rout of stars; cloud whirls, and the pace of winds; trees on the hill,
-and the far ecstasy of burning noons; lotus pools, and the gold petal of
-the moon; night-born poppies, and the silence of beauty, and the perfume
-of invisible roses; white winds and cold sea ripples; blossom spray, and
-narcissus petals on the black earth; little silver birds, and blue and
-gold-veined hyacinths; river pools of sky, and grains of sand as clear
-as wine....
-
-It will be made of dream-colored wings, and whispers among the flowering
-rushes; of moonlit tree-tops, and the gaiety of flowers; brown fading
-hills, and the moving mist; sea rose, and the light upon the poplars;
-shaken dew, and the haunts of the sun, and white sea-gulls above the
-waves; bright butterflies in the corn, and a dust of emerald and gold;
-broken leaves, and the rose and white flag-stones; sea iris with petals
-like shells, and the scent of lilacs heavy with stillness; scarlet
-nasturtiums, and dry reeds that shiver in the grasses; slim colorless
-poppies, and the sweet salt camphor flowers; gold and blue and mauve,
-and a white rose of flame; pointed pines, and orange-colored rose
-leaves; sunshine slipping through young green, and the flaring moon
-through the oak leaves; wet dawns, and a blue flower of the evening;
-butterflies over green meadows, and deep blue seas of air, and hyacinths
-hidden in a far valley....
-
-It will be of harsh rose and iris-flowers painted blue; white waters,
-and the winds of the upper air; green wine held up in the sun, and rigid
-myrrh-buds scented and stinging; the lisp of reeds, and the loose
-ripples of meadow grasses; mists on the mountains, and clear frost on
-the grass blade; frail-headed poppies, and sea-grass tangled with shore
-grass; the humming brightness of the air, and the sky darting through
-like blue rain; strewn petals on restless water, and pale green
-glacier-rivers; somber pools, and sun-drenched slopes; autumn’s gold and
-spring’s green; red pine-trunks, and bird cries in hollow trees; cool
-spaces filled with shadow, and white hammocks in the sun; green glimmer
-of apples in an orchard, and hawthorn odorous with blossom; lamps in a
-wash of rain, and the desperate sun that struggles through sea mist;
-lavender water, and faded stars; many-foamed ways, and the blue and
-buoyant air; grey-green fastnesses of the great deeps; a cream moon on
-bare black trees; wet leaves, and the dust that drifts over the
-court-yard; moon-paint on a colorless house....
-
-It will be pagan temples and old blue Chinese gardens; old pagodas
-glittering across green trees, and the ivory of silence; vast dark trees
-that flow like blue veils of tears into the water; little almond trees
-that the frost has hurt, and bitter purple willows; fruit dropping
-through the thick air, and wine in heavy craters painted black and red;
-purple and gold and sable, and a gauze of misted silver; blue
-death-mountains, and yellow pulse-beats in the darkness; naked
-lightnings, and boats in the gloom; strange fish, and golden sorceries;
-red-purple grapes, and Assyrian wine; fruits from Arcadia, and incense
-to Poseidon; swallow-blue halls, and a chamber under Lycia’s coast;
-stars swimming like goldfish, and the sword of the moonlight; torn
-lanterns that flutter, and an endless procession of lamps; sleepy
-temples, and strange skies, and pilgrims of autumn; tired shepherds with
-lanterns, and the fire of the great moon; the lowest pine branch drawn
-across the disk of the sun; Phoenecian stuffs and silks that are
-outspread; the gods garlanded in wisteria; white grave goddesses, and
-loves in Phrygia; wounds of light, and terrible rituals, and temples
-soothed by the sun to ruin; the valleys of Ætna, and the Doric
-singing....
-
-... The moon dragging the flood tide, and an old sorrow that has put out
-the sun; whirling laughter, and the thunder of horses plunging; old
-tumults, and the gloom of dreams; strong loneliness, and the hollow
-where pain was; the rich laughter of the forest, and the bitter sea; the
-earth that receives the slanting rain; lost treasure, and the violent
-gloom of night; all proud things, and the light of thy beauty.... Souls
-of blood, and hearts aching with wonder; the kindness of people—country
-folk and sailors and fishermen; all the roots of the earth, and a
-perpetual sea....
-
- [1] _I have omitted quotation marks for the sake of appearance,
- but every phrase in the next five paragraphs is taken from the
- Imagists._
-
-
-
-
- War Impressions
-
-
- FLORENCE KIPER FRANK
-
-
- The Moving-Picture Show
-
-We sat at a moving-picture show. Over a little bridge streamed the
-Belgian refugees, women, children, boys, dogs, horses, carts, household
-goods—an incongruous procession. The faces were stolid, the feet plodded
-on—plodded on!
-
-“See!” said my friend, “sometimes a woman turns to look at a bursting
-shell.”
-
-I murmured, “How interesting!”
-
-And my soul shuddered. It shuddered at sophistication.
-
-The man who had taken the pictures told us about them. He had been not
-more than three weeks ago in Belgium....
-
-“Huzza!” sang my ancestor of five thousand years back. He led a band of
-marauders into an enemy’s village. They ripped things up and tore about
-the place singing and looting. There was nothing much left to that
-village by the time they got through with it.
-
-But the people many miles away did not behold his exploits. Alas, there
-were no moving-picture shows in those days!
-
-
- The Modern Woman With a Sense of Humor
-
-There was a Modern Woman with a sense of humor.
-
-“I shall,” she said, “teach to women the absurdity of bearing children
-to be killed by cannon.”
-
-“The absurdity!” exclaimed the men of the State, aghast at levity.
-
-“Yes,” answered she, “it isn’t worth the trouble!” And she lifted her
-eyebrows and smiled, but in her eyes there was Knowledge.
-
-And the men of the State were more terrified by the phenomenon of The
-Modern Woman with a Sense of Humor than by any phenomenon that had
-before confronted them.
-
-
- The Incredible Adventure of Spring
-
-The year was again a-foot on the incredible adventure of Spring. The
-earth broke into blossoming, and the nights were moon-drenched and astir
-with the whisperings of wet winds. It was a really thrilling time of the
-year to be alive—and therefore, besides all these breathless and
-miraculous adventures of the grass and flowers, many innocent and
-unsuspecting souls had started out on the incredible adventure of being
-born.
-
-But the war-writers kept on writing that for man to reach true
-exaltation and vibrancy of spirit, he must blow out the brains of as
-many people as possible.
-
-
- Man and His Machines
-
-He has builded him machines—man the Maker—using great cunning of hand
-and of brain. And has not Bergson told us that thus has he evolved that
-tool, the Intellect—through the dim ages of his making!
-
-He has builded him states, politics, all the intricate architecture of
-institutions.
-
-Now who would think that what he himself has builded—builded through the
-thousands of years of endeavor—should thus turn about, ungrateful, to
-destroy and to rend him?
-
-
- The Annual Banquet
-
-“We shall not, this year,” said my rich friend—a Lady—“while the people
-of Europe are starving and fighting—we shall not this year have our
-large annual banquet.”
-
-But had she walked not a mile from her home, she would have seen in her
-own city men starving, and fighting because of the terrible dread of
-starving. And not this year alone had they been doing it, but for many
-years of large banquets.
-
-However, if all Ladies and Gentlemen felt acutely all these matters,
-what would become of our institution of Large Banquets—or, indeed, of
-the Divine Privileges of Monarchs!
-
-
- What a Veneer Is Civilization
-
-“War,” wrote the journalists, “reveals what a veneer is civilization.
-Man’s real emotions, instinctive, primitive, brutal, leap to
-ascendency.”
-
-But I did not believe the journalists, because I knew better men’s
-emotions. Indeed, what tore asunder my heart was the depth and beauty of
-the emotions of men and women. There was nothing—at least very
-little—the matter with their emotions.
-
-But with their thinking apparatus—ah, that is a different story!
-
-
-
-
- Lawson, Caplan, Schmidt
-
-
- ALEXANDER BERKMAN
-
-I don’t know of anything more tragic and pitiful than the superstition
-that “Justice will triumph.” What this metaphysical conception of
-“justice” really signifies, how it is to be expressed in applicable
-terms, is impossible to determine in view of the multiplicity of
-individual antagonisms and class interests.
-
-But somehow we all believe in “justice”; yet the criterion of each is
-the degree of the attainment of his own purpose.
-
-From time immemorial we humans have been clamoring for “justice,” divine
-and earthly. Hence our slavery. And Kaiser and Czar both claim justice
-on their side, and millions are slaughtering each other to attain the
-particular justice of their respective masters.
-
-In this blessed land of ours, justice is ranked high, and labor is
-constantly basing its appeals and demands on justice. But perhaps—let us
-hope—the John Lawson case has somewhat jolted the popular faith in the
-metaphysical conception, at least so far as it manifests itself in the
-Colorado courts. It is safe to say that there is no intelligent man in
-that state who does not know that the stage for Lawson’s conviction had
-been set long before his trial. He was an intelligent, active agitator.
-He sought to crystallize the rebellious dissatisfaction of the miners
-into effective action:—sufficient reason for the Rockefeller-controlled
-state to eliminate, most emphatically, such an undesirable element.
-
-In Colorado, as well as throughout the rest of the country, most people
-know that a great “injustice was done Lawson.” What are the people of
-Colorado doing about it? Not a thing. The cheerful idiot, otherwise
-known as the good citizen, cares for justice only in the degree in which
-it affects his own pocket. And the masses of labor who do feel
-themselves and their cause injured by the railroading of Lawson to
-prison—they call the verdict a “miscarriage of justice”—applaud
-Professor Brewster who wired Lawson: “Unbelievable. Counsel friends keep
-cool. Justice will be done.”
-
-And the people of Colorado remain inactive, in the belief that the
-Supreme Court, the Governor, or maybe the Holy Ghost will see to it that
-justice is done.
-
-Yet the Lawson lesson has not been entirely lost. It is possible that it
-has shed a light that will reflect itself on coming fights between labor
-and capital. It is more than probable that the lesson has already borne
-fruit in the more aggressive attitude of labor in some parts of the
-country. It has helped ever-growing numbers to realize that to expect
-“justice” in the struggle between labor and capital means to doom the
-toilers to defeat.
-
-It will be highly interesting to watch the effect of the Lawson outrage
-upon the approaching trial of David Caplan and Mathew Schmidt, the
-aftermath of the McNamara case, in Los Angeles, California. The history
-of this case is illuminating of our legal and social “justice”:
-
-The labor unions in California have for the last nine years fought a
-bitter fight against the Merchants and Manufacturers’ Association, the
-Western branch of the Steel Trust. Every means, legal and illegal, has
-been used by the employers to exterminate the unions and paralyze the
-workers. And they have practically succeeded in breaking every labor
-organization in the Steel Industry from New York to San Francisco.
-
-Where twenty years ago we had a powerful union—for instance, in
-Pennsylvania: the Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel
-Workers—today nothing but a pitiful remnant is left. Only _one_ union in
-the steel industry has survived: the Structural Iron Workers. They
-survived because they contested every inch of ground against the
-Merchants and Manufacturers’ Association. The result of that fight was a
-long war between capital and labor on the Coast. Every form of
-persecution and violence was used against labor, and labor was forced to
-defend itself. In consequence the Structural Iron Workers increased
-their wages from $2.40 a day to $4.40, and reduced their hours from ten
-to eight. Organized capital resorted to every trick to strangle the
-workers, and in Los Angeles a special law was passed prohibiting
-picketing. But the union defied the law, and five hundred men went to
-prison during the general strike of the metal trades in Southern
-California in 1910. During this fight the Los Angeles _Times_, the most
-relentless enemy of labor and of humanity, was destroyed. The brothers
-McNamara were arrested, as a result, and then the masters made the
-solemn promise that the war would be stopped and that all further
-prosecutions of labor men would cease if the McNamaras would plead
-guilty. It was only on the strength of this promise that the McNamaras
-were finally induced to plead guilty.
-
-Hardly ten days passed, when the Merchants and Manufacturers’
-Association broke every promise they made. They began the prosecution of
-labor men in Los Angeles and Indianapolis, and did everything in their
-power to railroad to prison the most effective members of the unions.
-And now, four and a half years later, they have arrested David Caplan in
-Seattle and Mathew Schmidt in New York, and brought them across the
-country to Los Angeles to put them on trial for complicity with the
-McNamaras.
-
-This perfidious activity of organized capital has made labor in
-California realize that the courts are controlled by the employers, and
-that labor cannot expect justice. They now understand what a fatal
-mistake was made in the case of John Lawson. The workers depended on the
-innocence of Lawson for his acquittal. They failed to act, expecting
-justice to be done.
-
-At least some of the labor elements on the Coast are awakening to the
-situation. They feel that they cannot expect justice from the courts of
-the exploiters. They have now determined that more aggressive and
-militant action is necessary, if labor is not to be submerged by the
-oppression of capital. They are beginning to see that throughout the
-country the masters are picking out the most effective and intelligent
-fighters from the ranks of the workers and railroading them to prison,
-to terrorize labor and stifle the spirit of liberty and independence.
-The Lawson case, the case of Ford and Suhr, of Rangel and Cline, of Joe
-Hill, and the many other cases now pending in the courts of New York and
-elsewhere, all show what capital intends to do to labor.
-
-Is labor really going to keep quiet and submit to this persecution and
-slavery? The unions on the Coast have determined that they will not.
-They are calling upon every one in sympathy with labor to join the great
-movement to stop the aggression of capital. They have decided on strong
-militant tactics to defend the workingman, his family and his union
-against the tyranny of the bosses.
-
-They have issued the call to every central body, affiliated unions and
-radical organizations, to join hands at this most critical moment. This
-is not a question of theory or of philosophic ism. It is the great war
-of labor against capital, a struggle of life and death. In this struggle
-all local and theoretic differences may be safely forgotten, and all
-friends of labor make common cause.
-
-I have been sent as a special delegate by some of the California unions
-to help organize the solidaric and militant forces of labor throughout
-the country. It is evident how significant this case is for the workers
-in general. It is imperative that they combine in solidaric unity in
-this vital matter, to register in mighty accents the sentiments and
-determination of the oppressed. Thus were Haywood, Moyer, and Pettibone
-torn from the clutches of the jungle beast. Thus were returned to
-liberty Ettor and Giovannitti, Carlo Tresca, and other fighters for the
-better day. But whenever the workers failed to sound the tocsin of
-solidarity and make their gesture of protest, their prisoners of war
-have invariably remained the hostages of the enemy.
-
-Organizations and individuals who are willing to give us their moral and
-financial assistance, should immediately send resolutions and funds to
-Tom Barker, Secretary Building Trades Council of Los Angeles, and
-Treasurer of the Caplan-Schmidt Defense Fund. Address, 201 Labor Temple,
-Los Angeles, California. My own address for the present is 917 Fine Arts
-Building.
-
-
-
-
- Father and Daughter
-
-
- EDGAR LEE MASTERS
-
- The church is a hulk of shadow,
- And dark is the church’s spire.
- But the cross is as black as iron
- Against the sunset’s fire.
-
- The shops and sheds and hovels
- Are massed with the church’s shade;
- And a girl with a face like a lily
- Is plying her wretched trade.
-
- And a drunken man reels homeward
- With a sullen leer in his eye.
- And the street is filled with children,
- That play and wrestle and cry.
-
- A broken hurdy-gurdy
- Rattles a hollow tune,
- And a light as yellow as fever
- Shines from the vile saloon.
-
- Two men are talking together,
- They pass where the children are;
- And one wears a robe of sable,
- The other a silver star.
-
- And one of them goes to vespers
- And one of them makes a search,
- And one of them enters the groggery,
- And one of them enters the church.
-
- And a shot is fired by the drunkard,
- And the girl falls dead in the street;
- And God is peaceful in heaven,
- And all in the world is sweet.
-
- [Illustration: EDGAR LEE MASTERS
- _Copyright, 1915, by Eugene Hutchinson._]
-
-
-
-
- Poems
-
-
- (_from the Greek of Myrrhine of Mitulene, and Konallis; translated
- by Richard Aldington_)
-
-
- I
-
- Hierocleia, bring hither my silver vine-leaf-carved armlet and the
- mirror graven with two Maenads,
- For my heart is burned to dust with longing for Konallis;
- And this is the silver armlet which pressed into her side when I held
- her,
- And before this mirror she bound up her golden-hyacinth-curled hair,
- sitting in the noon sunlight.
-
-
- II
-
- I, Konallis, am but a goat-girl dwelling on the violet hills of
- Korinthos,
- But going down to the city a marvellous thing befell me;
- For the beautiful-silver-fingered hetaira, Myrrhine, held me nightlong
- in her couch,
- Teaching me to stretch wide my arms to receive her strange burning
- caresses.
-
-
- III
-
- Fair young men have brought me presents of silver caskets and white
- mirrors,
- Gold for my hair and long lemon-colored chitons and dew-soft perfumes of
- sweet herbs.
- Their bodies are whiter than Leucadian foam and delicate are their
- flute-girls,
- But the wild sleepless nightingales cry in the darkness even as I for
- Konallis.
-
-
- IV
-
- We, Konallis and Myrrhine, dedicate to thee, Proserpine, two white
- torches of wax,
- For thou didst watch over our purple-embroidered couch all night;
- Was it thou who gavest us the sweetness of sharp caresses?
- For at midday when we awoke we laughed to see black poppies blooming
- beneath our eyes.
-
-
- V
-
- The doves sleep beside the slow-murmuring cool fountain,
- red-five-petalled roses of Paestum strew the chequered marble;
- A flute-girl whispers the dear white ode of Sappho, and Hierocleia by
- the pool
- Smiles to see the smooth blue-sky-reflecting water mirror her shining
- body;
- But my eyelids are shunned by sleep that is whiter than beautiful
- morning, for Konallis is not here.
-
-
- VI
-
- O reeds, move softly and make keen bewildering music,
- For I fear lest Arkadian Pan should seize Myrrhine as she comes from the
- city;
- O Artemis, shed thy light across the peaks to hasten her coming,
- But do thou, Eos, hold back thy white radiance till love be content.
-
-
- VII
-
- Last night Zeus sent swift rain upon the blue-grey rocks,
- But Konallis held me close to her pear-pointed breasts.
-
-
- VIII
-
- Sappho, Sappho, long ago the dust of earth mingled with the dust of
- thy dear limbs,
- And only little clay figures, painted with Tyrian red, with crocus, and
- with Lydian gold,
- Remain to show thy beauty; but thy wild lovely songs shall last for
- ever.
- Soon we too shall join Anaktoria and Kudno and kiss thy pale shadowy
- fingers.
-
-
- IX
-
- When Myrrhine departed I, weeping passionately, kissed her
- golden-wrought knees, saying:
- “O, Myrrhine, by what god shall I keep the memory of thy caresses?”
- But she, bending down like golden, smiling Aphrodite, whispered to me;
- And lying here in the sunlight among the reeds I remember her words.
-
-
- X
-
- Hierocleia, do thou weave white-violet-crowns and spread
- mountain-haunting lilies upon my couch,
- For Konallis comes! and shut the door against the young men for this is
- a sharper love.
-
-
- XI
-
- This is the feast of Iacchus; open wide the gates, O Hierocleia;
- Fill the kraters and kuathoi with sweet unmixed wine and snow; bring
- thyrsus-wands,
- And crowns of pale ivy and violets; let the flute-players begin the
- phallic hymn
- While the ten girl-slaves, drunken with the god, dance to the young men.
-
-
- XII
-
- Hedulia now lies with Myrrhine who aforetime was my lover,
- But seeing Hedulia she forgot me, and I lie on the threshold weeping.
- O marble threshold, thou are not so white nor so hard as her breasts,
- receive my tears
- While the mute stars turn overhead and the owls cry from the cypresses.
-
-
- XIII
-
- Wandering in tears about the city I came to the dark temple of
- Priapus;
- The tall, naked, scented-tressed priestesses taught me the mysteries,
- And I lay between Guathina and Leuke and afterwards Chrusea and Anthea;
- But now I worship the god on the mountain slopes, yet not unforgetful of
- Myrrhine.
-
-
- XIV
-
- This is the tomb of Konallis; Korinthos was her city and Kleobulina
- bore her,
- Having lain in sweet love with Sesocrates, the son of Menophiles.
- I lived three and twenty years, and then sudden sickness bore me to Dis
- So they laid me here with my silver armlets, my gold comb, my chain and
- with little painted figures.
- In my life I was happy, knowing many sorts of love and none evil.
- If you are a lover, scatter dust, and call me “dear one” and speak one
- last “Hail.”
-
- Telos.
-
-
-
-
- Nudity and the Ideal
-
-
- WILL LEVINGTON COMFORT
-
-One of the young men here loved the sunlight on his shoulders so
-well—had such a natural love for the feel of light and air upon his bare
-flesh—that he almost attained that high charm of forgetting himself
-half-dressed.... The country people occasionally come down to the water
-on the Sabbath or to sell (from their homes back on the automobile
-routes and the interurban lines) and for what they do not get of the
-natural beauty of shore and bluff, I have a fine respect. However they
-didn’t miss the Temporary Mr. Pan.
-
-They complained that he was exposing himself, even that he was
-shameless.
-
-Now, I am no worshiper of nudity. I’d like to be, but it disappoints in
-most cases. There is always a strain about an object that is conscious
-of itself—and that nudity which is unconscious of itself is either
-shameless, an inevitable point of its imperfection anatomically for the
-trained eye; or else it is touched with divinity and does not frequent
-these shores.
-
-The human body has suffered the fate of all flesh and plant-fiber that
-is denied light. A certain vision must direct all growth—and vision
-requires light. The covered things are white-lidded and abortive,
-scrawny from struggle or bulbous from the feeding dream into which they
-are prone to sink.
-
-It will require centuries for the human race to outgrow the shames which
-have come to adhere to our character-structure from recent generations.
-We have brutalized our bodies with these thoughts. We associate women
-with veils and secrecy, but the trouble is not with them, has not come
-from women, but from the male-ordering of women’s affairs to satisfy his
-own ideas of possession and conservation. The whole cycle of human
-production is a man-arrangement according to present standards, and
-every process is destructively bungled. However, that’s a life-work,
-that subject.
-
-The thoughts of our ancestors have debased our bodies in color and
-texture and contour organically and to be seen. Nudity is not beautiful,
-and does not play sweetly upon our minds because of this heritage. The
-human body is associated with darkness, and the place of this
-association in our minds is of corresponding darkness.
-
-The young man and I talked it over. We decided that it would be a
-thankless task for him to spend the summers in ardent endeavor to
-educate the Countryside by browning his back in public. _That_ did not
-appeal to us as a fitting life task; moreover, his project would be
-frequently interrupted by the town-marshal. As a matter of truth, one
-may draw most of the values of the actinic rays of the sun through thin
-white clothing; and if one has not crushed his feet into a revolting
-mess in pursuit of the tradesmen, he may go barefooted a little while
-each day on his own grassplot without shocking the natives or losing his
-credit at the bank. The real reason for opening this subject is to
-express, without hatred, certain facts in the case of the Countryside
-which complained.
-
-They are villagers and farm-people who live with Mother Nature without
-knowing her. They look into the body of Nature, but never see her face
-to face. The play of light and the drive of intelligence in her eyes is
-above the level of their gaze or too bright. Potentially they have all
-the living lights—the flame immortal, but it is turned low. It does not
-glorify them as men or parents or workmen. It does not inspire them to
-questing—man’s real and most significant business. They do not know that
-which is good and evil in food, in music, in color, fabric, books, in
-houses, lands or faith. They live in a low lazy rhythm and attract unto
-themselves inevitably objects of corresponding vibration. One observes
-this in their children, in their schools, and most pathetically in their
-churches. They abide dimly in the midst of their imperfections, but with
-tragic peace. When their children revolt, they meet on every hand the
-hideous weight of matter, the pressure of low vibrations, and only the
-more splendid of them have the integrity of spirit to rise above the
-resistance.
