<?xml version="1.0"?>
<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd">
  <teiHeader>
    <fileDesc>
      <titleStmt>
        <title>
        </title>
        <author>
        </author>
        <respStmt>
          <resp>Text encoded by</resp>
          <name>Digital Collections</name>
        </respStmt>
      </titleStmt>
      <publicationStmt>
        <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
        <address>
          <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
          <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
          <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
        </address>
        <date>2012</date>
      </publicationStmt>
      <sourceDesc>
        <bibl>
        </bibl>
      </sourceDesc>
    </fileDesc>
    <encodingDesc>
      <samplingDecl>
        <p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p>
        <p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p>
        <p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p>
      </samplingDecl>
      <classDecl>
        <taxonomy xml:id="LCSH">
          <bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl>
        </taxonomy>
      </classDecl>
    </encodingDesc>
    <profileDesc>
      <creation>
        <date>
        </date>
      </creation>
      <langUsage xml:lang="en-US">
        <language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language>
      </langUsage>
      <textClass>
        <keywords scheme="#LCSH">
          <list>
            <item>
            </item>
          </list>
        </keywords>
      </textClass>
    </profileDesc>
  </teiHeader>
  <text>
    <body>
      <div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>

        
        <pb facs="00062563_0001" />
        <p>
          <lb />
        </p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0002" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
        </p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0003" />
        <p>VOLUME VIII - FALL, 1964 NUMBER 1<lb /><lb />CONTENTS<lb /><lb />Purslane: Revisiting aad retier sp aeairal es mere ne ersten Yap -<lb />Essay by Sanford Peele<lb /><lb />She Was of Herons __-- Sa ee Meee ec stn ee ere kee ae page 4<lb />Poem by Charlotte McMichael<lb /><lb />gi Bf Tae iy S22 eat areata ea ERE meena dies Sain eSe crated Bisel cuts page 5<lb />Story by Guy Beining<lb /><lb />A chapter from Virtue in Four Posttions """$_________ page 8<lb />from a novel by Antoni Gronowicz<lb /><lb />Pilaicleipew rich sewichs Cnn ees eg a page 10<lb />Poem by Dwight Pearce<lb /><lb />On SartreTs Literary and Philosophical Essays ___----------------_-- page 11<lb />Essay by John Clement<lb /><lb />ae 4 Ranker 2 ce tite Man me hs yal igen aaae alll. Polk page 12<lb />Poem by Charlotte McMichael<lb /><lb />PCG Rm ee Se eee page 13<lb /><lb />SEPT TERRI M1 81 1 OME ESHER pRB IES eepmemi aS SEIS, OEE sete a page 21<lb />Story by Albert Pertalion<lb /><lb />PRES Folia ol ie Ae al ER SOS rl RAST ra: Welt Maca A A ue as teat 2a page 25<lb /><lb />Julian, Gore Vidal<lb />by B. Tolson Willis<lb /><lb />The Lost City, John Gunther<lb />by John D. Ebbs<lb /><lb />The Story of MiechelangeloTs Pieta, Irving Stone<lb />by Vernon Ward<lb /><lb />The Modern Short Story in the Making, Whit and Hallie Burnett<lb />by James Forsyth<lb /><lb />ibrar act, TU TOE ccna erie leet page 26<lb />Poem by Pat Scott<lb /><lb />fae pret IR a a seach eee cele eal oie halls fala Da page 30<lb />Poem by Gale F. Morgan<lb /><lb />Weil, Sree tree a page 31<lb />Poem by Charlotte McMichael<lb /><lb />ConGrite On Fier a ee page 32<lb /><lb />The REBEL magazine is published by the Student Government As-<lb />sociation of East Carolina College. It is printed three times a year in<lb />November, February and May by Owen G. Dunn Co., New Bern, North<lb />Carolina.<lb /><lb />Manuscripts are always welcomed, warmly. Send for consideration<lb />to the REBEL magazine, Box 2486, Greenville, North Carolina, or walk<lb />up to 30614 Austin Building, East Carolina College.<lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0004" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />PURSLANE: REVISITING<lb /><lb />by<lb /><lb />SANFORD PEELE<lb /><lb />I came upon Bernice Kelly HarrisT Purslane at<lb />the age of thirteen in a search for a reading plea-<lb />sure alternative to the apathy produced by the<lb />grim little selections to be found in state-approved<lb />texts, though at that time I had no knowledge and<lb />less concern for the profound reasons as to why<lb />the eighth grade should read something called<lb />eighth grade material. At thirteen, philosophic<lb />despair for the reading matter put forth by public<lb />educators was happily confined to my discovering<lb />that if what was read in school was reading and<lb />what I dragged home from the library on week-<lb />ends was likewise reading, then there were two<lb />types of reading, and I would do well to make a<lb />distinction. Interest was the final and absolute<lb />judge; thus were sheep and goats imperiously di-<lb />vided, the former being those books you had to<lb />have because being thirteen demanded adventures<lb />got up in all the mystical regalia of distant and<lb />improbable geographies of imagination made im-<lb />mediate. The latter were those books you must<lb />read to expand vocabulary in a particular way, to<lb />improve logic of a particular kind, and to prepare<lb />for the next grade.