SUNDAY, DBCEMBER 14, 1930 THE MICHIGAN DAILY P'AGE THRI SUNAYDEEMBR 1, 930THEMIHIGN DIL ----upon* HERRIT C '. r. ' . ' F' .. ' .. " , G ,., ~ ' -:=fit ' t3 9 *1f~ 1ilITIC REA IE PETI_CT RDIWN TUE DONNE TRADITION: A Study in English Poetry from Donne to lhoe Death of Cowley: by George Williamson: H a r v a r d University Press, 1930: Price $3.50. "About the beginning of the 17th century appeared a race of writers that may be termed the metaphy- sical poets." And by the tone of that remark, and the retundly e>- phatic condemnation that follow d Dr.. Johnson forced on all literr ly historians the conception of te "Donne tradition" as an isolated, curious, and rather suspect phen- omenon in English poetry. Nearly all critics after Dr. Johnson have defined "metaphysical poetry" by certain of its technical defects or excesses. But this century has seen a more substantial reexamination of the virtues of the poetry of John Don-j ne and George Herbert particular- ly in the work of Jessop, Gosse, Mario Praz, and in the fine editing of H. J. C. Grierson. But perhaps, even more influential for the new understanding, and certainly for creative imitation of the metaphy-1 sical poets, have been the brilliant intuitions of T. S. Eliot (scattered. through "Homage to John Dryden,"' "The Sacred Wood," the pages of the Dial, the Criterion, and the+ London Literary Supplement) and] his own very brilliant poetic prac-l tice, firm enough evidence in it- self for the survival and contem-I porary validity of the tradition. Eliot's main contentions were: that the general notion that intel- lectual analysis is unpoetic unlessI it receives some sort of fanciful ublimation is deplorable subser- vience to nineteenth century taste and poetry: that the metaphysi- cal poets' gift of a unified senibil-t ity in which intellect played at the tips of the senses was a rare pre- rogative for the writing of great poetry: that the influence of two great poets, Milton and Dryden,t unfortunately caused the disasso- ciation of sensibility which left the1 rotion that the possession of a de- liberate intellect implied a renun- ciation of emotional force andt hence an incapacity for poetry. As opposed to Johnson, he sug- gested that better results might ensue from "assuming that the poets of the seventeenth century (to the Revolution) were the direct and normal development of the precedent age; and by considering whether their virtue was not some- thing permanently valuable which subsequently disappeared but ought not to have disappeared." George Williamson does little but apply the conventional methods of scholarship to Eliot's intuitions. Evidence and analysis is accumu- lated for proof. Then there is the cataloguing or definition of trends; all descending from Donne: the re- ligious (Herbert, Crashaw, Vaugh- an), the amorous or profane line (Lord Herbert, King, M a r v e 11, Townshend), and finally the line of offenders (Cleveland, Benlowe, Cbwley). This being a typical aca- demic trick only justified by more profound analysis of differences between poets (say between Her- bert and Vaughan, and between both of those and Crashaw, whose typical virtues were not metaphy- sical at all) than Williamson seems capable of. The more original contributions in this book include an extended, and on the whole profitable, dis- cussion of t h e much-maligned "conceit" With its redefinition as profoundly structural and only fantastic frippery when wantonly used (by Cowley, Cleveland, and Crashaw); a chapter tended to minimise the academic distinction between the Donne and the Jon- .sonian influence on the 17th cen- try lyric by findiingmetaphysical p ssages in the Caroline lyrists; and a very useful chapter and ap- pendix showing that Chapman an- ticipated Donne in several emotion- al and technical aspects (again an Eliot suggestion). The book is quite satisfactory as a corrective (for conventional cri- ticim of the Donne tradition and for the looseness with which con- tempoaary journalists sling the word "metaphysical"). One, how- ever, awaiits Mr. Eliot's announced book on "The School of Donne." W. J. G. - ~ Carl Grabo Stresses Shelley's Contact F' Mi - aI Currents of His Day A NEWTON MONG PETS: by Carl Grabo: A study of Shdlley's Use of Science in Pcmwtcus Urbud." Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 19 Pp. xiv plus 298. x3.00. krEvf WW2 C I Ei1 SS>k JI OI1?AR.D MUMFORD JONA-S. Probably few inte,1igent readers 1nd as evidence is usually lacking, of Sheihy I o T y a'mroech hr i£JMr. Grabo has necessarily been terms of what Profe sor G r:o c::cd back to inference and ana- ca1os . This does not vitiate his con- ca11s i" aiaiv r. A' Dt"; {. c ons per force, but, like all ar- approech is ~elv t' b' e+her i Tnamerts from silence, it onens a pure aesthet_2 s Igtie in hi wide Field for speculation. In gen- gorgeous nagery an-d cesmic ;7- fe, the astronomical and chemi- agination or an intlileetual int r- cal portions of his argument seem to rest on sounder reasoning than est in his 'hiloonhical and meta- the central hypothesis he seeks to physical doctrin". it is Professor establish; namely, that for Shelley. Grabo's tr-sis in The present vOl-jACia, the spirit usually identifiedt ume that, &envin- no Thing of the with love in the poem, is not mere- valdit o~eit~e'sec aproahly love but perhaps also an em- he finds Shelley's inteliection in his bodiment ofan electrical theory of most important poemi revolving im- matter. The cautious reader is portantly around the scientific dis- likely to bring in a Scotch verdict coveries and theories of his day. of guilty, but not proven. Particularly drawing upon Eras- But whether particular portions mus Darwin, Sir William Herschel, of his book are weak or not, Mr. Humphry Davy, and above all New- Grabo is clearly headed in the right ton, either directly or as their dis~ direction. We have heard too much coveries and speculations reached of romanticism as something weak, him through compendiums. or poll- dreamy, and nebulous. Mr. Grabo ular articles, Shelley fused their is quite right in his insistence that hypotheses with his Platonic phil- Shelley was a hard-headed and osophy in the cosmic drama of keen-minded poet. He was intel- Prometheus Unbound. Professor lectually capable of adopting, as a Grabo's method something resem- matter of fact he did adopt an "as- bles that so brilliantly exercised in t r o n o m y ...basically Newtonian The Road to Xanadu by Professor with the addition of the nebular J. L. Lowes. hypothesis of Laplace and the ob- Mr. Grabo's speculations rest up- servations of Herschel." He was on some important matters of fact. certainly equipped to follow, he Of Shelley's youthful enthusiasm probably did follow the brilliant for scientific experiment, pa rticu- scientific speculations of the day. larly of a dramatic or imaginative And what is true of Shelley is in sort, there can be no question. That all probability true of some of the he was intensely alive to the other romantic poets who have thought of his own age and that been too easily dismissed as weak- he could scarcely have raissed the ling dreamers in a solipsistic uni- rich scientific literature of the time verse. The value of Mr. Grabo's likewise seems indubitable. That study lies, it seems to me, in the certan passages i Prometheus Un- approach he makes to the intellect- bound are explicable only by as- ual background of the romantic suming in the poet a knowledge of movement, and if certain of his certain astronomical, chemical, or conclusions may be wrong, his book electrical phenomena o theories as a whole is a welcome relief from seems likewise well estalished. much current discussion of roman- Professor Grabo's service lies in tic poetry. It has also the advan- drawing these elements togethrC tage of being well written, and is and in offering some suggestive not without a lurking humorous theories as to the meaning of more irony. disputable passages and of the poem as a whole. His central difficulty lies in prov- FOERSTER EDITS ing that Shelley read particular AMERICAN FSSAYS passages in these and other writ- ers which conveniently explain AME1YCAN CRITICAL ESSAYS: portions of IL.onietheus Unbound; edited by Norman Foerster for --~_ ____ World's Classics Edition published by Oxford Unversity Press 1930: List f Be7 Sllers In this infliuentia, because popu- lar, edition, Foerster edits very NON-FICT ION perspicuously until he gets to the STORY OF SAN MICHELE by twentieth century. The twentieth 3s LEJOU ! !Ti STTS OF f The United States of Europe: by Edouard Herriot, Former Prime Minister of France: Published by the Viking Press New York 1930: Price, $3.00. Reviewed by Professor Preston Slosson. Since Nietzsche called himself not a good German but a "good European" the idea of a United States of Europe has been in the air. "In the air" is, unfortunately, too apt a phrase. Even Herriot's book,. the practical work of a hard-headed statesman, a former prime minister of France, is the analysis of an idea rather than the project for a con- stitution. No one need look for a tight federal constitution in the near future with bills introduced by Representative Briand from the State of France or by Senator MacDonald of the State of Britain. The politi- cal side of the United States of Europe would hardly be a federation or even a confederacy, rather a peace pact or "regional agreement" within the more