-
-As for the clothing they wear, they would do better if left suddenly
-naked as a people and without preconceptions were commanded to find some
-covering for themselves. As herds, they have fallen into a descending
-arc of usage, under the inevitable down-pull of trade. Where the
-vibrations of matter are low, its responsive movement is gregarian,
-rather than individual. The year around, these people wear clothing,
-woolen pants and skirts, which if touched with an iron, touched with
-sunlight, rain or any medium that arouses the slumbering quantities, the
-adjacent nostril is offended.
-
-They are heavy eaters of meat the year round. They slay their pets with
-as little concern as they gather strawberries. Their ideas of virtue and
-legitimacy have to do with an ecclesiastical form, as ancient as Nineveh
-and as effaced in meaning. They accept their children, as one pays a
-price for pleasure; and those children which come from their stolen
-pleasures are either murdered or marked with shame. Their idea of love
-is indefinite with desire, and their love of children has to do with the
-sense of possession.
-
-They are not significant men in their own fields; rarely a good mason, a
-good carpenter, a good farmer; the many have not even found the secret
-of order and unfolding from the simplest task. The primary meaning of
-the day’s task in its relation to life and blessedness is not to be
-conceived by them. They are taught from childhood that first of all work
-is for bread; that bread perishes; therefore one must pile up as he may
-the wherewith to purchase the passing bread; that bread is bread and the
-rest a gamble.... They answer to the slow loop waves which enfold the
-many in amusement and opinion, in suspicion and cruelty and half-truth.
-To all above, they are as if they were not; mediocre men, static in
-spiritual affairs, a little pilot-burner of vision flickering from
-childhood, but never igniting their true being, nor opening to them the
-one true way which each man must go alone, before he begins to be erect
-in other than bone and sinew.
-
-They cover their bodies—but they do not cover their faces nor their
-minds nor their souls; and this is the marvel, _they are not ashamed_!
-They reveal the emptiness of their faces and the darkness of their minds
-without complaining to each other or the police.
-
-From any standpoint of reality, the points of view of the many need only
-to be expressed to reveal their abandonment.... You see, I have left the
-Countryside and am lost in the crowd now, any crowd, the world-crowd,
-whose gods today are trade, patriotism and a certain limp-legged
-tumbler.
-
-... Yet we are told by every authoritative voice out of the past, and we
-know it from the urge of our own souls, that we must love the many
-before we can serve them. It is fatuous to love blindly, therefore we
-must understand what we are about. I have touched here some small things
-of the crowd, which are well enough to know; otherwise we are apt to
-stand apart from the many crying: “How noble are the simple-minded! How
-sweet the people of the Countryside! How inevitable and unerring is the
-voice of the people!” As a matter of truth, unless directed by some
-strong man’s vision, the voice of the people has never yet given
-utterance to constructive truth; and the same may be said of those who
-cater to the public taste in politics or the so-called arts. The man who
-undertakes to give the people what the people want is not an artist or a
-true leader of any dimension. He is a tradesman and finds his place in
-his generation.
-
-The brave workman who dares be himself and go hungry for the honor finds
-sooner or later a brilliant little fact rising in his consciousness—one
-that comes to stay, and which future thinking must be built around: that
-while the people are all that is low and bad in their change and rush of
-personality, they are also the soil of the future, a splendid potential
-mass that contains every heroism and masterpiece to be; that all great
-things must come from the people, because great leaders of the people
-turn their passionate impregnation of idealism upon them; that first the
-dreamer dreams—and then the people make it action....
-
-That which we see that hurts us so as workmen, is but the unfinished
-picture, the back of the tapestry.
-
-To be worth his spiritual salt, the artist, any artist, must turn every
-force of his conceiving into that great restless Abstraction, the many;
-he must plunge whole-heartedly in the doing, but cut himself loose from
-the thing done; at least, he must realize that what he is willing to
-give could not be bought.... When he is quite ready, there shall rise
-for him, out of the Abstraction, something finished; something as
-absolutely his own as the other half of his circle.
-
-
-
-
- “Rooming”
-
-
- HELEN HOYT
-
-
- I
-
- O, I can tell when I get to my corner,
- Where to turn in going to my house.
- On the other corners along the avenue,
- Northward and southward where the cars grind,
- Are saloons and drug stores,
- Glaring with signals and bright glass.
- On both sides of the street the same,
- One block like the next.
-
- But on my corner is a florist’s shop
- With ferns in the window
- And sweet-peas and roses,
- Glowing with red and pink and yellow.
-
- And sometimes pansies
- And moss.
-
- Each night as I step down from the car
- There the flowers are waiting
- To say I have got home.
- And I linger
- Seeing gardens.
-
-
- II
-
- The room I have now is narrow,
- Narrow
- Like a coffin.
- As plain and as straight
- And as tight as a coffin.
- Two corners at the end of it,
- Are rounded off where the head lies.
- Ugh!
-
- In the bed, you stiffen
- And look down at your feet
- As if buried.
-
- On the right side is the high bureau,
- On the left side is the high desk—
- How high and stiff and black they are!
- How high and stiff and black they are
- And what is “I” dwells in the cañon between,—
- Where at any moment the narrowness may tumble and fall in upon me!
- How far off the ceiling appears over my eyes!
- At the coffin’s head one window;
- At the coffin’s foot, one chair.
-
-
- III
-
- My room is narrow,
- But wide enough.
- My desk and pencils are wide as the world
- And my books are like palaces and far journeys.
-
- What have I need of space?
- There is always room enough for thinking,
- Or for dreaming or desiring.
- There is always room enough to smile
- And sing
- And cry out.
- If the feet are happy they can always dance
- Even in narrowness.
-
- (And a small room can be cold for a large one
- When the mornings are gray.)
-
-
- IV
-
- Closing the door I close out the world.
- I am alone,
- Free.
- At home.
- Castled.
-
- After the mastery of the day
- Now I am the master.
- I expand and aspire:
- I exult and strut and feel aware of myself.
-
- The walls await me.
- The mirror,
- The chair.
- Everything that is here is mine,
- Familiar only to me;
- Dependent upon my hands for use;
- Dependent upon my heart for beauty.
-
- The books on the shelf call to me,
- They send out glances to me.
- We have an understanding together.
- They know I will come and touch them with my fingers.
-
- But first I must get loosened from the day;
- From people—
- People crowding upon my shoulders.
- I must loosen them from me.
-
- How good to us doors are!
- They make the whole universe not be except this room.
-
- The curtain folds are full of quietness
- And I have a great contentment with undressing.
- My bed reaches out kind arms to me
- And folds me in,
- Awake with many thoughts.
-
-
- V
-
- How pleasant are sheets!
- Smooth and fine with cool creases,
- Laying comfort to your cheek,
- Laying soft cleanness of touch to your throat;
- Delicious with sun
- And blown air
- And lavender.
-
- And then the kind wool of the blanket
- Spreading out wide;
- Dropping away plentifully,
- Luxuriously over the edge of the bed;
- Woven and spun out of living warmth,
- Lightly;
- Rich to possess against the proud cold.
-
-
- VI
-
- How generously into its soft yielding lap
- The bed receives us now,
- And its strong arms
- Fold us about as a mother folds her children,—
- Comforting, and long-accustomed, and secure.
-
- Unquestioning our deserts;
- Unfailing; never denying;
- Never refusing our weariness;
- Taking our weariness from us like a burden.
-
- To petulance, to discomfort,
- Answering with soft answers;
- Smoothing away with silence our sorrows,
- Till in those faithful friendly arms
- We are enwrapped with quietness and content;
- With old well-being of sleep.
-
-
-
-
- The Ugliest Man
-
-
- GEORGE BURMAN FOSTER
-
-Good and evil, these are time-old opposites. So are beautiful and ugly.
-But these two opposites are seldom entirely coincident. No doubt there
-are good and high-class men who are commonly judged to be fundamentally
-ugly. And there are blinding beauties who are on a war-footing against
-all that we call good. The good satisfies our moral judgment; the
-beautiful, our judgment of taste. The one has to do with the content of
-human life; the other, with the form. But, at bottom, the moral judgment
-and the judgment of taste cannot remain entirely and materially
-dissociated. It was a more nearly correct feeling on the part of the
-Greeks when they let the beautiful and the good inter-grow. According to
-the Greek, the good and the beautiful, intimately united, constitute the
-ideal of virtue, however. We are reconciled after a fashion to the
-ugliness of a man if we find a great and noble soul in the repellant
-shell.
-
-But if permanent beauty is to be preserved to human nature, efficient
-and high endeavor, free self-concentrated formation of character is the
-only means to this end. When the “outer man” mirrors goodness and beauty
-of heart, firmness and bravery of will, seriousness and depth of
-thought, his countenance glows under all circumstances with a radiance
-of happy beauty, and it would be a barbarian and pitiable eye indeed
-that could not apprehend such radiance or feel itself smitten with its
-glory. For the man of fine feeling, therefore, all that is ugly affects
-him morally at the same time. Indeed, the reproach of having behaved in
-an ugly manner he feels as keenly, frequently more keenly in fact, than
-the reproach of having behaved immorally.
-
-In the case of _Friedrich Nietzsche_, the moral criterion of human worth
-was totally transformed into an aesthetic criterion! This man who had
-subdued all “morality” and left it behind him, who took his stand
-“beyond good and evil,” submitted to a new evaluation, was measured
-according to his greatness. Greatness was nobility, supremacy, beauty.
-Smallness was vulgarity, baseness, ugliness. Not the wickedest, and not
-the wretchedest, but the ugliest man—_der hässlichste Mensch_—represents
-the power which the new culture has to struggle with—to overcome,
-indeed—if man is to mount to a higher plane of being.
-
-Who is this ugliest man? Of all the Zarathustrian enigmas, this is
-perhaps the most enigmatic. It must have been a frightful ugliness which
-haunted and harried the poet-philosopher when he narrates that, amid his
-wanderings over men’s disappointing earth, he had met the ugliest man.
-Many and many were the types of human beings that Zarathustra had met in
-his lonely pilgrimages. Most of them he disposed of with high scorn or
-honest contempt,—thus did he dispatch the good and reputable, the
-custodians of the old tables of morals and order; then, the preachers of
-the doctrine of equality, who swarmed around like flies in market
-places, shunning all solitudes, able to exist only in masses; next the
-poisonous tarantulas who, with envious revenge, devised punishments, in
-cold blood dragged their victims to justice; finally, the wise and
-upright, the schoolmasters, whose duress converted all depths into
-shallows, managed to obliterate all men’s peculiarities, till nothing
-distinctive was left.
-
-But the ugliest man was uglier than any of these! These types did not so
-infuriate Zarathustra as did the ugliest man. At all these Nietzsche
-shook his head, but they did not floor him. He had been able to look
-upon them, to scold them, to laugh at them. “And again did Zarathustra’s
-feet run through mountains and forests.... When the path curved round a
-rock, all at once the landscape changed, and Zarathustra entered into a
-realm of death. Here bristled aloft black and red cliffs, without any
-grass, tree, or bird’s voice. For it was a valley which all animals
-avoided, even the beasts of prey, except that a species of ugly, thick,
-green serpent came here to die when they became old. Therefore the
-shepherds called this valley ‘Serpent-death.’” Here Zarathustra found
-the ugliest man something sitting by the wayside shaped like a man, and
-yet hardly like a man, something nondescript. And all at once there came
-over Zarathustra a great shame, he blushed up to the roots of his white
-hair, he would flee this ill-starred place—the worst that there was in
-the whole world! But the Great Despiser, the Hater of all pity was
-himself so unstrung and overpowered by pity that he sank down all at
-once, like a giant oak that had weathered many a storm, or withstood
-many a stroke of the woodman’s axe.
-
-Who was this ugliest man? What was this ugliest thing which
-Nietzsche—the great man-spy and life-appraiser—had ever discovered in a
-human being? Before Nietzsche wrote, _thus spake Zarathustra_, he
-expresses himself in another work as follows: “Nothing is ugly save the
-degenerate man.... From the physical standpoint everything ugly weakens
-and depresses man. It reminds of decay, danger, impotence; he literally
-loses strength in its presence. The effect of ugliness may be gauged by
-the dynamometer. Whenever man’s spirits are downcast, it is a sign that
-he scents the proximity of something ‘ugly.’ His feeling of power, his
-will to power, his courage and his pride—these things collapse at the
-sight of what is ugly, and rise at the sight of what is beautiful....
-Ugliness is understood to signify a hint or a symptom of degeneration;
-that which reminds us, however, remotely of degeneracy, impels us to the
-judgment ‘ugly.’ Every sign of exhaustion, of gravity, of age, of
-fatigue; every kind of constraint, such as cramp, or paralysis; and
-above all the smells, colors and forms associated with decomposition and
-putrefaction, however much they may have been attenuated into
-symbols,—all these things provoke the same reaction, which is the
-judgment ‘ugly.’ A certain hatred expresses itself here: who is it that
-man hates? Without a doubt it is _the decline of his type_. In this
-regard his hatred springs from the deepest instinct of the race. There
-is horror, caution, profundity, and far-reaching vision in this
-hatred,—it is the most profound hatred that exists.”
-
-Nowhere has Nietzsche told us of the zenith, who his superman is. But he
-here tells us of the nadir, who the ugliest man is—and the superman is
-the exact and august opposite. Thus we could ourselves construct his
-superman.
-
-But the ugliest man—we recognize this strange figure of the Zarathustra
-poesy in the sharp cry of distress which all representatives of
-degenerate (_de-genera_) humanity groan out where the yearning toward a
-higher humanity overpowers them. The ugliest man then appears accoutered
-with a crown with which he has crowned his own head, and with two purple
-girdles which encircle him. In a later profound observation, Nietzsche
-informs us that the ugliest man is called _der historische Sinn_, the
-historical mind, or sense, which needs decoration, accoutrement, like
-all ugly things that would make themselves tolerable, at least for
-surface people. The degenerate man,—this is the ugly man, and the
-saddest degeneration is _the surrender of life to the past_—for the past
-is the big grave which swallows up all that lives. Whoever makes the
-past the goal of his longing walks among corpses which make him shiver.
-He becomes himself a corpse, whose society is freezing for living men.
-And because this man, assimilated to the past, living in the past, is
-nothing himself, he needs all kinds of fiddle-faddle to give himself the
-semblance of being something. He needs pomp which makes a world-stirring
-phenomenon out of a coronation; he scrambles and scratches after titles
-and orders—which long ago Frederick the Great, the philosopher-king on
-the Prussian throne, called the insignia of fools; he has himself
-accredited by father and grandfather, so that their merit may adorn the
-shield of son and grandson; in a word, he reverses the counsel of an
-apostle: “Forgetting the things that are behind,” for he forgets the
-things that are before and reaches back for the things that are behind.
-And because there is for this backward-bent man an inconvenient monitor
-and witness of all life—because there is God, the omnipresent God, who
-ever sees all, even sees man through and through, this ugliest man
-became the murderer of God, he took revenge on the living God for being
-witness of the hiddenest life of man! “I know thee well,” said
-Zarathustra, with a brazen voice, “_thou art the murderer of God_!...
-Thou couldst not _endure_ him who beheld thee through and through, thou
-ugliest man. Thou tookest revenge on this witness!”
-
-We have here, I think, with all that is enigmatic and obscure, a
-sharply-outlined picture of the ugliest man. Earlier Nietzsche wrote a
-book on the blessing and the bane of history for life. In that book he
-accorded right to historical culture and to man’s knowledge of the past
-_only in so far_ as the life of the man of the present and of the future
-would be advanced thereby. But the historians in the schools, in chair
-and pulpit, did not so think. They acknowledged life only when it was
-dead! A zealous teacher of history was a meandering mummy from out the
-past, who had no blood more in his veins, no flesh more on his bones.
-Therefore was he so ugly. Therefore did he create such a frosty
-temperature round about him. Under the pressure of these historical
-forces, all life became a _cultus_ of the past. The older a thing was,
-the better it was. It was the long past, the outlived, that was noble.
-The more remote that past, the prouder men were of it, and the brighter
-shone its glory-beaming star to the eyes of men.
-
-From this malady of the ugliest man, from this _de-genera-tion_, we are
-by no means free. Instead of ascent to a higher _genus_ than present
-man, to superman, there is descent to a lower _genus_. This antiquarian,
-hoary spirit pervades our whole social life, this _re-spect_ for what
-has become old and rotten, for what can show no other merit than that it
-once—was! It is a sign of our own decay, this living on the dead, this
-ability only to resuscitate and copy past centuries—past poetry, past
-art, past philosophy, past morality, past religion!—this knowing in
-consequence no life of our very own. We build “whitewashed sepulchers”
-in our lives, because we have no courage of heart to create anything
-that belongs to life. At all events, that the putridity and the dead
-bones may be concealed, we use whitewash, much whitewash! We use
-decorations, brilliant, finely-painted decorations so that men may not
-observe that life has become a theatrical play, making an impression
-indeed under clever management, but inspiring no living human heart. All
-the splendor of this pomp, which we of today employ on the stage of
-life, cannot conceal the chilly vacuity of this whole business; and the
-man who peers behind the curtains and sees how people look shorn of
-their decorations, without powder and paint, without the artificial
-cunning luminosity of the day’s puffery, has Zarathustra’s feeling in
-the valley forsaken to the old green thick snake on its way to
-die,—Zarathustra’s feeling when he met the ugliest man, where much
-heaviness settled on his mind, because he did not think that anything so
-ugly and horrible could exist among men.
-
-Yes, there are traces and traits of this ugliest man among us. If we but
-imagine all that is decoration, flummery, stripped off from us, think
-how much degenerate life would be disclosed! How much love for the dead
-_that no longer lives_, how much bitter strife and war over _reliques_,
-over some sacred cloak, or sacred bone, of which history narrates,
-telling us that they once belonged to life. How much slavish obedience
-to thoughts that once were; to institutions that once served the living.
-To be sure, men call this _piety_, and have thus designed a beautiful
-robe behind which they hide their moribund lives. For the sake of this
-piety, they exact consideration for all ancient dust which burden the
-homes and hearts of men, they arm themselves against him who, with
-mighty hand, would undertake a huge house-cleaning of life and for life.
-Piety,—it is this that they call admiration and veneration of every idol
-which for long has been played out, but still counts us of today among
-its devotees. Men must even deal God a mortal blow, the _Living_ God of
-the living, and, with the ferocious hatred of their folly, pursue the
-God who sees their innermost heart as a living witness of what they
-would like to hide from themselves and all the world. “But he—_had to_
-die: he looked with eyes which beheld _everything_,—he beheld men’s
-depths and dregs, all his hidden ignominy and ugliness ... he crept into
-my dirtiest corners. This most prying, over-intrusive, over-pitiful one
-had to die. He even beheld me: on such a witness I would have revenge—or
-not live myself. The God who beheld everything, _and also man_: that God
-had to die! Man cannot _endure_ it that such a witness should live.”
-
-Thus spake the ugliest man. Zarathustra started off, feeling frozen to
-the very bowels.
-
-The God who told men that altogether they served death, not life, that
-they worked deterioration, not rejuvenation—had to die! Life is a
-dying—and yet there shoots through the heart of man such a nameless
-anxiety in the presence of this dying that he paints up and pencils all
-death till it looks like life. And indeed many are deceived, many see
-only men’s rouge and mark not the great lie which it hides. This is the
-ugliest thing in the world, and it made the prophet of a new culture
-shudder and freeze—_this_, that we live and walk among corpses which yet
-look as if they were alive!
-
-To fight and conquer this hindrance to a new culture, this is to fight
-and conquer death; and since death is death only through man, through
-his yearning or fear, the triumph of a new culture begins with the
-triumphal song of life, which knows how to make a festival out of even
-death. To be sure, Nietzsche did not set his most beautiful man over
-against his most ugly, but we can yet read between the lines what he
-conceived the most beautiful man to be. He is the man who has pushed far
-from him the last vestige and survival of fear and slave-service. He is
-the man who has learned dying as the great Consummator, victorious,
-surrounded by men who hope and vow that there shall ever be festival
-where a man who so dies dedicates himself to the living. Here
-Zarathustra-Nietzsche intimates a kinship with that other Dying Man Who
-proclaimed his life’s victorious career in His: “It is finished!” and
-created on Christianity’s Good Friday a festival of death. Nietzsche
-speaks of the Hebrew, too early dead, who would have confessed
-Zarathustra’s doctrine, if he had attained to Zarathustra’s years. It
-did not occur to Nietzsche that such a confession was not at all needed,
-because the world had perceived the glad message already which would
-make a festival out of death and teach men how the most beautiful
-festival was consecrated. Christian art had opposed to the ugliest man
-the most beautiful human picture: the head full of wounds and blood, the
-King in the thorn-crown, who understood dying because he understood
-living. With this victorious song of death began a new culture, a new
-heroism of humanity, to which death ceased to be a pale ghost, but which
-confessed even in death: “as dying, and behold, we live!” Then men
-ceased to learn dying, and because they made no preaching of life out of
-dying and no vow to life, death became to them a torturing anxiety and
-care again; they did not dare name his name; they did not dare frankly
-look him in the eye. And this cowardice and lie disfigure all their
-action and passion; they would give to death at least the semblance of
-life; they would believe in ghostly existence still allotted to all the
-dead, rather than say to death: “Thou are a messenger of God, a
-revelation, a witness of life; since thou art good, I will greet thee
-and bless thee!”
-
-So Zarathustra demanded of his disciples: “Let your dying be no
-blasphemy of men and earth; my friends, your spirit and your virtue
-shall still glow in your dying, like the evening red over the earth, or
-else death has miserably betrayed you.”
-
-Death our will even, our freedom—this is life’s highest meaning! Who but
-Nietzsche could have thought that? Of course, this is not to throw life
-away, when it has become hard and heavy to bear. Such a death would be
-of all the most unfree. It would be a flight, not a deed; it would be a
-lamentation and a feebleness, not a festival of the soul! But it means
-that we take up death from the start into the order of our life, as the
-night which, no less than the day, belongs to man’s full day. It means
-that we give to life a worth which no death can destroy, which first in
-death reveals its eternal power. I must die—so laments the slave, who
-has lived only non-entities even in his life, and has never learned that
-life is work, creation, consummation. I _will_ die—so speaks the hero,
-to whom every fight brings the prize of a victory well worth death!—the
-hero who hazards his life every moment for the highest human good, who
-knows that he and his life have become a sacrifice from which a better,
-higher, freer humanity shall gain its life and its strength.
-
-Who is ugly? Who is beautiful? Who is ashamed of his death and falsifies
-his deadness that it may look like life—who does this, bears death
-within himself as a power that drags him down, disfigures him in the
-fullness of that which he would be able to live. But who, in his power
-to die, proves that he has learned to live, has overcome the ugliest
-thing in man, cast it out; namely, the fear of death which creates all
-the lies of life, and all the servility and unfreedom of men—which
-creates men over whom _das Gewesen_! the dead past, possesses power, so
-that they can never breathe a joyous breath, can never commit themselves
-to the living and the growing. But a _beautiful_ culture will also
-become a _good_ culture because one that is living is at once good and
-beautiful; the eternal life of God, of whom it is said: There is none
-good but God alone.
-
-
-
-
- Emasculating Ibsen[2]
-
-
-Dear Mr. Ibsen: I hope this letter finds you well as it leeves us the
-same. The reason why I write you is that I seen your play called
-_Ghosts_ at the Bijou Movie Theater last night and I thought it was so
-grand that I had to tell you. I thought it was awful the way poor Mr.
