0 TWELVE THE MICHIGAN DAILY ,91?NDAY NOVEMBER 9, WW Books and Writerd WWW[C t ..4 Study for an Avocation i THE MIDDLE WES The exhibition o fthe work of Aus- trian school children held in the West Gallery of Alumni Memorial Hall the first of the week was probablythe' most interesting display that Ann Ar- bor art patrons have had the oppor- tunity of viewing in some time. It is -salmost impossible to believe that the majority of the paintings and draw- ings exhibited are the work of chil- VIN LTE A UR ' dren, most of them are not over fif- T IN LITERATURE """o"" c'?'n h teen years old. The collection, only a part of which Dr. Kollar, who is sup- ervising the world tour it is making,. of grey calico floated over the fagged could bring to Ann Arbor, is a rare snow." And this: tribute to the inspirational genius of, "The rain beat the drum of the hol- Prof. Cizek,' under whose directiont low building with many sticks. The the childrenthave worked. tragic scrops of meaning, the flakesof The manner in which Prof. Cizek order and bits of melody rose and fell;l they aroused the ear and were oh- codcshisaschool is as simple as th teredar eresults are amazing. It was his idea literated." And far too few with the that children, given, free rein to dol Procacious-Adjective. Pert, petu- lant; forward; saucy. Scansion-Noun. The act of scan-' this and that ning; distinguishing the metrical feet of a verse by emphasis, pause or otherwise. (In "The Tattooed Count- _ -- ess" the word is used in reference to a~n Yechten unabridged:-sthe reading of a newspaper, which Van eclien uabriged: sems affected and unjustified). WHEN SOME years ago the suc- Strippled-Adjective. Engraved by cessful American play "Withi-n the means of dots instead of lines. Lavy" was produced in England, it Several of the reviewers accusedl was found necessary to translate Carl Van Vechten of coining his' own many of the slang terms into English ;words. This dill convince them of for the benefit of the audience. A their error, for to quote the news- similar instance occurred when "Bab- paper again: "It would be foolish to bitt" was published in England and a make up words when real ones, just glossary appended to explain Ameri- as funny are waiting in the dictionary, tion to general social conditions, with a consideration of whether or not the education now offered to youthy is able to meet youth's real needs. The eternal question. Miss Lowell rings the bell again.-- MISS AMY LOWELL, one of Ameri- ca's best known poets and critics. whose "John Keats" will be published 'by Houghton Mifflin Company in Jana-. ary, was recently awarded the Helen Haire Levinson prize by Poetry, A Magazine of Verse, edited by Harriet Monroe. Miss Lowell's prize poem, "Evelyn Ray," appeared in the Decem- ber 1923 issue of the magazine. EPISCOPALIANS! The Annual STUDENT BANQUET at le M ICHIGAN UNION .A- THE APPLE OF THE EYE, by Glen- way Wescott. Lincoln MacVeagh. The Dial Press.,.$2.50 The Apple of the Eye is the beauti- ful chronicle of an unsuccessful quest. Three members of a southern Wiscon- sin family of farmers give up, after failure of varying degrees of com- pleteness, the attempt at redemption of the spirit through the flesh. This quest, consciously or unconsciously undertaken, is the essential matter of the stories of Bad Han, the virgin mother Rosalia, and the lonely be- wildered Dan. So the theme of the book is simply that old, or at least rapidly aging, one, Sex and th'e Middle West. But there the resemblence to the weary-of-dish-water-eager-for-cul- ture sort of fiction ends. This yarn is solid; stuff. Wescott handles his story with a laudable forthrightness, es- chewing all the cheap devices by which many of the story tellers of to- day are wont to try to make their stories unusual. The story has a simple beauty, sometimes resembling Louis Hemon's Maria Chapdelaine. Perhaps it is surprising that this should be the case since the story comes from one who has been known heretofore chiefly and almost solely as an extremist poet of the group featured by the most esoteric reviews. Wescott's things heretofore have been of the over-sophisticated variety, the sort of thing done by T. S. Eliot, E. E. Cummings and others of their ilk. But into the substance of this story he has allowed no trace of intellec- tual snobbishness In any manifesta- tion. He neither writes down to his rustic characters, nor does he attempt to make them exaggeratedly idyllic. He has shown throughout the book an admirable sense of restraint and f'elhig for proportion. It is excellent discipline, for a young artist, to write a book of this sort. Wescott's course in this case is like that of George Moore, who turned from the effete artiness of Evelyn Innes to write a