_I N L I. aL iEKER I THE "STEEPLEJACK"-A RE- QUIEM, A REVIEW AND . A RESUME (By G. D. E.) This is supposedly a review of James Gibbon Huneker's last work, "Steeplejack" (Scribners), but I hope I may be forgiven if, in view of the fact that the book is an autobiogra- phy, I slight it in favor of its author. "Steeplejack" is an unusually com- plete autobiography; it was completed lateĀ°in 1918, published in 1920, and early this year Mr. Huneker passed; away at the age of sixty-one.' I call attention to a line in the early pages of the first volume ("Steeple- jack" comes in two volumes), take it for what you will: "I've never met anyone with whom I would change places, except a dead man." 'The writer doubtlessly referred to the im- mortals. Peace, Huneker, you are immortal! The world may not recog- nize it, but then, immortality is some- times a figment of fools. Greatness, recognized or unrecognized, is amar- anthine. Sowed Seeds of Culture And Huneker is great because he sowed the seeds of culture. He taught the art of criticism; to amplify, the art of appreciation and, elimination. He did not speak to the mob nor yet to embryonic intellectuals. He assumed always that his followers were ready for a post-graduate course. He aimed at porphyritic material; men already crystallized by the heat and mellow of culture. Let someone else fuse and shape the plastic , and let the adaman- tine entirely go hang! Through Huneker a number of our best critics in literature, painting, and music saved themselves from falling into the mud of mediocrity and empty popularity; and he saved not a few of" the artists themselves from the same fate. Today, in consequence, we have] his disciples, a small school of skill- 3 ful critics, helping the artists, drilling, yet new critics, and here and there encouraging men who have merely the potential ability of appreciation. "Steeplejack," like the rest of Hun- eker's books, seems bewildering to the beginner and none too easy for the savant to follow. It is replete with unfamiliar names and titles. Therein is its educational value; its charm forces one to read, its abstruseness forces one to investigate and learn. Shows Variety of Life The work shows the variety in the author's life, the fruition of the rich, mixed element; of the man. He ranged chiefly between Philadelphia, his home city, and Vienna. He met all manners of men; he was personally acquainted with nearly all leaders of all seven arts. Huneker was not only a literary critic of the first water; he estimated music superbly and played no mean hand of his own, and he knew paint- ing. He had tiffs with Bernard Shaw, he talked to Joseph Conrad, he received letters from Nietzsche, Brandes, George Moore, Remy de Gourmont, Frank Norris, Havelock Ellis, a postal card from Tolstoi, communications, stacks and bales of them, from painters, mu- sicians, stagefolk. But for all the gentle charm which won the host of friends, Huneker could strike and strike hard in defense of his concepts,. and against the churlish gasconade of Puritanism. "What has morality to do with art?" he asked de- fiantly. In opposition came only the tin hootings of the Puritans, armed with ink wells and hymns, seconded feebly by the nickering shades of An- thony Comstock and Cotton Mather. Leading Critics Praise But time presses and I have already overfilled my space allotment. Rather than re-hash I respectfully call your attention to an article on Huneker, far more complete and interesting, by C. Blythe Sherwood, in "Arts and Decora- tions," for March, obtainable in theI "periodical room" of the library. In addition it may be announced that Mencken devotes .over forty pages to Huneker in the "Book of Prefaces." ZELL WRITTEN BY A MICHIGAN GRAD, UNDER PEN NAME (By it. D. S.) An illuminating vignette of drab metropolitan bourgeois life is "Zell" (Knopf), the second novel of a Detroit lawyer and Michigan graduate, who writes under the name of Henry G. Aikman. Although better than "The Groper," Aikman's first novel, "Zell" is not without crudities. On the whole, however, it is unusually good and merits a place among the notable in- terpretations of mid-western American life of such moderns as Masters, Dell, Anderson, and Lewis. Avery Zell, son of bourgeois medi- ocrities, finds his life shadowed by the "disgrace" of his parents' divorce. In later years he is the victim of an un- happy marriage and faces the problem of leaving his prosaic wife and going with the woman he loves, thus freeing himself from the demoralizing Puri- tanical influences which have con- stantly hampered him, or of staying with his wife and giving his son the chance that he himself has lacked. This, briefly, is Aikman's theme and he has developed it well. Throughout the book the author's "idea" is per- haps a little .too apparent. Also the story suffers somewhat from compres- sion. The latter is especially notice- able in the chapter entitled "Avery, Junior," in which the tone of the book descends almost to the burlesque level of