T ERSPECTI VES Page Eleven BOOKS. IN SEASON ---- ---- --- Portrait of the Artist As a Young Dog Dylan Thomas New Directions. Those of us who read The World I Breathe, Dylan Thomas's last book, were excited or disappointed or just puzzled. There was no uniformity of feeling about the book because there was little unity in Thomas's work. As a Welshman with a fine imagination and a knack of orig- inal expression in verse, he had hewn a olace for himself overnight beside his poetic contemporaries. But his prose lacked something vital It was metrical and imagistic like his verse without achieving a character of its own It was surrealistic without reaching beyond the individual dream world to the mass of common emotional and social experience which stands at the base of all great art The world that Thomas was breath- ing had little relation to the world in which the rest of us, live and die. The engaging title of this new book of autobiographical prose sketches gives a clue to the contents. It smacks of the clever surrealist, perhaps, but it is per- fectly comprehensible. It is as humorous for precocious word-slinging as for warm reality. Portrait of the Artist as a Young Dog presents us with a new and much more likable Thomas. Ten scenes chosen at random from his life form the basis of -these stories. Covering the period from eary child- hood to young manhood they successful- ly avoid the pitfalls of sentimentalism or the abnormalities of adolescence which mar so many autobiographical sketches. Thomas's natural Welsh love of the mysterious and romantic (in the best sense) lends the proper atmosphere to the adventures of a half-mad grand- father or of Gwilym, the actress-loving minister. Fine language is the clue to much of Thomas's appeal but his humor and humanity are far more important in these stories. Above all, the author spends less time on himself than on his other characters. They are, for the most part, understandable people drawn from life. But what is true of Dylan Thomas's poetry is also true of these stories. Their outward vitality often conceals an in- ward hollowness. It is as if the author had started within himself and worked out in concentric circles. In the Portrait he draws his immediate friends and ac- quaintances but never goes beyond to the realities of the world at large. No- where in this book do we sense the pres- sure of outside events, the struggles of nations, races, or nationalities (like Welsh, for instance) which have so profoundly affected all young men dur- ing the past thirty years. This last link with complete reality is missing and contributes to the final sense of inward hollowness in the Portrait. The last sketch entitled "One Warm Sat- THE CONCERT Contipmed from Page 4 soul sweep from his dark fingers into the silver of her presence. He had admitted to his heart one sharp, leaping flame, annihilating her white body, and his dark one, This was communion!-O black and holy ones, O white and godly ones! Here black Africa swept off the crust of centuries to emerge one with her brothers in priestly chastening! Nevertheless, the onlookers in row eight saw her hair shudder, the proud little velvet hat in foamy storm, and the cream of her handkerchief fly dis- tressedly to her arm. There to wipe off all traces of the dark wine of commun- ion. - James Turner Jackson urday" appears to be symbolic of this Arena quality in Thomas's writing. In it the Hallie Flanagan author becomes enamored of a girl at Duell, Sloan & Pearce a party. He leaves the room for a mo- Your personal social philosophy will ment, expecting to return and find her Tu esnl5t5 hlspywl alone, but loses his way, batters blindly certainly have considerable weight in about the house for hours, and finally affecting your opinion of Arena, for the gives up. He wanders out into the street book deals not only with the history of where "the small and hardly known the Federal Theatre Project, but inti- and never-to-be-forgotten people of the mately with the individaul personalities dirtytown had lived and loved and died, of the men and women who contributed and, always, lost" Defeatism is the core to make the Federal Theatre a function- of this philosophy, and though it may al process between audience, actors and be nostalgic for some, it is the deadliest playwright. I open with this point be- disease which any writer may encounter. cause it is one of Mrs. ,Flanagan's very Dylan Thomas will have to find his way honestly and validly propounded theses around the house, which is our world, in Arena that Federal Theatre was dis- in less drunken fashion before he will continued, and the project branded and renounce this defeatism and write with scarred perhaps for all time, by the ig- complete understanding and reality. The norant manipulations of a few persons world he breathes has been considerably, in powerful government positions, who and admirably widened in these stories, were able to censor publications and, in but the process must continue and the the end, cut off the necessary funds. blind spots be filled in before we can The record of Federal Theatre, as doc- be in complete sympathy. umented in Arena, is amazing. I had - E.G.B. never fully realized the extent of the ' e 3/tuijon 0/ flormalc Tonight the moon's so crowded with the sight from a million burning eyes it foams white heat and steams a silent challenge to those who wake to light the real by burning paper dreams: Will the sense of spring speak the night tones of this so-normal moon or sight the stars bright glint in the sky's dark eye, dream even at the War's edge. with the strain of un-born livingness sight and speak the clear and cubic-cold Or will this pure sense of spring tense with history and teeming illusion of the moon. -Harold Norris project's scope until I had completed the book, although I had tried, as an ama- teur student of drama, to keep abreast of its growth. Among other things, MrS. Flanagan shows that Central Divisions were set up in every large city in every section of