plain roast-beef thing like Esther Waters, "the most English of all nov- els." But there is this difference: the style of Esther Waters was what good style should be, it was indistinguish- able from content. In Wescott's case, however, the artiness so rigidly and rightly barred out from the story it- self has been allowed to mar the style. The fault here is really merely a vir- tue overworked. Wescott, a young writer sincerely striving to create literature, has been fearful of falling into dulness and carelessness to the extent that his work suffers from the tion with inevitable adjectives and un- expected verbs has resulted in many cases in turning really fine work into mere fancy writing. It is purely in the matter of putting words upon his story that he has failed. He seemsj in some cases to have been influenced by the fear that the story's drabness of subject could only be saved by an extreme liveliness of style. The re- sult is that in many passages thestory is annoyingly jumpy just where it ought to flow along in a manner that would make one unmindful of words and style. There are too many para- graphs like this: "The houses on both sides of the road, brick and clapboard, surrounded by picket fences and evergrens. A little sad deer of iron with slant iron eyes stood among frugal dead grasses. Near him a woman in billowy skirts WillI1ii 111111I111110ili 11111111111111111111 I FUR COAT a - We can insure fur coats against loss by Sfire or theft for a very reasonable amount. 2 ~~~ i___ c a I c c n x it tt I f i F ATTENTION quiet distinction of this: "To her simple eye nothing was degrading, nothing evil; . everything formed a single difficult pure coil- morallness and pure. So she spoke' more plainly and more strongly than; other men and women, the faultless, the prosperous, or the strong." Save for this objection the Apple! of The Eye is a very beautiful book indeed. The Apple is good, sweet, andj well-ripened, but, to chase down the simile relentlessly, its style is the glazing of a candied apple when too, much sugar is used. It is brittle and hard and cracks away fronj the apple. Like most books of our day, this carries an incubus of sex-though not an incubus of lechery. Wescott's treatment of sex is, like the rest of the book, praiseworthy for its goodly forthrightness. It is, for no very un- derstandable reason, except its serenel matter-of-factness, entirely unshock- ing, handled throughout with an ethi-{ cally antiseptic touch. The apple may1 be candied, but it's nowhere rotten. The Apple of the Eye marks a great advance in Glenway Wescot.t's de- velopment. It is immeasurably super- ior to the 'sterile febrilities of his verse. It ought to assure him his spurs. (Note Bad Han, the story which forms the first third of The Apple of the Eye, was published in Dial for January 1924.. -Arnold CGingrich. as they chose, would produce far better things than under the restric- tion and guidance of teachers school- ed along conventional lines. To test{ his idea he devoted his week-ends to gathering a class of children to whom he gave the material for the repro- duction of their ideas. They were told to do as they chose. Their mistakes I were not corrected, their ideas were not forced. They were allowed to ! work out things as best they -could. The only assistance they were given1 was in media. Prof. Cizek gave them the materials it was easiest for them1 to use. As Dr. Kollar explained in his gallery talk Wednesday evening-a talk emphasized with wide, free ges- tures and punctuated with appeals to his audience to help him with his words-: if Prof Cizek discovered that a child was impeded by his in-' ability to haidle a pencil he gave that child a brush-something' the child{ could use freely. Probably the most interesting of the things exhibited were the expres- sionist paintings and drawings which I were to be found at the south end of the gallery. Two dancing figures which seemed to twist and sparkle as they were viewed, an amazingly com- prehensive mural of a city and a char- coal entitled "Introspection"-a thing of beautiful light and shade-were the (Continued on Page Fourteen) { ca oiqlum.fairly begging to be used."