Page Eighteen THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE Sunday, October 20, 1957 'Exiles & Marriages An Exceptional First Book d reading. "Six "f n niNa 'Ja r RUSSIA A GRAND TOUR (Continued from Page 9.) His degs will whimper through the webby barn, Where spiders close his tools ' in a pale gauze And wait for flies. When next October's frosts harden the earth,: Y And fasten in the yeas's catastrophe, The farm will lie like driftwood, The farmer dead, and deep in his carved earth. HIS IS indeed a poem of mar-x riage; the poet finds affirmation and direction in the experience of grief: I number out the virtues that are dead, Remembering his soft DONALD BALL consistent voice That sharpened on the diffcult choice w...with every act" in "an' to tell, age of choice and discontent / His honesty, his subtlety, Whose emblem is 'The difficult to and most, choose'." It is Hall's way of driving The bone that showed life into a corner. in each deliberate word. Exiles and Marriages is not free of flaws and Hall's chief one lies, There is no exaltation of the dead; I think, in his use of wit, although the vision evoked is one of a bare most critics have praised it. At and dignified honesty: times Hall's wit happens in bril- liant, well-turned flashes: Another rank of virtues Poetical Philander only was his trade's, thought to love: invites a secon (Continued from Page 15) 1 Poets in Search of a Lawyer ana "The Body Politic" are clever- and flourescent colored socks at once. close-out sales in the United N States and re-selling them in NEITHER of these poems pro- Moscow. His only problem then duces the pleasant discomfort of self-recognition, but an almost would be deciding what to do with embarrassed silence. One sees a the rubles. poet grimly deterined to amuse N ew buildings on thenoutskirts a society uncertain that it needs of Moscow house the technical any poetry at all. Perhaps a great- and scientific departments of the er sense of detachment between University. Here is one of the poet and poem would have made a difference. The other alternative great showplaces for tourists. At- would be a greater indignation or tention is automatically focused fury than seems consistent with upon the main building. Its 26 Hall's other, better poems. Wit is floors contain lecture rooms, lab- irresponsible in immediate effect, oratories, libraries, student living- for producer or perceiver, what- quarters, and even accomodationa ever its end; to lack the irresponsi- for some of the professors. Our bility places the poet dangerously Intourist guide told us that all near didacticism on brief effect. lectures and discussions were re- Such a personal stricture on corded. In this way, he said, if a Hall's poems of wit ought not de- student misses his class, he can fleet any reader. His fine lyric gift go to the library and listen to is repeatedly shown in poems that wfhat occurred. He neglected to are personal without being pri- point out the "1984" effect upon vate, that are never maudlin or open discussion. popular in the bad sense. "Carol,"' eiushon. c "September Ode," "New England The big showplace is, of course' November," "Jamaica," and "The the Kremlin. In a sense this Sleeping Giant," are other fine the center of Russia's Disneyland. poems that plead for quotation Thehmuseums and gardens with- entire. There can be no doubt that in the walls of the Kremlin are Donald Hall is a poet with high open as long as the visitor takes human qualities who cares not care not to step outside the only about poetry but about life as p a i nt e d white lines on the well: grounds. The guards did not stand 'out.unousy, ar. t.. ni.s time wea T HE CLIMAX of the tour was the visit to the mausoleum. There Lenin and Stalin lie in state. It is only open for two hours a day and fantastic num- bers of people begin to line up early every morning. There were many foreign delegations with wreaths of flowers and tears in their eyes. Thee were also thous- ands of Russians. As "capitaliA- tourists" we apparently bad ipe'- cial priority for we were rough$ to the head of the line. Inside it was cool - the only place we visited in Russia which was air-conditioned. The sight their former leaders lying in a r markable state of preservatio and nearly close enough to touc must have a tremendous psycho logical impact upon the people. Even Joe Stalin looked benevolent in a stern sort of way. It was ima- pressive. Throughout our trip the Rus- sians were good hosts. The "red' carpet was rolled out for us but even the Russians couldn't fabric cate one that was big enough 0 Over up everything. The fact remains that it is a country of contrasts. Shabbily dressed people ride in glass-topp buses or through subway statio l lined with marble. To an Ameri- can visitor they look strange against a background of brightly gilded fountains in a park. But the young rebel from Mos- cow University who thought that most of the people just don't care appeared to be right. By West- ern standards, the level of liv- ing is pitifully low. But there are the promises of tomorrow embod- ied in the great showplaces. And most people seem to be eating. Apparently for some men, espe- cially those with a background of hardship and war, this is suffi- cient. If it is, it is_ a foreboding manifestation of the power oi Big Brother. His working love of animals and land- No rhapsodies, but hands that shaped and made Domestication of the - wilderness... . The poem itself is a fusion of the values Hall ascribes to his grandfather with the qualities which characterize his own best poems, for the bare bone of each deliberate word does show, and domestication is but another name for making form of chaos "by He went to bed with what the girls were symbols of. I pray for time and place To shape my changing face And loose intelligenge r .* *By will to excellence, I learned in a vision a secret :So that from death will be that nobody knows: Preserved some part of me. Criticism must be at least ass well written as prose. In hate of death I make These words for my own sake. At other times what is lighted by the fdashes is less the substantives The art of poetry does not ask of the poems than the poet himself more dedication of its maker, nor whose technical facility will bear the art of living greater confirma- repeated scrutiny before his wit tion. out unduly, for by this time we were accustomed to seeing so many men in uniform. Lew Engman, who graduated from the University last year (he majored in economics) was Student Government Council treasurer and one of the tuno Honors Convocation representa- tives last year. He is Presently studying in London, England. ..-... It's the ANN AflB0f CLOTHING your RICIEMAN IO0S. CLOTHING STORi in Ann Arbor ; . Mpg, f ,"1ii i v }y 1 ,i '. x- l 1 . , SUITS .$39.95 - $44.95 SPORT COATS ... $24.95 - $29.95 TOPCOATS ...... $39.95 ZIP COATS ...... . $44.95 The same clothing sold nationally at the same low prices acclaimed by experts as the best on the market for style, quality, and price. 17 i I I i J I i } J 1"S - &fo aM . The Miracle Foam F We also have a complete line of IVY polished cotton trousers at $4.95 and $5.95 I 113 South Main Street $898 eacI The Vogue Drapery Shop 1209 S. University Phone NO 8-7287 apposite Campus Theatre