Page Two 9PERSPEC TI VES THE VISION OF HUGH FITZGERALD ... Continued from Page One a year like 1940, that the '41 Model cars should reach a sales of over five and a half million. Jim went sick at the thought of his '36 Ford. And he was sick, desperately sick, about 6:30 in the morning. But by ten he was on his way south, crumpled up in the back seat of his buddy's car. Then came the long, long night of waiting, the grim six months, the man- euvers, the hard work, the parties in camp, the discontent and idle waiting, the news of the service extension, the confusion when the company went over the hill to Texas. Word from the North became perfunctory and hollow as Spring advanced, until at last Jim sent a bitter letter out of the swamps of Hattiesburg, a letter that annoyed him a moment after he had mailed it, and caused him to pace the floor cursing as he waited for a reply. Darling, I wonder if you have ever told me a single word you really thought. Now that I come to think of it, maybe I never told you any of my deepest ideas. Perhaps it is that way with all men and women, that they never do truly open up. Maybe they can't. Look at us; we are like a couple of unopened old letters ly- ing side by side in the dead letter file at a postoffice. How the hell did we get where we are? We cannot tell. I only know that some nights I think of you up in Chi, and feel like an old, old man. Darling, say Prunes for me up there, and imag- ine that I'm kissing you while you say it. It is not good for anyone to be as reserved as I have been. Small talk comes to hurt at last. Some- times I feel that you've got to take me by the shoulders, and let me cry my eyes out with you. Then you could cry your eyes out with me. Sometimes tears are the only proper language. Darling, don't you need me, even a little. Or maybe there is someone else with whom you wish to cry. Maybe someone else repre- sents to you what you do to me. Oh, Dearest, say prunes again. I want to hear you so much. Please don't answer this letter with news of the weather and what you have been doing. I don't care a damn. Tell me you love me, tell me. you hate me, or don't write. And please don't wait a week to answer. Oh, Darling, don't let's ever be just friends. Don't let's ever just talk, or just write to each other. There are so many people with whom we have to do that. Please just take me, and tell me what in hell the score is with the world and us. I need you so much; it is so lonely here without you. Jim. I saw the reply go south, Airmail Special Delivery. Darling Jim, When I got your letter I felt like packing my things and starting for Hattiesburg. Jimmy, when are you coming home? Get a furlough, you've surely earned .one by now. Please come home for the Fourth, do! Dearest love, Ethel So at last Jim's leave came late in the afternoon of Saturday the Twenty- eighth of June he started north in Harold Higbie's Dodge, with Harold and Bob Lynn and Stan Andrews and Bill Cummins. They picked up a quart of Old Mr. B at Terre Haute, and by the time they had reached the Nu-Joy Rest- aurant at Kentland, they were stopping people to ask what the big noise around Chicago was. No one knew. "It's Illi- noise!" the five would shout, and roar with laughter. "SO WENT THEIR LEAVE, like a grand hallelujah shouting, a big midsum- mer jubilee of sunburn, sand, fried chicken, Tom Collinses, dancing under the stars, and gorgeous night rides in Hal's convertible, that always ended too soon, even when the couples drove back to town to bowl until bieakfast. And there were nights alone with Ethel, terrible swift sweet nights of impossible wanting and unfilled desire, nights when Jim wanted to cry and curse and kill the girl, and could not, nights that were followed by mornings when he tossed on his bed at the remembrance of the torment of her limbs and breasts, and woke up raw and taut, worn out ad afire again, so that he fell to drink- ing before breakfast. But every night he came back again, desperate from a day of intolerable longing. And now he was burned -out, and going back south again. Ah, Jim, always tired, yet with nothing ever accomplished, always worn out with desire. It is the luck of the West. Our fathers bashed out brains, blood, heart, bone, flesh and sinew on stone walls, and we will too. We are walled from birth in every direction, caged by the dreams of long-dead men. ridden east toward New York. The Au- gust day was furiously hot, we had stopped in the store to buy cokes and ice cream cones. The old crone watched us all the while we were in the store, followed us with her red 'eyes, and wept. "My sons," she cried, "it's pass- ing hard to know that I'll not be dead as soon as ye, even though I'm lame and old, and going blind. Oh, my sons, my sons, the shadow of death is upon ye! The Huns and Japs have made a league, but Franklin Roosevelt will stop them. You'll see hose little yellow men, just you watch. But nothing will come of them or you except skulls and bones and blood. So have your fun, boys, and love your girls, for the Huns and Japs are coming after you. All they that take up the sword shall perish with the sword." There was a sort of pride then in the old woman's voice, haggard and' weeping as she was with her vision. "Oh, hush now!" her daughter had said, with a tired annoyance. "Don't you mind her, boys. Her wits are loose, and she'll be dead before long now." "Not so soon as you think. I'm likely J/rouqA -ยง1/read The memories fail, They are a sick Whirl, A blur of lost times. Where are the live days, Dimensioned, world-size, And the full names? In age the days fade; The single through-thread Is that intense vow: "I will recall this, The drama, light, place, That makes now now." -Norman Lewis We came out of the valleys of the Don and the iVstula and the Danube, from the Rhine, the Moselle, the Meuse, the Scheldt, the Thames, the reedy Cam, the Loire and the Seine. It was 'inBai- kal that our fathers swam, an 'then in Galilee