FASHI ONS,ASPEORTS r 2 4 SUN DAY MAGAZ IN E Sunday, April 17, 1955 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN PAGE ONE Painted Words of Thomas Wolfe By ROY AKERS CARSON McCULLERS once wrote a book entitled, "The Heart Is A Lonely Hunter." And, although the novel had nothing whatsoever to do with another Southern writer-Thomas Wolfe-the title, when taken out of the context of its purpose, is perhaps the most accurate, if inadvertant, observation ever made re- garding the emotional make-up of one of the greater of America's major novel- ists, For within the proud and massive chest of Thomas Wolfe there did indeed throb a heart that was a lonely hunter. This brash young man from the Pied- mont cried so nobly and wept so majes- tically for the place called home that the reading people of the world sat up and listened with an ear enraptured. Tom Wolfe did not write words; he painted them, and in each syllable of the oils he used were to be found the pigments of the joy and misery of the human soul. He laughed words and he cried them. He shouted words and he whispered them. He was the Muse of the Lonely South- ern Hills. Wolfe dissected Asheville, North Caro- lina, into raw and naked open wounds and, by so doing, created it into one frag- mented yet immortal whole. With his first published work his own family prob- ably felt like disowning him, and the citizenry of Asheville threatened to lynch him. But in losing family and friend alike he had, at the same time, gained them forever. For wounds do heal and people, no matter how good or bad they might be, eventually come to love themselves on paper. He left a lusty hill boy singing, and re- turned a lonely hill man-dead. But one need saunter only through the streets of Asheville today to learn that Thomas Wolfe never 'really died. For he was too full of life and the love of living and the gift of God creative to depart without leaving the Smokies masked forever in a breathing legend. SOME of the natives say they have seen him walking at night-a grotesquely tall man, whom people once laughed at- taking great strides along the mountain tops bathed in the smile of the moon. And others swear that in the long lost nights of Dixie the Southern winds play music through the limbs of the high- borne trees for these the words of his: " ... a stone, a leaf, an unfound door: of a stone, a leaf, a door. And of all the forgotten faces. "Naked and alone we came into exile. In her dark womb we did not know our mother's face; from the prison of her flesh have we come into the unspeakable and incommunicable prison of this earth. "Which of us has known his brother? Which of us has looked into his father's heart? Which of us has not re ained forever prison-pent? Which of us is not forever a stranger and alone? "O waste of loss, in the hot mazes, lost. among bright stars on this most weary unbright cinder, lost! Remembering speechlessly we seek the great forgotten language, the lost lane-end into heaven, a stone, a leaf, an unfound door. Where? When? "O lost, and by the wind grieved, ghost, come back again." THOMAS WOLFE emerged upon the literary scene with the publication of "Look Homeward, Angel" by Scribner's just one week before the Great Depres- sion of 1929. It was a massive book al- most as ponderous as the Will O' The Wisp nightmares of ticker tape that were soon to nearly shatter the Great Ameri- can Dream. The writing of the "Angel" was a test of artistry and human endur- ance, and its editing still stands as a tribute to the consummate skill and God- given patience of the late Maxwell Per- kins. Muse of Lonely Southern Hills Aswell, from an enormous pile of manu- script, after Wolfe's death. THE FIRST of these, "The Web And The Rock," involves Eugene-his name now changed to George "Monk" Webber- in his strange and demused fascin-ion with the steel-ribbed and cemented can- yons of the great and fabulous city. This is his first introduction to the glitter, and sometimes dowdy emptiness, of urbane sophistication. Manhattan here becomes something more than just another 0'- Henry story, and the bums and the cops the arty artist and the dissipating social- ite; the doorman and the ambulance driver are subjected to the scrutiny of a pair of eyes behind which there lurked a mind that never forgot a detail. It is in the "Web And The Rock," too, that "Monk" meets and falls in love with the beautiful and very talented stage de- signer, Esther Jack. This unique love affair illustrates pointedly, and some- times very poignantly, some of the joy and tragedy involved when two artists fall in love. But, more than this, it is a highly skillful contrast between a man from an almost primitive culture and a woman reared in an urban society. For "Monk" Webber and Esther Jack are symbols, above