Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY li IYt!'1lY i/ 1-et- r n r i 74. I C),.'7 3unaav, rebruarv ,L-,t. I v,) 1 Y t.-r, 17Jr t Two New Books by Veteran Moore and Novice Booth "LIKE A BULWARK" by Mari- there, blessedly present in such the inan who does not denirate, rined stmps; as his seeds anne Moore, New York, Vik- a pom as Rosemary," shich con- depecite reach down to bear, eludes: dnunciate he will in his first yield kneel' ing Press; 32 pages; $2.50. Spinging" fromi stones beside A "citadel of leninmg is not down, By R. C. GREGIORY the sia, n+:c ss'rs''y a toots of wisdirom ad rooted where his praises mount. the hliuhi of Christ swheri some ELEVEN short poems are note thirty-tr- hasi" losit power sot coi- These lines, swhich coitlude the{ miny from whlich to make a' not hiher -iteedn irie ad psi iso first peo, "This Land," reveal book for amsost aisy iving poete- ote bee thikin", liceise emancipates the mood ird attitrde, maintain cept Mariansne Moore. Feswer lua au iths a idtmsb language", is in on ed to an aplroiiat degree eighty poems contitute her Col- riaty ae le quasi-modish couster- throusghout the colectiin. led ed Poem of 152. s0 her new a kind of Christnmas-tre. fi, book Lie A Bulwark louy be ac- Atutar itioin of Splendor" is Mitiis pioof in" conscience MR er BOOTH'S asaemsaisv re, iii dif- counted rest esent inia aitierairy ' aporcupimneopression against icharacternt,-aoal lrepomins, career inos' in its fourth dec'ade ati resistanie, anid Dieer, too hywth"lumnd ys. 'e The things he cares about and i Praise is harder to re'idsr Itshaiindthesscombination, c e h shoItulait idtth the themes he explores are not t diinnaio: io oudhoeassicsemasa ltte onos rotsb cnisustltanisatower."And those ho uncomon-the changiig se'sons, . called for, bt one sishes fioi a 'bsolutslIsrighjt: smlecpnt utsier"tie t'' Masre should be lea sd that do isMo a esd romantic love, fiig, children, c Iaragiaph that w ol]douto Miss its ,niil saidsencfoosodaotin yass"BWho poetry lamdcapes What is n- 1 Mocre s.sIust sasage. i a is', wacrer, and ra thes ca~use the herst is in it all is well," common is his capacity for seeingd Miss Mioore's poetry has sion than figh,-t the primets quili, old themes with a frank, liely in- ofnT IawFdiom, hut ths apps l.ilj' Sfal e- oiressor, intruder "LETTER FROM A DISTANT tere t nd an aritrarily personal She is a ditiutl poet bcc'ses she insister, you hare fossnd a( LAND,' by Philip Boot; discriminiation that leas allj is a gosooneiaid because she dis esistor. NewYok The Viking 00s ohrpetyot fcut o h likes the pnossvof ]otry ans lIt iri vilsge to s5osseha o(Yorures aoirototo f cou iv n for the pulousst, evens isthlessly avoids confusion"t 1957; 87 pages; $300. bidwtha tcerlfi'to it. There is noise of this familiarACOMLSE pe a the writing of the poem sndc amaiouss poetic landscaipe i h '1fE finasl pocus 'Btissed is the I, theeaftrMtotheSifeDfptoepoes'ss aork. Her psiess isre deses stic strin" the. Phi Beta Kappa ( nonc isl nafr among its readers. ht not of life iscdnts ides,, poenm at Cousmbhia, 156f, i te sook of poems: anyone oscare Thoreau isrote onrc: I 'isisaa- at or amythaingu specificec fuss biest in thei ook ad one of the, about miow uoety willI w'an to ways suk by the cntaity of tastic use of detail notewithstad- finest thin'gs Sitss Moore Ias swrit- r;'d Philip Booth's Letter Fomo the obsemrver's position He always mng ten, mat technimcsaly pcirlips, bu' A Distant La nd, In n age fed omt, ais fiontimg the middle of tie Readn let"boo, wth te ds crtanlyin siri an wi, M ss uueriuuives, there are no fresh ; ach, amd does ot suspctat first trus ofmerts he resribs, t 1 v~are' otryusullyis on-i cuues to describe the senstion of' that a thousand hils bhold th is hrd o sy te pemsareabot' vnntona indicionandsynaxhigh discoery Let it soply be 'sunt sky fiuom equally favorble anythin" or thuat theys ay -;an0umd oveciheasuchouthoughlt-alud in -' -iiu. hs ako upc toe hspe sdrc drsjsaid tiat Mr. Booth hais aclae dhiuu hiseakvfusedco sthus". It is plasi hhattif,'Missipirthisuwoim ugdiii ciyadoress rooxrrc.real poetry, Iis owniapery. issuatsihst's'snype Moose hIs snot uruasd essirsthinsg in ierhpsnstu sstuseyhis peuiar ann5,e of visions.Like-n sight, shes il hae efore se Ineweciotdiatic its'n'wise,' it gives the ot his asrute h swries hi-c met poe m rod eais1shauausisu u luyco- of 1tltr Bohl's poemsa consider-s 1 pod- mudnscholad ri ls wciithe'mous mid ,ed entire is the in suiming but !uity to cormpose l's pocusn gious 5reaudinuais a 5refimning po si dfr hi eeoyadsuch way5a situs hs radcrer not t ces; the qiuotatioms ions fromo itdeectatonsue c oldmnevsr beurfoud ssnse of csaincui moly to accept it butassre sg- have measinsiat ll suits as she iThee ares manyuwu asf ben sg ci- hsumaaun life. Poets hae ee a' sfcantts to thnk Ghat had the s titances