TH F:44C H -14 A" -I D AI L 7k I 7 F.LY 1E.;' 19? IN THE WORLD OF BOOCKS ------ --------- Survivor Of '5 Disaster Tells IOf Russian Fleet's Destruction TSUSHIMA - the Novikoff-Priboy. memoirs of Knopf. $3.50. A. By JOSEPH GIES In the autumn of 1904, with the Russian armies in Manchuria de- feated, the Pacific fleet bottled up or destroyed and Port Arthur, chief stake in the war with Japan, cut off and beleaguered, the Russian high command resolved on a last desperate move to save the imperial prestige and the Russian capital invested in the Orient, and ordered the Baltic fleet of Admiral Rodzhestvenzky to Vladivostok. The story of this gigantic cruise of thirty-eight ships around the Cape of Good Hope, through the Indian Ocean and up the coast of South China and of its complete annihilation at the hands of Admiral Togo and the Japanese fleet as it entered the Sea of Japan is recounted in detail in this carefully yet dra- niatically written account by A. Novikoff-Priboy, paymaster's steward aboard the armoured cruiser Oryol. The story is, of course, -pure trag- edy. From the bright September day anchor was weighed at Kronstadt to the night of terror at Tsushima six months later it became increasingly apparent to every member of the ex- pedition, officers and men, with the sole exception of Admiral Rodzhest- venzky, that the fleet was doomed. Long before the destination was reached Port Arthur had been lost, and a month before the denouement of useless destruction the Russian field army had been decisively de- feated at Mukden, rendering abortive even a possibly successful conclusion of the voyage. But the decree of the autocratic general staff in St. Peters- burg and the obstinacy of the admiral prevented the exercise of, reason,a while the incompetence of both+ rendered the fleet an easy prey to the vigilant and efficient Japanese. A striking example of historical foreshadowing occurred as the ex- pedition entered the North Sea in October. The English fishing fleet was mistaken at night for Japanese torpedo boats and a number of the helpless craft were sunk before the, blunder was rectified. The prepos- terous assumption that Japanese torpedo boats could have reached Dogger Bank without being previ- ously discovered was made possible by the hopeless confusion and un- reasoning fear aboard the Russian ships. The incident led to interna- tional complications and at the same time ruined the morale of the ships' companiesn Another incident equally revealing. of the Russian conduct of the war in general and of this expedition in particular is the author's description of a naval review held at the begin- ning of the voyage at which the Czar and the German Emperor were pres- ent, and during the course of which target practice was held. The Kaiser was much impressed with the quick demolition of the targets, and praised the gunners for their accuracy. The crews were highly elated by the to- tally unexpected success of the ex- orcise - until they learned that the targets had been so constructed as to fall to pieces at the mere' wind of a passing projectile! Later, in Af- rica, target practice demonstrated the hopeless inadequacy of the gun- ners' training; but according to Nov- ikoff, practice had to be stopped with- out making any appreciable improve- ment in the accuracy of the firing in order to conserve ammunition for the battle. Admiral Rodzhestvensky, according to the author's description, was a personification of the vices of autoc- racy: brutality, weakness, lack of judgment, conceit, obstinacy and cowardice. On several occasions dur- ing the cruise the admiral came aboard Novikoff's ship, the Oryol, and other members of the squadron in order to berate and even strike members of the crews for various acts of inefficiency or insubordina- tion. In any case, the orders of the day quoted in many places certainly are of a tone hardly calculated to arouse the enthusiasm of a disheart- aned crew. The battle itself, begun and car- ried through with stupidity by the admiral and his staff and with vary- ing heroism and helplessness by the men, is an almost endless series of minor horrors, of gun turrets ex- ploding, of men torn to pieces, of great ships foundering and finally the surrender of a battered remnant of the squadron on the dawn of the renewal of the fight. Good incident: the author, helping the surgeon in the sick bay during the action, wondering what to do with an amputated leg the doctor had handed him.' All through the book, as all through the cruise, runs the thread of the revolution-the dissatisfac- tion of the crews, the quietly distrib- uted propaganda, the shock of the news of the massacre of the Winter Palace