THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, .. ., IN THE WORLD OF BOOKS Halliburton Details Latest Orgy Of Globe-Trotting In New Book SEVEN LEAGUE BOOTS. pale lips. When the story has been By Richard Halliburton. tinished, Halliburton visits a num- Bobbs, Merrill Co. $3.50. ber of the more familiar scenes of By ARNOLD S. DANIELS the Czar's life, interviews Mrs. Lenin, and then tests the practicability of Swinging gracefully from vine to the Scviet marriage and divorce sys- vine in accepted Tarzan style, and tem by marrying his stout inter- occasionally emitting loud calls of preter in one room, and divorcing her in an adjacent room a few mm- self-approval, Richard Hallibtrton utes later. in his latest volume of photographs He then gives a clear, complete and word-pictures of himself against picture of Russia gained during his the invariable exotic backgrounds, brief visit. Impressed by a strong Seven League Boots, takes his read- show. of military power, he feels that ers on a round-the-world tour of the ideas now being developed in places- of historical interest. Russia "we must accept, and the He interviews one of the assassi- sooner the better. Thus is America nators of the Romanoffs, gets mar- going to develop, perforce, in the ried and divorced in Russia in less direction of new Russia's enlight- than five minutes, visits Fort Jef- ened attitude towards the working ferson in the Florida Keys, crosses masses, while Russia at the same the Alps on an elephant, visits the time gropes toward America's ideal scene of the sinking of the Merri- of personal and intellectual liberty." mac in Santiago Harbour, broods Having done with Russia, Halli- over the ruins of Cristophe's fort burton marches on to the Caucasian and palace in Haiti, lives among mountains, where he spends a short the remnants of the Crusaders in j time among the Khevscorians, a the Caucasians and touches upon an tribe believed to be a remnant of alarming number of other places the second Crusades. He is intrigued about which volumes have already by their medieval armour and been written. quaint habits of drinking and fight- The first spot on his itinerary ing. And so on to Turkey, and its was Fort Jefferson on the Dry Tor- Sultana. tugas of the Florida Keys. Here,; The Sultana, "not the great Sul- at "America's Devil's Island," he re- tana who ruled an empire and views the case of Samuel Mudd, the thwarted Napoleon, but the little girl doctor who set John Wilkes Booth's from Martinique, neglected and for- broken leg, when the assassinator gotten, faded to a fragrant memory of Lincoln was fleeing Washington. . . . and so far from home," is, in From Santiago the perennial flea Halliburton's opinion a pathetic, sad jumps to Haiti, and visits Sans Souci little figure, and he grows sentimen- and the Citadel, the strongholds of tal about her at length. , King Cristophe, the black dictator of He next visited the Holy Commu- that rich little island, who ruled so nities of Mount Athos, "No Woman's sternly and violently that, according Land," and lived among the monks to Halliburton, "Mussolini and Sta- After describing, and relating an- lin, a hundred- and twenty-five years cient myths about a number of other later, were to seem like weak sisters famous Greeks, he turns to Ethiopia, compared to this towering black ty- and interviews the emperor. His rant." He pauses here to marvel, picture, painted by an Ethiopian art- and to relate the already too familiar ist, is used as the frontispiece of the story of that bloody monarchy. After book. It shows the author in a typ- a short stop at San Domingo, where ical pose. he is allowed to view the bones of The book closes with a description Christopher Columbus, IHalliburton's most amazingdar- discloses his plan to rent an ele- of andibrton t amazn ar- phant on which he was to cross the ing and brilliant feat. On an ele- Alps in the footsteps of Hannibal. phant named Elysabethe Dalrymple The plan falls through at first how- he crosses the Alps, following in the ever, and the watching world is footsteps of Hannibal. The trip is forced to wait until a few months made with ease, and he is received later to witness the astounding feat. everywhere with great rejoicing. He Undaunted, he proceeds to Russia, pauses at the St. Bernard monastery whern he has the remarkable good to have his picture taken, and then whrene has nteremarkablne oo thcrosses over the Alps, to ride directly fortune ofsinterviewing one of the into the annual Italian army maneu- three assassinators of the Romanoffs vers, causing the assembled soldiery on his death-bed. To him are re- tothinghtheyaebei ryt vealed for the first time the facts of to think that they are being at- the ghastly event, told by Peter tacked from the rear by Ethiopians. Ermakov, as bloody froth tinged his The reader may assume that Hal- liburton then went home to Cali- sai !