-Alving is always seeing that hand which was pulling his hair out of the
-past. And it was awful too the way poor Mr. Alving crawled across the
-floor on his stomich and pulled the poison offn the icebox before he
-killed himself. The way his poor, dear mother suffered, that was
-terrible. She was such a strong, brave woman that I cried for her all
-the time. And The Rev. Manders he was such a real swell minister that my
-heart was all torn watching him. It ain’t natural for everybody to be so
-good as ministers because they ain’t got so much time and don’t read the
-Bible so often. But he was certainly all there when it came to pureness
-and kindness. But even if the play was awful it was just grand the
-lesson that it taught. I sent my friend to see it and he thought it was
-swell. He said the kissing scenes where the terrible Cap. Alving hugs
-the different ladies was real stuff and that the lesson against the
-evils of drink was good for the young. This is what I want to write you
-about, Mr. Ibsen. We’re going to organize a West Side Ibsen Prohibition
-Club and make you honary president. I wish therefor you will write the
-club a letter or better if you will write a sequil to the movie play
-_Ghosts_ we will put it on at the club. I know how hard it is to have
-movie plays accepted because I have done some myself but if you don’t
-write the sequil I will write it and send it to the Mutual people who
-put the first part on. I am certain they will take it because I will
-make it just so strong and powerful a sermon against the evils of drink
-as what you did. With best regards and hopes for your future success, I
-am your friend,
-
- Mobbie Mag.
-
- [2] P.S. For the reader: The wet nurses who minister to the mob
- have put our old friend Ibsen into diapers and give him to their
- patients to play with. The cherubic little fellow is kicking up
- his dimpled heels and thriving well in all the movie houses.
-
-
-
-
- Death
-
-
-I have always wished to know of death. I have always wondered what
-became of me when I went back to earth. Today I know.
-
-I have watched a soul die and have heard its pain. Beside it I have
-stood and listened to its cries. I have watched it sicken and have noted
-how it struggled.
-
-Life was beautiful to it. There never was so exquisite a soul. It
-leaped, and burned and danced when it was born. It was so radiant the
-dark world into which it came grew light.
-
-I have always wished to know of death. Today I know.
-
-It was raining softly and we sat within a room with pictures all about—a
-woman, fresh and young, and I—and trembled. The beauty and the
-loveliness of her were dawning in me. And something of myself that had
-not been took being. I loved. There was nothing as beautiful as her
-lips. There was nothing as beautiful as her eyes. There was nothing then
-in all the world as beautiful as she I loved. It was my soul. Restless
-as a song it reached from day to day to light new moments with its
-melody. Ever and forever it went singing, “I will live beyond the stars.
-I will live beyond the mystery of flesh. When the woman who awakened me
-is turned to dust I will live as now and sing as now.”
-
-I have always wondered what became of me when I went back to earth.
-Today I know.
-
-It was so precious and so fierce. I loved so. I had but to look on her
-and taste of immortality.
-
-Beside it I have stood and listened to its cries. I have noted how it
-struggled. In the night I have repeated its brave words, “Ever and
-forever.” I have nursed it from her lips. I have given it to feed upon
-her breast.
-
-It would not live. I loved so, I loved so—and yet I ceased to love.
-
-There is one thing in the world that will not live. There is one thing
-mortal more than life. It is the beauty of which poets sing. Beauty dies
-in every moment. It is mortal with the hours. It flashes and it dies. It
-leaps and dies. It sings and dies.
-
-I loved so and yet I ceased to love.
-
-Her eyes became as nothing. Her lips became as nothing. Her voice became
-as nothing. Her laughter and her tears, the movement of her body when
-she walked, the strangeness of her face, the mysteries that made her one
-apart and glorified her and the radiance that burned in me at her
-approach—all became as nothing.
-
-Miserable God. False Promiser. I have wished to know of death. I have
-wondered what became of me when I went back to earth. Today I know.
-
- “The Scavenger.”
-
-
-
-
- Children’s Poems
-
-
-Alice Oliver Henderson, eight-year-old poet, wrote the following five
-poems when she was only seven. Her method is to chant them to her
-mother, Alice Corbin Henderson, who takes them down exactly as they are
-dictated. Mrs. Henderson thinks their interest lies in the fact that
-they are the expression of a child’s mind, and so she refuses to change
-or “improve” them. Besides, it might be difficult to “improve” such
-lines as “The moon shines against my heart”.... The other poems in the
-group were written by Percy Mackaye’s children—Arvia’s at the age of
-ten, and Robin’s at twelve. Mr. Mackaye says that his daughter’s were
-done while it was still difficult for her to read or write, but that she
-has always been read aloud to and has learned considerable poetry by
-heart.
-
-
- A Mountain of Fire
-
- There was a mountain made of fire,
- Far in the sea—
- It was very nice to everybody that lived in that world.
- Right over in Japan, it was.
- Where there are very good fighters and painters,
- And very good little children,
- And very good minders in that world.
-
-
- Kathleen
-
- (after seeing _Kathleen ni Houlihan_)
-
- She looked very, very old when she came in.
- The mother and the father that were in the house.
- Had one brother in the house,
- The other one had gone out
- And got all the England people away
- For Kathleen,
- For Kathleen,
- And then said, _He shall be remembered forever_.
- She was a young woman when she went out,
- And she sang when she went out the door.
-
- The moon shines at night
- When all are in bed,
- And the dear little birdies sing for you
- In the morning time to wake you sure.
-
- How lovely the day is—
- The moon shines against my heart—
- I love the sweetness of the sky.
- The beautiful day comes every morning true.
-
-
- Miss Ungerich’s Japanese Play
-
- Eyes all blackened, lips made beautiful,
- Lavender under, then red over for the costume,
- Acted wonderfully with her hands fixed all the time,
- Bare feet, then on to the floor,
- She made a thing that was beautiful.
-
- Next was a man with a sword,
- He acted the same way with her face.
- Brown—gold costume, then a hat she wore,
- Then a sort of stick-sword;
- Then she did moving of hands and killing.
- She was pretending, but there was only one actor,
- Miss Ungerich.
-
-
- The Snow Flakes
-
- In the winter I saw the loveliest sky that you ever saw.
- It was blue and pink and yellow and orange and white and black and grey.
- That was the colors of the sky.
- It pleased me so that I went and sat down.
- You must think of life and the poor that war makes.
-
- _Done by Alice Oliver Henderson, Miss._
-
-
- Fire Castles
-
- Fast falling rain and every hill in mist
- Make even my very saddest thoughts grow sadder,
- And every sad thought lengthens my long list,
- As, moaning over old things that make me madder,
- I sit and sulk over some unkind word
- And weep as if I had not wept before,
- And think of words about me I have heard,
- And with old thoughts grieve over them some more.
- But soon, if I get up, or sit and gaze,
- Telling myself stories of joyous thought
- Before the warm and cheery, singing blaze,
- Now all my bad thoughts in a trap are caught;
- And if I gaze at castles in the fire,
- Then all the while to gladness I grow nigher.
-
-
- The Unknown Race
-
- O dream, what are you?—
- A fairy or a sprite,
- A goddess in the air,
- Or just a flash of light?
-
- A sudden flash of joy
- That brightens up my mind,
- Till wonders I see now
- Where first I was so blind.
-
-
- Zephyr
-
- Zephyr—Zephyr—Zephyr! Blow on, blow hard
- Over hill and over dale!
- O play in the green trees, leave nothing marred:
- O blow—O blow—O blow a gale!
-
- Zephyr—Zephyr—Zephyr! Play on, play long!
- Play and sing in tops of trees,
- And brush the valley’s airy green hair strong;
- Dip your head, diving down the leas!
-
- Zephyr—Zephyr—Zephyr,
- Like a little heifer,
- Frolic and lie
- In the field of the sky!
-
- Good-bye, good-bye!
- Frolic and turn and lie!
-
- _Arvia Mackaye._
-
-
- The Swimming Pool
-
- O! crystal-clear, transparent water,
- The cool wind is thy joyous daughter.
- As I glide through thee, quick and sleek—
- Oh thou so quiet and so meek!—
- I feel thy ripples lapping free,
- And thou dost lie so near to me
- I see my figure on thy face,
- Entwined in shadows, linked like lace.
-
- Oh! what art thou? what canst thou be,
- That dost reflect my visage unto me?
- I know not what thou seemest to another,
- But thou to me art as a brother.
-
-
- To a Turtle
-
- O gallant knight in armour black
- Blotched with grey and yellow squares,
- A horny motto’s on thy breast:
- _Bravery_ it bears.
-
- O turtle, paddling through the grass
- That skirts the cobwebbed shining lawn!
- Come tell me true: where journey you
- This dewy dawn?
-
- I smell a pond, and in it are
- Young tadpoles, newly hatched and fresh,
- And larvas of mosquitoes plump
- And sweet of flesh;
-
- And whirligigs, that streak and dart
- Like water-lightning underneath
- The greenish cat-tail spears, that shade
- The frogspit heath.
-
- And there is oozy, deep, soft mud
- For me to lie and bask upon,
- And dine on lizards fat, and sleek
- Chameleon.
-
- And there the bright-green, freckled frog
- My only friend will always be.
- To him I haste:—To you I bend
- My jointless knee.
-
- _Robin Mackaye._
-
-
-
-
- Book Discussion
-
-
- The Books of Poetry
-
- _Irradiations: Sand and Spray, by John Gould Fletcher. Boston:
- Houghton Mifflin Company._
-
-There is considerable diversity in Mr. Fletcher’s _Irradiations_, but
-one soon discovers that he has not encrimsoned himself with the standard
-passions of poetry. He does not display the usual contortions of love,
-hate, grief, and fear. Some persons have, therefore, found him aloof,
-oversubtle, and lacking in emotional force. This intimation that Mr.
-Fletcher’s art is etiolated is an admission of the reader’s
-incompleteness. Vitality does not depend on subject; nor is subtlety
-necessarily weakness. But the notion strangely persists that a poet must
-clothe his emotions in samite and dance with them around a blood-red
-fire to the plangent accompaniment of drums and trumpets.
-
-To say that Mr. Fletcher has entwined himself with nature would unfairly
-give an impression of Wordsworthian insipidity. Yet Mr. Fletcher in many
-of his poems is a part of the rain, of the sand and wind, of the clouds
-and sky. But he is never merely descriptive. He has the power of
-conveying a mood in the terms of nature without intruding himself upon
-the reader. Let me illustrate with one of the best of his poems which
-has been much quoted elsewhere:
-
- Flickering of incessant rain
- On flashing pavements;
- Sudden scurry of umbrellas;
- Bending recurved blossoms of the storm.
-
- The winds came clanging and clattering
- From long white highroads whipping in ribbons up summits;
- They strew upon the city gusty wafts of apple-blossom,
- And the rustling of innumerable translucent leaves.
-
- Uneven tinkling, the lazy rain
- Dripping from the eaves.
-
-Our tread-mill versifiers will shrink and mumble in the presence of Mr.
-Fletcher’s clean new poetry. They who have inherited the dead mottled
-skin of old poetic form with its incrustation of ancient allusions,
-symbols, and yellowed figures, will not feel the alluring freshness of a
-poem such as this:
-
- It is evening, and the earth
- Wraps her shoulders in an old blue shawl.
- Afar there clink the polychrome points of the stars,
- Indefatigable after all these years!
- Here upon earth there is life, and then death,
- Dawn, and later nightfall,
- Fire, and the quenching of embers:
- But why should I not remember that my night is dawn in another part
- of the world,
- If the idea fits my fancy?
- Dawns of marvellous light, wakeful, sleepy, weary, dancing dawns;
- You are rose petals settling through the blue of my evening;
- I light my pipe to salute you,
- And sit puffing smoke in the air and never say a word.
-
-In his preface Mr. Fletcher says the use of rhyme is in its essence
-barbarous; yet he himself uses it not infrequently together with such
-devices as assonance, onomatopoeia, and alliteration. He is not
-inconsistent, however, for he admits that rhyme used intelligently will
-add to the richness of effect. It does:
-
- The wind that drives the fine dry sand
- Across the strand:
- The sad wind spinning arabesques
- With a wrinkled hand.
-
- Labyrinths of shifting sand,
- The dancing dunes!
-
- I will arise and run with the sand,
- And gather it greedily in my hand:
- I will wriggle like a long yellow snake over the beaches.
- I will lie curled up, sleeping,
- And the wind shall chase me
- Far inland.
-
- My breath is the music of the mad wind;
- Shrill piping, stamping of drunken feet,
- The fluttering, tattered broidery flung
- Over the dunes’ steep escarpments.
-
- The fine dry sand that whistles
- Down the long low beaches.
-
-_Sand and Spray: A Sea-Symphony_ comprises the second part of Mr.
-Fletcher’s volume. This symphony has much of the movement and variety of
-music. In manner it resembles many of the “Irradiations,” and it is just
-as well worth reading.
-
-Certainly there will be many who will not like Mr. Fletcher’s work. Dogs
-will always bark at a new fragrance.
-
- _Japanese Lyrics, translated by Lafcadio Hearn. Boston: Houghton
- Mifflin Company._
-
-Readers of Lafcadio Hearn will recall the many translations of Japanese
-_haikai_ poetry which are scattered through his writings. Those
-translations have been collected in the present volume. They are
-delicate whisps of thought, tantalizingly suggestive, most of them
-confined to a sentence. Here are some of them:
-
- If with my sleeve I hide the faint fair color of the dawning
- sun,—
- then, perhaps, in the morning, my lord will remain.
-
- Perched upon the temple-bell, the butterfly sleeps:
- Even while sleeping, its dream is of play—ah, the butterfly of the
- grass!
-
- Many insects there are that call from the dawn to evening,
- Crying “I love! I love!”—but the Firefly’s silent passion,
- Making its body burn, is deeper than all their longing.
- Even such is my love ....
-
-The following poem, says the editor, was written more than eleven
-hundred years ago on the death of the poet’s little son:
-
- As he is so young, he cannot know the way.
- .... To the messenger of the Underworld I will give a bribe,
- and entreat him, saying: “Do thou kindly take the little one upon thy
- back along the road.”
-
-Some discerning persons have asserted that “Imagism” is derived from
-_haikai_ or _hokku_ poetry. We shall leave to them the pleasant futility
-of discussing that theory. They may eventually discover that they are
-building on the shaky premise that “Imagism” exists other than as a
-clever word.
-
- _The Winnowing Fan, by Laurance Binyon. Boston: Houghton Mifflin
- Company._
-
-My dears, we will tie _vers libre_ in the garden. Then let us go into
-the parlor where Mr. Laurence Binyon will pour tea; it will have sugar
-in it. Mr. Binyon will read to you from his latest book _The Winnowing
-Fan_. He is a gentleman of taste and culture who is vexed at the
-Germans. He is meticulously metrical and counts his syllables. He will
-say nothing unexpected.... If _vers libre_ howls in the garden, you may
-throw rhymes at him.
-
- _Mitchell Dawson._
-
-
-
-
- Have You Read—?
-
-
- (_In this column will be given each month a list of current
- magazine articles which, as an intelligent being, you will not
- want to miss._)
-
-Shadows of Revolt, by Inez Haynes Gilmore. _The Masses_, July.
-
-Redemption and Dostoevsky, by Rebecca West. _The New Republic_, July 12.
-
-The State of the War, by Arthur Bullard. _The Masses_, August.
-
-Serbia Between Battles, by John Reed. _The Metropolitan_, August.
-
-Richard Aldington’s lucid account of the Imagists and their history in
-_Greenwich Village_, July 15.
-
-Almost any of the editorials in _Harper’s Weekly_.
-
-
-
-
- Can You Read—?
-
-
- (_In this column will be given each month a resume of current
- cant which, as an intelligent being, you will go far to avoid._)
-
-The reactions of the two Chestertons in _The New Witness_.
-
-Midsummer fiction issues of _The Century_ or _Scribner’s_ or _Harper’s_.
-
-_The Continent_ on Edgar Lee Masters’ _Spoon River Anthology_: “Each
-poem is in the nature of a confession, philosophical or satirical,
-telling secrets of human nature, good or bad—mostly bad. Because of its
-novelty and originality the book has attracted attention far and
-wide.... His attitude toward religious believers is a wrong one, and
-readers may well wonder at the scarcity of sincere, sensible Christians
-in Spoon River.”
-
-
-
-
- The Reader Critic
-
-
-_Lee J. Smits, Detroit_:
-
-We are disgusted and impatient with “peo-pul” just to the extent that
-our realization of superiority fails us. That impatient attitude reminds
-me of the ordinary attitude of the white toward the black. The white man
-is not sure of himself; history and biology do not give him sufficient
-support. So he bullies negroes at every opportunity. Some men even are
-impelled to contend for their superiority by abusing dogs.
-
-The sense of superiority abides in all living things of necessity, else
-no form of life would stand out against any other. Wild creatures never
-need argue, each with himself, as to his place in the world. His right
-to exist and to express himself is paramount in the animal’s soul. Only
-man ever doubts.
-
-Really “peo-pul” do not doubt. They with the artist’s mark on them do
-the doubting. When it is very faint, their doubting asserts itself in
-strange ways and the crude egoism thereof revolts us. “Peo-pul” crawl
-along self-satisfied.
-
-And why do you ask so much of artists? Why is it so important that they
-should use their strength in vain strivings to make butterflies of worms
-never destined to be butterflies or to amuse other artists who should be
-able to amuse themselves? If they get joy out of creating and preaching,
-let them preach and create—let them soar. If they get joy out of being,
-out of exultant living and watching, let them live, and do not scold.
-
-The most beautiful butterfly I ever saw (some kind of “Emperor”) merely
-rested on a lump of mud in the forest shade and very languidly moved his
-wings. That is all he did while I looked at him. He knew that he could
-fly, I knew that he could fly, and he either knew that I knew or else he
-didn’t care.
-
-We all know what impatience with “peo-pul” is. In the hush of a great
-flash of dramatic power from the stage, they giggle, and it would be
-good to fasten your fingers in the pulpy throat of one. They applaud
-idiotic vaudeville, and it would be glorious to arise, automatic in
-hand, and slay and slay.
-
-That is your distrust of yourself—we all have it as much as we deserve
-it.
-
-“So I belong to this species!” you say.
-
-I do not hate my dog when he seeks out carrion. I wash him with strong
-soap and try to explain him. I feel quite sure—most of the time—that I
-have come a little further than he has.
-
-“Peo-pul” are even more interesting than dogs, when taken individually.
-We even have more in common with them than with other animals.
-
-Some of them are beautiful in their simplicity, like children—unspoiled
-in their loves and hates, and it is entertainment to behold them; to be
-with them, yet not of them; to be the arch-snob, of such perfect
-snobbishness that it is indistinguishable from perfect humility, perfect
-democracy.
-
-All the mighty ones have been artists in life; like unto children they
-have walked their ways, so everlastingly sure of themselves that rarely
-have they been betrayed into petulance by the wobbling of their sense of
-superiority.
-
-_Susan Quackenbush, Portage, Wisconsin_:
-
-May one who has read your every issue with joy and enthusiasm be
-permitted to enter protest against that gross libel on the human race
-labeled _The Artist in Life_, in your June number?
-
-Please—oh please—_be_ an artist-in-life, in human life, as well as in
-sunsets and Paderewskis and Imagism, and see for one creative moment, in
-“terms of truth and beauty,” the wonderful, aspiring, suffering, loving,
-smouldering, flaming beautiful souls of that great living, growing,
-winged group of creations you have called—may the great human God
-forgive the phrase—a “mass of caterpillars!” Come and see how its soul,
-and the souls of its separate creations “spring from the rock” just as
-truly as the brook’s or your own. If they can not _yet_ spring as far,
-it is because the weight above them is as yet too heavy.
-
-When all the humans look like caterpillars to any one human, the trouble
-is with that one’s viewpoint. From an aeroplane, even the Himalayas look
-like anthills. Come down from your remote altitude and lose yourself in
-the beautiful, glorious psychic of the crowd—be one of them, and see
-what you will find!
-
-THE LITTLE REVIEW proclaims itself bent on the adventure of beauty. Is
-there any beauty like that of the “sad, sweet music of humanity?” What
-is the glow of the most gorgeous sunset ever splashed against the
-western skies beside the glow of the divine in the human which hurls
-itself upon you—and _into_ you if you will let it—in a thousand
-beseeching, inviting, intoxicating flames from the midst of any crowd?
-
-But only, of course, if you are _in_ the midst.
-
-Is there any adventure like the “adventure of being human”—and _with_
-humans? and _of_ them? Go with Whitman into the heart of
-humanity—struggle _with_ them—not from far above them—to lift from off
-their backs the crushing weight of wealth and masters and idle snobs and
-false gods so that they may get _room_ to spread their wings—for they
-_have_ wings, and then you will know them as they are, and yourself but
-as one of them.
-
-If some of them still try to clip the wings of those who have struggled
-free from the crushing pressure, it is because of the maddening agony of
-their own atrophying wings. If a few seem even to be unaware of the need
-for wings, it is because the clamor of more insistent needs—the cries of
-hungry children, of bruised and broken and unsatisfied men and of
-suffering and degraded women—has silenced for every shame their own
-soul’s wing-cry.
-
-But I think that you will find that those who perform the wing-clipping
-are the other butterflies whom money or position or callousness has set
-above the people—not those who are really of the crowd. They of the
-crowd _love_ wings, and those who truly use them.
-
-I am not daring to attempt reply to the statement which inflames me
-most, lest I become profane and entirely incoherent. I mean, of course,
-the statement that the estimate of four or five thousand living artists
-would be too optimistic because that would mean four or five thousand
-who “have nothing in common with caterpillars.” That’s a worse libel on
-artists than the rest of it is on people. But I’ll try to stop with one
-remark and one question. The estimate is entirely too pessimistic; I
-positively refuse to believe there are four thousand persons alive who
-have or even who think they have “nothing in common” with the great
-splendid mass of folks; if there are, the gods have pity on them!
-And—has there ever been one single real and great artist, whether of
-brush or pen or tone, whose art and whose very greatness was not
-absolutely dependent upon and because of the fact that he had, and knew
-he had, _everything_ in common with, and indeed included in his being,
-the beings of these whom you term “caterpillars”?—these whose life and
-living are and always have been and through ages will continue to be the
-most worth while content of all art? Of course you reply: _Nietzsche_;
-but he was an intellectual and spiritual Rockefeller—not an
-artist-in-life.
-
-And Individualism? When _all_ have been set free to use their wings,
-then the few may feel free to strive toward the super-butterfly. And
-when they arrive, perhaps,—oh, just perhaps—they will find all the other
-“caterpillars” there too, and with quite wonderful wings. There are
-wings, and wings, and if they but serve to bear us free of the disaster
-of meanness and cruelty and snobbishness and injustice, who shall say
-they are not super-wings?
-
-_Witter Bynner, Windsor, Vermont_:
-
-I wish I could honor the Imagists as you do. Hueffer wrote _On Heaven_
-(not imagistic); and Pound wrote well before he affected a school ...
-Pound has a rhythm he can’t kill. But none of them, except Hueffer, says
-anything worth mentioning. They build poems around phrases, usually
-around adjectives. George Meredith has thousands of imagist poems
-incidental to each of his novels. But he knows their use and their
-beauty. These people wring tiny beauties dry. I can imagine a good poet
-using their methods on occasion, but he wouldn’t be so damn conscious
-about it. On the whole, the Imagists strike me as being purveyors of
-more or less potent cosmetics, their whole interest being in the
-cosmetic itself, not even in its application. Poetry gave signs of
-becoming poetry again and of touching life—when these fellows showed up,
-to make us all ridiculous.
-
-
- SOLD ONLY TO
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- PHYSICIANS, LAWYERS, EDUCATORS, CLERGYMEN, SOCIAL WORKERS AND
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-
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-
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-
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-
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- Poetry
-
-
- A Magazine of Verse
-
- 543 Cass Street
- Chicago
-
- Padraic Colum, the distinguished Irish poet and lecturer, says:
- “POETRY is the best magazine, by far, in the English language. We
- have nothing in England or Ireland to compare with it.”
-
- William Marion Reedy, Editor of the St. Louis _Mirror_, says:
- “POETRY has been responsible for the Renaissance in that art. You
- have done a great service to the children of light in this
- country.”
-
- CAN YOU AFFORD TO DO WITHOUT SO IMPORTANT A MAGAZINE?
-
- POETRY publishes the best verse now being written in English, and
- its prose section contains brief articles on subjects connected
- with the art, also reviews of the new verse.
-
- POETRY has introduced more new poets of importance than all the
- other American magazines combined, besides publishing the work of
- poets already distinguished.
