/ TI S. ELIOT 'On Poetry and Poets' Sums Up a Life of Trenchant Criticism ON POETRY AND POETS. By T. S. Eliot. New York, 1957: Farrar, Straus and Cudahy. 308 pp. $4.50. 'by wide reading and a seductive ,] . By R. C. GREGORY T S. ELIOT is a good minor poet and a generally good, usually interesting, frequently infuriating, critic. As a man-of-letters Eliot is great. Allowing an Eliot manner of approach to an essay on the man, a quotation from his essay ~Milton I" will justify the heresy of such an introduction: There is a large class of per- sons, including some who ap- pear in print as critics, who regard any censure upon a 'great' poet as a breach of the peace, as an act of wanton iconoclasm, or even hoodlum- ism. The derogatory criticism that I have to make upon (Eliot) is not intended for such persons.. m d f The citation which accompanied the award of his Nobel Prize em- phasized that Eliot's contribution lay more in the effects he has pro- duced in literature -- through younger writers - than in any self-achieved work. This is not to award Eliot a second - class citizenship in the land of letters but rather to remind that he fails to meet his own standards for poetic greatness, three in number: Tennyson is a great poet, for reasons that are perfectly clear. He has three qualities which are seldom found to- gether except in the greatest poets: abundance, variety, and complete competence. 1: prose style.- Re-reading an Eliot: essay with which one disagrees-- on Marvell, for example, or Pound- -is an instructive exercise, for one never ceases to wonder at how Eliot can so insult the reader and yet so 'captivate, charm, and in- struct him. The answer must be that Eliot does possess the right equipment and capacity for great- ness in criticism, one of the func- tions of which is always to shock' complacency at least a little bit. Selected Essays, published several years ago, constitutes er solid claim to a place in the literary history of this century's first half.: O1N POETRY AND POETS has sixteen essays, seven of which are on poetry in a wide sense; the remainder are on poets. Per- haps no other living critics would make a collection which opens with Virgil and closes with Yeats contain andessay each on Sir John. Davies and Rudyard Kipling. No doubt the Davies essay and the one on Kipling were lying around the study, had never appeared in book format, and the arrange- ment has chronological order to commend it, if nothing else. Eliot has always worked the graveyards of English literature for corpses to resurrect with a deliberately minor yet tasteful episcopal flourish. The Ph.D. ten- dency that he abhors he prac- tices, which is not to mention the distinction he makes in the Kip- ling essay between "verse" and "poetry," nor the weekly apolo- getic, vague excuse he offers for doing so, NOR IS IT really criticism of the first order to write: "Crabbe is a poet who has to be read in large chunks, if at all; so if you find him dull you must just glance and pass by. But it is worth while to know of his existenee, in case he might be to your liking, and also because that will tell you something about the people who like him." What will it tell?-that they, too, are dull? Nor is it real modesty for T. S. Eliot to say, to members of the British Academy, "I am aware that my only claim upon your attention, in speaking of Milton or of any other great poet, is by appeal to your curiosity, in the hope that you may care to know what a contemporary writer of verse thinko of one of his prede- cessors." The first portion of the remark only seems modest, the last portion is clearly something else, for it requires more of a man than an accident of history to claim Milton as his predecessor. Nor is it quite"'in keeping for a man who claims as values classi- cism, royalism, and catholicism, to say of Byron, "..Byron .. would seem the most nearly remote from the sympathies of every living critic: it would be interesting, therefore, if we could have half a dozen essays about him, to see what agreement could be reached. The present article-is an attempt to start the ball rolling." The com- mon reader, perhaps, is expected. to sense the difference in an Eliot "essay" and an Eliot "article," since poetry and verse are dif- ferent, but whatever is the com- mon reader to do with that meta- phor of the rolling ball? THERE IS ALSO the peculiar Eliot attempt at forthright ,honesty: "Milton I," in which Milton was finally expulsed from whatever paradise he had been accorded, is followed by "Milton II," in which Milton is restored to qualified glory. "Milton I" ap- peared in 1936, "Milton II" in 1947. In the earlier essay Milton was cxpulsed, in part, because:: There is more-of Milton's in- fluence in the badness of the bad verse of the eighteenth century than of anybody's -else: he certainly did more harm than Dryden and Pope, and perhaps a good deal of the obloquy which has fallen on these two poets, especially the latter, because of their in- fluence ought to be transferred to Milton.... Milton's poetry could only be an influence for the worse, upon any poet whatever. In eleven years something re- Jnarkable happened and some changes are made. Leaning heavily upon Doctor Johnson's crutch, Eliot re-enters and says: The errors (about Milton) of our own time have been recti- fied by vigorous hands, and the prejudices opposed by commanding voices. . . . In short, it now seems to me that poets are sufficiently liberated from Milton's reputation, to approach the study of his- work without danger, and with profit to their poetry and. to the English language. Now