PERSP IVES University Of Michigan Literary Magazine VOLUME V, NUMBER 2 Supplement to THE MICHIGAN DAILY JANUARY, 1942 THE IINynTZ RALD . .. ByJhn Ragsdale E HAD RIDDEN a hundred and fifty miles to Princeton; it was yet another hundred fifty to home. We could not even reach Petersburg, the next county seat, before dark. And we were due back at the Atchison Machine Shop next day, So we telephoned to get my brother Jim to come after us in my car, which he had used while I was gone. He was on a date, however, and could not be reached at once. It was past two in the morning when he reached Princeton. Meanwhile Bret and I waited, sitting on the granite base of the Civil War mon- ument at the southeast corner of the courthouse lawn. Princeton stands atop a ridge running north and sonth. Along the summit of this ridge, knitting the center of the town like a spine, runs United States Road 41, bound from Copper Harbor, at the farthest tip of Michigan's upper peninsula, south through Chicago, Nashville, Chattanooga and Atlanta, to Miami, Florida. The monument by which we sat looked across this highway, at the main corner of town, under a traffic light, and across the street from a large ice cream shop. It was not a unique place; I had sat in a thousand like it, in little Maryland and Connecticut towns on Road 1, in Geneva, Avon, and Batavia, New York, in Middlesboro, Pineville and Corbin, Kentucky. It was a continental place, whose likeness had been stamped on every town in America since theh day when the first Model T was sold. It had altered, as the Model T had altered to the Model A and the V-8, but it had not changed. The cars still went by, Cars from Concord, Niagara, Boston. Cars from Topeka, Emporia, Austin- Cars from Chicago, Hannibal, Cairo. Cars from Alton, Oswego, Toledo. Cars from Buffalo, Kokomo, Delphi. Cars from Lodi, Carmi, Loami. But where Bret and I sat by the high- way on that hot July night, we saw something bewilderingly strange, some- thig moving and awesome and terrible, such as neither we nor Princeto had ever seen before. We saw the Army go through. All evening and all night it passed. For an hour or more we weren't even aware of its passage, then the grandeur and immensity going before our eyes swelled and became evident, and seized us like the grip of a hammer- ing, choking, enthralling pulse. The Army did not go through in tanks, in jeeps or armored cars, or in great canvas-covered trucks; it carried no artillery, or anti-aircraft gus, no searchlights, radio stations, pennons, or rolling kitchens. The Army went south that night in a thousand shiny and shabby, battered and beautiful cars. Fourth of July furlough was to end next day; the Army was going back to camp, back to the sprawling bases of the Deep South, back to Camp Wheeling, Camp Bragg, Camp Benning, Camp Forrest, Camp Shelby, and Camp Beauregard. All theh boys out of Wisconsin and Chi- cago, out of the Calumet District, the sand flats of northern Indiana and the black-muck celery farms of Niles and Kalamazoo, were leaving home again. Officers and men, selectees and National Guardsmen, sergeants, corporals, and privates, streamed south in the warm darkness. They drove every make and model car to come off the line since 1928, a few even the 1941 Cadillac Specials, the kind that sold standard for $1398 f.o.b. Detroit. Just before dark we saw the gold oak leaf shoulder insignia of a major shine in the window of a new Pontiac Torpedo. And later it seemed that every '34 Plymouth between the Great Lakes and the Ohi must have been commandeered for the southward movement of this huge man-swarm. But all the cars were alike in one respect; they were crowded to capacity with men in soiled, hopelessly wrinkled uniforms. in on their chewed cigarettes, their eye- lids sagged shut and reopened, they shook their rocking heads, and their brows knotted as they looked up and waited for the stoplight to change. Ev- ery few minutes one of these agonized, desperate drivers would stop in front of us, to poke the man next to him sav- agely, slapping him on the cheeks as he groaned and writhed with sleepiness. "Jim, Jim, wake up, boy! We're in Princeton, almost to Evansville. I've driven a hundred miles, and it seems like a thousand. I can't drive no fur- pairs! Not for long will they be over, Maybe they are without end or begin- ning, only worse now than other times! My eyes ranged back, out of the night, out of the sick year, back to a year that was thinner but more peaceful, to a morning when I was back of the foun- tain in Stein's Drug Store. I