w -w -w w -~-. - - - w t, THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SIX SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1922 SUNDAY, NOVEUBER.26, 1922 THE MICHIGAN DAILY . - those of the realist. The lens of .her !startle you with revolutionary state- -- ' mind is romantic--"they liked to slap ments, but her work insinuates itself his strong back with. their rough into your consciousness until, instead hands, which age was " making {delicate of standing aloof and coldly -observ- - with filigree of veins and wrinkles"; ing, you enter ioto the story and live or "This woman was throwing over j with the characters. them a net of events as excessive as In brief, the novel deals with herself". A picturesque method and Claude Wheeler, the- son of. a Nebrts- transcending careful realism. . I ka farmer, who, after a short lived at- , Rebecca West has done well with I tendance at college, is compelled to THE INTRINSIC QUALI- be founded well. So, as Richard "The Judge". It moves with the col- Icome home and manage his father's TY OF REBECCA WEST Yaverland enters upon the scene or and breath of life. She has a man- farm. He is essentially an aspiring Ellen's trammelled life, with his rich ner which is neither obtrusive nor boy, with no liking for farm life, and THE JUDGEby RebeboyWeswith nokglikingoforpefarmclifeasasd THE JU;GE, by Rebecca West background of experience and as she uneven, which rolls over the tongue the resumption of routine on the George H. Doran. 1922. $.50 'absorbs him in her furious thirst for smoothly with a rich and fulfarm is wellngh disastrous to his beauty and adventure, they become famiIeiihdiatost i Rebecca West was born in Ireland. y fr ,ed taste. Her work gives off the clear outreaching spirit. He marries a She was educated in Scotlandsustantia us. They become in tone. of true craftsmanship. Hers childhood sweetheart, a girl who is Sdividuals of three dimensions, with may not be a profound mind or a never his wife but only his house- will be 30 years old on Christmas I close-woven, complex souls. This great one, but it is rare in its thor- keeper, who completes her household Day. She is or. at least was, a suf- sense of profundity grows with the ouglh and original appreciation of duties only to hurry to W C. T. U. fragette. She writes a sporadic col- progress of the story. The odd, life. meetings, and who firally packs off mn of reviews the New Stas-charming Ellen, whose hair is a to China to sit by the bedside of her umn of reviews for the New States- "burning bush of beauty", becomes Coney. issinaryositer.telaude o sur man called "Notes on Novels" which !esoa ---- n he gh3f e missionary sister. Claude is not sure ma ald"oe nNvl"wihreasonable to us in the light of herI whether he is glad or sorry, but feels is frequently devastating, commencing, parents, the wild Irish father and her ROMANTIC REALISM I relieved, and when the United States for Instance, Mr. Stephen McKenna mother, quiet and submissive but a e is not wholly without merit." And she "true romantic". ONE OF OURS, by Wila Cather. Al enters the war, enlists. With this leged. red . lnop. 192. 2JI step he sheds like an outgrown shell is hag-ridden with legend. Perhaps the scene changes too !Fred A. Knopf. 1922. $2.50. rheseslkneswtoessel is hg-ridenwithPeraps he cenechages ool all his old life, enters with zest into Writing this we are aware of be- completely in the second part to seem It is refreshing to find, in the hec- his military career, is sent to France traying the canons of the Young Re- to make for careful unity. The action tic atmosphere created by the young- and there loses his life in an attack. viewer. We are not regarding the turns abruptly from the close human- er writers of the p book as unique and isolated. But for ity of Edinburgh to the wide present day, an au- It would be difficult to say which is the sake of an interesting character' spaces of the south coast weright thor who writes placidly, sanely, the better presented, Claude or his and the correction of a curious mis- could be imagined that where It without fever and without haste, and mother. The former is very real and ante csorecthonoanturiouythw;coulbimagnd thatmthe people Iwho at the same time does not follow very human-an ordinary boy with as- take let us for the moment play the who lived under this immense sky Ithe school of our berufflled romantic- pirations beyond his grasp, who makes literary historian, might come to lose the comnmon hu- ists, Harold Bell Wright and Gene the most of what comes to him, and We write ourself on the books with man sense of their own supreme - CStratton Porter. Such an one is Wil- when opportunity arrives, joyfully Mir. Grant Overton of Doran's as one portance'. la Cather, acclaimed by critics as severs connection with the millstone of those "ho will help to scotch the But if the scene changes thorough- America's greatest woman