-
- THE ONLY MAGAZINE DEVOTED EXCLUSIVELY TO THIS ART.
-
- SUBSCRIBE AT ONCE. A subscription to POETRY is the best way of
- paying interest on your huge debt to the great poets of the past.
- It encourages living poets to do for the future what dead poets
- have done for modern civilization, for you.
-
- One year—12 numbers—U. S. A., $1.50; Canada, $1.65; foreign,
- $1.75 (7 shillings).
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-
-
-
- Have You Read—?
-
-
- (_In this column will be given each month a list of current
- magazine articles which, as an intelligent being, you will
- not want to miss._)
-
- The Unbroken Chain, by Romain Rolland. _The New Republic._
-
- Dostoievsky and Tolstoy, by James Huneker. _The Forum_, August.
-
- Nietzsche, by Anna Strunsky Walling. _The New Review_, August 1.
-
- The Uninteresting War, by Max Eastman. _The Masses_, September.
-
- Our Friend, the Enemy, by Alice Corbin Henderson. _Poetry_,
- August.
-
- Books and Things, by Walter Lippman. _The New Republic_, August
- 7.
-
- Morality and the Movies, by Floyd Dell. _The New Review_, August
- 15.
-
- Nearly everything in _The Egoist_, August 1.
-
-
-
-
- Can You Read—?
-
-
- (_In this column will be given each month a resumé of
- current cant which, as an intelligent being, you will go
- far to avoid._)
-
- The Meaning of It, by H. C. _The New Republic_, August 7.
-
- Bryant and “The New Poetry,” by John L. Hervey. _The Dial_, Aug.
- 15.
-
- The “Free” Poets, by Michael Monahan. _The Phoenix_, September.
-
- Pearls from _The Outlook_ for August 11, in regard to the Becker
- trial:
-
- What can we learn from this story of trust betrayed, of dishonor
- in high places, and of a three years’ legal battle over a crime
- which demanded immediate retribution? Certainly the law did not
- come out unscathed from this controversy. It is a familiar story,
- but it will bear repetition until it is remedied—we are very much
- behind England in our administration of criminal law. The
- efficiency of punishment as a deterrent to crime is largely based
- upon the swiftness and sureness of justice rather than the
- severity of the penalty inflicted. Becker is dead; but who can
- deny that whatever social effect may result from his execution
- would have been trebled had his death come within a reasonable
- interval after the commission of his crime? The case is
- significant, not because it is an exception, but because it is
- typical of the process of American law.
-
-
- Statement of Ownership, Management,
- Circulation, Etc., required by the Act of
- August 24, 1912
-
- of _THE LITTLE REVIEW_ published monthly at
- _Chicago, Ill._ for _April 1st, 1914_.
-
- Editor, _Margaret C. Anderson, 834 Fine Arts
- Building, Chicago_
-
- Managing Editor, _Same_
-
- Business Manager, _Same_
-
- Publisher, _Same_
-
- Owners: (If a corporation, give its name and
- the names and addresses of stockholders holding
- 1 per cent or more of total amount of stock. If
- not a corporation, give names and addresses of
- individual owners.)
-
- _Margaret C. Anderson
- 834 Fine Arts Building, Chicago_
-
- Known bondholders, mortgagees, and other
- security holders, holding 1 per cent or more of
- total amount of bonds, mortgages, or other
- securities: _None_
-
- _MARGARET C. ANDERSON_,
-
- Sworn to and subscribed before me this _10th_
- day of _April, 1915_.
-
- _MITCHELL DAWSON, Notary Public._
- (My commission expires _December 20, 1917_.)
-
-
-
-
- THE EGOIST
-
-
- An Individualist Review
-
- Subscribe to THE EGOIST and hear what you will get:
-
- Editorials containing the most notable creative and critical
- philosophic matter appearing in England today.
-
- Some of the newest and best experimental English and American
- poetry.
-
- A page of current French poetry.
-
- Reviews of only those books which are worth praise.
-
- News of modern music, of new painting, of French literary and
- artistic life.
-
- A series of impartial studies in modern German poetry (began June
- 1st).
-
- Translations and parodies.
-
- A serial novel by James Joyce, a young Irishman of great talent—a
- novel no one else would print—it was too good.
-
- PUBLISHED MONTHLY
-
- Price—Fifteen cents a number
- Yearly subscription, One Dollar Sixty Cents
-
- Buy some of the back numbers. They are literature, not
- journalism.
-
- OAKLEY HOUSE, BLOOMSBURY STREET, LONDON, W. C.
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-Advertisements were collected at the end of the text. Duplicate
-advertisements were removed.
-
-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 original spelling was mostly preserved. A few obvious typographical
-errors were silently corrected. All other changes are shown here
-(before/after):
-
- [p. 4]:
- ... scandal-monging newspapers, out of the malicious after-dinner
- gossip of ...
- ... scandal-mongering newspapers, out of the malicious
- after-dinner gossip of ...
-
- [p. 7]:
- ... For the sun shifts through the shade. ...
- ... For the sun sifts through the shade. ...
-
- [p. 13]:
- ... affects his own pocket. And the masses of labor who do feel
- themselve and ...
- ... affects his own pocket. And the masses of labor who do feel
- themselves and ...
-
- [p. 20]:
- ... Sappho, Sappho, long ago the dust of earth mingled with the
- dust of they dear limbs, ...
- ... Sappho, Sappho, long ago the dust of earth mingled with the
- dust of thy dear limbs, ...
-
- [p. 29]:
- ... Unquestioning our desserts; ...
- ... Unquestioning our deserts; ...
-
- [p. 32]:
- ... said Zarathustra, with a brazen voice, “thou are the
- murderer of God!... ...
- ... said Zarathustra, with a brazen voice, “thou art the
- murderer of God!... ...
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LITTLE REVIEW, AUGUST 1915
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Little Review, August 1915 (Vol. 2, No. 5), by Margaret C. Anderson</p>
-<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>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Little Review, August 1915 (Vol. 2, No. 5)</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Various</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Editor: Margaret C. Anderson</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: September 18, 2021 [eBook #66336]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>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.</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LITTLE REVIEW, AUGUST 1915 (VOL. 2, NO. 5) ***</div>
-
-<div class="frontmatter chapter">
-<h1 class="title">
-<span class="smallcaps">The Little Review</span>
-</h1>
-
-<p class="subt">
-<em>Literature</em> <em>Drama</em> <em>Music</em> <em>Art</em>
-</p>
-
-<p class="ed">
-<span class="line1">MARGARET C. ANDERSON</span><br />
-<span class="line2">EDITOR</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="issue">
-AUGUST, 1915
-</p>
-
- <div class="table">
-<table class="tocn" summary="">
-<tbody>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#THEAMERICANFAMILY">The American Family</a></td>
- <td class="col2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="col3"><em>Ben Hecht</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#PATTERNS">Patterns</a></td>
- <td class="col2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="col3"><em>Amy Lowell</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#THEPIANOANDIMAGISM">The Piano and Imagism</a></td>
- <td class="col2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="col3"><em>Margaret C. Anderson</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#WARIMPRESSIONS">War Impressions</a></td>
- <td class="col2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="col3"><em>Florence Kiper Frank</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#LAWSONCAPLANSCHMIDT">Lawson, Caplan, Schmidt</a></td>
- <td class="col2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="col3"><em>Alexander Berkman</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#FATHERANDDAUGHTER">Father and Daughter</a></td>
- <td class="col2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="col3"><em>Edgar Lee Masters</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#POEMSFROMTHEGREEK">Poems from the Greek</a></td>
- <td class="col2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="col3"><em>Richard Aldington</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#NUDITYANDTHEIDEAL">Nudity and the Ideal</a></td>
- <td class="col2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="col3"><em>Will Levington Comfort</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#ROOMING">“Rooming”</a></td>
- <td class="col2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="col3"><em>Helen Hoyt</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#THEUGLIESTMAN">The Ugliest Man</a></td>
- <td class="col2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="col3"><em>George Burman Foster</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr class="m">
- <td class="col1" colspan="3"><a href="#PHOTO017">A Photograph of Edgar Lee Masters by Eugene Hutchinson</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#EMASCULATINGIBSENYAY">Emasculating Ibsen;</a> <a href="#DEATH">Death</a></td>
- <td class="col2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="col3">“<em>The Scavenger</em>”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1 collect" rowspan="3"><a href="#CHILDRENSPOEMS">Children’s Poems</a></td>
- <td class="col2 bracket" rowspan="3">{</td>
- <td class="col3"><em>Alice Oliver Henderson</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col3"><em>Arvia Mackaye</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col3"><em>Robin Mackaye</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#BOOKDISCUSSION">Book Discussion</a></td>
- <td class="col2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="col3">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="col1"><a href="#THEREADERCRITIC">The Reader Critic</a></td>
- <td class="col2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="col3">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
-</tbody>
-</table>
- </div>
-<p class="monthly">
-Published Monthly
-</p>
-
- <div class="table">
- <div class="footer">
-<p class="pricel">
-15 cents a copy
-</p>
-
-<p class="pub">
-MARGARET C. ANDERSON, Publisher<br />
-Fine Arts Building<br />
-CHICAGO
-</p>
-
-<p class="pricer">
-$1.50 a year
-</p>
-
- </div>
- </div>
-<p class="postoffice">
-Entered as second-class matter at Postoffice, Chicago
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="frontmatter chapter">
-<a id="page-1" class="pagenum" title="1"></a>
-<p class="tit">
-<span class="smallcaps">The Little Review</span>
-</p>
-
- <div class="table">
- <div class="issue">
-<p class="vol">
-Vol. II
-</p>
-
-<p class="issue">
-AUGUST, 1915
-</p>
-
-<p class="number">
-No. 5
-</p>
-
- </div>
- </div>
-<p class="cop">
-Copyright, 1915, by Margaret C. Anderson
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h2 class="article1" id="THEAMERICANFAMILY">
-The American Family
-</h2>
-
-<p class="aut">
-<span class="smallcaps">Ben Hecht</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">T</span><span class="postfirstchar">he</span> dead fingers of spent passions, spent dreams, spent youth clutch
-at the throat of the rising generation and preserve the integrity of
-the American family. Not that there is a typical American family. There
-is only the typical struggle between the dead and the living, between the
-inert and hideous virtue of decayed souls and the rebellious desires of
-their doomed progeny.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The ambitious and educated American mother is a forceful creature, a
-strong, powerful woman. As an individual she is dead. Once she knew and
-had the desire for beauty. Dead fingers reached into her heart and killed it.
-The force of which she was doomed to become a part crushed her. The
-conventions of the world are stronger than its natural destinies. Those
-conventions—the conventions of the family—are not of the man’s making.
-Woman attends to her own subjugation. She preserves the spirit of the
-family, struggles and labors to keep it a unit, to keep its members alike.
-Moaning with the tyrannical lust for possession she enfolds her daughter
-in her arms. There are certain things in her daughter which must be
-killed. There is a dawning of love for “impossible” things in her daughter’s
-heart. There is an awakened mental curiosity, a perceptible inclination
-to break from the oppressiveness of the surrounding dead. In the
-night the daughter wonders and doubts. She would like “to get away”—to
-go forth free of certain fiercely applied restrictions and meet a different
-kind of folk, a different kind of thought. She would like to be—to feel the
-things she is capable of. It is all vague. Always revolt is vague and intangible
-for the daughters of women. Revolt is for souls still living, and
-the living are weaker than the dead. The living soul is a lone, individual
-force, its yearnings are ephemeral and undefined. The mother knows what
-they are. The dead always know what it is they have lost. And in this
-knowledge the mother is strong. But the living cannot say to itself what
-it wishes to gain, what it reaches to attain. Only in the stray geniuses of
-time has the individual soul fought desperately and triumphantly for its
-<a id="page-2" class="pagenum" title="2"></a>
-preservation. And there is no genius in the daughter. There is merely
-the divine and natural instinct for self-realization. Once the mother felt
-it and it was killed. Now the daughter has caught the dread disease—the
-contamination which starts a cold sweat under the corset stays of society;
-the thing which brings down upon it for its destruction the phalanxes of
-fierce fatuities—the moribund mercenaries employed by the home for its
-defense and preservation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Something happens to crystallize the revolt. It is a man outside the
-pale, a good man, a bad man. It is a book. It is a friend. Often the
-struggle is fought through little things too numerous to mention and
-the struggle itself too casual to classify. Sometimes it wages without a
-word; at other times there are blows. And at such times the enshrouding
-veils are torn aside. One can see the dead rise up, their pasty limbs dragging
-with the mould and slime of their couch. One can see them reaching
-their dead arms out, with the bloodless flesh hanging from them in shreds.
-One can watch them crawl on their bony feet and as they come close—these
-dead—the foul odor that issues from their sightless, twisted, rotted
-faces hangs like a grey smeared canopy above them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They come. They take their stand at the mother’s back. And the
-pitiful struggle is on.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is the mother who strikes the blows. Her first weapon (she uses
-it like a poison) is her love. She calls it that. “You are my only happiness,”
-she cries. “I have given you everything, a part of me, all you
-have needed. I have sacrificed everything for you. All my dreams have
-been for you. O, how can you permit anything to come between us?”
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The daughter listens. There is a selfish ring to it. But love must be
-forgiven for selfishness. In the schools and the churches the preliminaries
-of the struggle have been insidiously fought. Children owe duties to
-their parents and not to themselves. It was what the daughter learned
-at school. It is what she read between the lines of her books and heard
-from the lips of all around her. And now it is the murmur that rolls into
-her ears. It is the odor of the dead.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Day after day the mother strikes with this weapon. Her red, furious
-eyes dripping tears, she moans it out. Her voice is like the yelp of a
-frantic animal. Her voice is like the whine of a woebegone fice. Her
-voice is cold and hard and hollow like the echo in a tomb.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The beauty that has come to her daughter is a fragile thing. The lovliness
-she visioned is the most delicately mortal of life’s treasures. Fiercely
-the mother hurls herself against it, hurls the reproaches of her dead soul,
-the recriminations of her entombed spirit—the odors of the dead.... And
-her weapons are tangible things. They are sentences. They are the
-moral perversions with which the family unit always has fought for its
-preservation. They are tried things, prophetic precedents. And the beauty
-<a id="page-3" class="pagenum" title="3"></a>
-in the normal being is an indefinite force—a vagueness. It has no weapons
-with which to strike. Triumphant revolt is only for martyrs and artists.
-It is the losing force in normal existence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Gradually it becomes clouded in the daughter’s soul. She feels unclean.
-She imagines it is the beauty which is unclean. She does not know
-that it is the uncleanliness of the dead—the uncleanliness of her mother
-revealed to her in her heart by the divine light that is dying within herself.
-An agony comes into her. The struggle narrows to pain. Cold
-things reach at her heart. It leaps and flutters. She stands, her face
-white and a look of uncanny suffering about her eyes. The dead fingers
-grip fast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The mother, moaning, shuddering, her eyes gleaming, enfolds her
-daughter in her arms. “I dare you to take her from me,” she cries out
-to the man, to the friend, to the book, to the world of beauty, whatever
-it is toward which her daughter inclined for the divine instant of awakened
-soul. “I dare you. I dare you.”
-</p>
-
-<p>
-“Nothing can ever take me from you,” the daughter weeps. Death.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Tears, a form of decomposition now, roll from her cheeks. The
-struggle is over. The unit has been preserved and now one may look at
-the unit and see what it is. The rotted figures of the dead have dragged
-their shredded flesh back to the graves.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There are different kinds of families. Only in the struggle between
-the dead and the living do they become the same even when the contestants
-differ. I will describe only one type. Perhaps it is <em>the</em> American family;
-perhaps it is not.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is the family which considers culture a matter of polished fingernails
-and emotional suppression and dinner table aphorisms, puns and the
-classics in half morocco. It has bound volumes of <em>The Philistine</em> or some
-other mawkish philosophical twaddle on view in the bookcase. It—the
-spirit of this family—knows the titles of books memorized from literary
-reviews in current magazines and will discourse bitingly on the malicious
-trend of these radical volumes from the sweeping knowledge she has of
-their titles. In the matter of music the spirit of this family “plays safe.”
-It will characterize as “tinkly” or “syrupy” anything melodious which
-secretly pleases it. The rather humorous falseness of its culture is inexhaustible.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Introspection is an indecent as well as impossible thing to the spirit
-of this family. To look into her soul and see the diseased and dead things
-that fill it is naturally impossible and naturally indecent. Dostoevsky calls
-man an animal who can get used to anything. And a man’s adjustment to
-hideous things is not so final as a woman’s.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For the spirit of this family to reveal an honest reaction when it is
-contrary to the approved artificial demands of a situation is as heinous
-<a id="page-4" class="pagenum" title="4"></a>
-an exhibition of bad taste as to uncover a thigh. But luckily, this concealing
-of honest feeling is not often required. The spirit of this family
-is incapable in the main of honest feeling. That is a part of the beauty
-killed long ago in her, a part of the beauty she killed in the daughter, a
-part of the beauty the daughter will strangle in her own children. And
-one of the compensations for dead souls is that they naturally feel dishonest
-feeling and do not have to suffer with a realization of hypocrisy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This family thinks of virtue in terms of legs. This family regards art
-and truth with a modulated leer. It is crudely cynical of everything outside
-its range. It sneers and pooh-hoos, it ostracizes and condemns. It is
-vulgarly contemptuous of the factors in life superior to it. The spirit of
-this family would have shrieked in outrage at the presence of Verlaine in
-its home—unless he could have reflected social distinction on it. It would
-have closed the doors to Ibsen,—except for the social distinction,—to every
-triumphant soul that had escaped the dead fingers and realized itself. And
-by some inexplicable trick of self-adjustment the spirit of this family looks
-upon thought as an undesirable affectation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Social success means to this family a speaking acquaintance with any
-wealthier unit which originally considered itself “above” this family. Moral
-success means to this family an exemption from the prosecution of the
-forces it has reared for its own protection—keeping out of jail, out of
-scandal-<a id="corr-1"></a>mongering newspapers, out of the malicious after-dinner gossip of
-its friends.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of an evening you will find this family in the living room. The husband
-and father reads a newspaper. He has worked in his office all day
-and is tired. Life long ago ceased to mean anything to him. He is an
-animal husk in fine linen. He has his little prejudices and his little conventions.
-Indeed, he is a part of the system of the unit but not much interested
-in it. He never was possessed of the capacity for beauty which his
-women folk once had and which they found it necessary to kill in each
-other. Man is a more natural part of the world’s ugliness. He is coarser
-stuff in general. For him it is not necessary to wage any struggle. He
-accepted matrimony because of a concentrated physical curiosity in one
-woman, and because it was the thing to do at his age. Love suffered
-epileptic dissolution in the nuptial couch. Honor toward his woman expired
-when the mysteries of her flesh paled. Obedience is his natural
-state—that is, long ago he established a line of least resistance and inoculated
-his women folk with the fable that adherence to <em>this</em> line was the
-obedience and respect he owed them. If a latent instinct awakens suddenly
-in him he indulges himself. He finds it rather difficult to be immoral,
-but as he hesitates a latent strength overcomes his fear and thus he is
-able to be immoral and unfaithful to his own convenient restrictions in a
-natural manner and with no great loss of sleep.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<a id="page-5" class="pagenum" title="5"></a>
-One man in ten thousand inherits the beauty of the woman who bore
-him and he becomes an artist. It is not necessary for him to revolt. His
-fathers have taken care of that. There is an assured place in the world for
-him—not in the living room here in front of the fireplace but elsewhere,
-in places of which poets sing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The family man keeps posted. He knows what is going on in the
-world but does not understand it. He is not capable of understanding. But
-sometimes understanding and reason coincide with his prejudices and he
-is then as liable to hold minority views as not. He is dry, sometimes
-clever. But always he jogs, jogs, jogs along. He can even sleep night
-after night in the same bed with his wife without feeling annoyance. His
-bluntedness is complete. Dostoevsky is right.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His wife and the mother of his children is a part of the furniture of
-existence for him. In his own way he is quite dead, but it was not necessary
-to kill him. If his son revolts the instinct of his mother is communicated
-to him and he fights. He borrows the mother’s weapons and he
-blasphemes in a half-hearted way about the duty to parents. But the beauty
-which the mother found easy to kill in the daughter usually discovers a
-hardier citadel in the son and usually he carries it safely into the world.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The room—this living room—is dimly and “artistically” lighted. The
-fire in the grate glows. The daughter sits in a corner speaking to a friend.
-At the other side sits the father—reading blankly. The wife enters. She
-surveys the scene from the doorway with a feeling of warm satisfaction.
-She comes in and sits down. They talk about nothing, they think about
-nothing. The daughter and the young man, beneath the smooth surface
-of the artificial moments, are playing at the eternal indecency. The mother
-leads the conversation. Neighbors are discussed. Friends are derided.
-Social inferiors are laughed to scorn. Social superiors are spoken of with
-adulation and veneration. At last the father climbs to his bed like an ox.
-He is tired, poor fellow. The mother follows him into the bedroom. A
-victor, utterly triumphant, she hugs her dead soul to herself and smiles.
-The daughter retires after being desperately kissed by the physically curious
-young man, and she lies awake a while wishing in moments of provoked
-sex that she too was married and meditating in calmer spaces upon
-the advantages of the family unit, the fireplace, the party calls. O, this
-daughter! She is the one who had the vision of beauty. She is the one
-whose soul sang for a day with the capacity for all the world’s lovliness.
-Honesty, purity, fineness burned in her with their divine radiance. The
-lights are turned out. Death reigns supreme.