- Now, however, an American book ___ THE EVE OF VENUS (H-oughton , has been published in America by an THE EXILE of Ibanex. for giving Mifflin) translated from the original( American and an Ameri'can news-: free utterance to his opinions about Latin by R. W. Postgate is an anonly- paper has printed a glossary of deft-' the King of Spain is another step in mous .poem. Mr. Postgate remarks in' nitions of some of the American the rebellion against Spanish tyranny. his commentary: "It has all the uays- wor ls. Carl Van Vechten in "The Frank B. Deakin in "Spain Today" tery of the unknown; it comes to u Taa~ooed Countess" (Knopf) has, ac- (Knopf) claims that Spain is ",as unsigned, and from where we (101no?. cording to the newspaper, used "funny dreadful a country for its inhabitants know. A poem as strange as it is words in funny places" and so the in the twentieth century as any Euro-i beautiful, it is neither of the ancienjt1 following definitions are given: paconrwsinteMdlAg." nor of the modern world." Atrabilious-Adjective. Melanchblic The greatest Spanish prophet of dis- Ne ok-~iyCasfes or hypochondriac; atrabiliary (per- sent, however, is MgeUn uN eed_____work?-________ail___ tamning to black bile.) land J. E. Crawford Flitch has justI Contadina-Noun. An Italian peas- completed a translation of a selection- ant woman. 'from his essays under the title "Es- Crepitating---Adjective. Having a says and Soliloquies" to be published crackling sound; crackling, rattling, by Knopf. next Spring. Ibanez is' Derainat--'lra~nitiv verb To epresented on The Borzoi list with a 1 DeaiaeTast~ eb oreprint of his first novel to appear in R pluck up by the roots; to extirpate. ' this country, "The Cabin," now in-' Dolent-Adjective. Sorrowful. eluded in the Borzoi Pocket Books. Egrimony-Noun. Sorrow. WITH THE publication of "Pre-' Epithumetic-Adjective. Pertaining jtudices: Fourth Series" by HI. L.1s to sexual desire; sensual. Meneken, Alfred A. Knopf announcesI Glaucous-Adjective. Of a sea- that a set of the fond volumes "Pre-HA D W green color; of a dull green passing jiudices" will be boxed and handsome- into grayish blue. ; y boundl in time to become Christmas' 6'pI Moieaio-on Obsequious-; gifts for' "the civilized inority." I N{O/E L Otiose-Adjective. Being at' leisure' IT M4AY interest somebody to know 0 N 2if t or ease; unemployed; indolent; idle.' that John Galswor~by once called the ____________ ______ Passerine-Adjective. Again, in the long short ;story "the best for all forms interests of brevity we depart from for fiction." . j I1,AVE 3iOU SUBSCIBEII) YE'T'? ft Webster. The word in "The Tattoned ' _----- "- ------- ---_ , Countess" is used to describe a worn- "WHIAT AILS Our Youth?" by an. It indicates likeness to a small George A. Coe, of Teacher's College, perching bird.j Columbia University, has just been u E Peccancy--Noun. The sta~te of he-! published by Charles Scribnler's Sons. Pinguid-Adjective. Fat; unctuous; study of the habits and attitudes of greasy. modern young people and their rela-) sm TUESDAY, NOV. It at 6MOO P. M. Cliff Allen's Orchestra Speeches Cabaret 1OT FAIL TO GO Tickets at Harris Hall and Wahr's i p i ;'F'l A L T r I c Em: )RK N DRY Phone 2353 rronize Daijy Advertigers.--Adv. I I GRADUATES Are You Interested in Regarding Wescott Glenway Wescott, whose first novel. The Apple of The Eye has just been' published by Lincoln MacVeagh-The Dial Press was born in Kewaskum, Wisconsin. His father was a poor farmer, whose great disappointment, was young Glenway's dislike and ap- parent ineptitude for farm work. It was mostly through the help of his mother, who had a real regard for culture, that he was able to realize his ambition fpr an education. He first attended a small school at West End, where the associations were very distressing to him, and later continued his schooling at Waukeshaw until he finished high school. Then, with the help of rela- tives, he managed to attend the Uni- versity of Wisconsin for a year. After his attendance at Chicago,' he suffered a breakdown which con- fined him to his bed for a year. I Upon his recovery he sojourned, suc- cessively in Santa Fe, Chicago, Lon- don, the Berkshires and the Rhine. The Apple of 'The Eye deserves a place among the "much travelled books" of history, such as Conrad's Almayer's Folly. The story was begun in Wescott's home town, Ke- waskium, and the manuscript travelled with him to Chicago, Santa Fe, the Berkshires, London, Berne on the Rhine, New York, Gastein (Austria), Berlin, Carlsbad, Paris, the Adiron- dacks and finally, New York, where the story was finished. 0 - INVESTMENT BANKING? We have positions open in both the Buying and Sales Departments for several young men who have the necessary qualifications. Pre- vious experience is not necessary. If you are interested in making a connection with a long established Investment Banking firm, we shall be glad to have you write to us. Joel Stockard Co. Penobscot Bldg., Detroit, Michigan A real, straight run, high test gaso- line. The finest motor fuel obtain- able. Clear burning, quick starting, non-carbon forming. The .Rbbott j Com William at Maynard For THRILLS and more KICK in College DRIVE A CAR! 11 ENCLOSED cars for rent and drive your- self. Drive to the games. 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