<lb /><lb />I hasten to add; I did not then, and I do not, now<lb />despair for the reading matter and the manner of<lb />its being taught in the public schools. It is a mir-<lb />acle that anyone should come to read at all, much<lb />less live with words long enough and intimately<lb />enough to add reading to his canon of pleasure<lb />equal to a good sunrise, or spring, or any other<lb />occasion that brings being -alive to keenest<lb />awareness, I have arranged with myself, in the<lb />light of prophecies fulfilled, to absolve my edu-<lb />cators and their books from the charge obut it<lb />doesnTt apply to me.� It all too obviously does.<lb />Perhaps there might have been room for the math<lb />and sciences if I had not made such neat distinc-<lb />tions between what was good and what good for<lb />me.<lb /><lb />What has this bit of biography to do with Mrs.<lb />HarrisT Purslane? Nothing. But it might go some<lb />little way toward illuminating a personal discovery<lb /><lb />of a particular experience"in this case literary,<lb />Purslane"that can be encountered again and<lb />again over a period of many years; and enjoyed,<lb />upon each new encounter, for the growing discov-<lb />eries the reader is ready to make. And to be ready<lb />in the most private, physiological, emotional and<lb />intellectual sense of ready"a readiness not cal-<lb />culable by school or teacher or even self until self<lb />is so far into the experience that there can be no<lb />turning back"is to lay a trap for learning that<lb />no teacher may take responsibility for. It may be-<lb />gin in the classroom, or in the woods; and might<lb />just as well end in either place without the respon-<lb />sibility to and for the thing incurred ever shift-<lb />ing from the individual. It is this individual re-<lb />sponsibility for experience, seen as it works itself<lb />out in the complicated pattern of communal life<lb />lived among people whose entwined destinies con-<lb />stitute a spiritual as well as physical sense of com-<lb />munity, that occasions this response to having<lb />read Purslane again.<lb /><lb />The title fascinated me. Purslane. I liked strong<lb />nouns for book names, and Purslane had to be the<lb />name of something. Before turning page one, I<lb />had experienced two sensations that would re-<lb />turn, in all the freshness of first encounter, on<lb />each subsequent reading of the book. First were<lb />the words, Neuse River. They came out of the<lb />opening sentence with an overwhelming impact;<lb />this Neuse River couldnTt be my Neuse River. My<lb />Neuse River was private; you didnTt write books<lb />about it. You lived there. And not since Peter<lb />Pan was locked out of his home and into my im-<lb />agination had I been so sedticed as when Bernice<lb />Kelly Harris gave me her Nanny Lou, that superb<lb />little Protestant, and my second and deepest im-<lb />pression on first reading Purslane.<lb /><lb />There were many names, family names, refer-<lb />ences to aunts and uncles and people who were<lb />dead and could only be remembered by the very<lb />few. All of this made me faintly uneasy. It was<lb />like being with my grandmother and her friends,<lb />where you might know some of the people brought<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0005" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />up in conversation but by no means all. And those<lb />you didnTt know were spoken of with such inti-<lb />macy and precise remembrance of detail that you<lb />somehow forgot you had not been there, at the<lb />picnic on a given Sunday in a given year. Purslane<lb />hardly counted at all that first reading. It was a<lb />chronicle of my family and community life to be<lb />relished as the conversations overheard from the<lb />adult world and the observations I personally made<lb />about the town in which I lived. Only one time<lb />in my reading of the book did Bernice Kelly Har-<lb />ris, in the role of author, intrude upon the flow of<lb />narrative. Nanny Lou had bargained with God<lb />for a safe passage back to the mainland, after a<lb />storm had sprung up and severely compromised<lb />the pleasure of her first trip to the beach. One by<lb />one she sacrificed her little horde of shells in hope<lb />of appeasement, finally offering God the supreme<lb />gift of her paper dolls in exchange for firm earth<lb />beneath her feet. When the moment came to of-<lb />fer, separately and finally, in fistfulls her dolls to<lb />the open fire, I rebelled against an injustice the<lb />author must alone be held accountable for. Oh to<lb />have popped Mrs. Harris into the oven in heartfelt<lb />exchange for every one of the humble effigies!<lb />There was something unlovely and unnatural<lb />about that sacrifice; and while I now consider it<lb />among Mrs. HarrisT finest insights into the pivotal<lb />moment of a childTs receding into adulthood, I<lb />still cannot encounter it without a sense of un-<lb />sponsored desolation too grim and final to offer<lb />satisfaction beyond the artistry of its presenta-<lb />tion.