Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, November 1, 1969 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, November 1, 1969 Don aid Hall: e man and his work By LARRY RUSS His work I sometimes think that liv- ing in the same community with a man makes it harder for peo- pe to get the feel of the man's importance in the larger world. I get the feeling that this is so with Donald Hall. Donald Hall is, I would say, one of the two most active and important men in the American poetry scene (along with Robert Bly). At present Donald Hall has finished a t~xtbook on poetry that is far better than any which now exist, a tremendously warm, humorous, insightful, and intelligent book, to be called The Pleasures of Poetry. It begins, "Reading a poem is a pleasure, like in a k i n g love" The book, which is the only human textbook I have ever seen, is really manna in the wilderness of textbook sterility. And he is coordinating an inter- arts venture between the best poets and painters of our time, which will include people 11ik e Robert Rauschenberg and Sal- vador Dali The man is amaz- i ng. I often get a great kick out of making certain kinds of lists, and one of my favorite lists is of Donald Hall's activities: he is an editor of The Paris Re- view, chief poetry consultant to Harper & Row, foremost an- thologist this Contemporary American Poets and his Poetry in English are th best of their respective kinds, a winner of t he Lamont Prize (the most im- portant for a first book of poetry), and a j u d e for the National Book Award h has written a children's book, a book of short stories one of which won a Hest Short Story of the Year award, a book on the sculptor, Henry Moore (which is out of print, and was praised highly by Sir Herbert Read), the marvelous, internationally- known poetry, and a good deal more. And my typewriter is out of breath after that sprint) His poetry In talking about Yeats, Don- aid Hall has said that Yeats' great accomplishment can be discouraging to a poet, but that his spiritual example, the fact that he got better and better right until his death, is an en- couraging one. It should be en- couraging to Donald Hall be- cause while so manry of his fel- low poets fail to progress or fall to the wayside (ik Lowell in his last few books, especially the lousy Notebooks, Creeley with Pieces, etc.), le keeps get- ting better. Hall's new book, The Alligator Bride - Poems New and Se- lected, is tremendous. It con- tains poems from his first two books (largely rewritten), most of the poems from A Roof of Tiger Lilies, and a section of new poems, The Alligator Bride. My complaints are few: there are a couple of Poems f r o m Dark Houses that b o r e me iSestina and Je Suis Une Table), and there are a couple from Tiger Lilies omited here (The Moon and The Sea that I would've much rather seen than The Idea of Flying. Seen together the collection shows that Hall has a greater .stylistic range than anyone else in America; there is masterfulj writing in meter and rhyme, in syllables, in free verse, and there are marvelous humorous poems, intellectual poems, dialogue poems, elegies, and great sur- realism. He can do it all. If he has left behind the in- tellectualized pieces, the rhyme and mater, it is not from in- ability but lack of interest, from the need to leave t h e straight-j acket s of' rationalism and convention, to explore the mystery without protection. The new poems are the best by far, the great tenderness, the unequalled sound, the vision in * TONIGHT * BUDDIES in the SADDLE WOW-EE ROCK-A-BILLY 9:30 on-$1.00 only AT M RK'S FEE HOUSE MARK60O E.William P.S. Halloween Party Friday 3020 Washtenaw, Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti & Ann Arbor NOW SHOWING these poems even better. One of the things that astonishes me about the book is that there are so many poems that are so dis- tinctly different and so singly memorable. The Blue Wing is a great poem of birth, death, re- birth, and more: The Alligator Bride, a very ordered poem in an insane way, is an absolute mas- terpiece, written in a kind of tragi-comic surrealism. Pic- tures of Philippa is so delight- ful and touching; The Corner is frightening; and Anne Sexton has said that Gold is one of the greatest love poems ih the Eng- lish language. It goes on like that. And throughout all the differ- ent poems \ve hear that fan- tastic sound, the best ear in American poetry. Hall's sound not only touches the skin, pleases the ear, -and tenses the muscles. It moves down into the centers of the bones, vibrating the skeleton, the ancient man inside us. Bly says of his sound, "the music is coming from deep, inward and archaic parts of the consciousness ... The poems are amazing be- cause they are so spare, and yet so sensual (and spiritual):; they remind me of Henry Moore's great sculpture (about which Hall has written), of an- cient sculpture, like lovely bones. They often have a surface sim- plicity, a deep sensuality, and sipirituality that reminds me of Brancusi's sculpture. Brancusi said: "Simplicity is not an end in art, but we arrive at it as we approach the real essence of things." It is the confrontation with the mystery, with