novelist. I which has been hanging about his myth of "Regina Miriam Bloch." In ly so does the temper of the story. Miss Cather's work is realistic in that neck. His mother is a former country 1918 when Rebecca West published The entrance of Marion Yaverland, it deals with the facts of life without school teacher married to a. prosper- her first novel the Readers' Guide er- Richard's mother, that dark, preoccu- resorting to the tinselled garnishing }otus farmer--a figure that would be red in saying "see Miriam Regina pied, pent-up woman, complicates a employed by the late romanticists, tragic if she did not accept her des- Blochi." Amy Wellington hailed her situation which has been hitherto se- and at the same time it has a tinge tiny so mildly and cheerfully. She is by this ungraceful appellation in an rene. Unhappiness broods over the of romantic style which is refreshing ,a placidly intellectual woman, in- article in the Literary Review. Since landscape and as the story goes swift- to the reader who is jaded with har- tensely religious without snarling then it has become tradition for the ly to its ordered, logical, and inevita.. Irassed visions and futuristic dreams. fanaticism, and above all, she is a reviewer to remark on the peculiar ble tragic end, no hope of rescue is An especially noteworthy fact about beautiful mother. She is the epitomi- pertinence of the name of Ibsen's held out. Miss Cather's work is the time she zation of the characteristics I have strong-minded heroine as a nom-de- Marion's love, strong and full-bod- puts on it. She is not one of the alawys found dearest in mothers-she guerre for this pungent personality. ied, that should have gone to Rich- "book-a-year" writers, who ought l resembles in many striking details But she has legal as well as moral ard's father whom she never mar- rather to be writing advertisements, my own mother, and some other moth- right to the name of Rebecca West, ried, is turned on Richard himself, so but she takes her time and when she :era I know. Willa Cather has almost and it is time the myth was dislo- that he is held between Ellen's and, has finished, behold - a readable outdone herself in the presentation cated. !his mother's loves. Thus his mother novel! of this character. Aside from her political articles in unconsciously sentences him for his This tendency is quite noticeable in I In Enid. Claudes wife, ie also per- the Freewoman and the book reviews father's sin. The situation -holds for her most recent book, "One of Ours",, ceptible the careful study and accur- which are often appallingly right in Ellen and for Roger Peacey, the un- on which she spent three years, and ate delineation which is one of the their judgments, she has written a (loved half-brother. And in the end which as a result flows along easily characteristics of the authors work, study of H-enry James (which some Ellen finds herself facing Marion's and gracefully, at the same time be- We all know Enid. She is the girl we one has called very. good Rebecca old predicament:Thest ory works in ing full of vital truth and keen char- mistook for q beautifully calm orca- West), and two novels. The first, "The a hopeless circle, acter analysis. Miss Cather does not ture, a balm for our troubled souls, Return of the Soldier," is a brief and When we speak of action we mean hurl truth at you, and she doe not an understanding, soothing soft af nearly perfect tragedy. The second ( not action in the phiysical sense, but, and immediate novel is "The Judge." in the sense of the movement of the We refuse to make journalistic cap- mind, the processes of the soul. Miss ital out of the- prefatory sentence West employs the method, so highly GIFTS FR EYOUNG "Every mother is a judge who sen- developed by Henry James,sof creat-FT FOR NE UN tences the children for the sins of the!ing a theater in the mind of the char-i T. Clmenceau ,a-nd the Turkish MVein The gist of M. Clemenceau's mes-. sage to-.the United States, so far as his addresses have been reported, may be set forth in few words. There is danger, he thinks, of a coup in Ger- many which will restore the military party to power and hasten the pre- paration of another war againstI France; if the French had forseen the delay in the adjustment of repar- ations, they would have gone on to Berlin;. in the East there is a menace to civilization in the alliance between Turkish Nationalists and Bolshevik Russia; and since the Armistice, theI United States has been derelict in its duty to the world, above all to France,, which needs and deserves her support against aggression. No one who has av :, '; "now- ledge of conditions is (>rminl will minimize the danger of a revo:ution, because revolution s *L n th' trail of hunger. Unless some r-rpr-ement can promptly be made, i t:e face of the depreciation of the c rrency, by which the failure of the cereal crop in Germany can be offset through the