:_,A___ THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JULY 28, 1955 WHAT'S IN A POEM? Ohio State Professors' Find Sense in Nonsense 1-Point Program WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: West Germany's 'Old Man' Ponders Nation's Future EDITED BY CAL SAMRA NOT LONG AGO on a lovely spring morning, a young coed was walking to one of her English classes at Ohio State University, affectionately clasping to her bosom a volume of T. S. Eliot poems and anticipating another passionate lecture on poetic symbolism and obscurantism. A willow tree abruptly caught Miriam Frazier's attention, and that tree was the inspiration of a poem which, because it was so deliberately senseless, made a good deal of sense to the faculty members who later analyzed it. From the initial reference to the willow tree, Miss Frazier fashioned the poem with desultory abandon, intentionally disregarding relevancy, theme, meaning and organization. There was no conscious effort to make sense of the poem, which was merely a random picking of phrases and words to fit into a meter pattern. The resulting poem is a patch-work of unrelated ideas and images. Miss Frazier's poem was later submitted to several OSU English instructors for their written criticisms. They were not told who authored the poem. Their reactions, printed below, are indicative of the lengths the Eliot- philes will go to glean meaning out of the meaningless. It was Miss Frazier's manner of protesting poetic obfuscation and the religious attempts of the symbolists to find meaning in occult images and metaphors that, in the end, really mean nothing. Whether Miss Frazier's subconscious deter- mied her phrases and images is, of course, debatable. But all of the reactions contain some very interesting features. As Miss Frazier points out, there is a common tendency to read a Freu- dian theme into the poem. There is also the tendency to assume that the old traditional symbols always mean the same things-i.e., willow conveys sorrow. The younger and more ambitious the scholar, the more elaborate the explanation. And, Miss Frazier's primary observation: "The most remarkable assumption of all the faculty members was that the thing was sup- posed to make sense." Here is the poem: "Forsee the willow, bend a branch And lay them both along my side Tell me who, in tumbling worlds, Will hide us from a trembling dawn. By shallows of a faultless worth We see a dazzling glitter-gloom And you and I are sinking down Choking on a guileless mirth. A day, a noon, a clattering night Two blades of grass beside a stone We crush the cowslip, pluck cliches Are married in the eyes of heaven." And here are the reactions: Graduate Student Working on Ph.D. "Since this poem (expression of self might be a better term) is one in which the conscious mind was not brought to bear upon the freer imaginative projection, it would be best prob- ably to have a psychologist' or psychiatrist ex. plicate it. Poetry of free association like this is just as certain an expression of basic emotional patterns in imagery as is a T.A.T. or ink blot test. "Note the obvious feeling of fear and uncer- tainty inherent in the iages: "willow," associ- ated with the rod, tears. '(Why this projection into the future with "forsee" I don't under- stand.) Though fears, formless fears until imagized, are things usually associated with the future; we don't fear the past or present, but the future - forseeing of sadness, pain, in the willow image. The "branch," associated with "bend" gives us another pain-fear image. The reclining posi- tion of the speaker with the willow branch on either side (the bent branch, remember) seems to be an image similar in genre to Eliot's "like a patient etherized upon a table" in Prufrock. "In fact, much of the feeling conveyed in the imagery here seems to me to echo emotions inherent in much of Eliot's earlier poetry - fear in the face of an unstable and threatening universe, and like Eliot, you attempt here to exert control over these emotions in the poem by the use of the imperative mode (forsee, bend, lay, - all commands) and by the use of irony - "faultless worth," "glitter-gloom," "guile-less mirth" "pluck cliches" "are married in the eyes of heaven," all ironic in this context. Irony is a method of control. The reclining image adds the ingredient of impotence to the pain-fear imagery. Note how this fear-pain-impotence imagery is