general structure of the Leagu of Nations. Much more impor- tant, in the author's opinion, is the economic linking up of atomized Europe. Take, for example, the way in which political divisions complicate and interrupt the natural highways of Europe. "The Rhine is a sort of living being, with a citizenship at once Swiss and French, German and Dutch" (p. 172). "The Danube has also made possible the fusion of! races and the exchange of commodities . . . Hence the International! Commission, which has been able to settle the question of the Sulina mouth and the passage of the Iron Gate" (p. 173). Postal systems, tele- graphs, telephones, wireless, electric power, main roads and the chief railway lines cut across frontiers in crowded Europe in such a manner as to demand international agreements of all sorts, some of which have already been achieved. International banking, the International Labor Conferences under the auspices of the League of Nations, and the cartels of mine owners demonstrate how the problems of finance, labor and capital and alike unlimited by political frontiers. Thus Europe is being gradually bound into one bundle not by any iron chain of a Super-State but by a million cobweb filaments continually spun by the great spider of industrialism. The point of greatest interest to American readers is, of course, whether the United States of Europe is in any sense directed against the m p r 1 NOTH1-G TO PA , by Carado Evans: Pub ished by W. W. Norton: New York, I3A: Price, $2,50: Re- view Copy courtesy Wahr's Book- store. UR PE REIWETT STUDIES] PUEBLO INDIAN ANCIENT LIFE IN THE AMERI CAN SOUTHWEST, by Edgar Le Hewett: Merrill: Indianapolis, 193 Price $5.00. Dr. Edgar Lee Hewett, head o the Department, of Anthropology a the University of New Mexico, has presented in this volume a ver thorough summary of the Indian culture of the American southwest, comprising the "four-corners" dis- trict of Utah, Colorado, New Mexi- co, and Arizona. Contrary to the title, the book is not a dry anthro- pological treatise on an extinct people, but attempts to give an eva- lution to the Pueblo civilization, still in existence, in its relation to the "European America" which has surrounded it and is slowly press- ing in on the periphery with the ultimate unconscious objective of choking it into extinction. The Pueblo peoples were well on their way to dying out before the advent of the white man, but with- in comparatively recent times the southwestern Indians have exerted an effort to come back. Mr. Hewett decries the efforts to check this renaissance of Indian culture, and the constant and pernicious efforts to "civilize" the people. On the whole the analysis of the southwestern culture has been ade- quately done, but there is a slight tendency for Mr. Hewett to.regard the territory as a culture center en- tirely, and he fails to stress the dif- fusion from the centers of Ameri- can aboriginal civilization in Mid- dle America. The very house type of the Pueblo is tied up with the more central cultures, as are many of the religious and social activi- ties. But after all, the south es is a secondary center. Dr. Hewett's work has not been confined to the Pueblo territory, but has in the past done extensive research in archeology in the Aztec areas of Mexico. and among the Maya ruins of Yucatan and Gua- temala. United States of America; whether it will take the form of a1 a common hostile tariff against our trade, or represent a boycott combine and of There once was a time in the his-' tory of literature when it was con- sidered bad art and bad taste to make a hero of a character who had none of the enobling virtues, and from whom it was impossible to point a moral. It was thought that some trait in the character which the reader possessed (pat- riotism, etc.), was the only way in which the reader could construct a bridge to the character and re- ceive the message. And there is nothing admitting the major pre- mise (vicarious experience in the life of a character as a basis for the aesthetic emotions) that is more logical. By this token. Nothin; to Pay shouldhbefa bad novel. Since it is not, the fact must be that a novel should be something more than mere vicarious and selfish exper- ience. Caradoc Evans has written something which is an expression of a philosophy which is more and more taking hold today. I, is true that it is a pragmatic philosophy and negates the old philosophic contexts of speculation. It placesI each human in an universal pers- pective and we can no longer say "why?" Innocently, but with a power which cannot be denied, we see Amos Morgan, tie hero, de- veloping into the rich mean m r that he is. He cannot change but as his people