and Lucerne and Killarney. A rattle of unshod hooves beats in our ears; a pageantry wrought out of fifty million lonely small campfires strung like a chain of lights from Mongolia to San Francisco enchants our search- ing brains and our homesick, puzzled, hateful and magical hearts. Campfires and family namnes! They are the kinetic stuff of the West. There was a girl named Emma Manville in a high school English class with me; she had gray eyes and dark, frizzy hair, and broad, thick lips. Everyone laughed when she told the class that sh had b en born in the West Indies. so sure were they that she was a mulatto, al- though both her parents in the States were white. How interested they were in her. How interested all Americans are in their genealogies. When one wishes to make talk, he can take a per- son's name, and ask its nationality.. The recollections of old homes, of old fires and names in another land are like the rheumatic pais and forgotten flesh-wounds of an old soldier, th) come back to plague him in wet weath- er. There are raw places in all our hearts where our roots were wrenched out. They leave us hungry, hungry- hearted, starved in our talking tongues, empty in our souls, hungry and curious to know that in some sweet, small, solid and enduring place, some little walled valley town, our ancestors were big people who amounted to something. It does not seem to mean so much to be free and equal in a country where all men are, to be able to drive fine cars one year that the next-door neigh- bors, if they strike it rich, can surpass the next, to build imposing houses in suburbs that will be two miles down into town in two decades, if all goes well. All our democracy seems to leave us with a strangely flat taste in our mouths when we thik of our home- lessness, our lack of roots, our showy,. impermanent, easily withered foliage of destinction. So we laugh and we say, "Well, now, I don't know much about my ancestors, but I've heard that my Uncle Jim, far back on my mother's side, -.was strung up for horse-stealin', and that his eight young 'uns came over the pond to keep from following him." An, Jim, Jim! You were Uncle Jim then, you had eight children, and they hanged you. Jim, Jim, always wasted, always wanting, like a leaping salmon fighting its way home to spawn and die. It's sad, because there was so much hope in the hearts of those eight young 'uns when they did come across the pond. Yet the things we think about Europe are very untrue. They are dreams, hal- lucinations induced by our own heart- sickness. Europe was never the place we want to believe that it was. Where were all the quiet little towns by the Inn and the Moselle during the Thirty Years' War? or during the Crusades, either against the Saracens or the here- tics at home? What did these towns have their great walls for? Were they just violent symptoms of the same raw sickness that makes us here want some distinction, some rock on which to found our houses? The old trouble was in those towns by their little rivers, too; only, instead of running from it, across the ocean and beyond the mountains, as our fathers did, or running to the hills and suburbs as we have done, the older people simply stood and endured, weep- ing when they watched their children die. Think now of all campfires, as I did (Continued on Page Nine) But if only the weariness of the last two fearful years could be distilled, what a draught it would make to serve the rulers of Earth. It would fell old Mith- ridates in his tracks. Men can conquer the world and never be happy, only drunken and exhausted and full of in- satiable wanting. Conquer the world! That's the story, Jim. The coming struggle for Power. Power, Power, Jim! In the night a vision as sullen and terrible as the ap- proach of a mighty storm, enveloped me. Power, Power! Suddenly the sky opened, my eyes and heart opened, and I beheld the whole West risen like a stormy sea'in one huge tide of Power. I saw that Jim was a bubble, a pretty, floating bubble full of color and tears, driven in the midst of the tempest in a swarm of white froth. I was a bubble, Bret was a bubble, all America was a froth and foam of humanity pitched to the top of a tidal wave! THEN the whole West leaped up be- fore me, immensely gallant, sense- less, powerless, foolish and tragic, like a great salmon ready to spawn and die, fighting its way back across half the world to home. My mind shuffled images like playing cards. I saw an old woman seated in the corner of a gen. eral store at the edge of Iselin, New Jersey, toothless and mad, waiting to die. It was the Summer of 1937. I was seventeen, and Paul Ramsay and I had to last ten years yet. But these boys will be under the ground before half of that. Just you wait and see." The old woman grew silent, and her eyes were grand. Then it was 1941 again, I was working the night shift at Atchison's, it was about eleven, toward the end of sup- pertime, and the boys' were all sitting out in the driveway, smoking and look- ing at the weather. Bruce Lang was talking. Bruce was a pop-off, but he had to be heeded because he knew what people were thinking more often than not, and he sometimes said very true things. Now his' voice had risen. "Hell, let's be honest, fellas. I'm no damn Nazi, and none of you are either, you know that. But you know what we're fighting for. We're not fighting for no Democracy! We're not fighting for the English, neither. We don't even like the English. As a matter of fact, we hate the Englisk,-you know that. We're fighting to run the world. We're fighting to own all these new automo- biles you see running around the streets. We like to run the world. We don't want to share it with no English. We want to run it ourselfs!" The coming struggle for power. Again the image of America as a great spawn- ing salmon fighting its way half across the world, to home and to death, seized and enveloped me. We came out of the East, out o fSamarcand and Sinkiang.