~.LK K A. , EIGYAT THE MIC141GAN DAILY SUND3AY, MARCH 2, 1924 _ .:. . >. v Vacuity and Perspicuity MONTE GOMERICO <, DISCOVERY I -have just discovered that I am creature of moods. I, who always con-1 sidered myself as free as the winds, am slave to a mood. Not a whim, nothing as shallow as that, but a mood.' My mood varies with the hour of the day, the season of the year, the bookdIam reading. I am in the mood induced by a fairy talI as I write this. I ask myself with a little men- tal start if I am ever withQut a mood -if I ever do aught but reflect. an April morning, an ochre and oranje symphonied sunset, veils of Iavendei= in dim hills, a rollicking Kipling b- lad, a Browning monologue, a Dn sany fantasy, or the imbecile septi- cism of an antediluvian Paine. ANALYSISt Take from me my religion, my e r cation, my environment, myfriend ships-is there no remainder? I vis- ioned myself as an individual, one independent of all men, sufficient Uto himself. And now I suddenly realze that t4e whole thing is nothing but the attitude I tae in this broad mood into which my life at the Uiversitf thrusts me. I am what men WVbeen termed often and often, a puppet, a marionette, a Punch-with the rest of my despised fellows of the world un- wittingly and probably unwillingly pulling the strings. And my aw(k- ward, blundering stumbling- aout on- ly reflect their butter-fingered handli- ing of the cords. REFLECTION The mood I am in! What avmood it a that sent the Crusaders away from their wives and homes aid the trees of their woods, thousands of Miles on a hopeless, useless quest What a mood that sent the Spartans. to besiege Troy for ten long years What a mood it was that sent Colum- bus across the Atlantic, facing alone the terrible Unknown which put ter- ror in the hearts of his criminal crew! What moods sent Livingstone and Stanley into the heart of Africa, anid Drake to the North Pacific! °in what profound moods lived Aristotle, Kant, Hegel, Dante, Napoleon; Confucius Alexander, Mohammed, a host of others! MYSELV Individuals, all these, Representa- tive Men, Heroes, Prophets... Mono- maniacs, all these, prey to one de. vouring mood, prey to no distracting moods, ahethus to act without g es- tioning their actions.., I read Noyes, Vachel nday, Wilie, and my thoughts .bat ike end- leanly "roling .draim, like tha..srging thud of tom-toms, and -.. I write Edgar Guet dltties. I absorb the careful, powerful character studies and atmofiphere paintings of .Conrad, Iardy, Dostoevsky, Turgeniev, TIs- toI, and I grow cooly analytical; ac- quaintances and strangers become characters in exotic settings. I read Dracula, of Stoker; Andreyev; The Return, Qf De La Mare; and books of a like nature, and I feel that I cquld, call a leering slathering grin out of velvety darkness, and . . . 1 write crude imitations of Craig-Ken- nedy. I read Sandburg, Davis, Jeanne d'Orge, Orrick Johns, Kreymborg, Marianne Moore, and the rest of their ilk; and I am immediately become in- ordinately clever.. And Schopen- hauer, Paulsen, and Wenley make me exceedingly wise and sophisticated... DISILLUSION All nothing but mood. Nothing ex- pressing what I have called, what you and all others like us have called What-I-Really-Am. I have never, can never, tell anyone, least of all myself, vfhat I am at bottom; what I am when every extraneous influence is re- moved; and I strongly suspect that I am nothing. After all, I owe my ex- istence, the very fact that I live, to another. Another... . nothingf No, I am not i. I am only an accu-I mulation of many little characteris- tics, which, slapped together rather carelessly, make me what I am; not as other men, true, but-a man. Just a man-just a particular combination' of goodness and badness, reason and insanity, passion and austerity-just like no other man, but not in myself,. my ultimate self, any more than an imaginary point in Space. Literally, II am Nothing, a~id I am governed by 'the mood I am in. And I am always governed; I am always in some happy or sad, witty or dull mood. An animated fantasy, of paste and pulp, dressed in the baright clothes of environment, and dancing idiotically at the end of a string for a lot of fel- low-boobs. I wonder what the devil one of you is jerking that string now? "No less damaging to American dra- matic criticism is the dominant notion that criticism to be valuable, must be constructive. . One can't cure a yellow fever patient by pointing out to him that he should have caught the measles. One can't improve the sanitary condition of a neighborhood merely by giving the outhouse a dif- ferent coat of paint."