'~1 EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MAY 12, 1957 AULKNER'S 'THE TOWN': Replaces Action with Tedious Talk T 4 ______ r (Continued from Page 4y with his ridiculous exhibitions of gallantry and engaging in pom- pous and adolescent pronounce- ments about women and the world which are almost as painfully pointless and empty as the con- versations of the Colonel and the Countess in Hemingway's Across the River and Into the Trees. .. AS IF RESPONDING to this weakness of central conception, the narrative texture of The Town is notably vague and loose. Faulk- ner seems to expect that readers now take for granted the precise nature of Jefferson and its in- habitants as they have been dealt with elsewhere, and scarcely al- ludes to them as other than fan- tasmal ciphers whose role now ap- pears almost gratuitous. This is readily apparent if we compare the treatment of charac- ter and atmosphere in The Town to the. wonderful delineation of Flem Snopes in The nHamlet through scores of telling details and decisive encounters, or to the evocation of the great forest in the opening pages of "The Bear". The events and characters of The Town are hazy and indistinct, as if filtered through a fog of' words which do not form a con- certed stylistic pattern in rela- tion to the overall plan of the novel, as is the case with Faulk- ner's best works. The style of The Town is cer- tainly more restrained and read- able than that of A Fable, but it is rather colorless and flat and never really comes alive. Com- pare, for example, the episode of Major de Spain's punctured tire with that of the spotted horses in The Hamlet. Scholarly investigators will un- doubtedly find The Town a rich source of the alterations and em- endations effected by . Faulkner upon the Yoknapatawpha legend in many of his works, such as the resuscitation of Nancy in Requiem for a Nun or the successive stages in the evolution of the character of Ratliff (whose initials, we now learn, stand for Vladimir Ky- rilytch!). A FIRST reading reveals at least one interesting change: the author has engaged in another of his deliberate anachronisms by setting Gavin Stevens and Chick Mallison back in time a decade or two. In Intruder in the Dust, whose action takes 'place about 1943 or '44, these characters are, respectively, "50-plus" and 16 years old. In The Town, at the time of Eula Snopes' death in 1927, Ste- vens is around 45 and Chick 12. Such are the manipulations and afterthoughts of Faulkner, who is, after ally "sole owner and proprie- tor" of Yoknapatawpha, his own private metaphor of the South and of the world. The intricate and significant re- lationship between the nature of Faulkner's work-his style, struc- ture and vision - and the world which has formed and nurtured him has rarely if ever been studied with any kind of sound thorough- ness, despite the fact that he is one of the most talked about writ- ers in modern American litera- ture. Until such a study is made, the possible causes of his failure to make his novels of recent years equal or surpass the power and intensity of his finest work will remain conjectural. In the meantime, it can be as- serted that such a failure is again evident in The Town. Those of us who admire ' Faulkner's true genius as a novelist can only hope that it will yet give us further works of genius in the future. 'GILDED TORCH': Iola Fuller Displays Depth, Warmth of Human Feeling POGO-Delta Tau Delta and Delta Delta Delta's entry cross finish line in Darby heat. Grand Darby race winners were Delta Sigma Phi and Alpha Gamma Delta. (Continued from Page 3) wilderness. Sincethere is no way to evade the duty imposed upon him, he induces his brother also to join La Salle. The author follows Francis Parkman's La Salle and the Dis- covery of the Great West pretty closely in narrating La Salle's ac- tivities in the New World: the building of the Griffin, the thous- and-mile trip across southern Mi- chigan and on to Quebec in the spring of 1680 to raid additional funds, his triumph over the ma- chinations of his enemies, and his successful descent of the Missis- sippi, claiming the heart of the continent, which he named Lou- isiana, for the King of France. * * * VICTOR AND MARC share all the dangers and labors of their leader. At first appalled by the rigors of life in the wilderness, they become inured to hardship and glory in their ability to match his endurance. Loathing the role of spy which he is forced to play, Victor writes favorable reports to the King. SPRING WEEKEND: Crowds They return in triumph with La Salle to Versailles. The story closes with La Salle at the height of his career, high in the favor of the King, preparing to set out to found a colony at the mouth of the Mississippi. The twins, who have found love and a better way of life in Canada, are eager to return. The Gilded Torch is an excel- lent novel. Teeming with inter- esting characters and replete with exciting incidents, the 'story holds the attention of the reader. The author has skillfully painted the contrasting backgrounds of Versailles and the wilderness of the New World, and her charac- ters are real persons. Those known to history, Louis XIV, Madame de Montespan, Colbert, La Salle, and Father Hennepin, to name a few, live in the pages of the book. Her creations, especially Vic- tor and, Marc, become like close acquaintances. Throughout, the story has a depth of understand- ing and a warrth of human feel- ing. It should become as popular as the author's earlier novels. Find Excitement I DAILY PHOTO FEATURE by JOHN H IRTZEL IL i ICI I I A SPETACULAR JUBILEE OF SONG AND DANCE Gala Opening Monday at 8:30 P.M. .: The 1957 Drama Season presents CAROL BRUCE in "LADY IN THE DARK" A Musical Comedy by Moss Hart Music by Kurt Weill (composer of "The Threepenny Opera" Lyrics by Ira Gershwin also starring J SCOTT McKAY with LEE BERGERE Carol Bruce and a professional company of 30 LADY IN THE DARK is little short of miraculous the wittiest, most beguiling score Kurt Weill has written." -John Mason Brown "The American stage may well take a bow . . LADY IN THE DARK uses the resources of the theatre magnificently . . . it will create wonderful memories for everyone who sees it." -Brooks Atkinson "There are the dreams come true in this LADY IN THE DARK.. . Moss Hart's book must be counted on inspiration." --Burns Mantle Scott McKay Ticket Prices for "Lady In The Dark" Evenings thru Thursday: Orchestra-$4.25, $3.75; Balcony-$4.25, $3.75, $3.00 Friday and Saturday: Orchestra-$4.75, $4.25; Balcony-$4.75, $4.25, $3.50 Matinees Thurs. and Sat.: Orchestra-$3.50, $3.00; Balcony-$3.50, $3.00 w ~fz~ SHADES OF CHAS..ADAMS-Trigon-Henderson entry is winning float in Cartoonival parade. Thirty-one housing groups competed float in Cartoonival parade. Thirty-one housing groups competed. SECCO-Sigma Delta Tau and Sigma Phi Epsilon place second in Skit Night. Delta Delta Delta and Delta Tau Delta earned first place honors. * 4 WCBN--Campus radio network conducts 36-hour marathon. Located in a tent on the library steps, JAZZ JAMBOREE-John Kirkendall entertains crowd on Diag. they received telephone and personal requests from audience. Other acts were the Four Scores and Trumpet Trio. - I .*~,,, '