importation of grain from this con- tinent, in the next few months tens of thousands of the less robust of the population will die of "insuifficient nutrition", that is of starvation. Moreover, no well informed person 'who is not blinded by ignorance or prejudice will maintain that since the war the foreign policy of the United States has given evidence either oft far-sighted statesmanship or of heed to the humanitarian considerations which were so earnestly stressed dur- ing the War. Our handling of inter- national questions has too frequently been characterized by lack of vision and an e'aston of responsibility int facing paramount issues. Finally, not least ' in 'the indictment of our for- eign policy is a count which M. Clem-[ enceau, frank though he is, would! .hardly mention.- In dealing with in- ternational affairs at the present time asin the past,' our country has put itself under a handicap by ap- pointing to important diplomatic posts men without the-necessary diplo- matic experience, knowledge of Euro- pean languages and insight into the psychology of the . foreign nations. to 'grapple effectively with the por- tentous problems now forced upon them. Point is added to M. Clemenceau's expressions of opinion because at this moment all eyes are focused upon the proceedings at Lausanne, where the Turkish question °must be at least temporarily settled. The penalty of failure to sette it will be another Balkan War, which it will be impos- ByProf. Francis W. Kelsey sible to confine within the limits of of other islands and of Smyrna with the Near East. Nevertheless, after full allowance has been made for the 1 inconsistencies and shortcomings in the handling of our foreign relations, a dispassionate review of outstanding facts will make it clear that, however sound at heart the French people may be, the French government itself is primarily responsible both for. the recent horrors in Turkish lands and for the imminent peril of another war; and that the United States thus' far has done well to hold aloof from any kind of alliance that even in the remotest degree would commit it to an approval of French foreign policy, or bring aggressive French policies' into conflict with our pacific aims. On January 10, 1917, the Allies dis- patched from Paris a letter in FrenchE replying to President Wi'son's note, requesting a statement of the reasons why they were fighting. The section setting forth the objects for which' they fought mentions first "the restor- ation of Belgium'", and concludes with "the liberation of the peoples now subject to the bloody tyranny of the Turk; the expulsion from EuropeI of the Ottoman Empire, which is rad-1 ically alien to western civilization." Before the end of 1917 General Al- lenby captured Jerusalem, and in a few months the Turkish resistancel was completely broken. The Turkish armistice, which. was equivalent to an unconditional surrender, came in- to force on October 31, 1918. At that' time British garrisons held South-1 eastern Asia Minor, Syria and Meso-, potamia; but Cclici.a and Syria werel soon turned over to France under the terms of the previous Sykes- Picot agreement. Not until 1920 was a final agree-, ment reached regarding the territor-} lal allotments in the Ottoman Empire.{ British military experts opposed thel dividing up of Asia Minor,: on theI ground that- the physical configura-1 tion of the country would facilitate= unity of political administration anC make difficult the holding of isolated portions along the sea-coast againsti attacks from the central plateau. The experts, however, were over-ruled. As a result of various conferences,, by the end of 1920 Italy, which sincej her war with Turkey in 1911-12 had held a group of islands off the coast, of Asia Minor known as the Dodeca- nese, received not only these but oth- er islands and a "zone of influence" about Adalia on the mainland; France held Cilicia and Syria; Greece not on- ly had possession of Thrace on the European side but was given control about half of the vilayet or territor- ial division in which Smyrna lies. Of other arrangements it is not nec- essary to speak. On August 10, 1920, these arrangements were supposed to be ratified through the signing of theE so-called treaty of Sevres by the Turk- ish delegates. These delegates, how- with the Nationalists, a would stil be standing. lured by the prospect of nomic advantages as we lief from military pressi into a secret treaty with to whom directly or in supplied munitions of war against her allies, the Gri British. Italy also mac treaty with the Turks, bu have had slight influence ever represented the government cen- result if if it had not 1: tered in Constantinople, which in a support and help which sense was subject to the Allies. The received from the French. Turkish Nationalist movement, com- M. Clemenceau can not mencing in the middle of 1919 in Asia size the danger of a re