-</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="PATTERNS">
-<a id="page-6" class="pagenum" title="6"></a>
-Patterns
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="aut">
-<span class="smallcaps">Amy Lowell</span>
-</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">I walk down the garden paths,</p>
- <p class="verse">And all the daffodils</p>
- <p class="verse">Are blowing, and the bright blue squills.</p>
- <p class="verse">I walk down the patterned garden paths</p>
- <p class="verse">In my stiff, brocaded gown.</p>
- <p class="verse">With my powdered hair and jewelled fan,</p>
- <p class="verse">I too am a rare</p>
- <p class="verse">Pattern. As I wander down</p>
- <p class="verse">The garden paths.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">My dress is richly figured,</p>
- <p class="verse">And the train</p>
- <p class="verse">Makes a pink and silver stain</p>
- <p class="verse">On the gravel, and the thrift</p>
- <p class="verse">Of the borders.</p>
- <p class="verse">Just a plate of current fashion,</p>
- <p class="verse">Tripping by in high-heeled, ribboned shoes.</p>
- <p class="verse">Not a softness anywhere about me,</p>
- <p class="verse">Only whale-bone and brocade.</p>
- <p class="verse">And I sink on a seat in the shade</p>
- <p class="verse">Of a lime tree. For my passion</p>
- <p class="verse">Wars against the stiff brocade.</p>
- <p class="verse">The daffodils and squills</p>
- <p class="verse">Flutter in the breeze</p>
- <p class="verse">As they please.</p>
- <p class="verse">And I weep;</p>
- <p class="verse">For the lime tree is in blossom</p>
- <p class="verse">And one small flower has dropped upon my bosom.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">And the splashing of waterdrops</p>
- <p class="verse">In the marble fountain</p>
- <p class="verse">Comes down the garden paths.</p>
- <p class="verse">The dripping never stops.</p>
- <p class="verse">Underneath my stiffened gown</p>
- <p class="verse">Is the softness of a woman bathing in a marble basin,</p>
-<a id="page-7" class="pagenum" title="7"></a>
- <p class="verse">A basin in the midst of hedges grown</p>
- <p class="verse">So thick, she cannot see her lover hiding,</p>
- <p class="verse">But she guesses he is near,</p>
- <p class="verse">And the sliding of the water</p>
- <p class="verse">Seems the stroking of a dear</p>
- <p class="verse">Hand upon her.</p>
- <p class="verse">What is Summer in a fine brocaded gown!</p>
- <p class="verse">I should like to see it lying in a heap upon the ground.</p>
- <p class="verse">All the pink and silver crumpled up on the ground.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">I would be the pink and silver as I ran along the paths,</p>
- <p class="verse">And he would stumble after,</p>
- <p class="verse">Bewildered by my laughter.</p>
- <p class="verse">I should see the sun flashing from his sword hilt and the buckles on his shoes.</p>
- <p class="verse">I would choose</p>
- <p class="verse">To lead him in a maze along the patterned paths,</p>
- <p class="verse">A bright and laughing maze for my heavy-booted lover,</p>
- <p class="verse">Till he caught me in the shade,</p>
- <p class="verse">And the buttons of his waistcoat bruised my body as he clasped me,</p>
- <p class="verse">Aching, melting, unafraid.</p>
- <p class="verse">With the shadows of the leaves and the sundrops,</p>
- <p class="verse">And the plopping of the waterdrops,</p>
- <p class="verse">All about us in the open afternoon—</p>
- <p class="verse">I am very like to swoon</p>
- <p class="verse">With the weight of this brocade,</p>
- <p class="verse">For the sun <a id="corr-3"></a>sifts through the shade.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Underneath the fallen blossom</p>
- <p class="verse">In my bosom,</p>
- <p class="verse">Is a letter I have hid.</p>
- <p class="verse">It was brought to me this morning by a rider from the Duke.</p>
- <p class="verse">“Madam, we regret to inform you that Lord Hartwell</p>
- <p class="verse">Died in action Thursday sen’night.”</p>
- <p class="verse">As I read it in the white, morning sunlight,</p>
- <p class="verse">The letters squirmed like snakes.</p>
- <p class="verse">“Any answer, Madam,” said my footman.</p>
- <p class="verse">“No,” I told him.</p>
- <p class="verse">“See that the messenger takes some refreshment.</p>
- <p class="verse">No, no answer.”</p>
- <p class="verse">And I walked into the garden,</p>
- <p class="verse">Up and down the patterned paths,</p>
-<a id="page-8" class="pagenum" title="8"></a>
- <p class="verse">In my stiff, correct brocade.</p>
- <p class="verse">The blue and yellow flowers stood up proudly in the sun,</p>
- <p class="verse">Each one.</p>
- <p class="verse">I stood upright too,</p>
- <p class="verse">Held rigid to the pattern</p>
- <p class="verse">By the stiffness of my gown.</p>
- <p class="verse">Up and down I walked,</p>
- <p class="verse">Up and down.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">In a month he would have been my husband.</p>
- <p class="verse">In a month, here, underneath this lime,</p>
- <p class="verse">We would have broke the pattern;</p>
- <p class="verse">He for me, and I for him,</p>
- <p class="verse">He as Colonel, I as Lady,</p>
- <p class="verse">On this shady seat.</p>
- <p class="verse">He had a whim</p>
- <p class="verse">That sunlight carried blessing.</p>
- <p class="verse">And I answered, “It shall be as you have said.”</p>
- <p class="verse">Now he is dead.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">In Summer and in Winter I shall walk</p>
- <p class="verse">Up and down</p>
- <p class="verse">The patterned garden paths</p>
- <p class="verse">In my stiff, brocaded gown.</p>
- <p class="verse">The squills and daffodils</p>
- <p class="verse">Will give place to pillared roses, and to asters, and to snow.</p>
- <p class="verse">I shall go</p>
- <p class="verse">Up and down,</p>
- <p class="verse">In my gown.</p>
- <p class="verse">Gorgeously arrayed,</p>
- <p class="verse">Boned and stayed.</p>
- <p class="verse">And the softness of my body will be guarded from embrace</p>
- <p class="verse">By each button, hook, and lace.</p>
- <p class="verse">For the man who should loose me is dead,</p>
- <p class="verse">Fighting with the Duke in Flanders,</p>
- <p class="verse">In a pattern called a war.</p>
- <p class="verse">Christ! What are patterns for?</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="THEPIANOANDIMAGISM">
-<a id="page-9" class="pagenum" title="9"></a>
-The Piano and Imagism
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="aut">
-<span class="smallcaps">Margaret C. Anderson</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">O</span><span class="postfirstchar">nce</span> I said something vague about the piano music of the future.
-There is something very definite to be said about it. I think the next
-music written for the piano will have in it a high concentration of clear
-color-sound and that the new pianist will focus his technique to just one
-end: to the clearest expression of this color-sound identity. Sea mist, for
-instance, has certain colors and certain smells; if you are keen-sensed it
-has certain sounds. You may say it has been the aim of all composers and
-musicians to put nature into music. Well, it has been the aim of most
-poets to put nature into poetry, but the Imagists <em>have done it</em>: their medium
-is not only a more direct one: the point is that they seem to have dispensed
-with a medium. Their words don’t merely convey color to you; they <em>are</em> the
-color. The new musician can do this—and I believe he can do it on the piano
-better than on any other instrument. His music will be all these things:<a class="fnote" href="#footnote-1" id="fnote-1">[1]</a>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sea orchards, and lilac on the water, and color dragged up from the
-sand; drenched grasses, and early roses, and wind-harps in the cedar trees;
-flame-flowers, and the sliding rain; frail sea-birds, and blue still rocks, and
-bright winds treading the sunlight; silver hail stones, and the scattering of
-gold crocus petals; blackbirds in the grass, and fountains in the rain; lily
-shadows, and green cold waves, and the rose-fingered moon; pine cones,
-and yellow grasses, and a restless green rout of stars; cloud whirls, and
-the pace of winds; trees on the hill, and the far ecstasy of burning noons;
-lotus pools, and the gold petal of the moon; night-born poppies, and the
-silence of beauty, and the perfume of invisible roses; white winds and cold
-sea ripples; blossom spray, and narcissus petals on the black earth; little
-silver birds, and blue and gold-veined hyacinths; river pools of sky, and
-grains of sand as clear as wine....
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It will be made of dream-colored wings, and whispers among the
-flowering rushes; of moonlit tree-tops, and the gaiety of flowers; brown fading
-hills, and the moving mist; sea rose, and the light upon the poplars;
-shaken dew, and the haunts of the sun, and white sea-gulls above the waves;
-bright butterflies in the corn, and a dust of emerald and gold; broken
-leaves, and the rose and white flag-stones; sea iris with petals like shells,
-and the scent of lilacs heavy with stillness; scarlet nasturtiums, and dry
-reeds that shiver in the grasses; slim colorless poppies, and the sweet salt
-camphor flowers; gold and blue and mauve, and a white rose of flame;
-pointed pines, and orange-colored rose leaves; sunshine slipping through
-<a id="page-10" class="pagenum" title="10"></a>
-young green, and the flaring moon through the oak leaves; wet dawns, and
-a blue flower of the evening; butterflies over green meadows, and deep blue
-seas of air, and hyacinths hidden in a far valley....
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It will be of harsh rose and iris-flowers painted blue; white waters, and
-the winds of the upper air; green wine held up in the sun, and rigid myrrh-buds
-scented and stinging; the lisp of reeds, and the loose ripples of meadow
-grasses; mists on the mountains, and clear frost on the grass blade; frail-headed
-poppies, and sea-grass tangled with shore grass; the humming
-brightness of the air, and the sky darting through like blue rain; strewn
-petals on restless water, and pale green glacier-rivers; somber pools, and
-sun-drenched slopes; autumn’s gold and spring’s green; red pine-trunks,
-and bird cries in hollow trees; cool spaces filled with shadow, and white
-hammocks in the sun; green glimmer of apples in an orchard, and hawthorn
-odorous with blossom; lamps in a wash of rain, and the desperate sun that
-struggles through sea mist; lavender water, and faded stars; many-foamed
-ways, and the blue and buoyant air; grey-green fastnesses of the great
-deeps; a cream moon on bare black trees; wet leaves, and the dust that
-drifts over the court-yard; moon-paint on a colorless house....
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It will be pagan temples and old blue Chinese gardens; old pagodas
-glittering across green trees, and the ivory of silence; vast dark trees that
-flow like blue veils of tears into the water; little almond trees that the frost
-has hurt, and bitter purple willows; fruit dropping through the thick air,
-and wine in heavy craters painted black and red; purple and gold and sable,
-and a gauze of misted silver; blue death-mountains, and yellow pulse-beats in
-the darkness; naked lightnings, and boats in the gloom; strange fish, and
-golden sorceries; red-purple grapes, and Assyrian wine; fruits from Arcadia,
-and incense to Poseidon; swallow-blue halls, and a chamber under
-Lycia’s coast; stars swimming like goldfish, and the sword of the moonlight;
-torn lanterns that flutter, and an endless procession of lamps; sleepy
-temples, and strange skies, and pilgrims of autumn; tired shepherds with
-lanterns, and the fire of the great moon; the lowest pine branch drawn
-across the disk of the sun; Phoenecian stuffs and silks that are outspread;
-the gods garlanded in wisteria; white grave goddesses, and loves in
-Phrygia; wounds of light, and terrible rituals, and temples soothed by the
-sun to ruin; the valleys of Ætna, and the Doric singing....
-</p>
-
-<p>
-... The moon dragging the flood tide, and an old sorrow that has
-put out the sun; whirling laughter, and the thunder of horses plunging;
-old tumults, and the gloom of dreams; strong loneliness, and the hollow
-where pain was; the rich laughter of the forest, and the bitter sea; the
-earth that receives the slanting rain; lost treasure, and the violent gloom of
-night; all proud things, and the light of thy beauty.... Souls of blood, and
-hearts aching with wonder; the kindness of people—country folk and sailors
-and fishermen; all the roots of the earth, and a perpetual sea....
-</p>
-
-<hr class="footnote" />
-
-<p class="footnote">
-<a class="footnote" href="#fnote-1" id="footnote-1">[1]</a> <em>I have omitted quotation marks for the sake of appearance, but every phrase
-in the next five paragraphs is taken from the Imagists.</em>
-</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="WARIMPRESSIONS">
-<a id="page-11" class="pagenum" title="11"></a>
-War Impressions
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="aut">
-<span class="smallcaps">Florence Kiper Frank</span>
-</p>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="THEMOVINGPICTURESHOW">
-The Moving-Picture Show
-</h3>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">W</span><span class="postfirstchar">e</span> sat at a moving-picture show. Over a little bridge streamed the
-Belgian refugees, women, children, boys, dogs, horses, carts, household
-goods—an incongruous procession. The faces were stolid, the feet
-plodded on—plodded on!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-“See!” said my friend, “sometimes a woman turns to look at a bursting
-shell.”
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I murmured, “How interesting!”
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And my soul shuddered. It shuddered at sophistication.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The man who had taken the pictures told us about them. He had been
-not more than three weeks ago in Belgium....
-</p>
-
-<p>
-“Huzza!” sang my ancestor of five thousand years back. He led a band
-of marauders into an enemy’s village. They ripped things up and tore
-about the place singing and looting. There was nothing much left to that
-village by the time they got through with it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the people many miles away did not behold his exploits. Alas,
-there were no moving-picture shows in those days!
-</p>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="THEMODERNWOMANWITHASENSEOFHUMOR">
-The Modern Woman With a Sense of Humor
-</h3>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-There was a Modern Woman with a sense of humor.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-“I shall,” she said, “teach to women the absurdity of bearing children
-to be killed by cannon.”
-</p>
-
-<p>
-“The absurdity!” exclaimed the men of the State, aghast at levity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-“Yes,” answered she, “it isn’t worth the trouble!” And she lifted her
-eyebrows and smiled, but in her eyes there was Knowledge.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And the men of the State were more terrified by the phenomenon of
-The Modern Woman with a Sense of Humor than by any phenomenon that
-had before confronted them.
-</p>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="THEINCREDIBLEADVENTUREOFSPRING">
-The Incredible Adventure of Spring
-</h3>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-The year was again a-foot on the incredible adventure of Spring. The
-earth broke into blossoming, and the nights were moon-drenched and astir
-<a id="page-12" class="pagenum" title="12"></a>
-with the whisperings of wet winds. It was a really thrilling time of the
-year to be alive—and therefore, besides all these breathless and miraculous
-adventures of the grass and flowers, many innocent and unsuspecting souls
-had started out on the incredible adventure of being born.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the war-writers kept on writing that for man to reach true exaltation
-and vibrancy of spirit, he must blow out the brains of as many
-people as possible.
-</p>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="MANANDHISMACHINES">
-Man and His Machines
-</h3>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-He has builded him machines—man the Maker—using great cunning
-of hand and of brain. And has not Bergson told us that thus has he evolved
-that tool, the Intellect—through the dim ages of his making!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He has builded him states, politics, all the intricate architecture of institutions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now who would think that what he himself has builded—builded
-through the thousands of years of endeavor—should thus turn about, ungrateful,
-to destroy and to rend him?
-</p>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="THEANNUALBANQUET">
-The Annual Banquet
-</h3>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-“We shall not, this year,” said my rich friend—a Lady—“while the
-people of Europe are starving and fighting—we shall not this year have
-our large annual banquet.”
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But had she walked not a mile from her home, she would have seen
-in her own city men starving, and fighting because of the terrible dread of
-starving. And not this year alone had they been doing it, but for many
-years of large banquets.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-However, if all Ladies and Gentlemen felt acutely all these matters,
-what would become of our institution of Large Banquets—or, indeed, of
-the Divine Privileges of Monarchs!
-</p>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="WHATAVENEERISCIVILIZATION">
-What a Veneer Is Civilization
-</h3>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-“War,” wrote the journalists, “reveals what a veneer is civilization.
-Man’s real emotions, instinctive, primitive, brutal, leap to ascendency.”
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But I did not believe the journalists, because I knew better men’s emotions.
-Indeed, what tore asunder my heart was the depth and beauty of the
-emotions of men and women. There was nothing—at least very little—the
-matter with their emotions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But with their thinking apparatus—ah, that is a different story!
-</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="LAWSONCAPLANSCHMIDT">
-<a id="page-13" class="pagenum" title="13"></a>
-Lawson, Caplan, Schmidt
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="aut">
-<span class="smallcaps">Alexander Berkman</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">I</span> don’t know of anything more tragic and pitiful than the superstition
-that “Justice will triumph.” What this metaphysical conception of
-“justice” really signifies, how it is to be expressed in applicable terms, is
-impossible to determine in view of the multiplicity of individual antagonisms
-and class interests.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But somehow we all believe in “justice”; yet the criterion of each is the
-degree of the attainment of his own purpose.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From time immemorial we humans have been clamoring for “justice,”
-divine and earthly. Hence our slavery. And Kaiser and Czar both claim
-justice on their side, and millions are slaughtering each other to attain the
-particular justice of their respective masters.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In this blessed land of ours, justice is ranked high, and labor is constantly
-basing its appeals and demands on justice. But perhaps—let us
-hope—the John Lawson case has somewhat jolted the popular faith in the
-metaphysical conception, at least so far as it manifests itself in the Colorado
-courts. It is safe to say that there is no intelligent man in that state who
-does not know that the stage for Lawson’s conviction had been set long
-before his trial. He was an intelligent, active agitator. He sought to crystallize
-the rebellious dissatisfaction of the miners into effective action:—sufficient
-reason for the Rockefeller-controlled state to eliminate, most emphatically,
-such an undesirable element.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In Colorado, as well as throughout the rest of the country, most people
-know that a great “injustice was done Lawson.” What are the people
-of Colorado doing about it? Not a thing. The cheerful idiot, otherwise
-known as the good citizen, cares for justice only in the degree in which it
-affects his own pocket. And the masses of labor who do feel <a id="corr-8"></a>themselves and
-their cause injured by the railroading of Lawson to prison—they call the
-verdict a “miscarriage of justice”—applaud Professor Brewster who wired
-Lawson: “Unbelievable. Counsel friends keep cool. Justice will be done.”
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And the people of Colorado remain inactive, in the belief that the
-Supreme Court, the Governor, or maybe the Holy Ghost will see to it that
-justice is done.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet the Lawson lesson has not been entirely lost. It is possible that it
-has shed a light that will reflect itself on coming fights between labor and
-capital. It is more than probable that the lesson has already borne fruit in
-the more aggressive attitude of labor in some parts of the country. It has
-helped ever-growing numbers to realize that to expect “justice” in the struggle
-between labor and capital means to doom the toilers to defeat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<a id="page-14" class="pagenum" title="14"></a>
-It will be highly interesting to watch the effect of the Lawson outrage
-upon the approaching trial of David Caplan and Mathew Schmidt, the aftermath
-of the McNamara case, in Los Angeles, California. The history of
-this case is illuminating of our legal and social “justice”:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The labor unions in California have for the last nine years fought a
-bitter fight against the Merchants and Manufacturers’ Association, the
-Western branch of the Steel Trust. Every means, legal and illegal, has
-been used by the employers to exterminate the unions and paralyze the
-workers. And they have practically succeeded in breaking every labor
-organization in the Steel Industry from New York to San Francisco.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Where twenty years ago we had a powerful union—for instance, in
-Pennsylvania: the Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workers—today
-nothing but a pitiful remnant is left. Only <em>one</em> union in the steel
-industry has survived: the Structural Iron Workers. They survived because
-they contested every inch of ground against the Merchants and
-Manufacturers’ Association. The result of that fight was a long war between
-capital and labor on the Coast. Every form of persecution and violence
-was used against labor, and labor was forced to defend itself. In
-consequence the Structural Iron Workers increased their wages from $2.40
-a day to $4.40, and reduced their hours from ten to eight. Organized capital
-resorted to every trick to strangle the workers, and in Los Angeles a
-special law was passed prohibiting picketing. But the union defied the
-law, and five hundred men went to prison during the general strike of the
-metal trades in Southern California in 1910. During this fight the Los
-Angeles <em>Times</em>, the most relentless enemy of labor and of humanity, was
-destroyed. The brothers McNamara were arrested, as a result, and then
-the masters made the solemn promise that the war would be stopped and
-that all further prosecutions of labor men would cease if the McNamaras
-would plead guilty. It was only on the strength of this promise that the
-McNamaras were finally induced to plead guilty.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hardly ten days passed, when the Merchants and Manufacturers’ Association
-broke every promise they made. They began the prosecution of
-labor men in Los Angeles and Indianapolis, and did everything in their
-power to railroad to prison the most effective members of the unions. And
-now, four and a half years later, they have arrested David Caplan in
-Seattle and Mathew Schmidt in New York, and brought them across the
-country to Los Angeles to put them on trial for complicity with the McNamaras.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This perfidious activity of organized capital has made labor in California
-realize that the courts are controlled by the employers, and that labor cannot
-expect justice. They now understand what a fatal mistake was made in
-the case of John Lawson. The workers depended on the innocence of Lawson
-for his acquittal. They failed to act, expecting justice to be done.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<a id="page-15" class="pagenum" title="15"></a>
-At least some of the labor elements on the Coast are awakening to the
-situation. They feel that they cannot expect justice from the courts of the
-exploiters. They have now determined that more aggressive and militant
-action is necessary, if labor is not to be submerged by the oppression of
-capital. They are beginning to see that throughout the country the masters
-are picking out the most effective and intelligent fighters from the ranks
-of the workers and railroading them to prison, to terrorize labor and stifle
-the spirit of liberty and independence. The Lawson case, the case of Ford
-and Suhr, of Rangel and Cline, of Joe Hill, and the many other cases now
-pending in the courts of New York and elsewhere, all show what capital
-intends to do to labor.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Is labor really going to keep quiet and submit to this persecution and
-slavery? The unions on the Coast have determined that they will not.
-They are calling upon every one in sympathy with labor to join the great
-movement to stop the aggression of capital. They have decided on strong
-militant tactics to defend the workingman, his family and his union against
-the tyranny of the bosses.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They have issued the call to every central body, affiliated unions and
-radical organizations, to join hands at this most critical moment. This is
-not a question of theory or of philosophic ism. It is the great war of labor
-against capital, a struggle of life and death. In this struggle all local and
-theoretic differences may be safely forgotten, and all friends of labor make
-common cause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I have been sent as a special delegate by some of the California unions
-to help organize the solidaric and militant forces of labor throughout the
-country. It is evident how significant this case is for the workers in general.
-It is imperative that they combine in solidaric unity in this vital matter, to
-register in mighty accents the sentiments and determination of the oppressed.
-Thus were Haywood, Moyer, and Pettibone torn from the clutches
-of the jungle beast. Thus were returned to liberty Ettor and Giovannitti,
-Carlo Tresca, and other fighters for the better day. But whenever the
-workers failed to sound the tocsin of solidarity and make their gesture of
-protest, their prisoners of war have invariably remained the hostages of
-the enemy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Organizations and individuals who are willing to give us their moral
-and financial assistance, should immediately send resolutions and funds to
-Tom Barker, Secretary Building Trades Council of Los Angeles, and
-Treasurer of the Caplan-Schmidt Defense Fund. Address, 201 Labor Temple,
-Los Angeles, California. My own address for the present is 917 Fine
-Arts Building.