remem- bered a Monday morning, I could feel the chill in the air, could feel the ner- vous tension around my tired eyes, and the dryness of my throat. And I saw a thin, funny, rubber-faced man whom kids called Joe Spivis. Joe had come in for a Bromo on his way to the shoe shop where he worked. "Hughie," he said, "make it a stiff one. Im dying on my feet. I don't know how I'm gonna go on being this tired for another week or month or day or year, I just don't know. I been tired since I was ten, ex- cept on Saturday nights. I'm terrible tired on Sunday, worse on Monday, then a little less tired every day till Saturday night, and then again on Sun- day." He grinned. "Hell, boy, you know what war does to soldiers. Look what. it did to me. Takes the best years right off of the prime of their lives. God damn! It's a funny world, isn't it?" He took the Bromo, made a face, grunted and went on to work. Ah, Jim, that's the way it was; and now it's worse. THEN MY EYES came back across the terrible dead years, and I saw in an instant Jim's story, printed on his lined face, and on my brain, and writ- ten on the hot, windless night sky. Called up with the National Guard in October and sent to Shelby; back north for his first furlough at Christmas, after two months with scracely the sight- of a woman. Back to the bright lights of the great drunken, slushy, feasting and rejoicing city, back to the richest, grandest prosperity since 1929, back to Old Mr. Boston and Old Man Taylor went Jim, and back to a girl named Ethel who laughed and said, "My God, you're back! Come on in and have a short drink. How under the sun are you, Jimmy?" They went bowling and ice-skating together, morning, afternoon and night, Twice they went downtown to shop and eat; Ethel bought Jim a jewelled gold cigarette case, and Jim bought Ethel a lovely set of combs and brushes, and a smart hand mirror. And every girl they saw was beautiful, every dress and coat that flashed by them was bright and catching, the light on the newly var- nished bowling alleys was clear and rich, and soft on the gleaming white ice of the skating rink. Jim fell in love with the lights and the dresses, with the Four Hoses and turkey, with the laughter of all the gay people, and through them with Ethel. New Year's Eve he took her to the Back Hawk, and later to the Panther Room. Then he proposed to her. "Oh, Jimmy," she cried, in her small- est voice, "you can't ever know how much I want you. But we can't even think about getting married. It would only be for a few hours, then there would be years apart for us. You know this trouble is going to last four, maybe five years. Jimmy, I'll wait for you, you know that. But we just can't get married." Then a man was with them, telling them that there had never been (Continued on Page Two) By C. FREDERICK KORTEN And all the officers and men were alike in one respect, too, in their utter weariness. The packed khaki forms in the cars lay as inert as their disorderly mounds of luggage. They seemed to have been blown into their seats by the impact of a bomb, to have crumpled and imploded as though they were hollow inside. They lay heaped like logs on top of each other in the back seat, until the tortured bodies of their old cars sank to the axles, so that the front wheels leaped and staggered in starting. Arms, legs, big shapeless stockinged feet and sightless heads hung from the windows. Their faces were gray with sweat and grime under the white streetlights; their dusty hair was a matted wreck. All the cumulative misery and exhaus- tion of humanity seemed to have been heaped on their limp shoulders. The drivers were worst of all, for they were awake and in torment. As they drew ther, I've been blackin' out the last ten miles. Come on, don't go back to sleep, Jim boy. Ya gotta drive. I can't stay awake no longer!" There would be a minute of horrible silence, and a long groan like the wail- ing in a fallen city. "Ooh, Jesus Christ, Hal, where theh hell are we? Oh God, I'm so tired. You want me to drive? O.K. Ooh God, I don't see how I can make it!" Then they would trade places, and the former driver would collapse instantly, with his head fallen back into the corner of the seat and the door. "Merciful God!" I heard one of the Jims groan, "when will we be delivered out of this vale of tears and woe! Hey, pal, have you got a light?" I ran out to him. "Thanks a lot, pal," he said. Then he was gone, leaning on his steer- ing wheel and peering ahead into the night. Ah, Jim, Jim! The weariness, the fever, and the fret! the leaden-eyed des-