PERSPECTIVES, Pale Mine JLO ,:. Ai i' T! JE,7, k.77 -4 - ws .. NEITHER THEY SP (Continued from Pa his mother said. She glan dining room. 'You ate y "Yeah, thanks Mom." swallowing the rest of th could still taste the egg. cigarette. "You needs lots of foo "You haven't been gaining .if only I could do some dad and I are worried." "Don't worry," he said. much here 'cause I'm eatin I'm oot someplace." The coffee was ready, a a cup in to the table and. realised that he didn't kn it was. "Where's paper, called. He found the pap ing room and opened it1 page. While he read un strips of cartoons his mot and stood beside him. Hi and patted her on the bac: practised smile. She ran through his hair, pushing his head. "If you want anything said, and went back out o Sean drank the coffee t he got up from the table a the lining room. He picked zine and put it down again his cigarette into a cleanf stared down at the black c white stub alone in the m clean glass. He looked arou As he went out, his fath the darkness of the swing, money, son?" "No, I got plenty, dad.' to go down the front steps stood up and came overt "Well just in case," he s a wadded bill into Sean's "I don't need it, dad. Ho] goin' anyplace. Just bumm "'S all right. Get your You haven't had a date. Y the car." "Aw hell, dad. Thanks, kids are married or goin' just gonna shoot a little poo, ' then come home. Here. I don't need this (3) dough." Sean felt like such a heel. He had let them down so hard. He was ~IN so goddam worthless. "Take it," his dad said, giving him Lge Five) a shove. "Take it while you can get it." He walked back to the swing. Sean reached out to give back the bill, then went on down the steps, holding the money in his hand. "Thanks, dad," he iced in to the called back. "I'll be home early." He 'our egg." walked up the street. He finished Under the streetlight he looked down e water. He at the money. It was a dollar bill, dirty so he lit a and limp. He shoved it in his pocket, and walked along. He wished, he had )d," she said, guts enough to go on the bum, to take at all. Sean, the load off his folks. He was a para- thing. Your site. He would spend the dollar. He spent all of them. "I don't eat A date. There was a full moon. He'd .g all the time like to have a date. It was the kind of a night when he liked to be parked nd he carried somewhere in a car. Maybe he should sat down. He have taken the car. ow what day But his dad didn't know. It didn't Mom?" he mean the same thing it used to when er in the liv- Sean was in high school, having a date. to the comic It used to mean calling up a girl he saw smilingly the every day, and saying how about going ther came in to a show. Those were all gone, they e reached up had got married while he was away at k, smiling his school, or they didn't remember him, her fingers or they couldn't make it on such short it back on notice. A date now was picking up some- body in a beer garden, and going to call me," she more beer gardens, having enough mon- in the porch. ey to get the strange, shrill voiced girl oo hot. Then drunk, and then taking her out in the nd went into car and trying to lay her, and oh god, I up a maga having her expect him to try to lay her. . He ground That wasn't what his dad meant when ash tray. He he said get a date. If he could just be har, the bent a decent son, if he could stay home, and piddle of the be clean, even that would help. But nd the room, he was no good at all. He was a coward, er said from and he was no good, cracking dirty "Need some when he was with the boys, trying to be a nice kid when he was home. holding it now between his thumb and second finger, blowing smoke out through his nose. He made remarks when one of the boys missed a shot. He watched a younger kid trying to shoot with a cigarette in his mouth, the smoke curling up in his eyes. He smiled sar- donically as the kid missed. He talked tough, and smoked one cigarette after another, and his stomach felt raw. The blue smoke curled under the low lights hanging over the table. Loud talk, the click of hard hit pool balls, the sound of bowling and shouting, swearing, the screeching laughter of women, and sud- denly Sean found himself thinking about the folks at home, sitting there quietly on the swing, worrying about him, talking in low, puzzled tones about what they could do for him. They loved him so much, they had tied their lives to his, believed in him. And what did he give in return? Sean turned from the table and walk- ed away. He heard the boys yell that ' he could play in a minute, but he kept going. He dropped his cigarette in a spitoon around which lay many cigar- ette and cigar butts. The boys would think he was sore. Well, what the hell did he care what they thought? Outside the poolroom the air was cleaner. Sean turned first toward home. Then he stopped, and looked at washing machines in a store window while he thought. What could he do at home? He'd go crazy just hanging around the house all night. He'd get silent and surly, he couldn't keep up the act for his folks that long. Oh, Jesus, some- place to go, someplace decent, a girl's house, or some friends who liked to sit around and talk. Any place that was quiet, only not home, not yet. Home and sit in an easy chair and stare at the floor, seeing failure, seeing worried looks hastily hidden when he looked up, hearing anxious attempts to snap him out of the blues, falsely gay conversation, the radio turned on to some blatting cacaphony dance band, seeing behind it all the disappointment, the unadmitted lost, puzzled feeling of the two of them. Or trying to read, see- ing the type blur and change to an un- concerned professor's face, the mouth moving, saying "-who come here ex- pecting not to work, making their par- ents undergo sacrifices-"-Oh, Christ, oh Christ-no! But yes, Sean, Remember the times (Continued on Page Ten) KENNETH FEHRING -SOIAL POET (Continued from Page Three) problems of form and style. They have assumed that to be unrestrained is to be revolutionary. They have assumed poetic significance to be a simple ex- tension of social significance. Their views are as narrow in every respect, as those of Ruskin in the nineteenth cen- tury. They have not yet gone so far as to set up a proletarian style, but have assumed that the matter will dictate the style. This is, of course, true, but a poet writing about a woman screaming does something more and something less than scream himself. Fearing's style is as private acd esoteric a thing as that of any of the so-called "de- cadent" poets