-</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="FATHERANDDAUGHTER">
-<a id="page-16" class="pagenum" title="16"></a>
-Father and Daughter
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="aut">
-<span class="smallcaps">Edgar Lee Masters</span>
-</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">The church is a hulk of shadow,</p>
- <p class="verse1">And dark is the church’s spire.</p>
- <p class="verse">But the cross is as black as iron</p>
- <p class="verse1">Against the sunset’s fire.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">The shops and sheds and hovels</p>
- <p class="verse1">Are massed with the church’s shade;</p>
- <p class="verse">And a girl with a face like a lily</p>
- <p class="verse1">Is plying her wretched trade.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">And a drunken man reels homeward</p>
- <p class="verse1">With a sullen leer in his eye.</p>
- <p class="verse">And the street is filled with children,</p>
- <p class="verse1">That play and wrestle and cry.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">A broken hurdy-gurdy</p>
- <p class="verse1">Rattles a hollow tune,</p>
- <p class="verse">And a light as yellow as fever</p>
- <p class="verse1">Shines from the vile saloon.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Two men are talking together,</p>
- <p class="verse1">They pass where the children are;</p>
- <p class="verse">And one wears a robe of sable,</p>
- <p class="verse1">The other a silver star.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">And one of them goes to vespers</p>
- <p class="verse1">And one of them makes a search,</p>
- <p class="verse">And one of them enters the groggery,</p>
- <p class="verse1">And one of them enters the church.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">And a shot is fired by the drunkard,</p>
- <p class="verse1">And the girl falls dead in the street;</p>
- <p class="verse">And God is peaceful in heaven,</p>
- <p class="verse1">And all in the world is sweet.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="centerpic" id="PHOTO017">
-<a id="page-17" class="pagenum" title="17"></a><img src="images/i017.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="u cap">
-<span class="smallcaps">Edgar Lee Masters</span><br />
-<em>Copyright, 1915, by Eugene Hutchinson.</em>
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="POEMSFROMTHEGREEK">
-<a id="page-18" class="pagenum" title="18"></a>
-Poems
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="note">
-(<em>from the Greek of Myrrhine of Mitulene, and Konallis; translated by
-Richard Aldington</em>)
-</p>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="I">
-I
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Hierocleia, bring hither my silver vine-leaf-carved armlet and the mirror graven with two Maenads,</p>
- <p class="verse">For my heart is burned to dust with longing for Konallis;</p>
- <p class="verse">And this is the silver armlet which pressed into her side when I held her,</p>
- <p class="verse">And before this mirror she bound up her golden-hyacinth-curled hair, sitting in the noon sunlight.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="II">
-II
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">I, Konallis, am but a goat-girl dwelling on the violet hills of Korinthos,</p>
- <p class="verse">But going down to the city a marvellous thing befell me;</p>
- <p class="verse">For the beautiful-silver-fingered hetaira, Myrrhine, held me nightlong in her couch,</p>
- <p class="verse">Teaching me to stretch wide my arms to receive her strange burning caresses.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="III">
-III
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Fair young men have brought me presents of silver caskets and white mirrors,</p>
- <p class="verse">Gold for my hair and long lemon-colored chitons and dew-soft perfumes of sweet herbs.</p>
- <p class="verse">Their bodies are whiter than Leucadian foam and delicate are their flute-girls,</p>
- <p class="verse">But the wild sleepless nightingales cry in the darkness even as I for Konallis.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="IV">
-<a id="page-19" class="pagenum" title="19"></a>
-IV
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">We, Konallis and Myrrhine, dedicate to thee, Proserpine, two white torches of wax,</p>
- <p class="verse">For thou didst watch over our purple-embroidered couch all night;</p>
- <p class="verse">Was it thou who gavest us the sweetness of sharp caresses?</p>
- <p class="verse">For at midday when we awoke we laughed to see black poppies blooming beneath our eyes.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="V">
-V
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">The doves sleep beside the slow-murmuring cool fountain, red-five-petalled roses of Paestum strew the chequered marble;</p>
- <p class="verse">A flute-girl whispers the dear white ode of Sappho, and Hierocleia by the pool</p>
- <p class="verse">Smiles to see the smooth blue-sky-reflecting water mirror her shining body;</p>
- <p class="verse">But my eyelids are shunned by sleep that is whiter than beautiful morning, for Konallis is not here.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="VI">
-VI
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">O reeds, move softly and make keen bewildering music,</p>
- <p class="verse">For I fear lest Arkadian Pan should seize Myrrhine as she comes from the city;</p>
- <p class="verse">O Artemis, shed thy light across the peaks to hasten her coming,</p>
- <p class="verse">But do thou, Eos, hold back thy white radiance till love be content.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="VII">
-<a id="page-20" class="pagenum" title="20"></a>
-VII
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Last night Zeus sent swift rain upon the blue-grey rocks,</p>
- <p class="verse">But Konallis held me close to her pear-pointed breasts.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="VIII">
-VIII
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Sappho, Sappho, long ago the dust of earth mingled with the dust of <a id="corr-9"></a>thy dear limbs,</p>
- <p class="verse">And only little clay figures, painted with Tyrian red, with crocus, and with Lydian gold,</p>
- <p class="verse">Remain to show thy beauty; but thy wild lovely songs shall last for ever.</p>
- <p class="verse">Soon we too shall join Anaktoria and Kudno and kiss thy pale shadowy fingers.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="IX">
-IX
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">When Myrrhine departed I, weeping passionately, kissed her golden-wrought knees, saying:</p>
- <p class="verse">“O, Myrrhine, by what god shall I keep the memory of thy caresses?”</p>
- <p class="verse">But she, bending down like golden, smiling Aphrodite, whispered to me;</p>
- <p class="verse">And lying here in the sunlight among the reeds I remember her words.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="X">
-<a id="page-21" class="pagenum" title="21"></a>
-X
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Hierocleia, do thou weave white-violet-crowns and spread mountain-haunting lilies upon my couch,</p>
- <p class="verse">For Konallis comes! and shut the door against the young men for this is a sharper love.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="XI">
-XI
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">This is the feast of Iacchus; open wide the gates, O Hierocleia;</p>
- <p class="verse">Fill the kraters and kuathoi with sweet unmixed wine and snow; bring thyrsus-wands,</p>
- <p class="verse">And crowns of pale ivy and violets; let the flute-players begin the phallic hymn</p>
- <p class="verse">While the ten girl-slaves, drunken with the god, dance to the young men.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="XII">
-XII
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Hedulia now lies with Myrrhine who aforetime was my lover,</p>
- <p class="verse">But seeing Hedulia she forgot me, and I lie on the threshold weeping.</p>
- <p class="verse">O marble threshold, thou are not so white nor so hard as her breasts, receive my tears</p>
- <p class="verse">While the mute stars turn overhead and the owls cry from the cypresses.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="XIII">
-<a id="page-22" class="pagenum" title="22"></a>
-XIII
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Wandering in tears about the city I came to the dark temple of Priapus;</p>
- <p class="verse">The tall, naked, scented-tressed priestesses taught me the mysteries,</p>
- <p class="verse">And I lay between Guathina and Leuke and afterwards Chrusea and Anthea;</p>
- <p class="verse">But now I worship the god on the mountain slopes, yet not unforgetful of Myrrhine.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="XIV">
-XIV
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">This is the tomb of Konallis; Korinthos was her city and Kleobulina bore her,</p>
- <p class="verse">Having lain in sweet love with Sesocrates, the son of Menophiles.</p>
- <p class="verse">I lived three and twenty years, and then sudden sickness bore me to Dis</p>
- <p class="verse">So they laid me here with my silver armlets, my gold comb, my chain and with little painted figures.</p>
- <p class="verse">In my life I was happy, knowing many sorts of love and none evil.</p>
- <p class="verse">If you are a lover, scatter dust, and call me “dear one” and speak one last “Hail.”</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza center">
- <p class="verse">Telos.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="NUDITYANDTHEIDEAL">
-<a id="page-23" class="pagenum" title="23"></a>
-Nudity and the Ideal
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="aut">
-<span class="smallcaps">Will Levington Comfort</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">O</span><span class="postfirstchar">ne</span> of the young men here loved the sunlight on his shoulders so well—had
-such a natural love for the feel of light and air upon his bare
-flesh—that he almost attained that high charm of forgetting himself half-dressed....
-The country people occasionally come down to the
-water on the Sabbath or to sell (from their homes back on the automobile
-routes and the interurban lines) and for what they do not get of
-the natural beauty of shore and bluff, I have a fine respect. However they
-didn’t miss the Temporary Mr. Pan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They complained that he was exposing himself, even that he was shameless.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now, I am no worshiper of nudity. I’d like to be, but it disappoints in
-most cases. There is always a strain about an object that is conscious of
-itself—and that nudity which is unconscious of itself is either shameless,
-an inevitable point of its imperfection anatomically for the trained eye; or
-else it is touched with divinity and does not frequent these shores.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The human body has suffered the fate of all flesh and plant-fiber that is
-denied light. A certain vision must direct all growth—and vision requires
-light. The covered things are white-lidded and abortive, scrawny from
-struggle or bulbous from the feeding dream into which they are prone to
-sink.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It will require centuries for the human race to outgrow the shames
-which have come to adhere to our character-structure from recent generations.
-We have brutalized our bodies with these thoughts. We associate
-women with veils and secrecy, but the trouble is not with them, has not
-come from women, but from the male-ordering of women’s affairs to
-satisfy his own ideas of possession and conservation. The whole cycle
-of human production is a man-arrangement according to present standards,
-and every process is destructively bungled. However, that’s a life-work,
-that subject.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The thoughts of our ancestors have debased our bodies in color and texture
-and contour organically and to be seen. Nudity is not beautiful, and
-does not play sweetly upon our minds because of this heritage. The human
-body is associated with darkness, and the place of this association in our
-minds is of corresponding darkness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The young man and I talked it over. We decided that it would be a
-thankless task for him to spend the summers in ardent endeavor to educate
-<a id="page-24" class="pagenum" title="24"></a>
-the Countryside by browning his back in public. <em>That</em> did not appeal
-to us as a fitting life task; moreover, his project would be frequently interrupted
-by the town-marshal. As a matter of truth, one may draw most
-of the values of the actinic rays of the sun through thin white clothing;
-and if one has not crushed his feet into a revolting mess in pursuit of the
-tradesmen, he may go barefooted a little while each day on his own grassplot
-without shocking the natives or losing his credit at the bank. The real
-reason for opening this subject is to express, without hatred, certain facts
-in the case of the Countryside which complained.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They are villagers and farm-people who live with Mother Nature without
-knowing her. They look into the body of Nature, but never see her face
-to face. The play of light and the drive of intelligence in her eyes is
-above the level of their gaze or too bright. Potentially they have all the
-living lights—the flame immortal, but it is turned low. It does not glorify
-them as men or parents or workmen. It does not inspire them to questing—man’s
-real and most significant business. They do not know that
-which is good and evil in food, in music, in color, fabric, books, in houses,
-lands or faith. They live in a low lazy rhythm and attract unto themselves
-inevitably objects of corresponding vibration. One observes this in
-their children, in their schools, and most pathetically in their churches.
-They abide dimly in the midst of their imperfections, but with tragic
-peace. When their children revolt, they meet on every hand the hideous
-weight of matter, the pressure of low vibrations, and only the more splendid
-of them have the integrity of spirit to rise above the resistance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As for the clothing they wear, they would do better if left suddenly
-naked as a people and without preconceptions were commanded to find
-some covering for themselves. As herds, they have fallen into a descending
-arc of usage, under the inevitable down-pull of trade. Where the vibrations
-of matter are low, its responsive movement is gregarian, rather than
-individual. The year around, these people wear clothing, woolen pants
-and skirts, which if touched with an iron, touched with sunlight, rain or
-any medium that arouses the slumbering quantities, the adjacent nostril
-is offended.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They are heavy eaters of meat the year round. They slay their pets
-with as little concern as they gather strawberries. Their ideas of virtue
-and legitimacy have to do with an ecclesiastical form, as ancient as
-Nineveh and as effaced in meaning. They accept their children, as one
-pays a price for pleasure; and those children which come from their
-stolen pleasures are either murdered or marked with shame. Their idea
-of love is indefinite with desire, and their love of children has to do with
-the sense of possession.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They are not significant men in their own fields; rarely a good mason, a
-good carpenter, a good farmer; the many have not even found the secret
-<a id="page-25" class="pagenum" title="25"></a>
-of order and unfolding from the simplest task. The primary meaning of
-the day’s task in its relation to life and blessedness is not to be conceived
-by them. They are taught from childhood that first of all work is for
-bread; that bread perishes; therefore one must pile up as he may the
-wherewith to purchase the passing bread; that bread is bread and the rest
-a gamble.... They answer to the slow loop waves which enfold
-the many in amusement and opinion, in suspicion and cruelty and half-truth.
-To all above, they are as if they were not; mediocre men, static
-in spiritual affairs, a little pilot-burner of vision flickering from childhood,
-but never igniting their true being, nor opening to them the one true way
-which each man must go alone, before he begins to be erect in other than
-bone and sinew.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They cover their bodies—but they do not cover their faces nor their minds
-nor their souls; and this is the marvel, <em>they are not ashamed</em>! They
-reveal the emptiness of their faces and the darkness of their minds without
-complaining to each other or the police.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From any standpoint of reality, the points of view of the many need
-only to be expressed to reveal their abandonment.... You see, I have
-left the Countryside and am lost in the crowd now, any crowd, the world-crowd,
-whose gods today are trade, patriotism and a certain limp-legged
-tumbler.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-... Yet we are told by every authoritative voice out of the past, and
-we know it from the urge of our own souls, that we must love the many
-before we can serve them. It is fatuous to love blindly, therefore we must
-understand what we are about. I have touched here some small things
-of the crowd, which are well enough to know; otherwise we are apt to
-stand apart from the many crying: “How noble are the simple-minded!
-How sweet the people of the Countryside! How inevitable and unerring
-is the voice of the people!” As a matter of truth, unless directed by
-some strong man’s vision, the voice of the people has never yet given utterance
-to constructive truth; and the same may be said of those who cater
-to the public taste in politics or the so-called arts. The man who undertakes
-to give the people what the people want is not an artist or a true
-leader of any dimension. He is a tradesman and finds his place in his
-generation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The brave workman who dares be himself and go hungry for the
-honor finds sooner or later a brilliant little fact rising in his consciousness—one
-that comes to stay, and which future thinking must be built around:
-that while the people are all that is low and bad in their change and rush
-of personality, they are also the soil of the future, a splendid potential
-mass that contains every heroism and masterpiece to be; that all great
-things must come from the people, because great leaders of the people
-turn their passionate impregnation of idealism upon them; that first the
-dreamer dreams—and then the people make it action....
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<a id="page-26" class="pagenum" title="26"></a>
-That which we see that hurts us so as workmen, is but the unfinished
-picture, the back of the tapestry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To be worth his spiritual salt, the artist, any artist, must turn every
-force of his conceiving into that great restless Abstraction, the many; he
-must plunge whole-heartedly in the doing, but cut himself loose from the
-thing done; at least, he must realize that what he is willing to give could
-not be bought.... When he is quite ready, there shall rise for him,
-out of the Abstraction, something finished; something as absolutely his own
-as the other half of his circle.
-</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="ROOMING">
-“Rooming”
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="aut">
-<span class="smallcaps">Helen Hoyt</span>
-</p>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="I3">
-I
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">O, I can tell when I get to my corner,</p>
- <p class="verse">Where to turn in going to my house.</p>
- <p class="verse">On the other corners along the avenue,</p>
- <p class="verse">Northward and southward where the cars grind,</p>
- <p class="verse">Are saloons and drug stores,</p>
- <p class="verse">Glaring with signals and bright glass.</p>
- <p class="verse">On both sides of the street the same,</p>
- <p class="verse">One block like the next.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">But on my corner is a florist’s shop</p>
- <p class="verse">With ferns in the window</p>
- <p class="verse">And sweet-peas and roses,</p>
- <p class="verse">Glowing with red and pink and yellow.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">And sometimes pansies</p>
- <p class="verse">And moss.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Each night as I step down from the car</p>
- <p class="verse">There the flowers are waiting</p>
- <p class="verse">To say I have got home.</p>
- <p class="verse">And I linger</p>
- <p class="verse">Seeing gardens.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="II3">
-<a id="page-27" class="pagenum" title="27"></a>
-II
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">The room I have now is narrow,</p>
- <p class="verse">Narrow</p>
- <p class="verse">Like a coffin.</p>
- <p class="verse">As plain and as straight</p>
- <p class="verse">And as tight as a coffin.</p>
- <p class="verse">Two corners at the end of it,</p>
- <p class="verse">Are rounded off where the head lies.</p>
- <p class="verse">Ugh!</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">In the bed, you stiffen</p>
- <p class="verse">And look down at your feet</p>
- <p class="verse">As if buried.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">On the right side is the high bureau,</p>
- <p class="verse">On the left side is the high desk—</p>
- <p class="verse">How high and stiff and black they are!</p>
- <p class="verse">How high and stiff and black they are</p>
- <p class="verse">And what is “I” dwells in the cañon between,—</p>
- <p class="verse">Where at any moment the narrowness may tumble and fall in upon me!</p>
- <p class="verse">How far off the ceiling appears over my eyes!</p>
- <p class="verse">At the coffin’s head one window;</p>
- <p class="verse">At the coffin’s foot, one chair.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="III3">
-III
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">My room is narrow,</p>
- <p class="verse">But wide enough.</p>
- <p class="verse">My desk and pencils are wide as the world</p>
- <p class="verse">And my books are like palaces and far journeys.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">What have I need of space?</p>
- <p class="verse">There is always room enough for thinking,</p>
- <p class="verse">Or for dreaming or desiring.</p>
- <p class="verse">There is always room enough to smile</p>
- <p class="verse">And sing</p>
- <p class="verse">And cry out.</p>
- <p class="verse">If the feet are happy they can always dance</p>
- <p class="verse">Even in narrowness.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">(And a small room can be cold for a large one</p>
- <p class="verse">When the mornings are gray.)</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="IV3">
-<a id="page-28" class="pagenum" title="28"></a>
-IV
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Closing the door I close out the world.</p>
- <p class="verse">I am alone,</p>
- <p class="verse">Free.</p>
- <p class="verse">At home.</p>
- <p class="verse">Castled.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">After the mastery of the day</p>
- <p class="verse">Now I am the master.</p>
- <p class="verse">I expand and aspire:</p>
- <p class="verse">I exult and strut and feel aware of myself.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">The walls await me.</p>
- <p class="verse">The mirror,</p>
- <p class="verse">The chair.</p>
- <p class="verse">Everything that is here is mine,</p>
- <p class="verse">Familiar only to me;</p>
- <p class="verse">Dependent upon my hands for use;</p>
- <p class="verse">Dependent upon my heart for beauty.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">The books on the shelf call to me,</p>
- <p class="verse">They send out glances to me.</p>
- <p class="verse">We have an understanding together.</p>
- <p class="verse">They know I will come and touch them with my fingers.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">But first I must get loosened from the day;</p>
- <p class="verse">From people—</p>
- <p class="verse">People crowding upon my shoulders.</p>
- <p class="verse">I must loosen them from me.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">How good to us doors are!</p>
- <p class="verse">They make the whole universe not be except this room.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">The curtain folds are full of quietness</p>
- <p class="verse">And I have a great contentment with undressing.</p>
- <p class="verse">My bed reaches out kind arms to me</p>
- <p class="verse">And folds me in,</p>
- <p class="verse">Awake with many thoughts.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="V3">
-<a id="page-29" class="pagenum" title="29"></a>
-V
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">How pleasant are sheets!</p>
- <p class="verse">Smooth and fine with cool creases,</p>
- <p class="verse">Laying comfort to your cheek,</p>
- <p class="verse">Laying soft cleanness of touch to your throat;</p>
- <p class="verse">Delicious with sun</p>
- <p class="verse">And blown air</p>
- <p class="verse">And lavender.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">And then the kind wool of the blanket</p>
- <p class="verse">Spreading out wide;</p>
- <p class="verse">Dropping away plentifully,</p>
- <p class="verse">Luxuriously over the edge of the bed;</p>
- <p class="verse">Woven and spun out of living warmth,</p>
- <p class="verse">Lightly;</p>
- <p class="verse">Rich to possess against the proud cold.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="VI3">
-VI
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">How generously into its soft yielding lap</p>
- <p class="verse">The bed receives us now,</p>
- <p class="verse">And its strong arms</p>
- <p class="verse">Fold us about as a mother folds her children,—</p>
- <p class="verse">Comforting, and long-accustomed, and secure.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Unquestioning our <a id="corr-12"></a>deserts;</p>
- <p class="verse">Unfailing; never denying;</p>
- <p class="verse">Never refusing our weariness;</p>
- <p class="verse">Taking our weariness from us like a burden.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">To petulance, to discomfort,</p>
- <p class="verse">Answering with soft answers;</p>
- <p class="verse">Smoothing away with silence our sorrows,</p>
- <p class="verse">Till in those faithful friendly arms</p>
- <p class="verse">We are enwrapped with quietness and content;</p>
- <p class="verse">With old well-being of sleep.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="THEUGLIESTMAN">
-<a id="page-30" class="pagenum" title="30"></a>
-The Ugliest Man
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="aut">
-<span class="smallcaps">George Burman Foster</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">G</span><span class="postfirstchar">ood</span> and evil, these are time-old opposites. So are beautiful and ugly.
-But these two opposites are seldom entirely coincident. No doubt
-there are good and high-class men who are commonly judged to be fundamentally
-ugly. And there are blinding beauties who are on a war-footing
-against all that we call good. The good satisfies our moral judgment; the
-beautiful, our judgment of taste. The one has to do with the content of
-human life; the other, with the form. But, at bottom, the moral judgment
-and the judgment of taste cannot remain entirely and materially dissociated.
-It was a more nearly correct feeling on the part of the Greeks when they
-let the beautiful and the good inter-grow. According to the Greek, the
-good and the beautiful, intimately united, constitute the ideal of virtue,
-however. We are reconciled after a fashion to the ugliness of a man if we
-find a great and noble soul in the repellant shell.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But if permanent beauty is to be preserved to human nature, efficient
-and high endeavor, free self-concentrated formation of character is the only
-means to this end. When the “outer man” mirrors goodness and beauty of
-heart, firmness and bravery of will, seriousness and depth of thought, his
-countenance glows under all circumstances with a radiance of happy beauty,
-and it would be a barbarian and pitiable eye indeed that could not apprehend
-such radiance or feel itself smitten with its glory. For the man of fine
-feeling, therefore, all that is ugly affects him morally at the same time. Indeed,
-the reproach of having behaved in an ugly manner he feels as keenly,
-frequently more keenly in fact, than the reproach of having behaved immorally.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the case of <em>Friedrich Nietzsche</em>, the moral criterion of human worth
-was totally transformed into an aesthetic criterion! This man who had
-subdued all “morality” and left it behind him, who took his stand “beyond
-good and evil,” submitted to a new evaluation, was measured according to
-his greatness. Greatness was nobility, supremacy, beauty. Smallness was
-vulgarity, baseness, ugliness. Not the wickedest, and not the wretchedest,
-but the ugliest man—<em>der hässlichste Mensch</em>—represents the power which
-the new culture has to struggle with—to overcome, indeed—if man is to
-mount to a higher plane of being.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Who is this ugliest man? Of all the Zarathustrian enigmas, this is
-perhaps the most enigmatic. It must have been a frightful ugliness which
-haunted and harried the poet-philosopher when he narrates that, amid his
-wanderings over men’s disappointing earth, he had met the ugliest man.
-<a id="page-31" class="pagenum" title="31"></a>
-Many and many were the types of human beings that Zarathustra had met
-in his lonely pilgrimages. Most of them he disposed of with high scorn
-or honest contempt,—thus did he dispatch the good and reputable, the custodians
-of the old tables of morals and order; then, the preachers of the
-doctrine of equality, who swarmed around like flies in market places, shunning
-all solitudes, able to exist only in masses; next the poisonous tarantulas
-who, with envious revenge, devised punishments, in cold blood dragged
-their victims to justice; finally, the wise and upright, the schoolmasters,
-whose duress converted all depths into shallows, managed to obliterate all
-men’s peculiarities, till nothing distinctive was left.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the ugliest man was uglier than any of these! These types did
-not so infuriate Zarathustra as did the ugliest man. At all these Nietzsche
-shook his head, but they did not floor him. He had been able to look upon
-them, to scold them, to laugh at them. “And again did Zarathustra’s feet
-run through mountains and forests.... When the path curved round
-a rock, all at once the landscape changed, and Zarathustra entered into a
-realm of death. Here bristled aloft black and red cliffs, without any grass,
-tree, or bird’s voice. For it was a valley which all animals avoided, even the
-beasts of prey, except that a species of ugly, thick, green serpent came here
-to die when they became old. Therefore the shepherds called this valley
-‘Serpent-death.’” Here Zarathustra found the ugliest man something sitting
-by the wayside shaped like a man, and yet hardly like a man, something
-nondescript. And all at once there came over Zarathustra a great
-shame, he blushed up to the roots of his white hair, he would flee this ill-starred
-place—the worst that there was in the whole world! But the Great
-Despiser, the Hater of all pity was himself so unstrung and overpowered
-by pity that he sank down all at once, like a giant oak that had weathered
-many a storm, or withstood many a stroke of the woodman’s axe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Who was this ugliest man? What was this ugliest thing which
-Nietzsche—the great man-spy and life-appraiser—had ever discovered in
-a human being? Before Nietzsche wrote, <em>thus spake Zarathustra</em>, he expresses
-himself in another work as follows: “Nothing is ugly save the degenerate
-man.... From the physical standpoint everything ugly
-weakens and depresses man. It reminds of decay, danger, impotence; he
-literally loses strength in its presence. The effect of ugliness may be gauged
-by the dynamometer. Whenever man’s spirits are downcast, it is a sign
-that he scents the proximity of something ‘ugly.’ His feeling of power,
-his will to power, his courage and his pride—these things collapse at the
-sight of what is ugly, and rise at the sight of what is beautiful....
-Ugliness is understood to signify a hint or a symptom of degeneration;
-that which reminds us, however, remotely of degeneracy, impels us to the
-judgment ‘ugly.’ Every sign of exhaustion, of gravity, of age, of fatigue;
-every kind of constraint, such as cramp, or paralysis; and above all the
-smells, colors and forms associated with decomposition and putrefaction,
-<a id="page-32" class="pagenum" title="32"></a>
-however much they may have been attenuated into symbols,—all these things
-provoke the same reaction, which is the judgment ‘ugly.’ A certain hatred
-expresses itself here: who is it that man hates? Without a doubt it is
-<em>the decline of his type</em>. In this regard his hatred springs from the deepest
-instinct of the race. There is horror, caution, profundity, and far-reaching
-vision in this hatred,—it is the most profound hatred that exists.”
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nowhere has Nietzsche told us of the zenith, who his superman is.