<lb /><lb />Now thirteen years and a number of readings<lb />later, I have discovered in Pwrslane an insight in-<lb />to the pained and imperfect attempts of the in-<lb />dividual to find meaning and richness in his search<lb />for a balance between the dictates of a personal<lb />psychology and the demands of human society. A<lb />turn of the century rural setting gives Mrs. Harris<lb />the advantage of having a closed society to deal<lb />with; closed in the sense that any disturbance,<lb />whether from within the framework or without,<lb />occasions such reverberations as can be felt by<lb />nearly every member of that society. A new teach-<lb />er comes to take over the school, and immediately<lb />the entire community is involved. The first white<lb />tenant family to farm in the township arrives on<lb />the Fuller farm, and their arrival is the concern<lb />of the whole community. Nothing is entirely<lb />closed, however, and the errant and ungovern-<lb />able mysteries of human nature insinuate them-<lb />selves beneath the ritual of habit and circum-<lb />stance to force the individual to reassert his re-<lb />sponsibility as a thinking, feeling, separate and<lb />whole agent, before he lends his voice to public<lb />pronouncement and action.<lb /><lb />The primary authority in Purslane is. the<lb />church, Protestant and puritanical. The puritan-<lb />ism is ameliorated by the earthy nature of a farm-<lb />ing community and the healthy Protestant habit<lb />of dealing with God on the grounds of acknowl-<lb />edged mutual respect.. Community life, spiritual<lb />and cultural without distinction between the two,<lb />centers around the church. Members are chastised<lb />and rewarded before the church body when they,<lb /><lb />acting out of some grievance or good, involve<lb />other members in a situation that disturbs the<lb />smooth course of social order. The feud between<lb />Aunt Airy and Aunt Sugar over an accumulation<lb />of slights, real and imagined, is finally brought in-<lb />to the church proper to be handled as an affair of<lb />communal significance, threatening the stability<lb />of a happy norm. There is no questioning of so-<lb />cietyTs right. to bringythe women to a public facing<lb />of their private grievance. It had ceased to be<lb />private with the taking of sides by friends and<lb />relatives.<lb /><lb />As Purslane moves toward its close, a series of<lb />beautifully detailed occasions of public celebra-<lb />tion serve to illuminate the early accumulation of<lb />solitary character vignettes. A host of figures,<lb />heretofore confined for the main part to revealing<lb />relationships between individuals, emerge in an<lb />orchestration of specific community spirit, and be-<lb />yond that, an indication of what draws man into<lb />society. Scenes of life lived in the school room, in<lb />the winter chill of hog killing, at quilting parties<lb />and on coon hunts give way to the greater rituals<lb />of marriage, birth and the laying away of the dead.<lb /><lb />The aberrations and grand eccentricities of hu-<lb />man nature are fourld in PateTs Siding tolerated<lb />and, on occasion, indulged because they belong<lb />and are a part of what a society knows as its own.<lb />Uncle Sim of the stocks and bonds, empty pockets<lb />and too delicate condition for work, is shifted<lb />from household to household; the women appre-<lb />ciating his rare complements on their cooking and<lb />the men, his good talk about financial affairs up<lb />North. Discrepancies between the Christian life<lb />on this earth and the sometimes ungoverned de-<lb />mands of the flesh are met with good humor and<lb />occasionally unabashed grace when revival times<lb />call the fallen forward on a final stanza of su-<lb />preme good faith that all can be forgiven. Too<lb />much liquor and a view of the churchgoer as hy-<lb />pocrite are perpetual and favorite stumbling blocks<lb />to be removed with perennial group enthusiasm.<lb /><lb />But it is for the fact of death that Mrs. Harris<lb />appropriately gives her greatest compassion for<lb />living. In two instances, she brings the final act<lb />of living into such sharp and unsentimental relief<lb />that terror for the fact of oneTs own inevitable<lb />end is annihilated at the spectacle of what we can<lb />do for each other in a fraternity of spirit when the<lb />power of profoundest individualism passes. The<lb />dying of the old woman, Charity, ensconced in a<lb />pantheon of husband, children, friends and a life<lb />of good will lived well, moves toward its close with<lb />a rare beauty and a precision of .certainty among<lb />the survivors that oGod doeth all things well.� At<lb />her last, the lifetime of shared suffering between<lb />husband and. wife, asserts itself in; a bond that<lb />will not let Charity tell her man-to, leave their<lb />bed, that she might die in peace. Hers is the sacri-<lb />fice of not suffering profanely, of keeping to the<lb />end a charity for the beloved. It is the.ritual"<lb />the eating of the.funeral meats, the.sitting up<lb />with the dead while talking of crops to.come and<lb />the life old Charity lived, that shatters the pur-<lb />est sense of loss; and allows the living a little<lb />peace until they ean make a memory of the dead.<lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0006" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />The death of Calvin Fuller closes the novel.<lb />CharityTs death had been the deepest sounding of<lb />the communityTs ability to consolidate its rich-<lb />ness of cultural and spiritual experience in the<lb />face of its loss of a member. There is victory over<lb />death in the long continuum of shared experience<lb />canonized in memory that she passes on to her<lb />friends. CalvinTs death offers no consolation.<lb />Young and unhappy in a doomed romance, he dies<lb />by his own hand, married to a bride he nor the<lb />community knew or loved; and when the com-<lb />munity comes to witness his being walked from<lb />one end of the bare porch to the other, his legs<lb />rhythmically switched to keep him from falling<lb />into the poisoned sleep he desires above all else,<lb />they know the panic of having their comfortable<lb /><lb />answers swept away in the great overwhelming<lb />question, Why?<lb /><lb />Miss Harris has been responsible to her reader<lb />and to her material. Though the book is pervaded<lb />with nostalgia, there is no retreat from the com-<lb />plexity of living into easy answers. If the sym-<lb />metry of personal experience merging with so-<lb />ciety produces a unity that occasionally has the<lb />faded quality of a 19th century print, a look that<lb />is human but posed, that is her prerogative as an<lb />artist, her way of telling the story. As an artist,<lb />she knows the degree to which a human being may<lb />find solace, in the social order, for what Yeats<lb /><lb />called othe pain and uncertainty of his setting<lb />forth.�<lb /><lb />SHE WAS OF HERONS<lb /><lb />by<lb /><lb />CHARLOTTE McMICHAEL<lb /><lb />She was of herons<lb /><lb />cocking their feather throats<lb />above circles of water minutes<lb />about to waver breast-deep in.<lb /><lb />She was of crows<lb /><lb />sitting solitary on branches<lb /><lb />with no noise to focus the day with<lb /><lb />or to whistle green seeds for growing<lb /><lb />not too much past black where all is dark.<lb /><lb />She<lb /><lb />was of brown wrens<lb /><lb />no October wind could scurry<lb />brush-tailed back under directional timing<lb />no back tracking seasons could delay.<lb /><lb />She<lb /><lb />was of counterpoint bird<lb /><lb />pipering on ocean sands<lb />leaving marks for crabs to disfigure<lb /><lb />and gone the memory<lb /><lb />twice kept for shells and salt.<lb /><lb />She was of lace<lb /><lb />long marked to broken ash<lb /><lb />when cinders hold up a new flame of bird,<lb />but the feathers twist underground<lb />leaving only the melody mark of song.<lb /><lb />4<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0007" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />THE BARGAIN<lb /><lb />by<lb /><lb />GUY BEINING<lb /><lb />It was Friday when I passed him; Saturday<lb />night I was knocking on his door. He was bent<lb />like the fish in the pail and stood right under the<lb />light bulb which hung from the middle of the ceil-<lb />ing. It was uncovered, washing the room, making<lb />it more naked and bare than it was. The planks<lb />were full of dirt and rusty nails; everything was<lb />revealed right at once. Cigar boxes full of wrap-<lb />pers, and coffee cans full of nails and ashes from<lb />the cigars. His belt hung open, and he was finger-<lb />ing a bottle, bay-colored. When I handed him the<lb />money I could smell the cane liquor from his<lb />breath. He had a muddy mouth, and the broad<lb />expanse of his lips was contorted into a scowl.<lb />Bertha Lee was in the other room; I heard her,<lb />and whenever I got drunk I swore I smelt her.<lb />Every time I came I was drunk.<lb /><lb />oT ainTt leading you to her,� Abe cried out,<lb />oSheTs my daughter I know that for the truth.�<lb />The wooden floors were far apart and you could<lb />smell the ground. Like the room, AbeTs whole ap-<lb />pearance was revealed almost at once. He had<lb />already kicked off his shoes, and I could see the<lb />wrinkles on his stomach through the holes in his<lb />shirt. His face looked crumpled in his half sleep.<lb /><lb />oArenTt you planting this year?� I asked. He<lb />drew up his legs and his bony knees shot up.<lb /><lb />oWhat? Beans, peanuts or beans, maybe cot-<lb />ton. No, ITll fish. instead.�<lb /><lb />oFishing donTt make you money.�<lb /><lb />oMy hands are through being hired. Those<lb />watermelons were the last of my planting. You<lb />can tell your daddy.�<lb /><lb />His cigar was wet and shiny, resting on the<lb />orange crate by his chair. He lit it again with a<lb />wooden match on the floor planks, mixing sulphur<lb />with the ground smell and that of Bertha Lee.<lb />Perfume seems to putrify the strong substantial<lb />smell of the earth. Her odor made Abe nervous.<lb />oThat smell kills the substance meant for our<lb />lungs,� he said once.<lb /><lb />I would take her outside; I always did in the<lb />beginning, but then that changed the night it<lb />began to rain.