all things else, of the mountain provincial and the Park Ave- nue dowager. -YOU CAN'T GO HOME AGAIN," this is the titled declaration and the con- cluding volume of Tom Wolfe's great tet- ralogy. It is something else, too; some- thing that is so rarely found in the hidden pages of literature, and that is an account of what a writer-and a very fine writer, at that-found at the bitter and fabled end of the rainbow. A few fragments, taken from the context of "The Quest of the Fair Medusa," which is the preface to Book IV of "You Can't Go Home Again," tells it so beautifully in Wolfe's own language. The words can stand- either as a warning signal or a beckon- ing finger-to those misguided souls who are either foolish enough, or courageous enough, to spend the all too few years of this life's journey in quest of the elusive quill. "George took Randy's advice and mov- ed-for four years he lived in Brooklyn, and four years in Brooklyn are a geo- logic age-a single stratum of gray time. They were years of poverty, of despera- tion, of loneliness unutterable. All about him were the poor, the outcast, the ne- glected and forsaken people of America, and he was one of them. But life is strong, and year after year it went on around him in all its manifold complexity, rich with its unnoticed and unrecorded little happenings. He saw it all, he took it all in hungrily as part of his experience, he recorded much of it, and in the end he squeezed it dry as he tried to extract its hidden meanings . , . . And by his side was that stern friend, the only one to whomhe spoke what in his secret heart he most desired. To Loneliness he whispered, "Fame!"- and Loneliness replied, "Aye, brother, wait and see." THOMAS WOLFE, since the first pub- lication of his creative toil, has re- mained one of the most controversial of America's writers. The reader and the critic alike are either attracted to his writing, as by a magnet, or else are pushed away from it in a tidal wave of confusion, Few there are, among literate readers, who stand with an "I don't really care" attitude in the common boundaries of a middle ground. They either like Wolfe or they don't. A work of art, the critics say, should be able to stand or fall on its own as an entity absolute. But, in a world devoid of perfection, things as they should be are not so easy to come by. It is neve See TH10MAS, Page 7 .. LOOK HOMEWARD, ANGEL For it was "Look Homeward, Angel" that made of Wolfe an established writer and of Perkins an accepted literary legend The "'Angel" was not only the first in the gigantic Wolfe tetralogy of huge books, but it is also the best known, and will probably remain as the most lasting of his creations. The volume traces the arrival of Oliver Gant upon the Southern scene from Pennsylvania; his subsequent marriage with Eliza, a daughter of the Pentland clan, and the rearing of their strange but, somehow, wonderful family. Oliver Gant, the stone-cutter father, with his soaring rhetoric and uninhibited gift for invective, is the towering charac- ter of this book, but it is really the history of a family-a family that found itself caught between the impregnable doors of love and hate, and generosity and avarice. And, of course, the novel is most of all a vehicle for introducing the principal character of the tetralogy, Eugene Gant. and carrying the boy through the painful veil of growing up and leaving him, at the end of the book, a graduate of the state university ready to depart for Har- vard. THE SECOND NOVEL "Of Time And The River" appearing for publication some six years later-and again edited by Max Perkins-recounts Eugene's Har- vard years and the drama within a drama of 'his apprenticeship in the late Prof. George Pierce Baker's 47 Playwriting Workshop. An account is given that be- gins and encompasses the Starwick epi- sode that ends so bitterly on Eugene's first voyage to Europe. This book contains the incidence of Eugene's teaching experience at the School for Utility Cultures, intro- ducing his first actual contact with the thinking of the urban intellectual. And. "Of Time And The River," also brings in the ghastly and cancerous details, both physical and spiritual, of old Oliver Gant's death in what will probably re- main as the greatest and 'most moving death scenes in all fiction. And, here, our hero changes in more ways than one. Wolfe, while writing "The Story of a Novel"-certainly the most touching personal tribute ever paid to an editor, or to few other people on the earth, for that matter-makes his pain- ful, final break with the great and legen- dary Perkins. He takes his writing to Harper's; acquiring a new editor, in the person of Edward C. Aswell, for guidance. And the last two volumes of the tetral- ogy are later edited and published by