the "His Day of Rest" cartoons, Avery Zell, his depressingly matter- of-fact mother and sister, anI his scapegrace father are all well handled. Inez Copeland, the girl Avery loves, is rather unconvincing. With this ex- e ception the characters are those one sees a hundred times a day-on the street cars, in the corner drug store, in church, in the movie theatres. In short they are the people that compose three-quarters of a big city's popula- tion. "Zell" is a promising work. Aik- man, slightly under the influence of Dreiser, has nevertheless a simple and concise style of his own. His first two works show many signs of his be- coming one of America's few first- class novelists. SEEIG MICHIGAN2 WV81I TH THE OPERA (Continued from Page One) his heart-breaking rendition of "Hot Dog." After spending Sunday in Detroit with the D. A. C. as headquarters and brief sight-seeing tours around the city, out Mount Elliott avenue and In the region of Cadillac Square, the troupe left the Brush street station early Monday morning for Pontiac. Earle Neale drew first blood on the. trip when he received a beautiful bouquet Of roses at the close of "Fairy Fountain." Forsythe also had an ex- perience here that prevented him from getting his usual allotment of sleep. It was at this point that a petition was circulated and presented to the man- agement that more care be taken in spotting the cars so as to minimize the usual noises current around a rail- road yard. per cent of the Saginaw products were rewarded for their efforts, one receiv- ing a lovely Maize and Blue nosegay and the other a sumptuous funeral wreath. A big formal party at the Durant in Flint lasting until' three o'clock brought the social side of the tour to a close with the exception of more or less private affairs in Detroit over the week end. A few of the come- dians succeeded in missing the train which pulled out before breakfast. Professional Jealousy' Harmony as a whole existed through- out the trip, although professional jealousy cropped out now ' and then when one of the leads would feel that another member of the cast received a larger steak than he did or hotter cof- fee at meal time. The routine of school will probably weigh rather heavily from now until the end of the semester on the "Top O' th' Mornin' " troube, but there is still the chance that a longer trip will be taken in June to look for- ward to and at least anticipate. Woman Senator Active, J usy a Lansing, Mich.-Michigan's first man legislator, Senator Eva M. H9 ilton of Grand Rapids, has set a 1 precedent for any of her sex who follow her. Senator Hamilton attends every sion of the body to which she elected and takes an active par consideration of all bills preser She has "mothered" 11 measureE all, ranging in importance from teachers' retirement fund bill to an protecting lotus flowers in water the Great Lakes and their tributa Senator Hamilton is chairman of committee on industrial schools also a member of four other com tees. Use the advertising columns of Michigan Daily to reach the bes Ann Arbor's buyers.--Adv. Ann Arboi"s buyers.-Adv. JUST RECEIVED- The New Arrol Shir Bay City Wins The dance Tuesday night at Port Huron was one of the outstanding fea- tures of the trip, although the sight- seeing trip to Sarnia might be conbid- ered as a close second. It was here that one of the members of the chorus fell asleep in a barber chair and lost his locks. Bay City was the next stop. Not enough could :be said for the treat- ment accorded the members of the opera by the Michigan alumni in Bay City who had entertainment provided for them from the time they arrived until they left for Saginaw. There was not an idle moment and the men were kept busy throughout their stay. One of the biggest problems of the trip for E. Mortimer Shuter was to see that the local talent in the show would stand out prominently in their home towns. Sixty-six and two-thirds Ca, m pus WhVite, wi low collar attached Wadhams & Co Q # ' P State St$reet J b Q - I vv a D 0 U B L E SUNDAY - TUESDAY ( fg' ' r .L F E A T R E 0 T N IDHARLES ~HAPL1N -has taken a partner in the fun bus- iness. They're the greatest combina- tion of mirth-makers who ever got together. It's- JACKIE COOGAN whose work has stamped;him as one of the greatest juvenile actors ever discovered. FOLLOW THE CROWD TO "'THE STARTING TODAY CLARA KIMBALL Y 0 U N G / IN -,. 'w. ,'!J) i "r I A vital dramatic document dedicated to the great army:ofij who gained unhappiness by telling their husbands too KID" z IN ADDITION P R O G R A M M E i.. fi 1 I r The comedy that took a year to make. A laugh every minute and here and there is a sob too. EDDIE BARRY and the FOLLIES girls in Ik ALSO 'A %9 rI EVIA NOVAK -IN- "THE TORRENTtt She was swept by the curling sea on the shores of a desert isle. He swooped down from the sky and they met once more. "Dining Room t Kitchen and S-!ink"5 A merry mix-up of a stranded burlesque show, rich uncles and a pair of crooks TOPICS S::::::::::::::: OR C H ESTR A PRICES ONLYc '7