Minor, had gained such headway that I Turkish empire with a ba its leaders already felt strong enough pean soil, especially in a to refuse to accept the treaty and con- the Bolshevists. It is a' tinned to insist upon the withdraw- that, all professions of t al of the Greeks, French and Italians jtie contrary, the Nationa from Asia Minor, with the aim of ul- ment is the successor nc timately regaining the control of power but in spirit and Constantinople. Their program wa') the "Ottoman Empire whi specifically announced in a proclama- ally alien to western civil tion which was posted in Konia, an expulsion of which from ancient Turkish capital on the site of a cardinal aim of the grey the Iconium of New Testament times, Yet the case is not h September 29, 1919. 1 ha%.nng witnessed the ter The available military forces of Ita- quences to civilization o ly and France were not adequate to fidy, France, and also Ita hold the regions allotted to them tinue to stand side by sid against the forces and generalship of land and avoid secret c Mustapha Kemal, who had showi and understandings, it wil himself able both as a military or- sible to safe-guard the liv ganizer and as a commander in the perty of native Christians field and who had an advantageous foreigners in Constant position in the control of the central Turkish lands. plateau of Asia Minor. In visiting I But what of the United Konia at the end of 1919 I was amaz- aide-memoire forwarded b ed to find a force of fewer than one Hughes in reply to the u hundred Italian soldiers representing participate in the Near E the authority of Italy in one of 'the ence is technically correci most fanatical of Moslem cities. I that the rights of the U . The Nationalists harried the French must be safeguarded. Bu in Cilicia, and several isolated French he expect to safeguard th garrisons were cut off. In fact, the The United States ough Turks soon came to hold the French resented at the Confereni in contempt, and Kemal, before the sanne by a delegation hav signing of the Treaty of Sevres, ac- ity to vote as well as sp cording to current report declared case of the failure of thi Ithat he could drive the French out, meet reasonable requi of Cilicia whenever he wished.But would be salutary to hav It was to the advantage of the Turks ly the Pittsburgh but in to gain their'ends by secret diplom- considerable fleet of battl acy. plementing the fleet of des! IHad France remained true to her I n the Eastern Mediterra professions expressed in the note to I Turk respects nothing bu President Wilson in 1917, and to her twenty and odd treaties solemn obligations to England and tions made by Turkey in t other Allies which had saved her hundred and fifty years from German domination, a reason- been lived up to witho able settlement might have been made pressure. father," and the dedication "To the; acter in which the action happens. memory of my mother." Whatever is ; Thus she achieves reality for her peo- implicit in this juxtaposition may be ple by making us live with them. left to the post-mortems of the biog- The development of this reality is, tapher. paradoxically, backward. That is, we Superficially "The Judge" seems find a character given and then ex- oddly proportioned. The first part, plained. Instead of a steady and cu- nearly Xial the four hundred and nulative growth there is a retro- ninety pages, is given over to an gressional progress. The character of idyllic courtship between Ellen Mel- Richard never , approaches explana- ville and Richard Yaverland. An idyl- tion until the remarkable series of ic affair if such a thing is possible in flashbacks two-thirds of the way Edinburgh where "Holyrood, under a through the book in which his mother' black bank surmounted by a low bit- recalls her early life. It is like hear- ten cliff, would lie like the camp of ing a tale that fills in vast and un- an .invading and terrified army. " realized, though suspected,~spaces in But this lavish use of space is not your understanding of a person. disproportionate if you consider it as The esthetic demand for old wine a foundation for the action to fol- in new bottles is well satisfied in low. Great demands are to be made ! Rebecca West's style. The pattern of on the souls of Ellen and Yaverland1 her mind is not in the conventional and, for the reader's sake, they must i form. Her style and view are not 'Ii wucg In making up your Uhristmas list, consider these suggestions for the young man. Each has been the subject of our careful choice. Gruen Verithin and Strap Watches Cigarette Cases Gold Pencils Military Brushes Fountain Pens Card and Bill Cases Cuff Buttons In our wide selection you will find many other valuable suggestions. HALLER'S STATE STREET BEAUTY CLAY SPECIAL A "Real" Steak Dinner- Is an oasis of relief and satisfaction - in a desert of commonplace food! A. C. 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