that these critics rush to condemn. His Symbolist technique is still Symbolist despite its new weight of public matter. All of this of course is not so much a condemnatoin per se of Fearing as of his friends. Symbolism has left its considerable mark on the poetry of the last two decades, has be-. come a valuable part of the inheritance of the poets writing in the' preseat day. But a style can be completely separ- ated from the matter that it bears, and Symbolism was the language of com- pletely private emotion. For a soeial poet to swallow it piecemeal, as Fearing has done, is to risk disaster. Symbol' ism destroyed old restraints, but it cre- ated the new ones of the complete sub- jectivism. Fearing, in adopting it, adopted neither the old nor the new disciplines. As has already been noted, Fearing is himself beginning to be aware of this. But the poet that we now have, although his insights into the dynamics of modern society are often profound, is never quite sure what is form and what is matter. Fearing is not so con- tent as he once was to simply record the sensational and superficial aspects of the society in which he lives. He has moved much nearer its heart. But as a poet he still has far to go. He has the matter, the form is still to come. He started s. His father to him. aid, and put hand. nest. I'm not sin' around." self a date. ou can have but all the steady, m A BOWLING LEAGUE was knocking down the echoing pins, and shout- ing as men made strikes, and standing around drinking beer, names of stores or factories sewn in blue thread on their sweat stained shirts. Over at the snook- er table the boys saw him, and said "You're in the next game, husky," and Sean said "All right, you goddam nigger lovers," and leaned against another table to watch. He smoked a cigarette, THE PATRIOT Continued from Page Eight more valuable service for our nation than we could by sinking a hundred times as our comrades did today? You did not see it; you did not see the oily, smoke billowing out over the horizon like unclean, black toadstools. You could not imagine roaring flames burst- ing out of the guts of those ships, melt- ing the decks, frying the crew into cinders before your eyes. But if you had to shovel coal like a demon in the bowels of your ship,,'with shattered steam lines spraying hot vapor over your bare back like rain and sea water pouring in through smashed plates up to your knees, then, before. God -you dog! you would well wish you were on my island, taking your ease in the warm heat of the noonday sun beneath the shade of the royal palms. What end do you think the naval vessels of Spain are destined for other than destruction? Leave my quarters! Leave my cabin before I lose my temper." The man hurried out, cowed, and Suarez, his face working, continued to pace wildly in his cabin, After a brief time he calmed sufficiently to call Lieu- tenant Morales to- his quarters. Commander Suarez resigned to him command of the destroyer and turned over all official documens and orders in his possession. He asked permission to retain his cabin until the vessel reached Havana, and asked that his word might be accepted in exchange for his parole. The Lieutenant, shocked by the train of events of the day, remon- strated with him strongly. He feared that the heat, the excitement of their voyage, and the morning's battle had left his superior temporarily mentally deranged. Still, Suarez was not a man to make a rash statement ordinarily, and what he had proposed for the ship was indeed monstrous. On second thought, it was not proper that one who held such traitorous thoughts and who also was afraid to risk his vessel in battle should hold a command under the Spanish Queen. Morales accepted command and left to inforn the officers of the change. It should be kept from he men; the Commander would keep to his cabin and for al lthey knew do so because of illness. His spirits lifted to think that'he was actually in com- mand of this fine new vessel. The Lieu- tenant mounted buoyantly to the bridge. The Fernando Luis steamed in toward Havana late in the afternoon of July 5, and waited outside of the mine fields to pick up a 'pilot. He came out in a small dirty sloop and clambered slowly up the short Jacob's ladder that had been lowered over the side for his con- venience. He was a small, swarthy half- caste with a curiously pale face for so warm a climate. There was a strong odor of rum about his crumpled white linen clothing, but he seemed to be in possession of his faculties and to know his business. Lieutenant Morales, with disdain, assumed a position on the wind- ward side of the bridge behind the grey- painted canvas dodger. After proceeding a few ship's lengths into the mine field, the ragged half- caste gave a low groan and dropped limply to the deck. His arms and legs twitched convulsively and silver froth foamed at his mouth. He bit at the wooden deck. The dirty bastard must be an epileptic, Morales thought in quick horror. He stopped the engines hurriedly and snapped at the bridge messenger to bring Comander Suarez on deck at once. It would be madness to attempt to run the destroyer in through the mines without knowing the positions of the fields. If their hull completed contact with one of the mines, none of them would live to see Spain again. On either side of the destroyer, the bulbous shapes of anchored steel tor- pedoes glinted in the sunlight filtered down through the turgid green water. They swayed gently back and forth in the eddies caused by the ship's bow wave and the Lieutenant stared at them in fascination from the bridge. The men on the deck up forward near the anchor winch looked back at him en- quiringly. A small cross current of air snagged on the ship's lean grey hull and she began to drift toward the mines on the port side of the vessel. In quick terror of being blown onto the mines by the wind, Morales rang for slow speed ahead on the engine room telegraph. Seven bells struck somewhere in the ship and down in his cabin Commander Suarez started to wind his old'fashion- ed gold watch. Through the porthole he could see the green tile roofs and the yellow stucco houses of Havana across the harbor water. Very pretty. It was beastly stuffy in his cabin, though. The Commander sighed. resignedly. There was the sound of running boots on the wooden deck outside, and from the bridge Morales' voice bawled an order. A seaman's voice excitedly shouted; "The Lieutenant presents his com- pliments, sir and begs your presence on the bridge at- once."