all paved the way for the strong reaction against the govern- ment which took place in the prison camps. Tsushima is, in fact, the his- tory of a staggering blow dealt Rus- sian autocracy through the revela- tion of its startling and revolting weakness. SCHWARZ Disarmingly Innocent In Recollections Of OldRegime ALMOST FORGOTTEN GERMANY by Georg Schwarz. Translated by1 Laura Riding and Robert Graves. The Seizin Press, Deya Majorca, and Constable & Co., London. By ARTHUR PETERS The title is not auspicious. It re- calls a German-American enthusiast wandering through by-ways of Ger- many with nostalgia - and a note- book. But the portrait in the frontis- Predicts A Social Revolution piece is more suggestive of the book. It is a photograph of an old man with a worn yet serene face who is quietly engaged in making a rug. Almost Forgotten Germany is in reality the autobiography of a culti- vatedGerman Jew who was born in Prussia in 1861. He has had an event- ful life in a variety of professions. He has been a Prussian landowner,1 an artist, an art-dealer, a racial exile. He relates his anecdotes with con-' siderable charm, and he possesses a quiet zest for life under whatever difficult terms it offers itself. The book impresses one as being too short. Perhaps the author felt himself, incapable of writing on a larger scale; in any event, the two- hundred odd pages cannot contain an adequate picture of a long existence which was by no means purely con- templative. There is a whole world of life to record which Herr Schwarz only sketches lightly. We would like to know -more of his adventures on his estate. In East Prussia. The sug- gestions he gives us recall some of Tolstoy's early tales of Russian land- owners with the tragi-comic pic- tures of human stupidity in its strug- gle with the 'soil. But the author's mood was 'wayward. He disliked farming, and soon turned south to Munich. where he settled among the half-mad' artistic Bohemians of that city and amused himself with paint- ing, music, and love-affairs. Georg Schwarz's anecdotes of the Munich art-circles are not all of equal interest. Some of them have just the faintest ring of familiarity, as though. we had heard them before. A few of themr are hilariously funny and most of themi are amusing. The author is gifted with a disarming innocence of moral prejudices. It is refreshing be- cause it is accompanied by the skepti- cal Epicureanism of an old man whose spirit has remained keen. The peculiar value of this book is in the mellowness of culture that under- lies it;. It is a culture at once cyni- cal' and humane, sly, disillusioned, and tender. It is not free of bitter- riess; but this bitterness goes hand in hand with an extraordinary gaiety of .heart. It is shamelessly irreverent and does not always choose the object of its irreverence wisely, but one feels that this is the overflow of a vivacious spirit capable of expressing joy and mockery in the face even of brutal oppression. It is, in a word, a frag- ment of that enduring Jewish culture which is so curiously irritating to the modern German mind, and so often tragically misunderstood elsewhere. ut which persecution will never destroy. ON THIS ISLAND. W. H. Auden. Random House. $1.50 By MARY SAGE MONTAGUE One might say that Mr. Auden in his latest book, is less obscure, if obscurity were a legitimate qualifica- tion of poetry; but certainly he is less allusive, and less often techni- cally unfathomable. There is a note of assurance here which was not so apparent in his earlier writings, and a firm conviction of the approaching social upheaval which brings him perhaps closer than ever to his friend C. Day Lewis. Both poets have since their undergraduate days at Oxford predicted and prayed for the revolution; now they await it, certain of its inevitability. The tri- umph of Lewis's "Beckon O beacon, and O sun be soon! Hollo, bells, over a melting earth! Let man be many and his sons all sane, Fearless with fellows, handsome by the hearth. Break from your trance: start danc- ing now in town, And, fences down, the ploughing match with mate. This is your day: so turn, my com- rades, turn Aike infants' eyes like sunflowers to the light." is echoed in Auden's In Bold, Triumphant Poetry In this collection, he is still speaking .he same language but with a very differenteaccent. The lines follow each other so that one can get a connected thought and not a vague impression; there is coherence and boldness, and yet none of the poetic art has been jeopardized. Never does the lucid expression degenerate into the trite, and never is the sense of the dramatic lost. The reader who drifts along on a deceptive bit of lyricism is