Pa>eTwo PERSPECTIVES * * Editor - F. RANDALL JONES Fiction Editor -DON COZADD Henry R. Clauser, Jeanne Foster, Hervie Hauuer, Seymour S. Horowitz, Una Kelley, Penelope Pearl, Frances Pyle, Harry Purdy. Essay Editor - JAMES C. ALLEN Seymour 'Pardell, William Loud, Virginia Finkleston, Gwen Lemon. Poetry Editor - ROBERT WAYNE Nelson Bentley, Joseph Gornbein, Ruth Hatfield, Eleanor McCoy, David Stocking. Review Editor - HARVEY SWADOS Iris Behe, Marguerite Ezri, Elliott Maraniss. Ethel Norberg, Stanley Lebergott. Roger Norton. Publications Manager - JOHN R. STILES Advisory Board - ARNO L. BADER, GIOVANNI GIOVANNINI, JAMES H. ROB- ERTSON, WALLACE A. BACON. A RETURN TO THE SOIL ..... ...Dennis 1 -nagan ........ Story .... Page 1 A HYMN TO SOCI TY ..............William Gram .......... Poem.,. .Page 2 THOMAS WOLFE. .............. . Elliot Maraniss .........Essay.... Page 3 THOMAS WOLFE, 1900-1938.........Seymour Horowitz ....... Poem..... Page 3 CiIANG KAI-SHEK ...... ..... . ..Charles Miller... Poem... .Page 3 THE WRITING OF POETRY ........ Carib.. ...............Poem..... Page 3 DUST AND IVORY...............Maritta Wolff ..........Story .... Page 4 IDEALIST-..........................Chad Walsh...........Poem..... Page 5 KENTUCKY MOONSHINE ........... Hervie Haufler .......... Essay. . .. Page 6 PLATONIC CONVERSATION ........ Eleanor McCoy ......... Poem..... Page 6 AN EVENING IN PROVINCETOWN. .Penelope Pearl .........Sketch... .Page 7 STEEL...........................Ralph Heikkinen ........Poem .... Page 5 BOOK REVIEWS....... .........by Gies, Swados, Brinnin, Friedman, Maraniss ......... Page 7 field, seeming to exude a hea ness of its own through some piration. There was a faint a of skunk and sour weed smells in the air, almost Oppres pleasant and tingling in the There was a low chorus of crickets; he could hear the c loud against the high pitch ground. "I heard you shoot over Hubert said. "Did you get an; "No . . . I missed it, I gues pretty dark when I shot. I rabbit." "You'd do better to shoot ra a shotgun, like I said. You anything on the fly with t there." "This was sitting when I sh Ernest said. He rose and wa stairs to his room. He returne pint bottle of whiskey. "If you have a couple of g could have a drink," he said. They drank quietly in thec tive darkness of the keroses without looking at each other turned toward him. "It seems to me," he said." to me that it's a darn funnyv hunting, watching a house wit glass." Ernest looked up slowly. "I watching me," he thought. "I me out there on the hill, tI fool. He might of seen me go the house." "I wasn't watching any h said. "I was spotting ground "There aren't any groundh there to my mind." "Why, sure there are. Right the corner of that wheat field "That's my field. There a holes there that I can mind." "He's trying to get me now thought. "He thinks he has m "Man, who do you thinkY fooling, anyway?" Hubert said. of them were silent. "He thinks he has me now he'll even try to get me. Oh Ge a sloppy job." Hubert stood and ed, then walked out to the kitch go to watch myself now." thought. He's liable to try so he's dumb enough." He pulled to him from the wall, facing th entrance. "He'll come out in a he thought. He waited for a long time, hearing sounds of movement kitchen. "Hubert," he called. " He shouted out of the back d the kitchen. "Hubert!" "The damn fool," he said. "T fool." During the night he sat in the door, waiting, his rifle a knees. He listened carefully sounds outside, but could hear but the chirping sounds of the and tree toads. The whiskey h him sleepy, the taste of it sou tongue. He listened carefully, b hear nothing. , III. In the morning when he awa still tired. He has been asleep, still tired, and his neck is stiff from sleeping sitting in the c door when Ernest came in, reading a newspaper. Ernest watched his face as he stood and turned, but there was no more than a smile, no moment of doubt or fear. "Ernie!" he said. "How are you? How are you! You're looking great. Come on, have a seat and tell me what's up." He still smiled, without looking straight into Ernest's face. The woman smiled pleasantly and walked out of the room. "Come on, Ernie, how about loosen- ing up a little? How are all the boys in town?" "They're pretty good, Doc. ..I suppose we all sort of 'wish that'you were back with, us, but we know'how it is." "Is Henry all right now? He looked pretty bad .when I saw him last." "He's trying to figure his way out now.' Ernest thought. "He's wise now and he's trying to figure his way out." "Say, Ernie, wait a minute, will you? I'll be right back." "He's trying to get out of it now," Ernest thought. "He's going into the- other room so he can get a gun. He rose quickly and followed him into the other room. "Nice place you got here, Doc," he said. Doc turned slowly, his hand still on the drawer in his desk.' "Yes, a nice place," he said. "Well, it ought to be. I put enough dough into' it." "It sure looks it." Doc was looking at him calmly. "What say we go in the living room, Ernie? Maybe you want to meet my wife. She's afine girl, Ernie; they don't, come any better." Ernest stood alone by the fireplace,; looking at the ship's model on the mantel. The room was very quiet; eveti the woman seemed to have sensed the tension. Doc stood in front of him, his face white about the mouth. "What say we have a drink, Ernie?" "Sure," Ernest said. "He's going into the other room again," he thought, "and he won't come back without the gun. He's afraid for her, too, now, and he won't come back w ithout the gun. It was growing dusk outside; the woman turned on the floor lamp near her chair. There was a pile of small logs and a poker against the wall by the fireplace. With her back toward him the warm light from the lamp shone softly on her hair, making it appear reddish and fine where it curled about her neck. The skin on the back of her neck was soft and white; he almost wanted to touch it. "If I don't do this," he thought. "If I don't do this he'll come back with the gun in a few minutes." When he put the log back on the pile by the fireplace she slumped heavily to the side of the chair. "I didn't hit her very hard," he said. "She's all right." He slammed the door violently as he ran out to the front porch. Waiting by the tree with the rifle stock against his shoulder, the soft rub- ber cup of the telescope against his eye, he thought, "He'll come out pretty soon now. He'll see her in the living room and come -out after me. I'll see him in the telescope just as he comes oit on the porch. The poor bastard, he'llcome out on the porch and I won't give hime a chance. Not even in this light, he won't have a chance, the poor bastard." He walked carefully around Doc as he went back intothe house. without even looking down at him. 