S ISUNDAY, FEBRUARY 24. 1924 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rAGE SvF " ardent love for nature. The result fear we should utterly vanish into bright" and the highly imaginative was that man became horribly inlhu- metaphysics. We owe what little re- poets who passed along the belief scan-though of course not unhuman. ligion we have left far less to Calvin that"There is an animal known as Were it not for our sensuous poets and the saints, and to such seraphs the salamander. It springs into ex- (who despite popular belief are al- as Thomas a Kempis, than we do to istence from fire. Its blood smeared ways more worldly than heavenly) I I the author of "Tiger, tiger burning on the human body will secure im- munity from injury by fire. ." (Tal- m uc:' Ch la i -) Flashlight and Outside Groups _ - -t p i i l L 2l LI illfl? uI9 ltuIIt.tagga) DEDICATION If Iever write a took. I shalld di- cate it to iatiz for two reasons: he is dead, and I envy him. I envy him for two reasons: he is a poet and he is dead. Envy only dead people, and you will never be bothered by them- or will you? Around shlsere titanic waters flow, And soft-scsnted zephyrs blow, stripe-winged duchies fly Into the snow-filled sky. Vigorously their wings they flap When aroused from reposing nap; Far thro1h the air they leep W hen jarred from sleep. Off s er ton wriggly hills they go Outtined brownly against the snow ill drowned in cloudlets deep. There is nothing by whichn men dis- play their character so much as in what they consider ridiculous."-- (Goethe). a --_ __ - - - - - __._T _ _ -_ , , , .. e o 4 4 " u',, , c i i I i I r i I , i 4 1 f4IIl a i I r " a" AI Morgan Robertson An Appreciation DAVID WEPMAN We Americans, it would Deei/ have a penchant for mistreating our men of genius. Poe was forced to seek recognition of his genius abroad. Whitman was sneered at and isolated. And is it not a common tale-that of the one time genius dying amid the veriest poverty. There is no reason to suppose that times have changed in this respect. Even among the much sneered at 'moderns' posterity may find a genius. Some years ago I was presented with four volumes of the sea tales of Morgan Rabertson. Avidly I read them, as a boy will read any adven- ture tale, pored over them time after time until it must have seemed that I was trying to memorize the every word. thought them gripping, lucid, wonderful. But I was very young my tastes correspondingly im~iature and I was laughed at for my enthusi- asm. My elders chided me for my boyish taste and derisively advised Horatio Alger and Oliver Optic as sub- stitutes. Last week while working in the li- brary I ran across a volume headed "Morgan Robertson", The Man. In this I found the life story of Morgan Robertson told and the impression that he left recorded. The book roused my curosity. Would my pres- ent lay opinion of this old time favor- ite measure up to that of my youth. Almost fearfully I drew from the a volume that had been my especial favorite in other days-Sinful Peck. Still the book seemed wonderfully good. Not, perhaps as I might have called it in the past, a masterpiece, but really an epic of the sea. I found the book full of rich, color, unusually faithful to detail, and poss- essing a smooth, diction and a power- ful style that held me. The book was full too, with a humor that bubbled and sparkled. Then, fearing that I had been carried away by a precon- ceived enthusiasm, by memories of other days, I read the book again, this time calling to my aid all of the little analytical power that I posses. And still I found it good. Morgan Robertson wrote of the sea; for it was all he knew, but of the sea and it's ships he wrote in a way that led Joseph Conrad to call him "truly a master of sea tales- ranking-perhaps, second in a list of America's modern creative artists." That all lie knew, the sea and it's ships and when he tried to live his life on land he made of it a hopeless muddle and gave the world some of its greatest stories. Reading one of Kipling's sea stories, Morgan Robertson, then in poverty, was spurred by it into writing sea stories of his own. In all his liter- ary life Morgan Robertson wrote and published some two hundred and fifty stories. Most of these were published in the country's leading magazines and for no one of these did he re- ceive more than one hundred dollars. These same stories, so Charles Han- son Towne tells us, today would sell for from one thousand to fifteen hun- dred dollars each. And it was this same Morgan Rob- ertson that was the inventor of the periscope. During his lifetime he never received one cent of reimburse- ment for this and it was not until a very recent date that his wife began to be paid the government royalties for this invention. Some of his best stories he was forced to sell for one cent a word-he was such a poor provider and poor business man. Though he had little or no academic education his works are called ninety pine percent perfect English; and he (Cntinsed on Page sight) SPRING 1924 FASHION REVUE C OLLEGE women who realize the importance Of being well dressed in costumes that are styl- :sh and in good taste are cordially invited to attend the Spring 1924 Fashion Revue to be given at 7:30 o'clock TueSday evening, February 26, on the sec- ond floor. A LL Enat1s 'f'r0 ta c ming season will b re eaed at this event and all perplexing ques- tions concerning style tendencies will be answered by this exhilitisn c - utet La, pring Mcdes. Mod- ds chosen from the sec Rstaf -will display costumes iLtabe for ec ad -very --oman and for every vent of t y 00