Page Two PERSPECTIVES Page TwoPER SPECTTVF-S Perspectives Editor .............. Margery Wald Associate Editors ... ....... Doris Cohen, Russ LaDue, Don Thornbury Literary Staff: Stan Bradshaw, Cid Corman, Don Curto, June Friedenberg, Joan Lochner, June Miller, Dave Stewart Art Editors .............................Marion Carleton, Leo Teholiz Sophomore Staff Marge Granse, Norma Levy, Doris Pfeffer, Henry Schmer Advisory Board ... Arno L. Bader, Morris Greenhut, Allan Seager e Mortis -- (A Metaphysical ABC) Not, as they say, Ready (meaning: Resigned, Prepared But _garlanding the steady Erne-Voices, mute and heard, Bearing the ear glory, Stinging the lock bright, Bursting the lip eerie, Flashing the heart sight. So, for the thin Princes and the children in Revolt - Impartially, chores and dances Proceed to seasonal halt. Thence to the All (or the Nothing) foreknown but never traced ... The last kiss - splendid, frothing - Is Sky's: Strange! Parent-Faced. -Williai Gram The Twenty-Third Elder (The church of Moissac, France, has a carved portal over its main entrance depicting the apocalyptic Christ with his four beasts and twenty four elders.) I am the twenty-third elder Of the tympanum of the church of Moissac. Count and see--I crane my neck Twisted to gaze upon His face. They carved me so, the fools And thus I sit, six centuries together, My neck a barrel stave. They fixed my eyes upon His own Whence shows no love, no grace. A rock, dumb, I pay tribute To His pointed crown, His fiery mace. How my stoney eyes yearn to change To see one flower One willow lost in a stream One flash, one golden gleam Of bare, brown limbs in sunlight- One delicate painting of Him Bleeding on the Cross, all love, all anguish, all life- No frozen, harsh commander No apocalyptic revenger- Blow sand against me, wind, and grind away my face. Beat against my tortured legs, rain Blind the fools who keep me in repair Blot out my cramped pain, His Bold face where no love is. -Jean Reynolds EDITORIAL Saraband Until the Doves call me (which they in time will do) above all else I will love you. Love you alone, as long as the music bows and the lean sky suffers our private vows. But when the grass turns alien and the Doves begin their moan, I ca tnot longer love you alone. -Willias Gram "every fresh generation is a new people . . -Alexis de T ocqueville OK ALEXIS, we have taken your word for it-we are the fresh generation, the new people. We have moved more erect on our squat ends and have bothered to assume the more un- comfortable position of progress. And now that we have made motions, let's see what it is that we have put the pencil to and ordered into print. We have literature of no very high order; we make no pretense about it, though some of it is fine. We have gone on the fallacious assumption that we have the best writing that -the Univer- sity of Michigan student-body has cur- rently to offer in the way of fiction, true-fiction, and mysterious verse. The assumption is as false, of course. as saying that the best writing is always printed, for there is much that never gets one inch beyond the author's head and much that is lost in the fire of mood, temperament, or chance. But we have pulled together the best that peo- ple have been willing to invest with us. Such as it is, it is significant as a sign of reawakening in the University, for a university as much as a State needs prodding to get its lazy carcass into motion. We confess our poke smells of ink; and it must seem to many that a liter- ary magazine of any sort is dedicated to a particular audience, a small and peculiar audience. It is. We are con- cerned only with those people who through care and thought can catch in the writings of a new and quick gener- ation some new insight into event and society. We are preoccupied with try- ing to treat the living to another birth, for every bright eye that gathers action and sense in its proper perspective sees something that is worth another mind's gathering; and this - when given - is birth, as birth is new growth. Someone will then hurl this rock at us: "This is all very sweet, but if you realize that your contents have the lim- itations that inexperience and youth, as well as some bit of compromising for lack of matter, impose, o'v meaning- ful - as regards PERSPECTIVES - is thea bove and whatever may follow?" But what is the situation in this light? We have shown our aims and shall con- tinue to do so in full awareness of our essential weaknesses, and we shall maintain those aims- We are unquest- ionably the new people of a fresh gen- eration and, with all our imperfections, we move on and up. We recognize bet- ter than any the boundaries that stand high around us and stare at us forbid- dingly, but we try nonetheless to get as near our goal as is possible. And, if we travel a little way forward, we shall have made wise progress and wiser ef- fort. We try our hand at progress in a sphere of writin, that is, by its nature, round and full, of many continents of thought. We hope to contain history as well as art, criticism and literature, philosophy and wit. We think they can live together kindly. In the midst of this world, our way will not be the dark obscure one. But since even editors disagree, it is likely we shall take many roads, hoping by some distant concurrence to reach the forward road. We agree though that there is a tangle of beliefs today, that many half- steps forward are being taken and a quickly withdrawn, but we believe as a body that in honoring only that writ- ing which advances an idea clearly and promisingly, which arrives with person- al insight and stimulates our sensitiv- ities, we believe we move with full steps toward tomorrow. And these aims and this belief are coherent with the nature of the Uni- versity. If we fail, it is the failure in equal measure of the University and the people who are part of it. For now, we indulge in hope. But we have stirred ourselves and if you do likewise, we shall go a long way to- gether toward what we shall call (at this moment of optimism) a finer cul- ture, one that is rich and fertile. It is a matter worth effort for all of us, reader and writer, editor and such, to get up off our swollen haunches of thought and get out of the fog, which is only an overgrowth of dust, do a little sweeping and sweating and then more, and so go on. Late Sunday HE FEELS instinctively the certain fist of monday beat its punchcard route through sunday's darkness: tears have lost their use for him; he leans to midnight for a final whiff of air: sleepy moonmoths struggle in the closer evening of his room; there are no lamps here behind perspiring streets: only the dim face, unguided bugs, and outside beside the irrepressible coffee-orange smell of swill, two cats contend between starvation and the body's private urge; their arguments in utter mewl excite the nervous roots of terror in his fertile brain (distraction is his futile menace); he wants to soke, to hurl back time along the black and lonely passages of night and night, but, struck by a moth that fails the cigarette's bright target, he quickly rubs the last stub of sunday out, - retreats with tremulous haste into the desperate bed; and feels likefear the fateful epithet of MAN. --id Crman