continued and made more explicit in its association with such things as "tumbling worlds," "trembling dawn," "choking," "clatter- ing night." Also "dazzling" implies visual im- potenceof a sort. The same goes for "sinking down," choking." "A psychiatric and psychological literary crit- ic would point out the overplay of sexual imag- ery which you have used to imagine your emotions: phallic symbols, such as willow, branch, blades of grass, reclining position of speaker with a phallic symbol on each side, "choking" and the sexual implications in "mar- ried," also, of course "sinking down" etc. And such a critic would probably ask: "Is your sex life satisfactory?" "The poem is imagistic in that there is no dynamic movement through space and time. Imagistic poems are generally unsatisfying, unrewarding expressions of reality. They. are' static, like still likes. The poem has form in' the consistency of the imagery and conveys' emotion with vividness." Professor of English, authority on modern drama, playwright "THE FIRST two lines apparently are non- sense. After line two the poem becomes fairly clear - it is some kind of cynical celebra- tion of sex and/or love. "Worlds" involved- the "world" from which "we" would like to be hidden; the "world" in which the "we" are hiding. "Tumbling worlds," curiously enough, seems to belong to the world of "we" but also - because of syntax, at least- could refer to the world represented by the "trembling dawn," a strange representation of the larger world. "Hide" and "Crush Cowslip" might, to some readers, give this a certain charm of desperate carpe diem spirit - a "clattering" night is forceful but evocative of too many unpleasant sounds for this otherwise romper-set idyll - and if "clattering is supposed to suggest "time's winged chariot," it doesn't work. "Curious mixed effect - turgidity and inno- cence. "Willow" traditional symbol of sorrow-here, apparently, not sorrow as much as camouflage, but I admit defeat when it comes to discussing the opening two lines." * * * Full professor in English, authority in bibliography, specialist in 19th Century "Well, to begin on a properly pedantic note, the reading of this poem is made unneces- sarily difficult by the erratic punctuation; omitting periods after lines 2 and 10 (or, in the latter case, a lighter pointing, such as a comma or dash) may be a la mode, but it's still affecta- tion and serves. no useful purpose. Further pedantry: what does "them" in line 2 refer to? "The general meaning of the lines is conveyed, not by a single well-sustained progression of thought'from beginning to end, but by various tag-ends of images. These don't always jibe; the middle quatrain suggests astream ("shal- lows," "sinking down") and drowning therein, and the willow of line one is associated with stream; but the last four lines abruptly shift the metaphor. "What is a "faultless worth?" And what has it to do with "shallows?" "There are obvious suggestions of older poets who have influenced modern poetry: "Tell me who . . " recalls Donne's "Go and catch a falling star," and "glitter-gloom" is a trick of Gerard Manley Hopkins. "The use of adjectives is rather more auda- cious than effective: why "guile-less" mirth, and "clattering" night? "This poem doesn't make complete sense- lacks cohesiveness, form, continuity. I still prefer "Dover Beach." * * * Source: Full Professor, authority on economics and literature "THIS IS a poem about love-making. The experience as felt by this poet is pretty commonplace, and the many half-intelligible phrases serve to reveal rather than conceal the second-handedness of the emotion communi- cated." * * * Source: Young Assistant Professor Specialist in 18th Century Literature "THE FIRST thing I notice is the fusion of basic theme and basic metaphor: the theme is one of retreat, the metaphor a variation on the Garden of Eden. But the retreat is very likely from a contemporary situation, and so the Adam-Eve Paradise is brought up to date. The idea of contemporary is suggested by a number of things: the surface chaos of the metrical plan, the post G. M. Hopkins diction of "glitter-gloom" the contemporary mood sug- gested by such details as "tumbling worlds," "trembling dawn," "two blades of grass beside a stone" (which perhaps involves analogy be- tween the Adam-Eve and harsh world). The Garden of Eden is brought up to date by making it a place of retreat from this