PERSPECTIVES Page Nine STAND FOR THE FLAG ... Don La~adie HE WOULDN'T sit down?" "No sir. It was last Sunday. He got on when the car was almost empty. I'd only been on about two hours when this little fellow-why I could have smashed him with my fist easy enough -got on at Grove Street. Pretty soon the other passengers began to notice that he wasn't sitting down, though there were plenty of seats. Finally Miss Sykes-she's the librarian at the Montclair Library-came up to me and brought it to my attention that this man was standing when there was plen- ty of room for him to sit. So I left the place where I take the tickets and went over to him. He was just standing therestaring up at one of the beer post- ers. 'Thee are plenty of seats.' I said to him. He' looked at me and smiled. 'Yes, there ae many seats.' he said. 'It is a great improvement. I remember the old cars which had only a few seats.' 'Dn't you be funny.' I said to him. 'There 'are lots of seats empty in this car and you're standing. You're both- ermg everyone so they can't read their Sunday papers. Now you sit down there.' 'Oh but' I can't.' 'You'can't?' 'It wouldn't be respectful.' 'Respectful to what?' 'Respectful to the flag.' 'To' the flag? What are you talking about?' There's no flag on this car.' 'Butthe flags hang in many places throughout the city. I have a flag draped'from my window; and in many restaurants and halls it is prominently displayed.' 'Well there's no flag on this car, and you stand for the flag when you're supposed to, on special occasions and such. Now' if you want to stay on this car you sit down. Personally I think you've got a screw loose else I'd call a cop 'and'have you locked up for be- ing disrespectful and unpatriotic.' 'I don't mean to be disrespectful, but I can't"sit down. I've even learned to sleep while I stand and deserting now would be too easy.' 'Listen, I've had enough of this.' I said tO him. 'You either sit down or get off the car." He said he was sorry and asked me to stop the car. That's the last I thought of him till the inspector on my line, Mr. Fritz, told me all about the trouble they've been having on the busses too. Then I read in the paper about the music hall and I told my wife about it and she said to me: 'Albert, this man's some sort of seditionist or foreign spy trying to cause disunity. It's your duty to report him to the Prefect.' So that's how I came to see you, sir." The Prefect sat quietly for a few minutes, blowing smoke rings from his long cigarette. The conductor stood at attention before him, stealing a glance occasionally at the mahogany box on the Prefect's desk which contained the Cuban cigars. Fritz had told him that loyal einployes were often given these for good service. Finally the Prefect spoke: "Your report is only one of many. He's been causing disturbance every- where in the city. This business at the opera last night was, of course, all we could' overlook without taking action. Purchasing a box ticket - lord knows where he got the money - and then standing all the way through the per- formance, even after they'd stopped playing the anthem, so that he couldn't possibl escape notice. Bellinin stopped in the middle of the Immolation scene and screamed at him, threw a tantrum right in the middle of the stage. They had to carry her off and postpone the performance - you could identify this man?" "Oh yes, sir - He was very small and wore a bowler hat -" The Prefect pushed a button at his desk and spoke into a little box. "Have that man who was arrested at the opera last night brought up to my of- fice." He pushed the button again and turned back to the conductor. "Now we'll see." he said. "He's been identified by three people so far; a waitress at Goodman's, the priest at St. Andrew's, and one of our bus drivers. All three of them observed him standing at a time and in a place where it was con- spicuous for him to do so. We want to make certain that he's alone, that there's not a ring of these men trying to undermine the general morale." "It's a terrible thing, sir. The flag is something to be respected. Ever since I was a child my mother taught us we should respect the flag. When the other boys in the block would have an old tattered flag after a holiday and be spitting and stamping on it I'd say 'No, No!' and they'd say 'Why?' and I'd say 'Because it's the flag'-" Someone knocked on the door. "Come in." the Prefect called. The door open- ed and a fat officer led a small man into the room. "That's him, that's him!" the con- ductor cried rushing up and pointing in the small man's face. "All right, Jenkins." the Prefect said. "You may go." "You don't want me to stay in case he tries to contradict anything I said?" "No, I'll call you if I want you." Jenkins glared at the small man and walked from the room. "You may go too." the Prefect said to the fat officer. When they were alone in the room the Prefect began to sort some papers, leaving the small man still standing before him. "Sit down." the Prefect said without raising his head. "No thank you." the small man an- swered. "What's your name?" "Evans." 'What's your full name?" "They've always just called me Evans. I don't remember the first." The Prefect raised his head and star- ed directly into Evan's face. "You'll do better to cooperate with us. These obstructionist tactics will get you no- where. We won't find it difficult t learn your first name - Why are you causing all this trouble? Why can't you sit down like everyone else when the occasion calls for sitting? Who's giving you orders?" "No one gives rme orders. It's good to be free, to wander wherever I want in the country. I've always had this freedom and no one to thank, nothing to give in return. That's why I thought at least, I could do this so that I would remember and others wouldn't forget. The Prefect grunted slightly and cynically, not quite laughing. "That's a foolish story, Evans." he said. "Even if you were alone and I did believe you you'd have to stop this foolishness." "Oh but I couldn't. I couldn't desert the flag. I wouldn't believe in any- thing." "You won't leave the building until you promise and at the first recur- rence of this act you'll be arrested and possibly worse." "It wouldn't