brought up sharply with such a descriptive phrase as "the sexy airs of summer," and the ap- parent casualness and bantering at- titude are often only the basis for a stern prophecy. Auden is predominantly a satirist, and the smugness and selfishness of the capitalist are his chief targets. Occasionally he chooses the most simple poetic forms for his thrusts, or he takes the symbols of a capi- talistic society which he thinks most significant of its degeneration. "Now the leaves are falling fast, Nurse's flowers will not last; Nurses to the graves are gone, And the -prams go rolling on." But although universal in its social implications, the expression and feel- ing are English, and the desire for justice is for justice in England first; it is the situation of the coal miners in Wales that has the primary claim on his attention, not that of 'the miners in Pittsburgh. He is always aware of the close bond between himself and the people, and of the tradition of English writing which he must uphold, " 'The poetry is in the pity,' Wilfred said, And Kathy in her journal, 'To be rooted in life, That's what I want.' These moods give no permission to be idle." Forthcoming Books AS LONG AS I LIVE, by Emilie Loring. $2. IF INFLATION COMES, by Roger W. Babson. $1.35. CAREERS AF'TER FORTY, by Wal- ter B. Pitkin, $1.75. THE REVOLUTION BETRAYED, by Leon Trotzky. $2.50. TWILIGHT OF A WORLD, by Franz Werfel. $3. IT'S A FAR CRY, by Robert W. Winston. $3. LIGHT WOMAN, by Zona Gale. $2. MIDNIGHT ON THE DESERT, by J. B. Priestley. $3. THE MIRACLE OF ENGLAND, by Andre Maurois. $3.75. PRESENT INDICATIVE, by Noel Coward. $3. 4GONE WITH THE WIND' lutionary W arin upper New York, STILL LEADS remained in second place, with Alice Margaret Mitchell's "Gone With Tisdale Hobart's "Yang and Yin" The Wind" continued to lead the na- ranking third. tion's best sellers through February, Leading the non-fiction best sell- with the total copies now off the ers is Dale Carnegie's "How To Win withrn the otalcopiestoundongthe-Friends and Influence People," with presses reaching the astounding to- "An American Doctor's Odyssey," by tal of 1,300,000. Victor Heiser second, and Marjorie "Drums Along the Mohawk," Wal- HiHlis' "Live Alone and Like It" ter D. Edmonds' story of the Revo- ranking third. IT'S HER E! And with this piping new satire at hand, you're in for A Riot of Literary Free Wheeling " . Can Hate so securely bind? Are the dead here? Yes, And the wish to wound has the power. And tomorrow Comes. It's a world. It's a way." The paradox in Auden's poetry has long been that he speaks in the vernacular of the proletariat, but so, overburdens common speech with puns, allusions, technical ambiguities, that it is almost totally incomprehen- sible to those about whom it is writ- ten and to whom it is often directed. TROTZKY VS. STALIN "The End of Socialism in Russia," an article by Max Eastman appear- ing in the current issue of Harper's Magazine, will be published this week in a bound volume selling for 75 cents. Dorothy Thompson and Herbert Agar have declared that Eastman's tract represents the most concise summing up of what has happened to the Communist experiment in Rus- sia which has yet appeared. Eastman describes in the article the switch from Leninism and Trotz- kyism to Stalinism and predicts a timeswhen Communist Russiasand Fascist Germany may be in sym- pathy. By W. H. Mack of Ann Arbor, Lit. '28 AT ALL BOOKSTORES Published 1937-- HILLMAN-CURL, Inc., NEW YORK TYPEWRITERS 1 makes and models, ught. Sold, Rented, :changed, Repaired. t I t a BIOGRAPHY OF FRANZ LISZT Zsolt Harsanyi, a Hungarian writ- er, regarded as one of the most dis- tinguished biographers and novelists of Europe, has just completed a new novel built around the life story of Franz Liszt and titled "Immortal I t 1 i ::: :%.6'C444SK:..ti I' 0. D. Morrill 314 SOUTH STATE STREET' Franz." I I - I --- - I'll I I - mmmmi STENOTYPE or GR EGG NEW CLASSES MONDAY. - DAY or EVENING. HAMILTON BUSINESS COLLEGE William at State Phone 7831. cvi nnouncing C'.40 b I I d . , 1 " S' " f , f . r 1S A MAN THE 4 ASSEMBLY BALL at the I Michigan League Ballroom Friday, March 5th Nine till One :2 :a: . :x . ; is :},: fJ: :, :: . '. I:S ~^S: F YOU may not measure him by a compass or yardstick, but may by the determination of his character, the quality and integrity of his work. The measure of a man and of a business are one and the same. There is but one standard by which to judge in either instance - that of Character; a Reputation for proved responsibility and trustworthiness in the execution of duties. We feel we have earned, through Service, that Reputation, and oi)1usic by JOH N NY HAMP AND HIS ORCHESTRA I I