<lb /><lb />I remember that the rain came down hard on<lb />the tin roof, like pebbles thrown into a pot. And<lb />I knew that ITd have to stay if it didnTt let up, and<lb />I felt it wouldnTt. It was a steady downpour that<lb /><lb />or<lb /><lb />could last all night. Abe swore at the rain and<lb />squeezed the money I had given him. Squeezing<lb />hard as if he thought it would become liquid like<lb />the rain. His forehead was damp. I heard the<lb />bed creak in the other room where Bertha Lee<lb />was. It was a humiliating sound, but I was full<lb />of liquor, and could only laugh at the rain making<lb />a thousand little silver threads on the windows.<lb />Abe had emptied his bottle of cane liquor, and<lb />I wondered how he never got drunk.<lb /><lb />oWhy did you come tonight?� he asked. ~You<lb />saw it would rain.�<lb /><lb />I couldnTt stop the rain or myself. I said it to<lb />myself as if to him. I could almost see his skull<lb />when he lit a match, cupping it close to his mouth.<lb />I slept with her there that night, and from then<lb />on if it rained or not.<lb /><lb />Another night. It was eight oTclock and the Sa-<lb />vannah train came rushing by. It wasnTt quite<lb />dark yet and the light looked strange lighting up<lb />the ties between the tracks that didnTt quite need<lb />lighting up. The tracks were no more than three<lb />hundred feet away, making the roar of the train<lb />deafening for a steady minute. The shack trem-<lb />bled humbly. The train was what made me<lb />nervous like Bertha LeeTs perfume made Abe<lb />nervous. I knew where I was when I heard the<lb />ground stammer and seem to break up. The<lb />train always shook a little sense, and then regret,<lb />into me. I came too damn early; ITll have to wait<lb />for the dark to come.<lb /><lb />oI came early.�<lb /><lb />oIT know what you done. I saw you walking<lb />down Grove Lane yesterday and I wondered<lb />whenTs he coming, but I didnTt look your way,<lb />and we passed, but I knew youTd be coming.�<lb /><lb />oYou were carrying a pail of fish,� I said<lb />laughing.<lb /><lb />oIT feel good when I fish. Right out in the hot<lb />sun for hours; right into the chill of evening;<lb />I still feel good.�<lb /><lb />oThe waterTs your salvation.�<lb /><lb />oT donTt get to plant no more, but I get by. The<lb />waterTs always got something.�<lb /><lb />oYour salvation.�<lb /><lb />His eyes got darker, and they seemed harder.<lb />There are raisins in his eyes, I thought. He looked<lb />the same as the time when the rain came. The<lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0008" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />eyes becoming small like raisins, then liquidy.<lb />His grizzly hair looked setaceous. When I was<lb />little I thought such hair would prick.<lb /><lb />A solemnity came about, a secrecy of sound.<lb />And I stood in the quietness as if everything ITd<lb />ever thought was being used up to make the dark.<lb />It was cinerious outside; not dark yet. It was<lb />like looking at a clock, waiting for the dark to<lb />come.<lb /><lb />Abe got up from his chair, making no noise<lb />at all, as if he didnTt want to disturb the silence.<lb />He got down another bottle of cane liquor from<lb />the cabinets above the sink. He sat down again<lb />and with his eyes half open he began to drink.<lb />He rinsed his mouth with the first gulp, and then<lb />rested the bottle on the floor and got back to his<lb />cigar, wet and shining where his muddy mouth<lb />had been.<lb /><lb />oYour daddyTs letting you run loose now, huh?<lb />I see you all about,� he said in a dead tone.<lb /><lb />oOn my own good time. I put in my work with<lb />him, then ITm through, and he knows it.�<lb /><lb />oYou canTt drive a car now, huh?�<lb /><lb />oT done busted everyone heTs let me use and<lb />then some, but still he wonTt take me off the trac-<lb />tor. He knows I drive hard but I get things done.<lb />I donTt mind breaking in the land, especially in<lb />the spring, when the earth is down hard. ItTs<lb />a satisfaction, plowing in those even furrows.<lb />They always come out even.� : 4<lb /><lb />oT done through with farming; just going to<lb />fish now.�<lb /><lb />I was trying to listen for Bertha Lee, but I<lb />couldnTt hear her. I knew sheTd be wearing her<lb />red skirt. A nigger will always wear something<lb />bright. I always said to myself she was half<lb />white, knowing she was a quadroon at best, yet I<lb />heard my father say she looks like a mulatto,<lb />so I kept telling myself she was, but when I was<lb />drunk I forgot about the whole thing and didnTt<lb />try to divide her up. She was good for what she<lb />was.<lb /><lb />I now sat down on a little stool off in the corner;<lb />I sat looking out at the half light trying to figure<lb />out Abe. Hating him now for making me wait;<lb />wondering why he still had pride in his old age,<lb />and why he held on to his last child so.<lb /><lb />My father said that Abe had been a good farmer.<lb />HeTd first moved into the region eleven years ago.<lb />I was just nine at the time, and I didnTt pay no<lb />attention to Bertha Lee then. She was just six<lb />and looked like any other little nigger girl.<lb /><lb />I heard him that first time talking to Father<lb />about how dedicated he would be in his work,<lb />_" he had nothing but a little child to take care<lb />of.