Page 8--Sunday, December 11, 1977-The Michigan Daily lowell food (Continued from Page 3) presentation of self. Although Lowell gives us a portrait that is vivid, it is at times contradictory, perhaps be- cause of its transparency. In the year of Lowell's birth, Yeats told us; that poetry emerges from the quarrel within ourselves, while rhetoric comes from the quarrel with others. "A poem," says Lowell, "needs to include a man's contradictions." In this new collection Lowell, displays these contradictions with a force that, when read, carries with them a burden. The age burns in me The path is cleared and cleared each year Each year the brush closes; nature cooperates with us then we cooperate no more. Instead of using conventional lyric which tends to transcend the past and future in favor of the present moment, Lowell forces us to see the sensibilities of the moment through a knowledge of the past and future. Nothing is hidden or left behind; nothing is forgotten. His verse gives us the emotional moments of a woman, children, a landscape, an acquaintance,an illness, a walk, a photograph, a poetry reading, shav- ing, dinner with a friend. But the poet stands by almost helplessly watching what life will become. I ask for a natural death no teeth on the ground, no blood about the place... It's not death I fear, but unspecified, unlimited pain. In a poem to his son, Lowell weds the past to the present through his consideration of an old photograph of himself, which resembles his son's face: We only live between before we are and what we were. In the lost negative you exist, a smile, a cypher an old-fashioned face in an old-fashioned hat. Lowell, who was once a decorative poet, who wrote of religious myth, of predecessors such as Longfellow, Holmes, and Whittier, who searched through history, has now turned to the simplicities of life. His subjects deal with what is immediate, with what has been gathered from the past into -an aging present. Still his verse clings to the orderly narrative that he is known to have mastered: Southbound- a couple in passage, two Tennessee cardinals in green December outside the window dart and tag and mate- Since my second fatherhood and stay in England, I am a generation older, We are dangerously happy- The poems of Day by Day are longer than most, and each contains a coherent narrative within itself as it moves from one still unpredictable line to the next. Traditions are not seen as soothing when they are viewed through the uncomfortable, and sometimes -unsettling perspec- tive of this older, structured mind. In Constance Ennis is a member of "The Downlook," a poem which apprehends while it concedes, Lowel juggles realism with a meditative focus. For the last two minutes, the retiring monarchy or the full moon looks down on the first chirping sparrows nothing lovelier than waking to find another breathing body in my bed... glowshadow halfcovered with dayclothers like my own, caught in my arms. Last summer nothing dared impede the flow of the body's thousand rivulets of welcome, winding effortlessly, yet with ambiguous invention- safety in nearness. Now the downlook, the down- look - small fuss, nothing that could earn a line or picture in the responsible daily paper we'll be reading, an anthology. of the unredeem- able world ... There's no greater happiness in days of the downlook than to turn back to recapture former joy. How often have my antics and insupportable, trespassing tongue gone astray and led me to prison ... to lying . . . kneeling standing., Lowell has given up the structured succession of aesthetic shapes that he so faithfully wrote in earlier years. What once came from without now comes randomly from within. He is dealing with tangible facts, both mentally and physically, and in "Epilogue," which closes the book, Lowell says, "We are poor passing facts." He forces us to read the emotions of the moment, but allows them to stretch beyond our own selves. Perception, for Lowell, is his conscience, and he writes by it with obedience. But sometimes everything I write with the threadbare art of my eye seems a snapshot, lurid, rapid, garrish, grouped, heightened from life yet paralyzed by fact. All's misalliance. Yet why no say what happened? pray for the grace of accuracy Vermeer gave the sun's illumina- tion stealing like a tide across a map to his girl solid with yearning. We are poor passing facts, warned by that to give each figure in the photograph . his living name. Lowell, who was once a difficult poet that critics analyzed endlessly, now becomes candid, open, and giving. His images and language now speak for themselves. Day by Day is a collection of poetry, which is an act of renewal for a poet who compre- hends the delicate pain which comes (Continued from Page 7) short for schlagobers) and sprinkle with just a hint of powdered cinna- mon. Nice to serve with a cinnamon stick, too. 7 fluid oz. milk 1 oz. fresh yeast 4 T. sugar 4 eggs 22/3 C. all-purpose flour 1.