few would claim that public recantation requires no sense of honesty, but few 'public recanta- tions were ever so adroitly com- mitted on a superficial level nor. so little made on a real level. Eliot really does little better by Milton than the Kremlin encyclopedia editors did for the late, and now officially unlamented, Joseph Stalin except that he prints both his versions without instructions for destruction of the earlier one. WHAT IS more nearly the truth is this, that after Eliot had revived Donne and others as proved useful, even necessary, by casting Milton out, he permitted a "purged" Milton to return. Mil- ton hadn't changed, the litera- ture of the eighteenth century hadn't changed, nor Donne. Fun- damental estimates fairly current among the common readers of the English language hadn't changed either; Eliot, however, had grown older, Perhaps Eliot had looked again at things two of his wisest friends had occasion to say. NVs. Woolf once quoted Dr. Johnson: ". . . I rejoice to concur with the com- mon reader; for by the common sense- of readers, uncorrupted by literary prejudices, after all the' refinements of subtilty and the dogmatism of learning, must be finally decided all claim to poetical honours." THE SECOND wise friend, Sir Desmond MacCarthy, once wrote: It seems to me a dubious bar- gain to lose a Keats to gain a Pound, to surrender a Cole- ridge to find a Flint, to ex- change a Milton even for an Eliot. But must it be with us always either this poet or that? Does not the'same read- er often respond both to Pope and Blake? Surely we are all gifted with a happy natural inconsistency of tastes? In- deed, we are-if only we let, ourselves alone. We can ad- mire poets equally who have hardly once excellence in com- - mon, until we apply to both the same Aesthetic. But the moment we start to think we know what is the essence of poetry we are driven to reject much we could otherwise ad- mire. There is,. of course, much that will be rejected in this book of essays; as a book it does little to show anything new about' Eliot, excepting a movement toward finishing things up: Eliot was born, after all, in 1888. Clearly the most interesting essay of the lot is "The Frontiers of Criticism," originally delivered as a lecture at the University of Minnesota in 1956. Eliot passes out praise on thestate of, criticism in general, if to no critic in par- ticular, saying that criticism has improved during the last thirty years. He qualifies this tepid praise by saying that criticism has been too brilliant-perhaps. F "THE FRONTIERS -of Criti- cism" is the most interesting essay, two others are more use- ful: "Poetry and Drama" and "The Three Voices of Poetry" but each has been printed as a little book and had periodical publication as well. The first named should be read, I think, in connection with Eliot's plays and the second would serve admirably as an introduction to his Collected Poems. Indeed, On Poetry and Poets is almost all introduction. One can say that Eliot is publishing late the kind of work that one expects from a young poet. There is no doubt that it isan important book still, for there is so little of Eliot's writing all told. Selected Essays, the poems and the plays may well be indispensable; On Poetry and Poets is a luxury. For His Chris visit Our S Quality Ie Nationally Beau Brummell Ties Shapely Shirts Jerks Sox Gates Mills Gloves Coopers Jockey Underwear Champ Hots Pioneer Belts Pleetway Pajamas Walk a Few.S SURPRISE!-J. Fred Lawton looks pleasantly surprised after being shown a display containing the first copy of "Varsity," written by Lawton and Dean Earl.V. Moore of the music school. The display is in a local restaurant. J FRED LAWTON He's Part of a Fast-Disappearing Species AS A CRITIC Eliot has what is criticism's prime prerequisite, a well-defined personal taste and perfect confidence in it, supported liiiTI By LANE VANDERSLICE Daily Staff. writer CARICATURED by movies, sup- posedly feared by f o o t b a l coaches and rarely seen by stu- dents, the "old grad" in his tradi- tional form is rapidly becoming the most recent kind of "vanishing American." For the alumnus who devotes much of his time to his old school is disappearing as the modern stu- den, whose interests and affection lie elsewhere, takes over. But the University still has alumni who devote time and effort to it. Perhaps none of them ex- emplify he traditional concept of the "old gad" as-'well as does J. Fred Lawton. Although he is the man who wrote the lyrics to "Varsity," and many other Michigan songs, in recent years he has needed more and more of an introduction to University students. HEALTHY, active man whose 69 years would pass for 15 less if it were not for a slight stoop and his reminiscences, Lawton can talk your arm off and make it a painless operation. Alive with memories of the Uni- versity, he is a treasure house of Michigan lore dating from both before and after his attendance here -- and can quote facts and figures at the drop of a name or date. And probably the collection of Now at Wid's . -THE RATIONAL LOOK in Cambridge Grey and Blue Blazers DICKINSON (Continued from Page 7) tage. Emily Dickinson turned 'her experiences of the concrete com- monplaces of her contemporary world into hard and clear aesthetic images. ater theological uncer- tainty was unorthodox, but ac- cording to Whicher, it was directed by the failure of the supposedly ultimate source of truth to provide the final unity of all things pro- pounded by religion in - general-. When God was not accessible, Miss Dickinson, like Emerson, regarded Nature