<lb /><lb />oMy wife done left me, and my sons the same<lb />after her. I got me a hoe and I got me a sickle<lb />and I done worked in the fields since I was ten.�<lb /><lb />My father would pick him up every day, and<lb />heTd sit in the back of the truck with Bertha Lee<lb />who he took with him everywhere he went. And<lb />his hounds would jump in after him. And theyTd<lb />bark and carry on in the wind from the truckTs<lb />motion, and Bertha Lee would just look straight<lb />at Abe, trusting in him, HeTd work a good twelve<lb /><lb />hours out in the fields and he did that for ten<lb />years, and then last year he began to drop off<lb />coming to work in his little Ford coupe. He<lb />said that he was getting old and felt the weather<lb />more, but he was out fishing and he would trap<lb />some. I knew this because he taught me how to<lb />set a trap the right way.<lb /><lb />Then one day in the autumn I was passing his<lb />shack. It was early in the morning. The ground<lb />looked dusty from the frost which covered every-<lb />thing. I had my 30/30 rifle with me and was<lb />going up the dirt road toward Grove Lane and<lb />beyond Widows Creek. His shack looked so calm<lb />and dispassionate covered with frost. The sun<lb />was just beginning to reach over one side of the<lb />roof. One of the hounds started barking, then they<lb />all ran up to me and began to dance about my feet,<lb />kicking up the frosted ground. They were beg-<lb />ging to go with me. I was pushing them away<lb />with my legs when Abe stepped out. He walked<lb />up to where I was and told the dogs to move on.<lb />He finally shouted so loud that they cringed back<lb />to the shack and hid under the steps. Abe was<lb />wrapped up in several shirts and a jacket with<lb />a hood that rested loosely on his head. He was<lb />chewing something in his muddy mouth and look-<lb />ing at the ground where the dogs had scratched<lb />it up. He looked bent like the fish in the pail.<lb /><lb />oYouTre up early boy.�<lb /><lb />oHunting calls for that,� I said, putting my<lb />fingers over my lips which felt stiff and dry from<lb />the cold.<lb /><lb />Smoke was beginning to whirl up from the<lb />chimney. Bertha Lee was fixing the fire. I had<lb />come upon her the other evening and eyed her<lb />longer than usual. That was shortly after Father<lb />had said she looked like a mulatto.<lb /><lb />oI got a problem, boy,� he said, wiping his<lb />muddy mouth.<lb /><lb />oT ainTt surprised, you not working and all.�<lb />ee his head a little more, ignoring what ITd<lb />said.<lb /><lb />oI want to kill one of my dogs. SheTs going to<lb />have puppies I reckon and I canTt keep no more.<lb />oy to shoot her, but I canTt.� He glanced at my<lb />rifle.<lb /><lb />oNo shells?�<lb /><lb />oNo, ITm scared to kill her. God might strike<lb />me down.�<lb /><lb />oWant me to kill her?�<lb /><lb />oTl pay you. ITll give you fifty cents a dog.<lb />You can kill them all.�<lb /><lb />I began to laugh inside, but looked hard at<lb />him. oThatTs wholesale murder!�<lb /><lb />oT got to get rid of them but I canTt.�<lb /><lb />Bertha Lee stepped out and threw some scraps<lb />to the dogs. She had on a white robe, but she still<lb />didnTt look black.<lb /><lb />~ oDo you want me to kill them dogs?� I asked<lb />er.<lb /><lb />oTheyTre not mine,� she said indifferently, and<lb />then closed the door behind her.<lb /><lb />oHow old is she now?� I asked looking at the<lb />door where she had appeared.<lb /><lb />oSeventeen. Yes seventeen this past October.�<lb /><lb />oSheTll be going off soon wonTt she?�<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0009" />
        <p>oSomeday I guess. Someday.�<lb /><lb />oShe ainTt bad,� I said; he looked kind of<lb />strangely at me.<lb /><lb />oThem dogs ainTt no good to me, but I done sat<lb />right before them and tried to shoot them but I<lb />couldnTt. Tied them up to a tree, but I couldnTt.�<lb />He spat on the ground. Abe hardly had any teeth<lb />and had no force behind his spitting. Part of it<lb />trickled down his sharp, unkempt chin. His lips<lb />fell back together. HeTd been chewing a cigar tip.<lb />The little pieces of tobacco slid from his muddy<lb />mouth every so often.<lb /><lb />oYou donTt think God can strike me?�<lb /><lb />oTTll pay you, I says ITll pay you.�<lb /><lb />oThis rifleTs too powerful. It'll splatter your<lb />whole yard with their blood.�<lb /><lb />oI got the .22 I was going to use all loaded up.�<lb /><lb />oGod ainTt going to bother with me,� I said<lb />under my breath. oTie them to a tree. Tll get<lb />the 22.7<lb /><lb />He ran toward the house calling the dogs, but<lb />they sensed something and wouldnTt come out from<lb />under the steps.<lb /><lb />Inside the shack Bertha Lee was standing over<lb />the wood stove; she turned around with her hands<lb />on her hips. Then she waved her right hand in<lb />front of her eyes as if she couldnTt see too well,<lb />or as if there was a fly buzzing around her. I<lb />grabbed the hand as if it were a weapon. It was<lb />soft. I didnTt think it would be. It was soft like<lb />a girlTs hand should be soft. I turned it over; the<lb />palms were pink; her fingertips were smoky<lb />buds. I noticed when I glanced up that her eyes<lb />were large with wonderment; jet-black, glassy<lb />fixities.