the un- seen forces that move our lives. Donald Hall is leaving behind the rational structures that we impose on our lives, with which we protect ourselves from life. He wants the bare vision. He is an explorer, a lover, of the mystery. By "lover" I don't mean just that he is attracted to the mysteries, but that he is in the most intimate relation- ship to them. And as he puts it, "My poems are attempts to let my inside talk directly to your insides." I suspect that many people like their faces kissed and slap- ped more overtly by poems in a way that these poems may not. The Alligator Bride tends to move quietly, disturbingly and tenderly, into the body where the poems continue to live and move. The new poems especially are genuinely haunting. It will be a considerable injustice if The Alligator Bride isn't given the National Book Award for 1969. The man_ Behind the flurry and beauty of the work is a man loved by many people from all different planes of society, by students, teachers, doctors and lawyers, readers of his prose and poetry. He may have done more to turn people on to poetry than any- one else in the country. He can do that because his love for it is so real and great, Hearing him read at his best, and there is no one better, is to see an act of love;, he caresses and bites the words, getting lost in the being of the poems. I'll nev- er forget the other-worldly sil- ence that followed a reading he once did of Roethke's The Rose in class. He is one of the great teach- ers, and students love him. There has been, at times, dur- ing his office hours, as many as ten people lined up in the hall, waiting to see him. He is warm and kind and honest, but never condes'cending or nasty. There is a great tenderness to him, and great generosity in giving time and effort to his students. He has been for me, and count- less others I'm sure, an import- ant spiritual example as a man and as an artist. He is not afraid of life or love. He al- ways quotes Rodin's advice to young sculptors, "If a sculpture isn't coming right,, don't just scratch at it. Drop it on the floor and then see what it looks like." As Bob Dylan says, he "don't look back." When I was fifteen, working hard at poetry, reading, a n d writing adolescent crap, I wrote a letter to Donald Hall. He was, as always, very kind, and wrote me a letter giving advice, en- couragement without f a ls e praise. In it he said, "Poetry is a lonely art, praise God. We make it in sm al l rooms out of the darkness in ourselves. No one but our- selves makes the poems we write. And teachers or elders in their talks or letters do little. Their poems and their spiritual example can be ano- ther thing." Yes, they certainly can. Praise God for Donald Hall. COMES THE REVOLUTION CINMA BUILD SAT. and SUN.-Nov. 1-2 EE RED LINE 7000 dir HOWARD HAWKS (1965) The Red, White and Blue-Blooded World of America NASCAR Racing. "Bring your red-neck" 7 & 9 75c ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 (CHEAP) AUDITORIUM Join'The Daily Today!_ LOW PRICED PREVIEWS MON. and TUES., Nov. 3 and 4 THE UN IVERSITY OF MICHIGAN C#M/NS/ POFESSIONAL HAR Rc WORLD PREMIEREMON., NO V.O JAMES AUDRA CATHERINE LINDLEY BURNS u EVAN HUNTER ,ge,, h0JO MIELZINER I A ARBOR NATIONAL 8ENERAL CORPORATION _ NOW FOX EASTERN THEATRES iMV SNOWING FOX V1LLBGE 375 No. MAPLE RD.-769-1300 TIMES MON.-FRI. 7:10-9:20 SATURDAY-SUNDAY -1 :00-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:30 Not ftt it atters.butmastofitism 20th CENTURY-FOX PRESENTS KATHARINE ROSS. BI)tH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID PANAVISION$ COLOR BY DELUXE I eW"2 hnr.2 rMY Subscribe To THE MICHIGAN DAILY CRl 757506 BLUES IS BACK AND THE REVOLUTIONARYBLUES BAND IS LEADING THE WAY. ROCK-BLUES? SURE! DIG IT. GET IN STEP WITH THESE YOUNG SPIRITED ACTIVISTS. THE REVOLU- TIONARY BLUES BAND - NO GIMMICKS - JUST SOME OF THE BEST NEW SOUNDS AROUND TODAY. INCREDIBLE NEW EXCITEMENT 6N DECCA RECORDS D eeC Daily Classifieds urn El,"' 1 '1 I I Jt . "I k : . fh, I per: r t - s TODAY AT 1:30 & 8 P.M. Aammmffimmlm ZIM= , DIAL 5-6290 Try I "IlNw-' - SPECIAL ONE SHOWING ONLY! Bergman's SEVENT H SEAL SUNDAY NIGHT 7 P.M. "I think I would have liked it if I had understood it." -ZaSu Pitts ACADEMY AWARD WINNER! BEST ACTRESS! BARBRA STREISAND COLUMBIA PICTURES andRASTAR PRODUCTIONS present BARBRA OMAR STREISAND SHARIF "The Musical Blockbust- er of the Movie Season, Any Movie Season!" Judith Crist, NBC-TV r'" "; Today at 1:30 Adults $1.50 .<$Fj y ;, Tonight at 8:00 ,_.. Adults $2.00 __ , ARE PRESIDENTIAL POLITICS CORRUPT? (IF YOUR LAST NAME IS NIXON YOU GET IN FOR FREE) *7 ,/ . , ELINA w... I Il I 1 r _ . . ,' r, ..:r r I T r c ma mT~ in ............. MELINA MERCOURI An PHAEDRA ANTHONY PERKINS I See How One Familv Closed the Generation Gar) PLUS- THE WEDDING FEAST OCT. 31-NOV. 1 Fri.-Sat., 7:00-9:15 Aud. A 75c (cheap) -A H HELD OVER S4th Big Week! Program Information 662-6264 where the heads of all nations meet SHOWS > TODAY 9 P.M. iEA Friday and Saturday at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. AND 11 P.M. y ' n 'I 4 a k. . _ L " r ; s s T v r ;' : What If Someone Monumentally Incompetent Became President? From .' i" 4e ai i i