themusiusansusussetthngs.S-Ir cactuc' one cusris' deliver le- i ng fornuite a whiletlthitos t ii reases witten the poem he could ;I poetryi s n I("'-nis l'fomsald ch' ly on shomissle s naske -te ie f suittua iu55hiss close it no other way. on~fulmaentigmpratt a s likiteiiu prsschusatwygstrs rrasen , sorbssins'mel toIssurie the "Susmusthu gz Delilhthen, coms from aa lisstihsunin usthu i et scu 5 ssI clts uirect1requires ewisdom Oiler''right iiround Ithe cuss lkr reelunrust sraLi ememt b r t is eemu sad isitbothiof wi uch many oc- MI sss unesr ss'estinhodeandeseislet cseth oma x'_LCiswuluttcall this pirocess,5 551ipuuts of sole mn chesusnot only:nrlgti utifueusdci 'tu'ep 555 1cusnCn - the acluiees ssst 51of ecise akbt sc aunsot apprenciate us oti- EGetl but rathesr oonOf siiul i -se niiu"Ins anothe posm o Saing{ ems Mis Moouc sassregenerations thuat concue;dns is5 ot eascr for the sason's lusngr correatires, Juyce Es'ipssls'ssses Moliriuastu"selforeutasst luteraryhstoy Ms.Boohi mates MissMooe s'i~mi'rv as Hlsssd u ths Mumsdespair: this my not be Fie I S us r s n t' reckless breathless, - dens uithsrseat toads usathem." who does mut sitisothe seat ofbu"tewrdigentopw:whc haben oebfrea Whtvrnmd otcprocess is, the scoffer ss on not to be ot-which - ',- mass often has been avi'se-baut this! - might seen susable, lure, to clear is still a fresh costribution; it Slung viiw from the tangled;, cosnludnes: sladous's. Wheno timeu is a troutlily yelowvi- L d NKE -Yet ho ill hossead heure, as sum,ahat widflowers ieather(e L Ok !his l toue. dhehr maon tomosrro? p . MEN'S 1O0o WOOL For Your FLANELSPRING VACATION TROUSERS take 8 days in Fabulous c IP5BERMUDA fam Reg. 1095 7 3 > ~ASSORTED COLORS I a k' ' u } Includes Hotel Aommodations I ~ Breakfast Transfers, IVY LEAGUE , Confirmations Tours, and Cruise SPORT HIRTSBeachs Partis, Dning Under thse Slr Assored Colors $325 Iansd1Calypso Cnets During The Fabulous i COLLEGEWEK OPEN MONAY IG S ,Stop in or Call for DetailsN 12 2 East Was i ngto n 1 31 3 S. University -- Ph. NO 2-558,7 for shade and ther's maidien hair ferns to gather, Noe' blossomu is bloodroot is sap- is Sprisig, and true s arbutus, w'ere nee'. Words are a ruisn no animals heed, so kiss mue to silence; this wood is for you. 4AND wsith Mor. Booth giing "I- stroctions in the Art," fishing seems much es suaint a pas- tose, The point at which h meanss more thian a trout is, ...the giast beauty that you cast ton ...," so fuses iii its ex- pression amd thought that oe n- erstands 'liy - maens fie huarbs not toward food or troushie', ut for lck they cannot keep, But lest this isasasumd ases,s, nismportant thsine" Ventor com- hludes eithi the Isardest purnf the lesson .I pav you patience for that tug and mse the risen image that outleapsa the rapid; in one illimitable arc: to paisec but not to puize Many of the poems mas ke some implicit commet about poetry sef; poetsra' exceptin" life, smight ue called Mu Booth'sopsie pre- ccupation. For hum poety seems ao be a side variets of cnodiios and locationsmnot at all 'a'm- site'st eciept as maude so b' thec oet's mnd expriesssng itself, Isa 'Chart 120th-Puonsbscot aysn Approaches" he sas of saiiing sluat cani hi'sa'idlof winmg poetry: Who een oks a storm to windeward, sails isa rain, or naigates ini isanud must reckon from tihe swunmg 1esd, fu 05 5squsO1 o clieek; must bear by com- puas, chart, and log, These things a sailor must do ad till be sensiive of danger only utuuitiona reveas, the kind of re- lationus scarcely less imortat to oet thans to sailor, Chaurts and 0ons ansI leads do not acount for :hostsiips or suudne adaluads is-. here rocks sander, he steers dosn the chiasnel that his- courane dredges. He knsows'the chart is niot the sea, ITlE TITLE POEM,-la tst ini thec book, is a long, close con- nutary on costemporary life that posacsss a special tone b- cause it is less the acutely obique social-commentary, les the care- fully drawnoboservation siths icarcely ismpied judgements, less abombastic refusal to mourn, than smost poetry these last yeas's "Letter From A Distant Lnd" squite nakedly concerned with eimg-not with Mybe, but with Is. It fulfills awhat it intends, ac- :ordimu to its epiraph from Ihoscaus: L, on my side, require of every saliter, first or last, a simple and sincere account ot huis00-m life--. ome sucha account as hie would send to his kindrd trmsa distant and; for it is has ied sunerely, it mussi have beens in a distant lad to the upsit tells Thsoreausiwhere he iress "shslay;aIsalwaysebetween man airieldsaId syos ums tosd,-huuui- i,-a withinssthe hosuse Imoed to soy hi' borrowngi" ehicha imliesc usgrt de at aboaut how tan lives, lut maucnhaThore'su wiaut ced Isiutha sas. iuthu eenuy eausped sice TIhouraus vemt to the posn to drivc lit' lust a cornser, but if jeu- out ruacethirisdotublhe h- "e 'T'O, P" e11 4