situation of fear. "In addition to the basic metaphor, there's a tissue of other, equally traditional images at work: the willow, for instance, is a conventional symbol for grief, (which in this case is forseen in the trembling dawn of a tumbling world) and death and love-lorn. The poem is partly a per- suasion to love in the Horation-17th century vein, love as the antidote to present misery, and the last line, the apology for the action, 'macks very much of that genry. Those last two lines seem to be a very delicate statement, subtle without being prudish. "The description of the seduction, or prelude to seduction as the retreat, is complex enough to be convincing. That is, after the shock of "trembling dawn" to have the two principals sink down in real mirth, and then to follow this up with the jolt of "clattering night" is a nice juxtaposition of contraries." Source: Assistant lofessor in creative writing and modern American literature. A woman "TWO LOVERS would have the protection of nature (the willow branch - willow symbol of sorrow?) to hide away from a world which is crumpling around them, to keep from being awakened to another day (which itself tumbles, fears to face the world). Paradoxically, these lovers are choked (destroyed) by an innocent if somewhat incongruous, laughter) presumably ' at their own predicament, ie., dazzled (parti- ally blinded) by the flase light (glitter) actually compounded with darkness (gloom). Apparently this light is reflected from the stream of transcendent truth which is now faultless rather than perfect and hallow, rather than deep. Actually, the lovers themselves are but R "two blades of grass" whose growth crushes. the cowslip (symbol of simple natural beauty) heid the stone (sumhn1rf fnP1il+* ,f of - mnr N44 ~ L~c~40 PRALIA REVIEW LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THE HAPPY TIME A PLAY populated with trans- planted Frenchmen, as this one is, would perhaps tempt an inexperienced company to gag it up like a bunch of comic-opera Frogs. Happily, the Speech De- partment has had the confidence and ability to play the piece as much for the warmth and hu- manity it offers as for its boffolas about French national character- istics. The alarums and confusions in the adolescence ofhahFrench-Ca- nadian boy are "the happy time" of the title; this is refreshing in it- self, in an age when most good writers find nothing but dark despairs in puberty. The play cov- ers something of the same ground as "Tea and Sympathy," except that, there's a good deal more sym- pathy between the characters, and a good deal less occasion for drink- ing the bitter tea of frustration. The cast is the most consistent- .ly able one I've ever seen in a Speech Department production. Everyone seems to have been cast in his role, not, as so frequently and unfortunately happens, cast at it. Michael Stabler, as Bibi, the boy of the play, does very well with a very important part. He's appeared on local stages before, and has many of the virtues which only experience can produce. He knows how to stand still, for one thing, and the play would have been ruined by a boy who had to fidget or mug the audience. More than that, though, he seems to have an ability to play with other actors, which is more than a mat- ter of coming in on cue. Joseph Ombry, as Bibi's father, is excel- lent in a role which requires him to be as madly antic as his wine- swilling, girly-chasing brothers at the same time that he's the fam- ily's pillar of wisdom and gen- tleness. His shining moment is the man-to-man talk he has with Bi- bi. This is the point at which he states overtly all the play's values: the sanity of sex, the sanctity of the home, and the necessity of love; and he brings it off as force- fully and straightforwardly as one could wish. The three other male members of the family are done elegantly: Grandpere, an aging roue, played by Russell Brown, is amusingly brittle and cantankerous; Uncle Desmonde, a young roue, is dash- ingly played by Norman Hartweg; and Louis, the drunken uncle, is played with the proper amount of bathos by Alan Lefkowitz. The only scene which seemed not quite to come off was the one in which the three brothers brow- beat a villainous schoolteacher. The direction in this scene seem- ed to follow well-worn precedents - lecherous teacher is dragged from behind his flimsy shell of self-righteousness. It's all very pat by this time. I