// C. currants 12 C. sultanas (white soaked in /4 C. rum '2 tsp. salt 1 T. grated lemon peel 314 C. unsalted butter 1r2 tsp. vanilla % c. chopped almonds 6 to 12 almond halves raisins) center. Pour in the milk mixture and stir well. Cream butter and remain- ing 2 T. sugar until light. Add eggs, one at a time, beating after each addition. Beat in milk/flour mixture. Drain sultanas and add with lemon rind and currants to batter. Stir in vanilla. Cover and let stand til doubled (105 to 120 minutes). Beat down and put into prepared pan and allow to rise to within 1/3" of the rim of the pan. Place on baking sheet and bake in center of pre-heated oven at 350 degrees for 50 to 60 minutes. If coffee cake begins to darken, turn down heat a bit or cover lightly with foil. When a cake tester comes out clean, cake is ready. Leave in the pan a few minutes before turning out to cool on a wire rack. Dust with confectioners sugar and enjoy warm with butter. Variation: While still warm, glaze with a syrup of 3 T. apricot jam and 1 T. rum, heated through with 2 tsp. sugar and a squeeze of fresh lemon. Allow to absorb for 10 minutes and then sprinkle with confectioners sugar. If A Heavily butter an 8" Turk's Head Mold or small Bundt pan. Sprinkle with chopped almonds and make a pleasant arrangement on the bottom with the almond halves. Warm the milk and dissolve the yeast. Add 2 T. sugar. Sift the flour and salt into a warm bowl and make a well in the film 'Continued from Page 7 sion money a safer bet than the potential fickleness of a paying audience. And it now seems possible that the overdue popularization of cable TV and its acccompanying freedom of subject matter may indeed render theatrical film showings obsolete. Scheuer has tailored his anthol- ogy to these altered times, including as many new films as possible at the expense of some of the older ones. His new edition includes such cur- rents as Star Wars, Annie Hall and at least one film which, as best I can tell, hasn't even appeared in theaters yet, Billy Jack Goes to Washington. Scheuer has spruced up his book with such items as directors' names and film running times, features former- ly found exclusively in a similar guide written by the editor's chief rival, critic Leonard Maltin. And while it's awfully hard not to get metaphorically redundant while de- scribing 10,000 movies, the Scheuer crew succeeds quite well in holding the film buff's interest. S CHEUER sometimes displays a tendency to equate newness with excellence (four stars for Pumping Iron and The Pink Panther Strikes Again, for heaven's sake?!), but his perception is largely reasoned and rarely offensive. Yet fun as this new issue is, I would still recommend that true trivia buffs hunt down one of Scheuer's editions of the mid-'60s. That was the era of Hercules and Godzilla - an age of camp extravaganzas all catalogued lovingly and hilariously by the editor - inane masterworks largely and sorrowfully omitted from the present edition for want of space. And while it's fine to be able to look up Rocky or Taxi Driver, Scheuer'S book just ain't the same without High School Ceaser or Queen of Outer Space. 'sand' (Continued from Page 3) younger. After conquering their ini- tial surprise at this strange twist of time, the older Borges and his young self settle down to discuss a few matters. They cover both the mun- dane and the seemingly significant, and Borges manages to avoid the maudlin cliche of regret for lost youth while poking gentle fun at his idealistic early beliefs. In discussing a poem of Whitman's, for example, the older Borges speculates that the incident around which the poem revolves probably never occurred., Young Borges is stunned. "You don't know him!" he exclaims, open- mouthed. "Whitman is incapable of telling a lie." The works in this collection are so diverse that they defy easy categor- ization; suffice to say that they are never boring. Fans of the author will be surprised at the inclusion of a rare Borges love s'tory, as well as another of his famous gaucho tales. There is something for everybody here, plus a little extra; it leads one to wish that Jorge Luis Borges would write forever. Tom O'Connell is an associate editor for the Daily Sunday Maga- zine. inside: AT LAST Fditor' nowe-For those who've beenaitin fu r the ans~cr tohe acrosi ic pu//Ic of NoN. I. seteuIcarned it andhereiis: 'Backganmon is a gambling game which requires both luck and skill. With a single roll of the dice a winning position can crumble or a seemingnv hopeless position , can le salvaged. Luck keegs the game interesting but skillil p/aY will alwavv he rewarded. -Paul Magriel from Bawkgammon Uranium hunters: Sweeping the Upper Peninsula Books: Borges' latest melange of stories Food them crois, Supplement to The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, December 11, 1977