as the -possible provider of this absolute singularity or beauty. NEXT to the theological tradi- tion, rthe commonest unifying factor in New England culture was what Whicher calls "Yankee hu- mor," or more generally, the new American humor which was be- ginning to grow out of the yet heterogeneous soil of the still young nation. Miss Dickinson's poems are bound together by the senses of humor and incongruity which in her verse so often may be equated. Vitality and imagina- tion were a part of the cultured New Englander's background,. and the poet used these two elements of fancy in even her serious writ- ing. She was echoing.the literary rambunctiousness of her country; new things were being.. said throughout America and Emily Dickinson, isolated as she, was, was formulating new ways to say them. The third of the literary: cur- rents said to merge in Miss Dicki- son, was Emersonian transcen.- facts and figures he likes to tell most is the story of how he and (now) music school Dean Earl V. Moore wrote "Varsity." Lawton tells it so well that it seems a shame to let anyone but him do so. Leaning forward on his chair, his glasses slipped down on his nose, his han emphasizing details, he absorbs the listener into his story. It was October 3, 1911. Dean Moore and Lawton met in front of the Majestic Building in De- troit. Lawton lived in Detroit, having been graduated the year before. "We talked for a while," Lawton said, "and then Earl said Michigan needed a new song. SO THEY DECIDED to write one,. Having na place nearby where. they could go, they got on a street- car and rode to Lawton's house. "While eve were riding, I tried to think of some words. Then the words came, and Lawton paused and lowered his voice, 'Varsity, we're for you-Here for you-to cheer for you--we have no fear for you-our Varsity.' " 'Geez,' I said, 'there's four rhymes.' Earl and I repeated them to ourselves until we came to our stop." Then, according to Lawton, they got off the trolley and "ran like the devil" down to his house and the piano. Dean Moore sat down to play. "Evidently he had gotten the meter on he trolley," Lawton said, "because he played the mel- ody once and it hasn't been changed since. "After we went through this, I said to Earl that it was one of the easiest songs we had ever written. 'It isn't written yet,' he said, 'we still need a first stanza.'" Dean Moore told Lawton it needed something about defense and offense and loyalty. ANDSO THE PRESENT first stanza of 'Varsity' was the re- -sult.. "Varsity-Down the field-- Never yield-Raise high our shield -march on to victory for Michi- gan .. ." But here they were stuck. Finding the tag ". . . and the Maize and 'Blue." took almost as. much time as writing the rest of it. But they did, and finally were. done. But they were not nearly done with the playing of it. That F'ri- day, Lawton came to Ann Arbor for a pep meeting in the old Uni- versity Hall. Pep rallies were not the seemingly well-organized- af- fairs that they are today, for Dean. Moore had to climb up on a lad- der to play the organ and the janitor said everyone had to be out by 9 p.m. They cheered and sang, and then "Varsity" was given its pre- miere. It wasn't too long before So after more cheering, "Var- sity" was given an encore. When the rally finally broke up, Lawton "heard some of the crowd whis- tling 'Varsity' as they walked across campus. We had no idea, or at least didn't have very great hopes, that the song would ever last," Lawton said. SONGS during this time seem to have been written at the drop of the then-traditional fresh- man beanie, and Lawton wrote as many as anyone. He helped write and was in the first four all-male operas, before the Union became associated with them. Students could make small fortunes by writing songs for these operas. Lawton, for example, made $500 in royalties from one song, "My Dear" dedicated to his wife, the former Marjorie Newton. In those days, $500 was nearly enough to put Lawton through school for a year. Besides song writing, Lawton was a member of the varsity foot- ball team, The Daily, Sphinx and Michtgamua and Trigon frater- nity. Lawton has devoted much of his time since graduation to being an alumnus. In one of the first operas he did an imitation ofI Fielding H. Yost which he still does for alumni groups. On the more serious side, he edits the Detroit University of Michigan Club newspaper and has written enough poems and songs for the University/'to fill a good- sized book. He and Dean Moore were honor- ed last year by the Los Angeles U-M Club for their contributions to University tradition. At this prograin, the University Glee Club premiered his and Dean Moore's latest composition, a sa- lute to the Glee Club for its 100th anniversary. LAWTON emphasizes service to the University, He says "a student should feel himself en- rolled for all his life in his Uni- versity." "There should be five stages in a University man's life," Lawton says. The first four-Freshman, Sophomore, Junior and Senior- should be where a University man learns to appreciate and benefit from his University, and the final stage - alumnus -is where he should give back to the University part of what the University has given him. This "giving back" seems to have shaped Lawton's life. What has he gained from al this? One of his remarks gives the answer as well as it can be given. "If I knew of anyone from here to Chi- cago who has been as happy as I FROM the late JUST ARRIN I" Observatory S. - The traditional "natural" model sport coat with a new look! 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