should mention in closing that Jack E. Bender's solid-looking set well betokened the solidity of the Bonnard family. Altogether, there's a great deal to be pleased with in this production. -Bob Holloway TITO'S BREAK with Stalin and the Cominform leaders in 1948 was essentially the culmination of a struggle for physical power. Id- eological questions were asked and ideological retorts given in the famous correspondence between Moscow and Belgrade, but the substantive issue was whether the Yugoslav government and party could act independently of'the So- viet government and party. -The Reporter By DREW PEARSON MURREN, Switzerland -An old man who has seen two wars and much happiness sat on a moun- taintop as the Big Four scurried about Geneva "at the summit." And, while the Big Four were being ogled by hundreds of tour- ists and guarded by 284 secret service men, 150 Russian security men and two battalions of Swiss guards, Konrad Adenauer Chan- cellor of West Germany, sat on a summit so aloof and alone that only the tenuous strands of a ca-. ble hauling a cable car straight up Switzerland's highest mountain linked him with the diplomatic hustle and bustle down below. One narrow street threaded the mountain shoulder where Aden- auer sat on his summit. No autos disturbed him. No one could pos- sibly reach Adenauer's summit un- less hauled by cable car and, aft- er they got here, they had no place to go. Only two-wheeled milk carts perambulated along Murren's one and only street. PRECARIOUS PEACE IN SOLITUDE the old man of Germany sat watching the gla- ciers melt into cataracts and come tumbling down the Jungfrau like Hitler's empire tumbled after 1944. He sat admiring the patches of potatoes which clung to the side of the mountain as precari- ously as the peace of Europe and he gazed up at the clouds crown- ing the peak of Jungfrau like his own hopes for the future of the German people. The old man had a lot to think about during the Big Four Con- ference. Twice his German observ- ers at Geneva sent him by tele- type recommendations that Ger- many accept Russian overtures to do some dealing - on the side. Twice the old man sent back a brusque, blunt, almost brutal "no." He had made his bed with the west and there he was prepared to sleep. He did not propose to conduct any flirtations on the side. The newspapers that came to his lonely mountainside also gave him plenty to think about. France was rapidly disintegrating, Mor- occo was seething, a hotel in Sai- gon was gutted and Indo-China was going Communist as swiftly as the Swiss skiers shoot down his mountainside in the wintertime. The nation which twice in 30 years had triumphed over Ger- many was being forced to retreat to its own narrow confines; its far-flung French empire soon would be no more. Unlike some Germans, it did not make the old man happy. Once he had hoped fervently that France and Germany could serve under the same flag of the Euro- pean Defense Community, with ' their troops wearing the same uni- form. He was sorry France had turned this down, sorry that France had not seen the great op- portunity of making these one- time bitter enemies permanent friends. CHEERING ECONOMIC - REPORTS THE OLD MAN also received re- ports which should have made him glad and, on the whole, did. His country was thriving, Ger- man goods were flooding Western Europe and cutting into British markets in the Near East and even into American markets in Latin America. At Hamburg, German shipbuilders are constructing 27,- 000-ton vessels in six months so much cheaper than the British that the British steamship lines are deserting the Clyde for Ger- many. It was one of the penalties or advantages - he didn't know which - of losing a war. Your shipyards and your factories were so completely knocked out that you installed the most modern equipment in the world-so mod- ern that you could outproduce the older machinery of your competi- tors. Along with the favorable econo- mic reports, the old man had two disturbing reports. One from the Health Ministry showed that Ger- man health is suffering from over- time work-German people were working night and day in their ea- gerness to stage a comeback to their once great strength, but it was hurting their health. The other report came from Dr. Grewe, chief of the Political Bureau in the Foreign Office. Writing from Geneva, Dr. Grewe warned that the Big Four's prog- ress toward peace