-("The Critic and the Drama," Nathan.)' "The prostitute is disesteemed. to- day, not because her trade involves anything intrinsically degrading, or even disagreeable, but because she is currently assumed to have been driven to it by dire necessity against her dig- nity and inclination . . . the prosti- tute commonly likes her work and would not exchange places with a shopgirl or a waitress for anything in the world."-("In Defense of Women Mencken.) THE INEFFICIENCY OF GOD: "If Christ, as John writes, appeared on earth in order to destroy the works.9t. the devil, he might have been dis-" pensed with if no devil had existed."- (David Strauss, "The Old Faith and the New.") I Horatian Stoicism ,, ..____ f v/ t 4 ..l' .4 A " f 4 { ' f THE SUNDAY MAGAZINE ANN ARBOR, MICHIG &N, SUNDAY, MARCH 2, 1924 TAIL E UR prn 's First Fancy T HE O'Rossen Suit has invaded America, but it has been nicely modified. On avenues and at smart luncheon tables everywhere its tailored chic catches one s eye, and with what interesting variety! Never twice alike. A glimpse of this collection will tell you why for there are a surprising number of different fabrics, a wide range of colors and details so varid that it would be hard to say which is most attractive. A great many women will find it pos- sible to wear these newer tailleurs and happily, for they do indeed make striking costumes. The Camel 's Hair Suiet JAUNTY Suits of Camel's Hair in favorite shades will prove extremely girlish and well suited to class wear. Priced $29.75 The Right Blouse for the Tailleur F THE tailored suit is to hit the mark of smartness it must have as comrades a num- ber' ofclever Blouses. A visit to this section will show many models made to chum with the boyish suit. Of Broadcloth M ANY Broadcloth Blouses show their fashion worth in two ways, by being simply tailored and by wearing a black bow at the neck! $5.75 Madras Shirts IRLS who are very, very fond of mannish things will choose the good looking Blouse with stiff madras front faintly tucked. $5.95 Clever Collars C AVALIER and Eton col-- lars make many little dim- ity Blouses ever so demure. $1.95 and $2.95 (MACK'S' SECOND FLOOR) SCEPTICISIU AND ANIMAL FAITH, by George Santayana. Scribners. Every scholar or investigator worth his salt rejoices whenuhe finds his corner of the garden cultivated with l, conspicuous success at any university. Thus, those who follow philosophyl could hold their heads a littlef higher fifteen years ago, thanks to the faculty of all the talents at Harvard. But death and resignation making shipwreck, this conjunction became apart of history. Mercifully, although death is apt to close the record, resignation may lend new opportunity. -And one dare affirm that the impres- -:Isive series of books produced by Mr. "Santayana since 1911 offers notable compensation for face-to-face traffic wwith our young barbarians. At all :vents, the publishers of "Scepticism ..and Animal Faith" (the latest of the - -series, 1923), seem to think so; they S2parade virtue pompously in their1 'blurb' with-"courageous seeking for I -Truth . . . pursued unhampered by ,academic conventions." Our friends protest overmuch; I wonder how the =Scribner counting-house would fare were academic conventions relegated -:to the discard! Such supports happen to be a very present help in time of need. But there be men who are men enough to transcend them and, even when he wore the much-bethumped - title 'professor,' Mr. Santayana dis- pensed with these crutches. Here, he =is merely going his own characteristic way, rejoicing in artistry, prospering' in strength, more than ever. The subtitle, "An Introduction to the Realms of Being," serves to remind; one forcibly that philosophy may im- .port many things. As his genially ma- licious wit hints, Mr. Santayana agrees -that it has been, still is, the happy- hunting-ground of dogmatists with home-made axes to grind; of amateur ,..,psychologists fain to ease their own toothache and tell the remedy at a price or for the mere telling's sake; of dull Ipdagogues drooling "rules for profitable study;" of slaves to en- cyclopaedic facts; of malignant mindsi set upon anathematizing heretics and magnifying disciples; of liliputians1 adrift on a momentary current and 'uttering "our water's fne;" of trained bores so naive that they actu- ally tolerate each other at stated meet-i ;ngs; of timid souls whistling in the tlark to keep their courage up. All1 these agree to suffer conventions glad- I ly-whether academic or other makes mighty little difference. Thus, the1 -