#t@Oxi1D01Da' fornia to brood, over new plans. CH RISTMAS Readersof Seven League Boots will not be a whit surprised or taken i CARDS and GIFTS 3 aback to hear some day that he is A following the footsteps of Aeneus STUDENT SUPPLY STORE into the land of the dead, or has 1111 South University at last discovered the lost cities of Atlantis. MARK TWAIN: Democrat By PROF. HOWARD MUMFORD JONES The two dominant literary personalities of the last part of the nineteenth century were Walt Whitman and Mark Twain. Whitman carried his democratic faith through the Civil War; and if the political corruption of the following decades shook that faith, they did not destroy it. What was Clemens' relation to political democracy? In 1860 he was only 25. His slight participation in the war furnished him with a literary burlesque; in 1861 he went to Nevada with his brother; and until 1866 he remained in the Far West, remote from the conflict. Then he went to Hawaii; then, after a brief return to the United States, he made his memorable visit to Europe. In 1870 he married; and until 1872, besides supporting his family, he was busy writing his two vast books, The Inrno- cents Atroad and Roughing It.r Not until 1873 did he "settle <.: down" at Hartford, Connecti- cut. As it is charged by critics that Twain deliberately avoided writing social and political crit- icism because his friends were men like H. H. Rogers, the ( Standard Oil magnate, these dates have considerable signifi-. cance. The Grant period ended? with the Hayes-Tilden election of 1876, and during the rest of the century there was a slow rise in the level of public decency. Twain did not see at first hand the Civil War or the corruption. of the Grant administrations; but when, aided by C. D. War- ner, he turned his attention to this theme, the result was The Gilded Age (1873), a book which despite great defects, indicts the whole economic and social corruption of the age. Once finding this theme, he never again lost it, for his essays, his speeches, his letters, his humorous squibs excoriate the low state of public - and private - morals. Modern critics, however, charge that he was blind to the economic causes of this corruption. But Twain was not, and never pretended to be, an economist. For him democracy was founded in human nature; and the paradox of Twain's view is that a profound belief in the potentiality of human nature leads Twain to pessimism. Man is cap- able of sympathy and love, but he is full of meanness and cruelty; and, seeking to account for this contradiction, Twain fell back upon a naive doctrine of determination which he failed to fuse with his evolutionary beliefs. Looking back on history in The Prince and the Pauper, A Connecticut Yankee, and Joan of Arc, he detected a steady improvement in the direction of modern man; looking around him in The American Claimant and Pudd'nhead Wilson, he saw greed and cruelty still in the saddle. BRIFFAULT, * Paints Startling Panorama *Of Pre-War Europe .. . EUROPA. By Robert Briffault. Scribner's. $2.75. By ALBERT K. STEPHENS E (Of the English Department) Son of an English diplomat, Julian Bern spends his boyhood in the Rome of the 1800's, trudging the Appian Way to school, absorbing a pagan love of balance and beauty along with Italian sunshine. His aunt, Lady Penmore, horrified to learn that he doesn't play cricket, ships him to Eng- land to learn to be "nice and trim and English," and eventually sends him through Cambridge. There are blessed periods of respite, vacations in glor- ious Italy, during one of which he tastes the sweets of young love with Zena, daughter of an expatriate Rus- sian prince who, in 1900, lives in Oriental magnificence. The love affair is nipped in the bud, and, disillu- sioned, Julian returns to England. His astronomy teacher furtively in- ducts him into a knowledge of celes- tial magnitudes which helplessly dwarfs Christian theology, and he re- fuses to attend chapel. He plunges into the study of philosophy - at- tends lectures, for instance, on "Post- Hegelian Currents in Realistic Ideal- ism"-and in the end renounces phi- losophy as mere logomachy. He learns the principles of socialism - the correlation that exists between one's notion of the ideal government and his bank account - from an old German printer and, his eyes opened, becomes