meant less for- eign aid, less foreign arms from the> United States, and might lead to an economic slump in Europe if the United States curtailed its steady flow of dollars to Europe. It might do this the way the sud- den stoppage ofAmerican loans to Europe did it in 1929 when finan- cial panic swept Europe-a panic which eventually crossed the At- lantic andr triaaererd the sarky vor, offered tribute for her sup- port. But the old man wasn't hap- py. He wanted unification for his country. Even more, he wanted to insure peace for his country while there is Yet time. When you're 79 years old you can't wait too long and the old man kn wthere were forces back home in Germany which he could control now, but not after he de- parted. Would the latent forces of Nazism, after he departed, become like the rivulets he watched cours- ing down the breast of Jungfrau? -rivuletsrwhich meant nothing at their start but which, gathering momentum, rushed into the migh- ty cataract grinding, cutting and carvin gan ugly scar in the side of the mountain. Would those latent political forces in Germany once again leap to the surface? No! Not as long a sthe old man lived. But he is 79 years old PAN AM PROTEST PAN AMERICAN World Airways has raised some objections to the column of Sunday, July 24, by Jack Anderson. In fairness to our editors, we are supplying them with Pan Am's statement, plus Jack Anderson's reply, for such use as they may wish. The following is the statement released by Pan Am: "Jack Anderson's July 24 col- umn demonstrates that no effort has been made to check or to ac- curately report the record. His statements attacking Pan Ameri- can are utterly disproven by Civil Aeronautics Board records, testi- mony before the appropriations committees and by the record of the 'general accounting office. "Typical misstatements: "1. No giveaway to Pan Ameri- can was before the joint confer- ence. What air service gets how much public support is determined by a judicial proceeding laid down by the Civil Aeronautics Act. "2. No subsidy money goes to Pan American's hotel subsidiary. The hotel company currently makes a profit which the CAB claims' in full and applies to re- duce public support for air serv- ices. "3. PAA receives no subsidy for operations* comparable to any un- subsidized U.S. competitor. Con- gress and the CAB have author- ized subsidy for certain routes of PAA's thin traffic, national inter- est routes, as well as for certain routes of othe rairlines. Payment is made for services performed after full judicial-type investiga- tions. "4. PAA provided consistently more airlift than any other con- tractor in the Korean airlift and was among the lowest in cost. "The familiar tactic of person- al attack may be considered as evidence of Anderson's lack of ob- jectivity." HERE IS Anderson's reply to Pan American: The Pan American World Air- ways statement is as off-beat as the Russian version of who in- vented the airplane. I am accused of lacking objectivity. I have no axe to grind for or against Pan Am. I have only a reporter's in- teresi min a new story and a tax- payer's interest in preventing a raid .on the public treasury. Pan Am, on the other hand, has $ 17,- 769,000 at stake. I will leave it to the reader to decide who is likely to be more objective under the circumstances. Here is the answer to Pan Am's statement, point for point: 1. Congress, not the Civil Aero- nautics Board, determines how much subsidy shall be granted. On June 16, 1955, the Senate ap- proved a proposal by Sen. Spes- sard Holland (D., Fla.) to in- crease the airlines subsidies ap- propriation for next year from $40,000,000 to $55,000,000, The Senate-House conference finally set the figure at $52,500,000. The total subsidy claims of ev- ery domestic airline in the coun- try, including the local service airlines and helicopter companies, add up to only $32,000,000. Pan Am's two big rivals in the inter- national field, TWA and North- west, didn't claim a penny's worth of subsidy. In other words, the House figure of $40,000,000 was more than enough to take care of all airlines except Pan American. The $12,500,000 increase, there- fore, is of benefit only to Pan American World Airways. 2. On July 14, 1953, Pan Am advanced in a single day to its wholly owned subsidiary, Inter- continental Hotels Corporation, the vast sum of $2,000,000. Then, as an added touch of generosity, Pan Am stipulated this advance should be interest-free. Sen. Paul Douglas (D., I.) stated on the Senate floor: "The foregoing of interest on this single advance of Pan Am to its hotels amounts to $80,000 a a 4 A. V# 'a,. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Publication in it is construc- tive notice to all members of the Uni- versity. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3553 Administration Building before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication (be- fore 10 a.m. on Saturday). Notice of lectures, concerts and organization meetings cannot be published oftener than twice. THURSDAY, JULY 28, 1955 VOL. LXVI, NO. 26 Notices Regents' Meeting: Friday, Sept. 30. Communications for consideration at that meeting must be in the President's hands by Thurs., Sept. 22.' Applications for Engineering Research Institute Fellowship to be awarded for the fall semester 1955-56 are now being accepted in the office of the Graduate School. The stipend is $1,000 per semester. Application forms are available from the Graduate School. Only applicants who have been em- ployed by the Institute for at least one year on at least a half-time basis are eligible. Applications and supporting material are due in the office of the Graduate School not later than 4:00 p.m. Mon., Aug. 22, 1955. All Veterans who expect education and training allowances under Public L~aw 550 (Korea G. I. Bill) must get instructors' signatures for the period of June-July by July 29, and turn Dean's Monthly Certification into the Dean's office before 5:00 p.m. Aug. 3. Pfobate and Juvenile Judge, Marshall, Mich., has an opening for a man to work on the staff of the Juvenile Division. Requires a BA with speciliza- tion in Social Work or related Social Sciences. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, Woods Hole, Mass., is looking for Re- search Assistants to perform analyses and computations of underwater sound data. Would like women with BA in Physics or in some other field of science but with a minor in Physics. For further information contact the Bureau of Appointments, Ext. 371, 3528 Admin. Bldg. Lectures Linguistic Forum. Prof. Hans Galin- sky of the University of Mainz will speak on "An Outsider's view of American English" Thurs., July 28, 7:30 p.m .in Rackham Ampitheater. Department of Astronomy. Visitors' Night, Fri., July 29, 8:30 p.m. Mr. Robert C. Bless will speak on "Radio Astronomy." Following the illustrated lecture in 2003 Angell Hall, the Stu- dent's Observatory on the fifth floor will be open for telescopic observation of Saturn and the Moon, if the sky is clear, and for inspection. of the telescopes, exhibits and planetarium, if the sky is cloudy or clear. Children are welcomed, butymust be accompanied by adults. Academic Notices Seminar in Applied Mathematics will meet Thurs., July 28, at 4:00 in Rm. 247 West Engineering. Mr. John Klein will speak on Hankel tranforms (cont.). Doctoral Examination for Thelma Williams Batten, Sociology; thesis: "Functinal ffln nimti nni 4 .' n' announced for Thurs. evening, July 28, in Rackham Assembly Tal, has been postponed until Fri. evening, Aug. 5, in Aud. A, Angell Hall. Events Today The Happy Time, Samuel Taylor's Comedy, will be presented by the De- partment of Speech tonight at 8:00 p.m. in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Tickets are available at the theatre box office from 10:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. $1.50-$1.10-75c.- The International Center Teas will be held at Madelon Pound Home at 1024 Hill Street on Thursday from 4:30-5:30 p.m. Musicale at the Hillel Foundation,j 14029 Hill St., Thurs., July 28 at 8 p.m. Vivaldi's "The Seasons" and the Franck D Minor Symphony, recorded. Public invited. Friday Evening Services at the Hillel Foundation, 1429 Hill St., July 29 at 7:45 p.m. Sailing Club Meting at Base Line Lake. Cars will leave the north end of the Women's League at 5:00, 5:30 and 6:00 p.m. Bring your own picnic dinner. Coming Events Lutheran Student Association Steak Fry Fri., July 29 at Silver Lake. Meet at the Student Center corner of Hill St. and S. Forest Ave: at 5:00 p.m. Call NO 20401 for reservations. The Department of Journalism and the Graduate School will show the Edward R. Murrow film, A Conversation with Oppenheimer, Fri., July 29, at 7:30 p.m. and 9:00 p.m. in Rackham Amphi- ,I The Daily Staff Managing Editors ....... ........... .Cal Samra Jim Dygert