'The poor bastard; the crosshair was full on him when I shot." She was still in the chair where he had left her, slumped to one side, still unconscious. She seemed* very heavy, but he managed to carry her to the couch at the other side of the room.'He tied her wrists and ankles with heavy package twine, listering to her stertor- ous' and labored breathing. The hay was already wet with the evening dew as he walked. across the vy .damp- stands, and looks about the room, but secret ex- there is no one there. He shouts for crid odor Hubert, but it is quiet, with only the hanging faint rustling of the trees outside on sive, but the lawn, the trees rustling in the nostril. bright and shadowed morning sun- chirping light. He sits in the chair again, think- lose ones ing, the rifle still across his knees. "He ed back- hasn't come back yet," he thinks. "He hasn't comne back yet and there doesn't seem to be anyone outside." there He packs his valise quickly and puts ything?" his rifle case, folded double, under his s. Itawas arm. He sees that the gun is cocked and twas a loaded. He knows that it is fifty yards from the house to the barn and it seems bbits with quiet and still outside. The fifty yards can't get seem a mile to him, and the weeds are hat gun hot and sour smelling, with the sun beating down, but he hears nothing. otk at it," He is a half mile down the road, driv- lked up- ing fast, even though he does not do so d with a ordinarily. "I can get through to the road now," he says. "I can get through lasses wenow." nTheiron hayrake is heavy and solid lompara- looking, parked as it is across the road. se lamp, He can see the road beyond, through Hubert the rake prongs, but he knows that it is "It seems iron, and heavy. He stops a hundred way to go feet before reaching it, looking through h a spy- the prongs to the road beyond. There are high banks on each side of the road, He's been covered with thickets of red and green He's seen sumac, and he sees a movement in one he's seen of them to his left; a man is watching he damn him through the branches of the red down to and green sumac. ruse," he ."They don't want me," he says. "It's . ,", just as if I wanted to kill him and they hogs." want to get me for it." He lies on his ogs down belly across the front seat, protected by d i the side of the car. The coarse, bristly down in seat fabric is dirty against his cheek as there." he grips the forearm of his rifle tightly. m't any He opens the door on the side away SErnest from the man on the bank carefully, so , that he doesn't have to raise his head. e '' The seat is rough and clinging as he you been slides across it on his belly to the The two ground outside the door. Crouching be- hind the hood of the car, he begins to d. Maybe look over the top when he hears a sound .d, this is behind him. I stretch-beidhm sen. "I've The inside of the muzzle of the shot- En 'T gun is shiny, and bright, reflecting the Ernest early morning sun. He can almost see the rifle downinto the throat of the barrel, but ehkitchen he can't see the man behind it and the ekitchen rifle is heavy and slow as he tries to minute, bring it up to his shoulder. without He is sitting now, instead of kneeling, in the sitting with his back against -the sharp Hubert!" edge of the running board, his legs cor from sprawled in front of hum. His chest is warm, as if he had just taken a drink he damn of some trehendously strong liquor, and the warmth is spreading. He can feel it front of in his whole chest, and it is spreading cross his lowes into his belly. He can feel it rising to the in his throat when he first sees the men nothing standing about him. He can move his crickets hand, but only stiffly and slowly, and ad made he feels it stop moving. He is looking ir on his straight upward at the men now,feelng ut could the sharp stones and hard packed earth of the road against his back. The stones are sharp and rough, but already he can't feel them; he can only see the kes he is heads of the men as they stand in a cir- but he is cle looking down at him, their heads and sore close together and pointing inwards, hair. He almost like the spokes of a wheel. He cannot see their bodies, but only the heads looking downward, with a mauve colored darkness wheee' their necks and bodies begin, as though they were peer- ing at him over the edge of a steep wall- ed bowl. He tries to count the heads, but his brain refuses to function; he can tell only that there are several of them. The warm colored darkness is rising slightly now and the heads are not so clear. He tries again to count the heads peering over the edge-of the cylinder at him. They fade as his head begins to ache painfully and become a bright greenish yellow, while the sky behind them becomes purple. The heads are normal again now, but the mauve dark- ness is rising up the cylinder and they become dimmer. Now he can only see a single bright spot of the sky immedi- ately above him, and soon even that fades. Will you weep, then. with this man of bleak uneloquence? Will you condone his dark ways, his sacked expression, and the arctic voice - the brittle undertones of studied and unnatural discretion? You, who are scavengers of all unholy, gluttoning from graves, and mocking deity- hold, for a time, your merciless appetites. and mourn a fragile, ruined enemy! You, the three-barbed spiderwasp and purple robe- reducing the robust clasp to a whispered pressure- Beware! This shell has gained the gathering's heart; next, you may be the victims of the seizure. - WILLIAM GIRAM