an observer of the furtive war of the classes in pre-War Eu- rope, a struggle which involved also the war of the sexes. Agreeing with an unpopular biologist that "the urges of life shape the world," he dedicates himself to the pursuit of scientific truth and embarks on a long series of researches into the habits, the "urges," of simple marine life. These researches he carries on in Naples, where he finds it all too easy to relax in the sex-saturated atmo- sphere in which moves the inter- national society of European nobility. But when, in collaboration with the biologist, Julian wishes to add a final chapter to the report of the re- searches which would give the human meaning, the social significance, of his scientific findings, he is thwarted by the ancient prejudices here in a pseudo-scientific garb, about the dif- ference between man and animal and the peculiar nature of the human soul. This is but one more in a progressive series of disillusionments, and now we see a keen young mind slipping into the paralysis that comes with too thorough understanding of the accumulated folly we cal, modern civilization. He again encounters Zena, now a princess in her own right, and with her and her simple carpe diem philosophy he drifts through a. year of desire and fulfilment, until the opening crack of the Great War. That is the skeleton of this valuable sociological novel - and as set down here it is misleading. For the book is much more than an account of Julian Bern and his reactions to his environment. It is 500 pages of in- discreetly overheard conversations be- tween the bluebloods of the Almanak de Gotha, the Social Register of the ruling classes of pre-War Europe; 500 pages of the small-talk between kings and financiers, echoes of intrigue and scandal, guarded whispers of rev- olutionary plotters, blood-and-thun- der oratory of political bamboozlers and of futile pink socialists, pano- ramic views of restlessly parading millions of men under arms, and close-ups of the bitter suffering of the dispossesed, inarticulate slaves in English mines, Italian pastures, and German factories. The vocabulary is amazingly ver- satile; the whole range of intellectual life is drawn on for conversation be- tween "emancipated" polyglot char- acters - conversation that is intel- lectually stimulating. The pages are packed with intimate, convincing detail - Briffault's father was in the French diplomatic service and the author lived through the scenes he describes - detail which wins the sus- pension of dis-belief necessary to dra- matic art and thusssaves the book from the accusation of being mere essay or propaganda. To the "ap- prentice-to-life" theme of early nine- teenth century novels by Disraeli and Bulwer-Lytton is added the pano- ramic effects of Hardy's Dynasts and the pessimism of T. S. Eliot as he surveys European civilization in The Wasteland. The whole is an enlarged and enriched kind of Point Counter- Point for the twenty years preceding the World War; the subtitle, signifi- cantly, is The Days of Ignorance. An intelligent duchess is represent- ed as saying, in August, 1914, "The fate of Europe is at this moment in the hands of a few people who are not fit to be trusted with the fate of a barnyard." This remark stands near the end of the book; the preced- ing 496 pages, with their amazing se- quences of sex-mania, greed, and stupidity in high places are the docu- mented evidence on the basis of which one pities even the barnyard. The book closes with the staccato of declarations of war, and as Julian and his Russian princess settle down for a free ride out of Germany in a railway compartment, its blinds nailed down with German thorough- ness, a lieutenant asks the lady whe- ther there is anything more he can do. Her answer is the supreme touch of the novel and its last sentence: "Oh, yes," said Zena. "Bring me a bunch of roses." BEST SELLERS OF 1789 As early as 1789 earhest attempts were being made to regenerate the youth of America. Mrs. Sarah Went- worth Morton, the first American novelist, observed that "didactic es- says are not always capable of en- gaging the attention of young ladies," so she turned to fiction. Her great work, THE POWER OF SYMPATHY or THE TRIUMPH OF NATURE was published in Boston in 1789. Her preface proclaims the purpose of the work "to expose the danger- ous Consequences of Seduction and to set forth the advantages of fe- male Education." PRINTING LOWEST PRICES PROGRAMS, BIDS, STATIONERY THE ATHENS PRESS Downtown. North of Posto fice I .1 I m lE M iii _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ -~III