the country, each with its own director who was supposed to pre- sent theatrical and recreational amuse- ments best suited to his locale.:Traveling unit were sent out from these central points with productions on tour for the lesser satellite towns of the area. These productions included magicians, puppet, shows, vaudeville, stage shows, and every possible kind of stage entertainment, the fortunes of whose exponents had suf- fered just as much from the depression as had those of the factory worker, the farmer or the tradesman. "To set up theatres which have pos- sibilities of growing up into social insti- tutions in the communities in which they are located ... and to lay the founda- tion for the development of a truly cre- ative theatre with outstanding producing centers in each of those regions which have common interests as a result of geography, language, origins, history, traditions, customs, occupations of the people . . , ": this was the' aim of Fed- eral Theatre as Mrs. Flanagan inter- prets it. And with it in mind, certainly it is difficult to comprehend how the hopes of the general project could go up in smoke at the hands of a group raising the old cry of "Red." The project never turned even close to the direction of the national theatres of Europe. It was, rather, a fairly loose federation of regional theatres and Mrs. Flanagan shows this beyond any doubt. By the time the Dies Committee began brand- ing Christopher Morley and Shirley Temple as Communists, it was clearly showing the idiocy of the leading op- ponents of Federal Theatre, but by then it was too late. Federal Theatre had al- ready met its defeat. The necessity of a wide-awake and socially-conscious theatre as illustrated by the attendance records of millions of people when the theatre was brought financially and geographically to their doors has not died with this project. Mrs. Flanagan's record of the Federal Theatre is clear evidence of this necessi- ty, and outlines the courses to be fol- lowed and the mistakes to be avoided in the future, should any such enterprise ever be sponsored again. And it is quite evidently up to Mrs. Flanagan to know, by this time, the proper courses and possible pitfalls, productional as well as administrative, connected with a gov- ernment theatre project. For she will- ingly resigned an important position at Vassar to direct Federal Theatre, and was with it all the way as it pros- pered and failed. She must be accorded due credit, in Arena, for her thorough- going honesty in recording, and for her capable turning of all her dramatic abilities to delineating the rise and fall of Federal Theatre in America. - William Mills eyes when he encounters evidences of German penetration and influence. Tac- tics and characterstics of the well known Fifth, as it operates on Equadoreans, come into notice, and their prevalence and evident success threw a shock into this complacent North American at least. The book is not one to be read at a single sitting. Its strong individuality of language makes it like a highly flav- ored but delicate dish-losing its sang when taken in large portions-indeed because it is episodic, really plotless, it may become wearisome, but to any reader who avoids this mistake The Don- key Inside cannot fail to be a delightful experience. - Joan Outhwaite The Donkey Inside Ludwig Bemelmans Viking Press Equador, as described by Bemelmans would be enjoyed by no man but a Bemelmans, but any man who can enjoy the remarkable descriptive prose of an artist with the gift of tongues will en- joy Bemelmans' decription of Equador. The Donkey Inside is neither to be read nor avoided as a "travel book," but as a sympathetic (not sentimental) por- trait of towns, jungles, mountains, In- dians, adventurers, flies, dogs, and don- keys. Only an artist's eye would observe orchids "of immoral design, astounding flowers, like hats invented by a lewd modiste," or discover that a head in a hunter's pot is "a dirty washcloth with holes for eyes and mouth," see a paint- ing of a waterfall as "noodle soup run- ning down over a green couch," re- mark that a flock of sea-birds is "as if an immense carpet with an all over design of birds were suddenly unrolled into the sea." At sustained description he does equally well. Seldom has a jungle grown with such luxuriance and magical real- ity as it does here in these pages, and seldom has one such an opportunity to become aware, not of what is in a country, but what it feels like, and how one feels when there. Eccentric and de- lightful people appear incidentally, as they appear in the course of an itiner- ant's journey; the oddities, crudities. and pleasures of local hotels, are record- ed with enough objectivity to give real- ity, and enough enthusiasm and en- joyment on the part of the author to rouse our interest and focus our atten- tion. Bemelmans writes as he paints, not to record the physical objects of a scene, but to create a pleasant, effective and honest picture. He says himself, in a note that with his characteristic com- mon sense he puts at the end of the book, "The terrain, the architecture, and the landscape,-the light that lies over it and the animals that walk about it,- are rendered as they are. As for the people-(they) are wholly fictitious. Whenever character and persons had to be painted in broad immediate color I have taken license to use the devices of the fiction writer. I have, whenever I found it right, put together several, -I have taken the feet of one and the ears of another, and I hope it comes out all right." He does the same with inci- dents and events. "It fitted so, it made a gcod picture." The result is a good pic- ture, not a photograph, map, or a Cook's tour plan. He selects his people and his incidents as he chooses his words, with taste and style. He is seldom funny, al- ways humorous. For those of the "life is real, life is earnest" cast of mind, it may be mentioned that Bemelmans ob- serves very clearly, with considerable perspicacity, and he does not shut his