<lb /><lb />oNo fellow ever touched your hand before?�<lb />I asked slyly.<lb /><lb />She said nothing; just stared steadfastly at me.<lb /><lb />oITm going to kill them dogs. Kill them all, just<lb />for you. Look at your pa trying to round them<lb />up.� I led her to the window. oSee him on his<lb />knees a-calling them, pleading with them. But<lb />they ainTt to be deceived so quickly.�<lb /><lb />She didnTt say nothing, just stared blankly out<lb />the window. Her hand felt like it had turned to<lb />wood.<lb /><lb />oYouTre like the Petrified Forest,� I said laugh-<lb />ing.<lb />oLike the Petrified Forest?� She spoke in a<lb />spirited way.<lb /><lb />oThatTs right.�<lb /><lb />oWhere are they at?�<lb /><lb />oSomeday I might show you.�<lb /><lb />Abe was shouting fiercely at the dogs. Finally<lb />he got a rope from his car and began pulling<lb />them out one at a time.<lb /><lb />oThereTs a resolute man,� I said letting go of<lb />her hand, which had made mine warm and wet.<lb />Her hand was just as dry and cool as ever.<lb />oWhereTs the .22?�<lb /><lb />She went into the bedroom with me right behind<lb />her. Her body seemed to sway like the tops of<lb />cane stalks. It was lithe, a figure in my mind of<lb />early summer. She pointed to the wall over a<lb />small bed. The .22 lay on top of two nails. I<lb />went to the other bed. oThis hereTs yours, ainTt<lb /><lb />it?� I began to pat it with my hand. She nodded<lb />her head very slowly, as if she should be cautions<lb />at the question. oYou got the big bed and heTs got<lb />the small one.�<lb /><lb />oHe donTt sleep well. He mostly sits up all<lb />night.�<lb /><lb />oDo you like to sleep in the dark all alone?�<lb /><lb />oNo. Why?�<lb /><lb />oWell ITll tell you...�<lb /><lb />Abe shouted from outside, oTheyTre tied up,<lb />boy. I got them all tied up.�<lb /><lb />I grabbed the .22 and then turned to Bertha<lb />Lee and sounded the words at her softly, as if<lb />they were adhesive, a joining declaration, a sub-<lb />mission and a contiguity of all past quests, yet<lb />the words sounded hollow and foreign to my ears,<lb />as if they were being forced from a dream.<lb /><lb />oThis time, this recognition, I canTt let by. You<lb />wait here tonight and if my mind sees you as<lb />I see you now, ITll be calling.�<lb /><lb />Then breaking that voice embedded in despera-<lb />tion, I cracked with a burn of mortification, oRe-<lb />member, ITm killing them dogs for you. You donTt<lb />just clutter up space, making other people act,<lb />you act too.�<lb /><lb />She didnTt say anything, but stood there like<lb />some goddess of light. But she was black. I left<lb />burning with the neglect of my warm words.<lb /><lb />Abe was looking mournfully at the tree. oI<lb />had them like that yesterday. All bunched up<lb />like that.� He turned his head away when I took<lb />aim.<lb /><lb />oYou thinking God might make you an acces-<lb />sory?� He didnTt reply, just kept his head turned.<lb />oITm killing them dogs for her, and she knows it.�<lb /><lb />With each shot I said it. It seemed I could hear<lb />the thud of the shot wedge into the dogTs body, and<lb />with each shot it felt like I could hear more. Fin-<lb />ally with the last one, I sensed the bullet spinning<lb />its way, then the thud, and the spattering of blood<lb />around the wound. The dog making one quick<lb />yelp (that was real) and the copper bullet enter-<lb />ing, and then submerged, in the pulsing, then<lb />quaking and finally roiling, blood.<lb /><lb />A kind of madness went through my mind. He<lb />started to hand me the two dollars, which had<lb />been crumpled in his dirty jeans, but I pushed<lb />it away.<lb /><lb />oT said I done it for her and she knows it and<lb />now you know it.� I felt like a commander, an<lb />embattled commander, after killing them dogs.<lb />oAnd God wonTt spare you less you fall clear of<lb />this KILLING!T<lb /><lb />He fell back a bit, moving toward the shack,<lb />feeling his way with his hands as if it were<lb />dark; with his eyes, upturned white arcs, staring<lb />at me. White liquid, white hot with incompre-<lb />hension. He dangled in front of me like a broken<lb />twig. He was shaking and trying to say what<lb />he felt, but he just kept shaking and I knew he<lb />understood. o<lb /><lb />And thatTs how it happened. ITve been giving<lb />him the same amount as he offered for the dogs,<lb />every time I come. ITve done it every time but<lb />the very first, for thatTs when he paid me for<lb />killing the dogs. ThatTs how he paid.<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0010" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />A CHAPTER FROM THE NOVEL<lb />VIRTUE IN FOUR POSITIONS<lb /><lb />by<lb /><lb />ANTONI GRONOWICZ<lb /><lb />THE GOLDHEAD<lb /><lb />Supreme Court: Franklin Kapistrot, plaintiff,<lb />against The Coast to Coast Railroad Company,<lb />William S. De Jager and Bartholomew A. Leach,<lb />defendants.<lb /><lb />Examination by the defendant, The Coast to<lb />Coast Railroad Company, of the plaintiff before<lb />trial took place at the offices of Rollon, Casevant,<lb />Small &amp; Abdoller pursuant to oral stipulation.