and his wor'd chnge. He is a symbol and yet a dliiitj character. It seems to be the impression a- mong reviewers of this b ok, that; Evans was solely inturestea in re- vealing the evilness of his native Wales. On the contrary, his work is not one of propaganda but has consistent artistic integri-y. S. S. F. IFregt, ervice impoverished, debtor nations to oppose our demand for debt repay- ments. The answer to this is both yes and no. Europe is being forced to league together partly because of the competition provided by the productivity of the United States with its vast resources unhampered by internal frontiers and customs barriers; but this movement is de- fensive rather than hostile. "A European federation is not to be thought of as being aimed against the United States" (p. 15). Really it is a case of imitation, the sincerest form of flattery. Disunited Europe being unable to achieve the high standard of living reached by united America' is desirous of following our example. A bow is in order. The author has frequently touched on but not, in the reviewer's opinion, completely answered the greatest objection to the United States of Europe. That is, can we speak of "Europe" at all except in a purely' geographical sense? Where does the British Empire come into the pic- ture, with Great Britain at once a European Kingdom and a world empire covering a quarter of this globe? And how soon will Soviet Russia he ready to co-operate even economically with "capitalist" Europe? Yet would Europe be complete without either Britain or Rus- sia? And does not "Europe" in the political sense include most Qf Africa, which is nearly all divided into European colonies, to make no mention of colonies in other continents? The old recipe for cooking rabbit began "First catch your rabbit." Must we not decide what Europe is before we make her a constitution? i ill sgei Mc 'gan's Favorite College Songs $4.75 Michigan's Book Ends ............ ...$2.00, $2.50, $3.00, $5.00 $7.50 M chg-n's Memory Books ... . ....1.75, $3.50, $4,50, 6.50 Axel Munthe. N by E, by Rockwell Kent. SECOND TWENTY YEARS AT HULL HOUSE, by Jane Adams. CASE FOR INDIA, by Will Durant. HUMANITY UPROOTED, by Maurice Hindus. UNiVERSITIES, by Abrahamn [Flexncr. ASH-WEDNESDAY, by T. S. Eliot LITTLE AMERICA, by Com- mander Richard Fvelyn Byrd. FICTION THE VIRGIN A NDTHE GYP- SY, by D. . LI. o w 'enei. ONy F Yi CHANGE, by John Gahwor h.y RUDOLPH AND) ANINA, by Cli> upher lordey, MODY DICK, by Herman Mel- ville (i.ockwe 1ent Edition.) PHILLIPA, by Ann Douglas Sedgewick. DEEPENING S T R E A M, by Dorothy Canfield. ANGEL PAVEMENT, by J. B. Briestisy,. CAKES AND ALE, by Somerset Maugham. 24 HOUIRS, by Louis Bromfield. MAD MAN'S DRUM, by Lynn 'Wird century inclusions are questionable.1 G. E. Woodberry is granted space for his "Man and the Race" which1 expresses with no particular exac-f titude general views, more brilliant- ly stated and illustrated by their originator, Taine, in any chapter say of his History of English Lit- erature. Babbitt and More are rep- resented by two of their best es-l says; and Prosser Hall Frye's finei essay on "The Idea of a Greek Tragedy" is happily included., But the inclusion of J. E. Spin- garn's wild plea for Croce, "The New Criticism" (the essay in which occurs that hilarious list of "what we new have done with": the old rules, the genres, the theory of style, Al r ,al judgments, race, time and environment, all evolu- tion of Lerature: all because we now know that literature is "ex- pression") could only have beenj prompted by a too conscientious historical viewpoint. Then from the earlier esys of Stuart Sher- man, Foerster chooses the one on "Mark Twain" which most nearly forebodes his later degraded think-< ing. And finally the omission of an essay from eihe "The Sacred l Wood" or Image to John Dry- den" (unless Foerster considers T. S. Eliot an Englishman) is unfor- givable. Michigan's Blankets .......... . $11.00, $12.0O, $13.00 Mfchigan's Banners and Pennants ................. M Chigan's Seals (Bronze) rncuited on placque ...$2.50, $5.50, $8.50 Michigan's Stationery .........65c, 85c, $1.00, $1.25, $1.50, $1.75 Michigan's Jewelry, Paper Cutters, etc., etc. h i *vr ty a a eB'6'katore 316 State Street Main Street Opp. Court House OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL CHRISTMAS 111 DETROIT Three trucks daiiy Detroit terminal 2140-20th St. YPSILANTI Trucks daily Ypsi-terminal 14 S. Washington Pick-up and Delivery Service. ELSFOR CARTAGE CO. 117 No. 1st St. Phone 4299g ;. i i !{ ; ( } 4 uI i f .._.._..__________._ .Ii__.. .___ _ I! !y 9p ^ --- - _. ..3, =_.. . ._ t , , ---- , t s - __ ' ff( I'. 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