Page Two PERSPECTIVES Perspectives EDITOR. Margery Wald AssocTAT EDITORS Doris Cohen, Cid Corman, Russ LaDue LTER"RY STAFF Stan Bradshaw, Joan Lochner, June Friedenberg, Dave Stewart, Harry Moses MANAGING EDITORS Don Curto, June Miller SOPHOMORE STA . . Marge Granse, Norma Levy, Henry Schmer ADVISORY BOARD Arno L. Bader, Morris Greenhut, Allan Seager EDITORIAL what he does with that subject that concerns us; here, we feel, is the only THE LAST ISSUE of pespectives was legitimate basis for evaluation. There- 1 met witha volley o triticismcwhich fore itlac ism a de that the lat was based mainly i' the type osubject Isu oft Sf g'.i s' n swasoverbalanceec matter it contined. We were accused in the direction 0f what'is loosely called of trying to be modern and sophisti- realism, we can only say that that was cated; simply to be "smart." We were where our best aterial lay. accused of assuming that "the modern When we look to see how an author school or schools of poetry were the only has handled his subject, we look to see ones of worth or 'any validity and as- if he is expressing it in his own terms. suming this, printed nothing that was Novelty in itself has no intrinsic value. even slightly out of the hard new focus" But art expresses or mirrors the temper We were faced with the belief "that of its time. We are looking for writing there is almost as much opposition to that will express our age in its own the moderns as there is support.' And terms; we do not want writing that finally, we were pose many problems of simply adopts the worn-out, sterile aesthetics, resting on the critics' con- forms of a past generation. With the ceptions of the ends of art. We were appearance of ne' ideas and concepts, told, for instance, that such figures as new art forms are necessary to express "copper slugs" and "refuse the booze" them. We wan writers who talk in "just don't seem poetic;" and that "a their and our'terms, who speak the lan- poem should strike certain chords of a guage of their time, not using a diction sort of universal sound in the mind, but no longer capable of catching the tone not jab the consciousness with figura- of our own age if this is what people tive ice-picks, nor brain it with bru- mean when they accuse us of trying to tality." In view of this sort of criticism, be modern, we frankly admit our guilt; we feel that there is a certain value in but we think it is not a crime, but the clarifying our position as the position of goal of any literature It is this that we any literary magazine, and in trying to are looking for, and when we find ideas answer some of the main objections by well presented in the artist's own terms, pointing out our goals,ae will print th Is Wedo not p etend, however, that the In the first place, we want to reaffirm last issue was completely representative here that we adhere as a unit to no one of all the elements present in the mod- aesthetic school or tradition. There are ern temper or in modern writing. if as many diverse views represented by what we printed last time is labelled the staff as there ae members on it. "modern," and if there is much being We do not, therefore, judge manuscripts written in opposition to it, we will as on a basis of how well we like or agree certainly publish that as we did this. with the subject matter. It is not the We welcome opposition and are eager subject that an author writes about but to print anything that is expressedwell I Shall Remember I shall remember when the great monster time noses us forward into autumn twenty years later how you were slim under the catalpa how tentlike the catalpa was with you beneath it i wanted to cry darling Darling DARLING with the fierce crescendo of the first utterance but a blue heron hung haphazardly in the sky like a dream of a blue heron and you were walking down the road holding the snapdragon and the purple aster, walking through my nerves holding the yellow snapdragon, into my joyplacesi -Harold V. WVitt For This They Departed For this they departed, that my heights were haunted mountainous and treacherous, for this they said: you are the young land and the crude land we'll never come back until you're dead, your meadows brought down to us, your fierce rocks rounded leveled and laid low and in gentler season for this they left me and returned no more for this they forsook me, one by one so now only the sound of great trees falling the crash of mountain over the crush of stone shudders the silence in my dying country forsaken, and wind-grieved, and forlorn -Harold V. Witt WINDSHAPE I. I do love Francesca's soul, surrendering all mind, As I live an evening with a wounded sky, Stained where it broods on some remote and spacious hurt Rose-guazy -orbidezza, stricken into cloudy blaze: When every shape of earth Throbs with sympathetic fire or sinks profound In shadows, till the world withdraws itself, Blown meekly round the poles, grows sudden And terrifically night, dissolves all shapes. Quietly, fatally I love Francesca so; Past thought, beyond love even, inside a realm Of symbols where all shapes sink down in mystery, Convulse, and reappear transfigured On the broken shell of Form, Fixed in sublime repose and glistening In the wind that marks its proper passage And all things'. Soul of Francesca! Who I read in hell's fraternity of souls That, when they stumbled earthlings, boasted Gentle hearts that learned too much of love, Too well-and died of it . Have I read you also Slave and prisoner to that hot, demonic wind Issuing fitful as a madman's breath from Who knows what corrupted and eternal lung. Deny, negate, my Love! - as all my wicks burn low, And stirs no proof of creatures in the world, When the threatening fiend whistles his bleak passage Under, through the bony caverns where The shapes of all past things lie festering-- Destroy my senses of life and of you bound in hell: But come as one who steals upon a sleeper with a f an In one cool hand, and in the other spindly sheaves Of opiate corn wherewith to cool his brain And sink him further into sleep, that he may wake once- That once without thought-to windy, shapeless death! IL Halting in a desert mine, to press their brows Into its crusted, weeping walls, two diggers sight At once beyond them, living in the shadows, A curious rock of crystals, malachite Or nitid marble. Impatient of its form, This wonder heaves its longing, like a breast, For freedom, is nostalgic for the warm Black wind of heaven, trembles, and is not at rest. A quick desire, livid as a brand, Seals up the miners' eyes, enchants them on To frantically destroy; so, pick in hand, They hack first at the rock, and then--foregone Deceit, and formal, on each other's part- Each hacks the other till no more unfolds His dirty, living shape, whose mangled heart Is littler than a crushed stone, and as cold. The rocky, wondrous, crystal agony These two dead ran to was my Love, Whose image, blown here windily, Lay deathly mocking and eluding me; Now, scattered as this saone, eludes me still. Yet, I know that in the depth of any well I choose (and need I choose?) would be her face Turned to me skyward, yearning out of hell; And in the muted tongue of any bell Her voiceless cry, and in the sea her tears. Francesca! whose dust my hunger tastes, Whose broken love is planted by the wind! -Richard Koppitch