-But he here tells us of the nadir, who the ugliest man is—and the superman
-is the exact and august opposite. Thus we could ourselves construct his
-superman.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the ugliest man—we recognize this strange figure of the Zarathustra
-poesy in the sharp cry of distress which all representatives of degenerate
-(<em>de-genera</em>) humanity groan out where the yearning toward a higher
-humanity overpowers them. The ugliest man then appears accoutered with
-a crown with which he has crowned his own head, and with two purple
-girdles which encircle him. In a later profound observation, Nietzsche informs
-us that the ugliest man is called <em>der historische Sinn</em>, the historical
-mind, or sense, which needs decoration, accoutrement, like all ugly things
-that would make themselves tolerable, at least for surface people. The degenerate
-man,—this is the ugly man, and the saddest degeneration is <em>the
-surrender of life to the past</em>—for the past is the big grave which swallows
-up all that lives. Whoever makes the past the goal of his longing walks
-among corpses which make him shiver. He becomes himself a corpse, whose
-society is freezing for living men. And because this man, assimilated to
-the past, living in the past, is nothing himself, he needs all kinds of fiddle-faddle
-to give himself the semblance of being something. He needs pomp
-which makes a world-stirring phenomenon out of a coronation; he scrambles
-and scratches after titles and orders—which long ago Frederick the
-Great, the philosopher-king on the Prussian throne, called the insignia of
-fools; he has himself accredited by father and grandfather, so that their
-merit may adorn the shield of son and grandson; in a word, he reverses
-the counsel of an apostle: “Forgetting the things that are behind,” for
-he forgets the things that are before and reaches back for the things that
-are behind. And because there is for this backward-bent man an inconvenient
-monitor and witness of all life—because there is God, the omnipresent
-God, who ever sees all, even sees man through and through, this
-ugliest man became the murderer of God, he took revenge on the living
-God for being witness of the hiddenest life of man! “I know thee well,”
-said Zarathustra, with a brazen voice, “<em>thou <a id="corr-13"></a>art the murderer of God</em>!...
-Thou couldst not <em>endure</em> him who beheld thee through and through, thou
-ugliest man. Thou tookest revenge on this witness!”
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We have here, I think, with all that is enigmatic and obscure, a sharply-outlined
-picture of the ugliest man. Earlier Nietzsche wrote a book on the
-blessing and the bane of history for life. In that book he accorded right to
-<a id="page-33" class="pagenum" title="33"></a>
-historical culture and to man’s knowledge of the past <em>only in so far</em> as the
-life of the man of the present and of the future would be advanced thereby.
-But the historians in the schools, in chair and pulpit, did not so think.
-They acknowledged life only when it was dead! A zealous teacher of history
-was a meandering mummy from out the past, who had no blood more
-in his veins, no flesh more on his bones. Therefore was he so ugly. Therefore
-did he create such a frosty temperature round about him. Under the
-pressure of these historical forces, all life became a <em>cultus</em> of the past. The
-older a thing was, the better it was. It was the long past, the outlived, that
-was noble. The more remote that past, the prouder men were of it, and the
-brighter shone its glory-beaming star to the eyes of men.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From this malady of the ugliest man, from this <em>de-genera-tion</em>, we are
-by no means free. Instead of ascent to a higher <em>genus</em> than present man,
-to superman, there is descent to a lower <em>genus</em>. This antiquarian, hoary
-spirit pervades our whole social life, this <em>re-spect</em> for what has become old
-and rotten, for what can show no other merit than that it once—was! It is
-a sign of our own decay, this living on the dead, this ability only to resuscitate
-and copy past centuries—past poetry, past art, past philosophy, past
-morality, past religion!—this knowing in consequence no life of our very
-own. We build “whitewashed sepulchers” in our lives, because we have
-no courage of heart to create anything that belongs to life. At all events,
-that the putridity and the dead bones may be concealed, we use whitewash,
-much whitewash! We use decorations, brilliant, finely-painted decorations
-so that men may not observe that life has become a theatrical play, making
-an impression indeed under clever management, but inspiring no living
-human heart. All the splendor of this pomp, which we of today employ
-on the stage of life, cannot conceal the chilly vacuity of this whole business;
-and the man who peers behind the curtains and sees how people look shorn
-of their decorations, without powder and paint, without the artificial cunning
-luminosity of the day’s puffery, has Zarathustra’s feeling in the valley
-forsaken to the old green thick snake on its way to die,—Zarathustra’s feeling
-when he met the ugliest man, where much heaviness settled on his
-mind, because he did not think that anything so ugly and horrible could
-exist among men.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yes, there are traces and traits of this ugliest man among us. If we
-but imagine all that is decoration, flummery, stripped off from us, think how
-much degenerate life would be disclosed! How much love for the dead
-<em>that no longer lives</em>, how much bitter strife and war over <em>reliques</em>, over some
-sacred cloak, or sacred bone, of which history narrates, telling us that they
-once belonged to life. How much slavish obedience to thoughts that once
-were; to institutions that once served the living. To be sure, men call this
-<em>piety</em>, and have thus designed a beautiful robe behind which they hide their
-moribund lives. For the sake of this piety, they exact consideration for
-all ancient dust which burden the homes and hearts of men, they arm themselves
-<a id="page-34" class="pagenum" title="34"></a>
-against him who, with mighty hand, would undertake a huge house-cleaning
-of life and for life. Piety,—it is this that they call admiration and
-veneration of every idol which for long has been played out, but still counts
-us of today among its devotees. Men must even deal God a mortal blow,
-the <em>Living</em> God of the living, and, with the ferocious hatred of their folly,
-pursue the God who sees their innermost heart as a living witness of what
-they would like to hide from themselves and all the world. “But he—<em>had
-to</em> die: he looked with eyes which beheld <em>everything</em>,—he beheld men’s
-depths and dregs, all his hidden ignominy and ugliness ... he crept
-into my dirtiest corners. This most prying, over-intrusive, over-pitiful
-one had to die. He even beheld me: on such a witness I would have revenge—or
-not live myself. The God who beheld everything, <em>and also man</em>:
-that God had to die! Man cannot <em>endure</em> it that such a witness should live.”
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus spake the ugliest man. Zarathustra started off, feeling frozen to
-the very bowels.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The God who told men that altogether they served death, not life, that
-they worked deterioration, not rejuvenation—had to die! Life is a dying—and
-yet there shoots through the heart of man such a nameless anxiety in
-the presence of this dying that he paints up and pencils all death till it
-looks like life. And indeed many are deceived, many see only men’s rouge
-and mark not the great lie which it hides. This is the ugliest thing in the
-world, and it made the prophet of a new culture shudder and freeze—<em>this</em>,
-that we live and walk among corpses which yet look as if they were
-alive!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To fight and conquer this hindrance to a new culture, this is to fight and
-conquer death; and since death is death only through man, through his
-yearning or fear, the triumph of a new culture begins with the triumphal
-song of life, which knows how to make a festival out of even death. To
-be sure, Nietzsche did not set his most beautiful man over against his most
-ugly, but we can yet read between the lines what he conceived the most
-beautiful man to be. He is the man who has pushed far from him the last
-vestige and survival of fear and slave-service. He is the man who has
-learned dying as the great Consummator, victorious, surrounded by men
-who hope and vow that there shall ever be festival where a man who
-so dies dedicates himself to the living. Here Zarathustra-Nietzsche intimates
-a kinship with that other Dying Man Who proclaimed his life’s
-victorious career in His: “It is finished!” and created on Christianity’s
-Good Friday a festival of death. Nietzsche speaks of the Hebrew, too early
-dead, who would have confessed Zarathustra’s doctrine, if he had attained
-to Zarathustra’s years. It did not occur to Nietzsche that such a confession
-was not at all needed, because the world had perceived the glad message
-already which would make a festival out of death and teach men how the
-most beautiful festival was consecrated. Christian art had opposed to the
-ugliest man the most beautiful human picture: the head full of wounds
-<a id="page-35" class="pagenum" title="35"></a>
-and blood, the King in the thorn-crown, who understood dying because he
-understood living. With this victorious song of death began a new culture,
-a new heroism of humanity, to which death ceased to be a pale ghost, but
-which confessed even in death: “as dying, and behold, we live!” Then
-men ceased to learn dying, and because they made no preaching of life out
-of dying and no vow to life, death became to them a torturing anxiety and
-care again; they did not dare name his name; they did not dare frankly
-look him in the eye. And this cowardice and lie disfigure all their action
-and passion; they would give to death at least the semblance of life; they
-would believe in ghostly existence still allotted to all the dead, rather than
-say to death: “Thou are a messenger of God, a revelation, a witness of
-life; since thou art good, I will greet thee and bless thee!”
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So Zarathustra demanded of his disciples: “Let your dying be no
-blasphemy of men and earth; my friends, your spirit and your virtue shall
-still glow in your dying, like the evening red over the earth, or else death
-has miserably betrayed you.”
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Death our will even, our freedom—this is life’s highest meaning! Who
-but Nietzsche could have thought that? Of course, this is not to throw
-life away, when it has become hard and heavy to bear. Such a death would
-be of all the most unfree. It would be a flight, not a deed; it would be a
-lamentation and a feebleness, not a festival of the soul! But it means that
-we take up death from the start into the order of our life, as the night which,
-no less than the day, belongs to man’s full day. It means that we give to
-life a worth which no death can destroy, which first in death reveals its
-eternal power. I must die—so laments the slave, who has lived only non-entities
-even in his life, and has never learned that life is work, creation,
-consummation. I <em>will</em> die—so speaks the hero, to whom every fight brings
-the prize of a victory well worth death!—the hero who hazards his life
-every moment for the highest human good, who knows that he and his life
-have become a sacrifice from which a better, higher, freer humanity shall
-gain its life and its strength.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Who is ugly? Who is beautiful? Who is ashamed of his death and
-falsifies his deadness that it may look like life—who does this, bears death
-within himself as a power that drags him down, disfigures him in the fullness
-of that which he would be able to live. But who, in his power to die,
-proves that he has learned to live, has overcome the ugliest thing in man,
-cast it out; namely, the fear of death which creates all the lies of life, and
-all the servility and unfreedom of men—which creates men over whom <em>das
-Gewesen</em>! the dead past, possesses power, so that they can never breathe
-a joyous breath, can never commit themselves to the living and the growing.
-But a <em>beautiful</em> culture will also become a <em>good</em> culture because one that is
-living is at once good and beautiful; the eternal life of God, of whom it is
-said: There is none good but God alone.
-</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="EMASCULATINGIBSENYAY">
-<a id="page-36" class="pagenum" title="36"></a>
-Emasculating Ibsen<a class="fnote" href="#footnote-2" id="fnote-2">[2]</a>
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">D</span><span class="postfirstchar">ear</span> Mr. Ibsen: I hope this letter finds you well as it leeves us
-the same. The reason why I write you is that I seen your play called
-<em>Ghosts</em> at the Bijou Movie Theater last night and I thought it was so grand
-that I had to tell you. I thought it was awful the way poor Mr. Alving is
-always seeing that hand which was pulling his hair out of the past. And
-it was awful too the way poor Mr. Alving crawled across the floor on his
-stomich and pulled the poison offn the icebox before he killed himself. The
-way his poor, dear mother suffered, that was terrible. She was such a
-strong, brave woman that I cried for her all the time. And The Rev. Manders
-he was such a real swell minister that my heart was all torn watching
-him. It ain’t natural for everybody to be so good as ministers because they
-ain’t got so much time and don’t read the Bible so often. But he was certainly
-all there when it came to pureness and kindness. But even if the
-play was awful it was just grand the lesson that it taught. I sent my friend
-to see it and he thought it was swell. He said the kissing scenes where the
-terrible Cap. Alving hugs the different ladies was real stuff and that
-the lesson against the evils of drink was good for the young. This
-is what I want to write you about, Mr. Ibsen. We’re going to organize
-a West Side Ibsen Prohibition Club and make you honary president. I
-wish therefor you will write the club a letter or better if you will write a
-sequil to the movie play <em>Ghosts</em> we will put it on at the club. I know how
-hard it is to have movie plays accepted because I have done some myself
-but if you don’t write the sequil I will write it and send it to the Mutual
-people who put the first part on. I am certain they will take it because I
-will make it just so strong and powerful a sermon against the evils of
-drink as what you did. With best regards and hopes for your future success,
-I am your friend,
-</p>
-
-<p class="sign">
-Mobbie Mag.
-</p>
-
-<hr class="footnote" />
-
-<p class="footnote">
-<a class="footnote" href="#fnote-2" id="footnote-2">[2]</a> P.S. For the reader: The wet nurses who minister to the mob have put
-our old friend Ibsen into diapers and give him to their patients to play
-with. The cherubic little fellow is kicking up his dimpled heels and thriving
-well in all the movie houses.
-</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="DEATH">
-Death
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">I</span> have always wished to know of death. I have always wondered what
-became of me when I went back to earth. Today I know.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I have watched a soul die and have heard its pain. Beside it I have stood
-and listened to its cries. I have watched it sicken and have noted how it
-struggled.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<a id="page-37" class="pagenum" title="37"></a>
-Life was beautiful to it. There never was so exquisite a soul. It
-leaped, and burned and danced when it was born. It was so radiant the dark
-world into which it came grew light.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I have always wished to know of death. Today I know.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was raining softly and we sat within a room with pictures all about—a
-woman, fresh and young, and I—and trembled. The beauty and the
-loveliness of her were dawning in me. And something of myself that
-had not been took being. I loved. There was nothing as beautiful as her
-lips. There was nothing as beautiful as her eyes. There was nothing then
-in all the world as beautiful as she I loved. It was my soul. Restless as
-a song it reached from day to day to light new moments with its melody.
-Ever and forever it went singing, “I will live beyond the stars. I will live
-beyond the mystery of flesh. When the woman who awakened me is
-turned to dust I will live as now and sing as now.”
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I have always wondered what became of me when I went back to
-earth. Today I know.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was so precious and so fierce. I loved so. I had but to look on her
-and taste of immortality.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Beside it I have stood and listened to its cries. I have noted how it
-struggled. In the night I have repeated its brave words, “Ever and forever.”
-I have nursed it from her lips. I have given it to feed upon her breast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It would not live. I loved so, I loved so—and yet I ceased to love.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There is one thing in the world that will not live. There is one thing
-mortal more than life. It is the beauty of which poets sing. Beauty dies
-in every moment. It is mortal with the hours. It flashes and it dies. It
-leaps and dies. It sings and dies.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I loved so and yet I ceased to love.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her eyes became as nothing. Her lips became as nothing. Her voice
-became as nothing. Her laughter and her tears, the movement of her body
-when she walked, the strangeness of her face, the mysteries that made her
-one apart and glorified her and the radiance that burned in me at her approach—all
-became as nothing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Miserable God. False Promiser. I have wished to know of death.
-I have wondered what became of me when I went back to earth. Today
-I know.
-</p>
-
-<p class="sign">
-“The Scavenger.”
-</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="CHILDRENSPOEMS">
-<a id="page-38" class="pagenum" title="38"></a>
-Children’s Poems
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">A</span><span class="postfirstchar">lice</span> Oliver Henderson, eight-year-old poet, wrote the following
-five poems when she was only seven. Her method is to chant
-them to her mother, Alice Corbin Henderson, who takes them down exactly
-as they are dictated. Mrs. Henderson thinks their interest lies in the fact
-that they are the expression of a child’s mind, and so she refuses to change
-or “improve” them. Besides, it might be difficult to “improve” such lines
-as “The moon shines against my heart”.... The other poems in the
-group were written by Percy Mackaye’s children—Arvia’s at the age of
-ten, and Robin’s at twelve. Mr. Mackaye says that his daughter’s were
-done while it was still difficult for her to read or write, but that she has
-always been read aloud to and has learned considerable poetry by heart.
-</p>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="AMOUNTAINOFFIRE">
-A Mountain of Fire
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">There was a mountain made of fire,</p>
- <p class="verse">Far in the sea—</p>
- <p class="verse">It was very nice to everybody that lived in that world.</p>
- <p class="verse">Right over in Japan, it was.</p>
- <p class="verse">Where there are very good fighters and painters,</p>
- <p class="verse">And very good little children,</p>
- <p class="verse">And very good minders in that world.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="KATHLEEN">
-Kathleen
-</h3>
-
-<p class="note">
-(after seeing <em>Kathleen ni Houlihan</em>)
-</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">She looked very, very old when she came in.</p>
- <p class="verse">The mother and the father that were in the house.</p>
- <p class="verse">Had one brother in the house,</p>
- <p class="verse">The other one had gone out</p>
- <p class="verse">And got all the England people away</p>
- <p class="verse">For Kathleen,</p>
- <p class="verse">For Kathleen,</p>
- <p class="verse">And then said, <em>He shall be remembered forever</em>.</p>
- <p class="verse">She was a young woman when she went out,</p>
- <p class="verse">And she sang when she went out the door.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
-<a id="page-39" class="pagenum" title="39"></a>
- <p class="verse2">The moon shines at night</p>
- <p class="verse2">When all are in bed,</p>
- <p class="verse2">And the dear little birdies sing for you</p>
- <p class="verse2">In the morning time to wake you sure.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse2">How lovely the day is—</p>
- <p class="verse2">The moon shines against my heart—</p>
- <p class="verse2">I love the sweetness of the sky.</p>
- <p class="verse2">The beautiful day comes every morning true.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="MISSUNGERICHSJAPANESEPLAY">
-Miss Ungerich’s Japanese Play
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Eyes all blackened, lips made beautiful,</p>
- <p class="verse">Lavender under, then red over for the costume,</p>
- <p class="verse">Acted wonderfully with her hands fixed all the time,</p>
- <p class="verse">Bare feet, then on to the floor,</p>
- <p class="verse">She made a thing that was beautiful.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Next was a man with a sword,</p>
- <p class="verse">He acted the same way with her face.</p>
- <p class="verse">Brown—gold costume, then a hat she wore,</p>
- <p class="verse">Then a sort of stick-sword;</p>
- <p class="verse">Then she did moving of hands and killing.</p>
- <p class="verse">She was pretending, but there was only one actor,</p>
- <p class="verse">Miss Ungerich.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="THESNOWFLAKES">
-The Snow Flakes
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">In the winter I saw the loveliest sky that you ever saw.</p>
- <p class="verse">It was blue and pink and yellow and orange and white and black and grey.</p>
- <p class="verse">That was the colors of the sky.</p>
- <p class="verse">It pleased me so that I went and sat down.</p>
- <p class="verse">You must think of life and the poor that war makes.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza attr">
- <p class="verse"><em>Done by Alice Oliver Henderson, Miss.</em></p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="FIRECASTLES">
-<a id="page-40" class="pagenum" title="40"></a>
-Fire Castles
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Fast falling rain and every hill in mist</p>
- <p class="verse">Make even my very saddest thoughts grow sadder,</p>
- <p class="verse">And every sad thought lengthens my long list,</p>
- <p class="verse">As, moaning over old things that make me madder,</p>
- <p class="verse">I sit and sulk over some unkind word</p>
- <p class="verse">And weep as if I had not wept before,</p>
- <p class="verse">And think of words about me I have heard,</p>
- <p class="verse">And with old thoughts grieve over them some more.</p>
- <p class="verse">But soon, if I get up, or sit and gaze,</p>
- <p class="verse">Telling myself stories of joyous thought</p>
- <p class="verse">Before the warm and cheery, singing blaze,</p>
- <p class="verse">Now all my bad thoughts in a trap are caught;</p>
- <p class="verse">And if I gaze at castles in the fire,</p>
- <p class="verse">Then all the while to gladness I grow nigher.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="THEUNKNOWNRACE">
-The Unknown Race
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">O dream, what are you?—</p>
- <p class="verse1">A fairy or a sprite,</p>
- <p class="verse">A goddess in the air,</p>
- <p class="verse1">Or just a flash of light?</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">A sudden flash of joy</p>
- <p class="verse1">That brightens up my mind,</p>
- <p class="verse">Till wonders I see now</p>
- <p class="verse1">Where first I was so blind.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="ZEPHYR">
-Zephyr
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Zephyr—Zephyr—Zephyr! Blow on, blow hard</p>
- <p class="verse1">Over hill and over dale!</p>
- <p class="verse">O play in the green trees, leave nothing marred:</p>
- <p class="verse1">O blow—O blow—O blow a gale!</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
-<a id="page-41" class="pagenum" title="41"></a>
- <p class="verse">Zephyr—Zephyr—Zephyr! Play on, play long!</p>
- <p class="verse1">Play and sing in tops of trees,</p>
- <p class="verse">And brush the valley’s airy green hair strong;</p>
- <p class="verse1">Dip your head, diving down the leas!</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse4">Zephyr—Zephyr—Zephyr,</p>
- <p class="verse4">Like a little heifer,</p>
- <p class="verse4">Frolic and lie</p>
- <p class="verse4">In the field of the sky!</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse4">Good-bye, good-bye!</p>
- <p class="verse4">Frolic and turn and lie!</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza attr">
- <p class="verse"><em>Arvia Mackaye.</em></p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="THESWIMMINGPOOL">
-The Swimming Pool
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">O! crystal-clear, transparent water,</p>
- <p class="verse">The cool wind is thy joyous daughter.</p>
- <p class="verse">As I glide through thee, quick and sleek—</p>
- <p class="verse">Oh thou so quiet and so meek!—</p>
- <p class="verse">I feel thy ripples lapping free,</p>
- <p class="verse">And thou dost lie so near to me</p>
- <p class="verse">I see my figure on thy face,</p>
- <p class="verse">Entwined in shadows, linked like lace.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Oh! what art thou? what canst thou be,</p>
- <p class="verse">That dost reflect my visage unto me?</p>
- <p class="verse">I know not what thou seemest to another,</p>
- <p class="verse">But thou to me art as a brother.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="TOATURTLE">
-To a Turtle
-</h3>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">O gallant knight in armour black</p>
- <p class="verse">Blotched with grey and yellow squares,</p>
- <p class="verse">A horny motto’s on thy breast:</p>
- <p class="verse4"><em>Bravery</em> it bears.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
-<a id="page-42" class="pagenum" title="42"></a>
- <p class="verse">O turtle, paddling through the grass</p>
- <p class="verse">That skirts the cobwebbed shining lawn!</p>
- <p class="verse">Come tell me true: where journey you</p>
- <p class="verse4">This dewy dawn?</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">I smell a pond, and in it are</p>
- <p class="verse">Young tadpoles, newly hatched and fresh,</p>
- <p class="verse">And larvas of mosquitoes plump</p>
- <p class="verse4">And sweet of flesh;</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">And whirligigs, that streak and dart</p>
- <p class="verse">Like water-lightning underneath</p>
- <p class="verse">The greenish cat-tail spears, that shade</p>
- <p class="verse4">The frogspit heath.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">And there is oozy, deep, soft mud</p>
- <p class="verse">For me to lie and bask upon,</p>
- <p class="verse">And dine on lizards fat, and sleek</p>
- <p class="verse4">Chameleon.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">And there the bright-green, freckled frog</p>
- <p class="verse">My only friend will always be.</p>
- <p class="verse">To him I haste:—To you I bend</p>
- <p class="verse4">My jointless knee.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza attr">
- <p class="verse"><em>Robin Mackaye.</em></p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="BOOKDISCUSSION">
-<a id="page-43" class="pagenum" title="43"></a>
-Book Discussion
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3 class="section" id="THEBOOKSOFPOETRY">
-The Books of Poetry
-</h3>
-
-<p class="book">
-<em>Irradiations: Sand and Spray, by John Gould Fletcher.
-Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company.</em>
-</p>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">T</span><span class="postfirstchar">here</span> is considerable diversity in Mr. Fletcher’s <em>Irradiations</em>, but one
-soon discovers that he has not encrimsoned himself with the standard passions
-of poetry. He does not display the usual contortions of love, hate,
-grief, and fear. Some persons have, therefore, found him aloof, oversubtle,
-and lacking in emotional force. This intimation that Mr. Fletcher’s art is
-etiolated is an admission of the reader’s incompleteness. Vitality does not
-depend on subject; nor is subtlety necessarily weakness. But the notion
-strangely persists that a poet must clothe his emotions in samite and dance
-with them around a blood-red fire to the plangent accompaniment of drums
-and trumpets.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To say that Mr. Fletcher has entwined himself with nature would unfairly
-give an impression of Wordsworthian insipidity. Yet Mr. Fletcher
-in many of his poems is a part of the rain, of the sand and wind, of the
-clouds and sky. But he is never merely descriptive. He has the power of
-conveying a mood in the terms of nature without intruding himself upon
-the reader. Let me illustrate with one of the best of his poems which has
-been much quoted elsewhere:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
- <div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Flickering of incessant rain</p>
- <p class="verse">On flashing pavements;</p>
- <p class="verse">Sudden scurry of umbrellas;</p>
- <p class="verse">Bending recurved blossoms of the storm.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">The winds came clanging and clattering</p>
- <p class="verse">From long white highroads whipping in ribbons up summits;</p>
- <p class="verse">They strew upon the city gusty wafts of apple-blossom,</p>
- <p class="verse">And the rustling of innumerable translucent leaves.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Uneven tinkling, the lazy rain</p>
- <p class="verse">Dripping from the eaves.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Our tread-mill versifiers will shrink and mumble in the presence of Mr.
-Fletcher’s clean new poetry. They who have inherited the dead mottled skin
-of old poetic form with its incrustation of ancient allusions, symbols, and
-yellowed figures, will not feel the alluring freshness of a poem such as this:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
- <div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">It is evening, and the earth</p>
- <p class="verse">Wraps her shoulders in an old blue shawl.</p>
- <p class="verse">Afar there clink the polychrome points of the stars,</p>
- <p class="verse">Indefatigable after all these years!</p>
- <p class="verse">Here upon earth there is life, and then death,</p>
- <p class="verse">Dawn, and later nightfall,</p>
-<a id="page-44" class="pagenum" title="44"></a>
- <p class="verse">Fire, and the quenching of embers:</p>
- <p class="verse">But why should I not remember that my night is dawn in another part of the world,</p>
- <p class="verse">If the idea fits my fancy?</p>
- <p class="verse">Dawns of marvellous light, wakeful, sleepy, weary, dancing dawns;</p>
- <p class="verse">You are rose petals settling through the blue of my evening;</p>
- <p class="verse">I light my pipe to salute you,</p>
- <p class="verse">And sit puffing smoke in the air and never say a word.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-In his preface Mr. Fletcher says the use of rhyme is in its essence
-barbarous; yet he himself uses it not infrequently together with such devices
-as assonance, onomatopoeia, and alliteration. He is not inconsistent,
-however, for he admits that rhyme used intelligently will add to the richness
-of effect. It does:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
- <div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">The wind that drives the fine dry sand</p>
- <p class="verse">Across the strand:</p>
- <p class="verse">The sad wind spinning arabesques</p>
- <p class="verse">With a wrinkled hand.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Labyrinths of shifting sand,</p>
- <p class="verse">The dancing dunes!</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">I will arise and run with the sand,</p>
- <p class="verse">And gather it greedily in my hand:</p>
- <p class="verse">I will wriggle like a long yellow snake over the beaches.</p>
- <p class="verse">I will lie curled up, sleeping,</p>
- <p class="verse">And the wind shall chase me</p>
- <p class="verse">Far inland.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">My breath is the music of the mad wind;</p>
- <p class="verse">Shrill piping, stamping of drunken feet,</p>
- <p class="verse">The fluttering, tattered broidery flung</p>
- <p class="verse">Over the dunes’ steep escarpments.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">The fine dry sand that whistles</p>
- <p class="verse">Down the long low beaches.</p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<em>Sand and Spray: A Sea-Symphony</em> comprises the second part of Mr.
-Fletcher’s volume. This symphony has much of the movement and variety
-of music. In manner it resembles many of the “Irradiations,” and it is
-just as well worth reading.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Certainly there will be many who will not like Mr. Fletcher’s work.
-Dogs will always bark at a new fragrance.
-</p>
-
-<p class="book">
-<em>Japanese Lyrics, translated by Lafcadio Hearn.
-Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company.</em>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Readers of Lafcadio Hearn will recall the many translations of Japanese
-<em>haikai</em> poetry which are scattered through his writings. Those translations
-have been collected in the present volume. They are delicate whisps
-of thought, tantalizingly suggestive, most of them confined to a sentence.
-Here are some of them:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
- <div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">If with my sleeve I hide the faint fair color of the dawning sun,—</p>
- <p class="verse">then, perhaps, in the morning, my lord will remain.</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
-<a id="page-45" class="pagenum" title="45"></a>
- <p class="verse">Perched upon the temple-bell, the butterfly sleeps:</p>
- <p class="verse">Even while sleeping, its dream is of play—ah, the butterfly of the grass!</p>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">Many insects there are that call from the dawn to evening,</p>
- <p class="verse">Crying “I love! I love!”—but the Firefly’s silent passion,</p>
- <p class="verse">Making its body burn, is deeper than all their longing.</p>
- <p class="verse">Even such is my love ....</p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-The following poem, says the editor, was written more than eleven
-hundred years ago on the death of the poet’s little son:
-</p>
-
-<div class="excerpt">
- <div class="poem-container">
- <div class="poem">
- <div class="stanza">
- <p class="verse">As he is so young, he cannot know the way.</p>
- <p class="verse">.... To the messenger of the Underworld I will give a bribe,</p>
- <p class="verse">and entreat him, saying: “Do thou kindly take the little one upon thy</p>
- <p class="verse">back along the road.”</p>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Some discerning persons have asserted that “Imagism” is derived from
-<em>haikai</em> or <em>hokku</em> poetry. We shall leave to them the pleasant futility of discussing
-that theory. They may eventually discover that they are building on
-the shaky premise that “Imagism” exists other than as a clever word.
-</p>
-
-<p class="book">
-<em>The Winnowing Fan, by Laurance Binyon.
-Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company.</em>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-My dears, we will tie <em>vers libre</em> in the garden. Then let us go into the
-parlor where Mr. Laurence Binyon will pour tea; it will have sugar in it.
-Mr. Binyon will read to you from his latest book <em>The Winnowing Fan</em>. He
-is a gentleman of taste and culture who is vexed at the Germans. He is
-meticulously metrical and counts his syllables. He will say nothing unexpected....
-If <em>vers libre</em> howls in the garden, you may throw
-rhymes at him.
-</p>
-
-<p class="sign">
-<em>Mitchell Dawson.</em>
-</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="HAVEYOUREAD">
-<a id="page-46" class="pagenum" title="46"></a>
-Have You Read—?
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="note">
-(<em>In this column will be given each month
-a list of current magazine articles which, as an
-intelligent being, you will not want to miss.</em>)
-</p>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">S</span><span class="postfirstchar">hadows</span> of Revolt, by Inez Haynes Gilmore. <em>The Masses</em>, July.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Redemption and Dostoevsky, by Rebecca West. <em>The New Republic</em>, July 12.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The State of the War, by Arthur Bullard. <em>The Masses</em>, August.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Serbia Between Battles, by John Reed. <em>The Metropolitan</em>, August.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Richard Aldington’s lucid account of the Imagists and their history in <em>Greenwich
-Village</em>, July 15.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Almost any of the editorials in <em>Harper’s Weekly</em>.
-</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="CANYOUREAD">
-Can You Read—?
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="note">
-(<em>In this column will be given each month a
-resume of current cant which, as an intelligent
-being, you will go far to avoid.</em>)
-</p>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">T</span><span class="postfirstchar">he</span> reactions of the two Chestertons in <em>The New Witness</em>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Midsummer fiction issues of <em>The Century</em> or <em>Scribner’s</em> or <em>Harper’s</em>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<em>The Continent</em> on Edgar Lee Masters’ <em>Spoon River Anthology</em>: “Each
-poem is in the nature of a confession, philosophical or satirical, telling secrets
-of human nature, good or bad—mostly bad. Because of its novelty
-and originality the book has attracted attention far and wide....
-His attitude toward religious believers is a wrong one, and readers may
-well wonder at the scarcity of sincere, sensible Christians in Spoon River.”
-</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="THEREADERCRITIC">
-<a id="page-47" class="pagenum" title="47"></a>
-The Reader Critic
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="letters">
-<p class="from">
-<em>Lee J. Smits, Detroit</em>:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We are disgusted and impatient with “peo-pul” just to the extent that our realization
-of superiority fails us. That impatient attitude reminds me of the ordinary
-attitude of the white toward the black. The white man is not sure of himself; history
-and biology do not give him sufficient support. So he bullies negroes at every
-opportunity. Some men even are impelled to contend for their superiority by
-abusing dogs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sense of superiority abides in all living things of necessity, else no form of
-life would stand out against any other. Wild creatures never need argue, each with
-himself, as to his place in the world. His right to exist and to express himself is
-paramount in the animal’s soul. Only man ever doubts.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Really “peo-pul” do not doubt. They with the artist’s mark on them do the
-doubting. When it is very faint, their doubting asserts itself in strange ways and the
-crude egoism thereof revolts us. “Peo-pul” crawl along self-satisfied.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And why do you ask so much of artists? Why is it so important that they should
-use their strength in vain strivings to make butterflies of worms never destined to be
-butterflies or to amuse other artists who should be able to amuse themselves? If they
-get joy out of creating and preaching, let them preach and create—let them soar.
-If they get joy out of being, out of exultant living and watching, let them live, and
-do not scold.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The most beautiful butterfly I ever saw (some kind of “Emperor”) merely rested
-on a lump of mud in the forest shade and very languidly moved his wings. That is
-all he did while I looked at him. He knew that he could fly, I knew that he could
-fly, and he either knew that I knew or else he didn’t care.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We all know what impatience with “peo-pul” is. In the hush of a great flash of
-dramatic power from the stage, they giggle, and it would be good to fasten your
-fingers in the pulpy throat of one. They applaud idiotic vaudeville, and it would be
-glorious to arise, automatic in hand, and slay and slay.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That is your distrust of yourself—we all have it as much as we deserve it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-“So I belong to this species!” you say.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I do not hate my dog when he seeks out carrion. I wash him with strong soap
-and try to explain him. I feel quite sure—most of the time—that I have come a little
-further than he has.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-“Peo-pul” are even more interesting than dogs, when taken individually. We
-even have more in common with them than with other animals.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some of them are beautiful in their simplicity, like children—unspoiled in their
-loves and hates, and it is entertainment to behold them; to be with them, yet not of
-them; to be the arch-snob, of such perfect snobbishness that it is indistinguishable
-from perfect humility, perfect democracy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All the mighty ones have been artists in life; like unto children they have walked
-their ways, so everlastingly sure of themselves that rarely have they been betrayed
-into petulance by the wobbling of their sense of superiority.
-</p>
-
-<p class="from">
-<em>Susan Quackenbush, Portage, Wisconsin</em>:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-May one who has read your every issue with joy and enthusiasm be permitted to
-<a id="page-48" class="pagenum" title="48"></a>
-enter protest against that gross libel on the human race labeled <em>The Artist in Life</em>,
-in your June number?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Please—oh please—<em>be</em> an artist-in-life, in human life, as well as in sunsets and
-Paderewskis and Imagism, and see for one creative moment, in “terms of truth and
-beauty,” the wonderful, aspiring, suffering, loving, smouldering, flaming beautiful
-souls of that great living, growing, winged group of creations you have called—may
-the great human God forgive the phrase—a “mass of caterpillars!” Come and see
-how its soul, and the souls of its separate creations “spring from the rock” just as
-truly as the brook’s or your own. If they can not <em>yet</em> spring as far, it is because the
-weight above them is as yet too heavy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When all the humans look like caterpillars to any one human, the trouble is with
-that one’s viewpoint. From an aeroplane, even the Himalayas look like anthills. Come
-down from your remote altitude and lose yourself in the beautiful, glorious psychic
-of the crowd—be one of them, and see what you will find!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="smallcaps">The Little Review</span> proclaims itself bent on the adventure of beauty. Is there
-any beauty like that of the “sad, sweet music of humanity?” What is the glow of
-the most gorgeous sunset ever splashed against the western skies beside the glow of
-the divine in the human which hurls itself upon you—and <em>into</em> you if you will let
-it—in a thousand beseeching, inviting, intoxicating flames from the midst of any
-crowd?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But only, of course, if you are <em>in</em> the midst.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Is there any adventure like the “adventure of being human”—and <em>with</em> humans?
-and <em>of</em> them? Go with Whitman into the heart of humanity—struggle <em>with</em> them—not
-from far above them—to lift from off their backs the crushing weight of wealth
-and masters and idle snobs and false gods so that they may get <em>room</em> to spread their
-wings—for they <em>have</em> wings, and then you will know them as they are, and yourself
-but as one of them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If some of them still try to clip the wings of those who have struggled free from
-the crushing pressure, it is because of the maddening agony of their own atrophying
-wings. If a few seem even to be unaware of the need for wings, it is because the
-clamor of more insistent needs—the cries of hungry children, of bruised and broken
-and unsatisfied men and of suffering and degraded women—has silenced for every
-shame their own soul’s wing-cry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But I think that you will find that those who perform the wing-clipping are the
-other butterflies whom money or position or callousness has set above the people—not
-those who are really of the crowd. They of the crowd <em>love</em> wings, and those who
-truly use them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I am not daring to attempt reply to the statement which inflames me most, lest
-I become profane and entirely incoherent. I mean, of course, the statement that the
-estimate of four or five thousand living artists would be too optimistic because that
-would mean four or five thousand who “have nothing in common with caterpillars.”
-That’s a worse libel on artists than the rest of it is on people. But I’ll try to stop
-with one remark and one question. The estimate is entirely too pessimistic; I positively
-refuse to believe there are four thousand persons alive who have or even who
-think they have “nothing in common” with the great splendid mass of folks; if there
-are, the gods have pity on them! And—has there ever been one single real and great
-artist, whether of brush or pen or tone, whose art and whose very greatness was not
-absolutely dependent upon and because of the fact that he had, and knew he had,
-<em>everything</em> in common with, and indeed included in his being, the beings of these
-whom you term “caterpillars”?—these whose life and living are and always have been
-and through ages will continue to be the most worth while content of all art? Of
-course you reply: <em>Nietzsche</em>; but he was an intellectual and spiritual Rockefeller—not
-an artist-in-life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<a id="page-49" class="pagenum" title="49"></a>
-And Individualism? When <em>all</em> have been set free to use their wings, then the
-few may feel free to strive toward the super-butterfly. And when they arrive, perhaps,—oh,
-just perhaps—they will find all the other “caterpillars” there too, and with
-quite wonderful wings. There are wings, and wings, and if they but serve to bear
-us free of the disaster of meanness and cruelty and snobbishness and injustice, who
-shall say they are not super-wings?
-</p>
-
-<p class="from">
-<em>Witter Bynner, Windsor, Vermont</em>:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I wish I could honor the Imagists as you do. Hueffer wrote <em>On Heaven</em> (not
-imagistic); and Pound wrote well before he affected a school ... Pound has a
-rhythm he can’t kill. But none of them, except Hueffer, says anything worth mentioning.
-They build poems around phrases, usually around adjectives. George Meredith
-has thousands of imagist poems incidental to each of his novels. But he knows their
-use and their beauty. These people wring tiny beauties dry. I can imagine a good
-poet using their methods on occasion, but he wouldn’t be so damn conscious about it.
-On the whole, the Imagists strike me as being purveyors of more or less potent
-cosmetics, their whole interest being in the cosmetic itself, not even in its application.
-Poetry gave signs of becoming poetry again and of touching life—when these fellows
-showed up, to make us all ridiculous.
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="ads chapter">
-<a id="page-50" class="pagenum" title="50"></a>
-<p class="h2 adh">
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-</p>
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-<p class="h2 adh">
-Poetry
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-
-<p class="h3 adh">
-A Magazine of Verse
-</p>
-
- </div>
-<p class="u fr b c">
-543 Cass Street<br />
-Chicago
-</p>
-
-<p class="cb">
-Padraic Colum, the distinguished Irish poet and lecturer, says: “POETRY
-is the best magazine, by far, in the English language. We have nothing in
-England or Ireland to compare with it.”
-</p>
-
-<p>
-William Marion Reedy, Editor of the St. Louis <em>Mirror</em>, says: “POETRY
-has been responsible for the Renaissance in that art. You have done a great
-service to the children of light in this country.”
-</p>
-
-<p>
-CAN YOU AFFORD TO DO WITHOUT SO IMPORTANT A MAGAZINE?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-POETRY publishes the best verse now being written in English, and its
-prose section contains brief articles on subjects connected with the art, also reviews
-of the new verse.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-POETRY has introduced more new poets of importance than all the other
-American magazines combined, besides publishing the work of poets already distinguished.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-THE ONLY MAGAZINE DEVOTED EXCLUSIVELY TO THIS ART.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-SUBSCRIBE AT ONCE. A subscription to POETRY is the best way of
-paying interest on your huge debt to the great poets of the past. It encourages
-living poets to do for the future what dead poets have done for modern civilization,
-for you.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One year—12 numbers—U. S. A., $1.50; Canada, $1.65; foreign, $1.75
-(7 shillings).
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-
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-
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-POETRY<br />
-543 Cass Street, Chicago.
-</p>
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-<p class="u">
-Send POETRY for one year ($1.50 enclosed) beginning .........<br />
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-Name ........................................................<br />
-Address .....................................................
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="ads chapter">
-<a id="page-53" class="pagenum" title="53"></a>
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="HAVEYOUREAD3">
-Have You Read—?
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="note">
-(<em>In this column will be given each month a
-list of current magazine articles which, as an
-intelligent being, you will not want to miss.</em>)
-</p>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">T</span><span class="postfirstchar">he</span> Unbroken Chain, by Romain Rolland. <em>The New Republic.</em>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dostoievsky and Tolstoy, by James Huneker. <em>The Forum</em>, August.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nietzsche, by Anna Strunsky Walling. <em>The New Review</em>, August 1.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Uninteresting War, by Max Eastman. <em>The Masses</em>, September.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our Friend, the Enemy, by Alice Corbin Henderson. <em>Poetry</em>, August.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Books and Things, by Walter Lippman. <em>The New Republic</em>, August 7.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Morality and the Movies, by Floyd Dell. <em>The New Review</em>, August 15.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nearly everything in <em>The Egoist</em>, August 1.
-</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="article" id="CANYOUREAD3">
-Can You Read—?
-</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="note">
-(<em>In this column will be given each month a
-resumé of current cant which, as an intelligent
-being, you will go far to avoid.</em>)
-</p>
-
-<p class="first">
-<span class="firstchar">T</span><span class="postfirstchar">he</span> Meaning of It, by H. C. <em>The New Republic</em>, August 7.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Bryant and “The New Poetry,” by John L. Hervey. <em>The Dial</em>, Aug. 15.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The “Free” Poets, by Michael Monahan. <em>The Phoenix</em>, September.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Pearls from <em>The Outlook</em> for August 11, in regard to the Becker trial:
-</p>
-
- <div class="excerpt">
-<p class="noindent">
-What can we learn from this story of trust betrayed,
-of dishonor in high places, and of a three years’ legal
-battle over a crime which demanded immediate retribution?
-Certainly the law did not come out unscathed from
-this controversy. It is a familiar story, but it will bear
-repetition until it is remedied—we are very much behind
-England in our administration of criminal law. The
-efficiency of punishment as a deterrent to crime is largely
-based upon the swiftness and sureness of justice rather
-than the severity of the penalty inflicted. Becker is
-dead; but who can deny that whatever social effect may
-result from his execution would have been trebled had
-his death come within a reasonable interval after the
-commission of his crime? The case is significant, not
-because it is an exception, but because it is typical of
-the process of American law.
-</p>
-
- </div>
- <div class="impressum">
-<p class="b c">
-Statement of Ownership, Management, Circulation, Etc., required by
-the Act of August 24, 1912
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-of <em>THE LITTLE REVIEW</em> published monthly at <em>Chicago, Ill.</em>
-for <em>April 1st, 1914</em>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Editor, <em>Margaret C. Anderson, 834 Fine Arts Building, Chicago</em>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Managing Editor, <em>Same</em>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Business Manager, <em>Same</em>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Publisher, <em>Same</em>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Owners: (If a corporation, give its name and the names and addresses of stockholders
-holding 1 per cent or more of total amount of stock. If not a corporation, give
-names and addresses of individual owners.)
-</p>
-
-<p class="u c">
-<em>Margaret C. Anderson<br />
-834 Fine Arts Building, Chicago</em>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Known bondholders, mortgagees, and other security holders, holding 1 per cent or
-more of total amount of bonds, mortgages, or other securities: <em>None</em>
-</p>
-
-<p class="sign">
-<em>MARGARET C. ANDERSON</em>,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sworn to and subscribed before me this <em>10th</em> day of <em>April, 1915</em>.
-</p>
-
-<p class="sign">
-<em>MITCHELL DAWSON, Notary Public.</em><br />
-(My commission expires <em>December 20, 1917</em>.)
-</p>
-
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="ads chapter">
-<a id="page-54" class="pagenum" title="54"></a>
-<p class="h1 adh">
-THE EGOIST
-</p>
-
-<p class="h2 adh">
-An Individualist Review
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p>
-Subscribe to THE EGOIST and hear what you will get:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Editorials containing the most notable creative and critical
-philosophic matter appearing in England today.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some of the newest and best experimental English and American
-poetry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A page of current French poetry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Reviews of only those books which are worth praise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-News of modern music, of new painting, of French literary and
-artistic life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A series of impartial studies in modern German poetry (began
-June 1st).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Translations and parodies.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A serial novel by James Joyce, a young Irishman of great talent—a
-novel no one else would print—it was too good.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="c">
-PUBLISHED MONTHLY
-</p>
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-<p class="u adp">
-Price—Fifteen cents a number<br />
-Yearly subscription, One Dollar Sixty Cents
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-<hr />
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-<p>
-Buy some of the back numbers. They are literature, not journalism.
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="ade">
-OAKLEY HOUSE, BLOOMSBURY STREET, LONDON, W. C.
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="trnote chapter">
-<p class="transnote">
-Transcriber’s Notes
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Advertisements were collected at the end of the text. Duplicate advertisements were
-removed.
-</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 original spelling was mostly preserved. A few obvious typographical errors
-were silently corrected. All other changes are shown here (before/after):
-</p>
-
-
-
-<ul>
-
-<li>
-... scandal-<span class="underline">monging</span> newspapers, out of the malicious after-dinner gossip of ...<br />
-... scandal-<a href="#corr-1"><span class="underline">mongering</span></a> newspapers, out of the malicious after-dinner gossip of ...<br />
-</li>
-
-<li>
-... For the sun <span class="underline">shifts</span> through the shade. ...<br />
-... For the sun <a href="#corr-3"><span class="underline">sifts</span></a> through the shade. ...<br />
-</li>
-
-<li>
-... affects his own pocket. And the masses of labor who do feel <span class="underline">themselve</span> and ...<br />
-... affects his own pocket. And the masses of labor who do feel <a href="#corr-8"><span class="underline">themselves</span></a> and ...<br />
-</li>
-
-<li>
-... Sappho, Sappho, long ago the dust of earth mingled with the dust of <span class="underline">they</span> dear limbs, ...<br />
-... Sappho, Sappho, long ago the dust of earth mingled with the dust of <a href="#corr-9"><span class="underline">thy</span></a> dear limbs, ...<br />
-</li>
-
-<li>
-... Unquestioning our <span class="underline">desserts</span>; ...<br />
-... Unquestioning our <a href="#corr-12"><span class="underline">deserts</span></a>; ...<br />
-</li>
-
-<li>
-... said Zarathustra, with a brazen voice, “thou <span class="underline">are</span> the murderer of God!... ...<br />
-... said Zarathustra, with a brazen voice, “thou <a href="#corr-13"><span class="underline">art</span></a> the murderer of God!... ...<br />
-</li>
-</ul>
-</div>
-
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LITTLE REVIEW, AUGUST 1915 (VOL. 2, NO. 5) ***</div>
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