make any difference." "Have you any idea of the effect your act has on others? Do you know how it makes them feel? They feel guilty as if they were neglecting something, and all because of your selfish little whims. Selfish, that's what they are, Evans. Just because people are religious do you find them praying in the middle of the street, on their knees wherever they are? Of course not. There's a time and place for everything. That's why we have ceremonies and churches." "But I feel the way I do all the time." "Then you'll remain here until you change your mind. Maybe not seeing the country for a while will diminish your enthusiasm." "I won't change my mind." The Prefect turned angrily in his chair to face the window. Then sudden- ly he swung around again. "Now listen to me. I can't afford any- thing like this. You're practically a pub- lic figure. Did you see the newspaper this morning? Everyone is asking who you are. There were four editorials on your performance at the opera last night. You must answer the public. You've got to tell them it was all a joke." "I'm sorry. I couldn't." The Prefect pushed the button at his desk. "Hello." he said. "Give me the Head at the capitol, Miss Davis - You might as well sit down, Evans. You'll be tired enough before this is finished. -Oh hello - John - Yes, yes - No, I think that's out. He's alone - Yes, he says it's that - Oh he's sincere enough - No, he refuses - I've tried- I said that - Yes - Yes, yes - Yes, that's very good - I don't know. And if not - I don't think it's the wisest measure. People will wonder - Yes, if you think so. - All right - Yes'- Goodbye." He put down the receiver and folded his hands on the desk. Then he leaned forward and looked decisive- ly at Evans. "Well," he said. "We've one last pro- posal to make - The Flag Soiety is making a tour of the country next month. If you'll agree to travel with them and to appear on the patform at each performance you can ,- free to stand wherever and whenever ycuW ish. We want the public to get used to you so that you'll be more a familar oddity than a mystery that arouses disturbing thoughts in their minds - I think it's a fair proposal all the way arcund. What do you say?" The Prefecsicame around the desk and confronsd Evans. "It wouldn't be the same then. There wouldn't be any point to my standing anymore." "Go then." "I may go?" "If you wish." "Well - Well I'm sorry if - Well, goodbye." As Evans started t, tin the Prefect struck him hard on the back of the neck with his fist. "Fcr sanity and good measure!" he cried. When the little man fell he stared down at him blankly, somewhat pu'zled as if he had forgotten a detail.. HAMLET AND EXISTENTIALISM ...Continued from Page5 spearean hero; in the deepest part of his misery, Hamlet stands apart from society in mocking aloofness, in almost complete alienation and aloneness. His mother is the reverse of a comfort, in- deed the cause of his suffering; he can- not confide in Ophelia; the Court is hostile or inquisitive; and, until the mousetrap is sprung, he bears his know- ledge alone, without any real confiding in Horatio. Particularly in those scenes in which he feigns madness, Hamlet has a mocking spirit that delights to shock-epater le bourgeois-he is lack- ing in 1'esprit serieux; he finds a cloud like a camel or like a whale; he polishes off Polonius with great nonchalance, much as Meursault shoots the Arab; his "lug the guts into the neighbor room" is altogether lacking in proper respect; he sends Rosencrantz and Guilderstern to their deaths with complete insouci- ance and indifference; indeed, Hamlet is a very dangerous fellow, as Claudius realizes, not because he has killed a doddering statesman (Polonius), but because he refuses to accept with any seriousness the postulates and bases of' society. He curiously traces how a king Prophecy Wildgrown and winnowed from the moon the lands lie dipped in solitude; and they are hollow with the mood of sand and petulant forests that command the dipthongs of the wind;- no men intrude . .. the trees are reprimand; a foot, a skull, the palms of hands distend within transparent cubicles of pears and drop and rot upon the deep nocturnal soil. -D. Cohen may go a progress through the gusof a beggar, or how the dust of Alexander may be used to stop a beer-barel. He exists in a proud isolation like the hero of The Stranger, an etre in the must of neant, and with stubborn individ, l- ism and nonconformity finds blest are Ihs Whose blood and judgments n so well commedled, That they are not a sipe far Fortune's finger To sound what stop she p5l'ae. But while Parisian audiences will c- cept plays like Huis Clos or l.es ouches, an Elizabethan audience would prob- ably not stand for a play that enied as bleakly as does the novel.The Sran- ger or as hopelessly as No EX t. trio Bentley has called No Exit "a p to- sophical melodrama" and what is Hn- let if not that? But No Exit ends v th horrible quietness; Hamlet ends heoi rally with the noise of a funezal mtarch, and a stage which is a nev'cpcis of corpses. One reason, surely, for the f"scna- tion of Hamlet, the man, is riJ'amb _u- ity: he has a gentle idealistic nat re, yet he is anything but gentae to 'is mother and Ophelia. He is a dreamer and an intellectual, yet on eccasin a man of action; he is a mo-ker and no- conformist, yet he heals himself cf :his maladjusted and unhappy crndIor of being ungeared to society. In the last act he is a stoic of the order cf Marius Aurelius. He ends by bequeathing the state to the most extroverted aand con- ventionally heroic man that nald be found; Hamlet had he lived wold Lave been an imaginative ruler, Plato's peil- osopher-king; and perhaps Ais 'an ironic commentary that he car find no better to take his place than Fortin- bras, who, being serious, finds t a sensi- ble occupation to waste thosands of lives in fighting for a square mile of territory that is quite worthless. We are living in an existentialhst era, The world has shrunk to a narrow room; and for nations to have nem ""uand to be unliveable-with is to isue this pleasant earth, look you, .ts brave o'erhanging firmament, this majstical pool fretted with golden fJre, t, a claustrophobic chamber of harrora