<lb />Gilbert L. Lasher appeared as attorney for plain-<lb />tiff. Rollon, Casevant, Small &amp; Abdoller were at-<lb />torneys for defendant The Coast to Coast Rail-<lb />road Company, represented by Carroll A. Layton,<lb />Esq. and Augustine 8. Neely, Esq. of counsel.<lb /><lb />The participants confirmed: oIt is hereby stipu-<lb />lated and agreed by and between the attorneys<lb />for the respective parties hereto that filing of the<lb />within examination before trial be and the same<lb />is hereby waived, and the attorney for the plain-<lb />tiff shall be furnished with a copy thereof without<lb />charge; it is further stipulated and agreed that<lb />the witness may be sworn at the taking of his<lb />examination before trial by any Notary Public of<lb />the State; and that the witness may read, sign<lb />and swear to this testimony when the same is<lb />transcribed before any Notary Public of the<lb />State; it is further stipulated and agreed that<lb />all objections, except as to the form of questions,<lb />be and the same are hereby reserved to the trial<lb />of the action.<lb /><lb />Franklin Kapistrot, the plaintiff, after having<lb />first been duly sworn, was asked by Mr. Layton:<lb /><lb />oMay we have your full name, please.�<lb /><lb />oFranklin Kapistrot.�<lb /><lb />oWhere do you live, Mr. Kapistrot?�<lb /><lb />o13 Ulmus Street, New Pecunia.�<lb /><lb />oWhat is your occupation, sir?�<lb /><lb />oResearcher.�<lb /><lb />oDo you know the defendant, William S. De<lb />Jager?�<lb /><lb />"Yes. 1° ao"<lb /><lb />oCould you tell us when you first met him?�<lb /><lb />oOn his train.�<lb /><lb />oWhere did you first meet Bartholomew A.<lb />Leach?�<lb /><lb />oIn his office.�<lb /><lb />oIn Oldtown?�<lb /><lb />as Vag<lb /><lb />oAs I understand it, Mr. De Jager and Mr.<lb />Leach said to you that the railroad was interested<lb />in engaging you to write a book about Mr. De<lb />Jager and the CCRR?�<lb /><lb />oYes; also in financing the book and me.�<lb /><lb />oDid you make a promise to them at that time<lb />that you would write the book?�<lb /><lb />oYes; I agreed to write the book, because Mr.<lb />De Jager, Mrs. De Jager and Mr. Leach solemnly<lb />promised me that if I would write a book accept-<lb />able to them, they would not only buy one hundred<lb />thousand copies, but also would put me on a<lb />salary for two years at two thousand dollars per<lb />month, grant me a white railroad pass plus all<lb />expenses, and make me a wealthy man.�<lb /><lb />oMr. Layton,� interrupted Gilbert Lasher, the<lb />short pleasant-mannered attorney for the plain-<lb />tiff, oI do not want to object to anything, but the<lb />contract, of course, speaks for itself.�<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0011" />
        <p>oNaturally, but I thought we might identify<lb />it. Do you have the original contract, Mr. Lash-<lb />er?�<lb /><lb />oYes, I have the original.�<lb /><lb />oYou do not want to identify it today?�<lb /><lb />oDo you wish it?�<lb /><lb />oTf you have it with you, why donTt we?�<lb /><lb />oAll right.T�T He passed the papers to LaytonTs<lb />well-manicured hands.<lb /><lb />oMr. Kapistrot, is this the contract that you<lb />and Mr. Leach and Mr. De Jager executed?�<lb /><lb />oYes, Mr. Layton.�<lb /><lb />oMr. Kapistrot, did you deliver the outline and<lb />two chapters of the book Willie the Whistle per-<lb />sonally to Mr. and Mrs. De Jager and to Mr.<lb />Leach?�<lb /><lb />oVes 1dia;:T<lb /><lb />oCan you tell what then transpired?�<lb /><lb />oMr. Leach, as a vice president of the CCRR<lb />Public Relations Department, sent this memo to<lb />Mr. De Jager and to the directors of the railroad,<lb />~Today Mr. Kapistrot submitted two chapters and<lb />an outline for the book Willie the Whistle. This<lb />is a most magnificent piece of writing, and I<lb />think it will be a great book.T �<lb /><lb />oWhen did you next submit any material of the<lb />book to the railroad, Mr. Kapistrot?�<lb /><lb />oT think it was in December or January, be-<lb />cause Mr. and Mrs. De Jager and Bart Leach gave<lb />me a few other assignments besides the writing<lb />of Willie the Whistle.<lb /><lb />oWhat other assignments did they give you?�<lb /><lb />oA number of social assignments"entertaining<lb />Mrs. De Jager and her daughter Tessa; mixing<lb />with important people and reporting to Mr. De<lb />Jager what they said about him; evaluating a<lb />novel, Brothers in Stalingrad, written by William<lb />Wattson, the fiance of Tessa De Jager; and pre-<lb />paring stories and articles about Mr. De Jager<lb />for the American and Canadian press. Here is a<lb />note from Bart Leach: ~Dear Mr. Kapistrot, thank<lb />you very much for the piece about Willie the<lb />Whistle for the Detroit Free Press. Great! I<lb />have sent it along today.T �<lb /><lb />Mr. Lasher held a cigar in his left hand and<lb />the paper in his right. oDo you want to see it?�<lb /><lb />oYes, if you please.T�T Lasher handed the paper<lb />to Mr. Layton, who asked Kapistrot, oDid Mr.<lb />or Mrs. De Jager ever express dissatisfaction to<lb />you with any of your work?�<lb /><lb />oNo. As a matter of fact, they praised me all<lb /><lb />MS area:<lb />oHe did not ask you that,� said Gilb Lasher.<lb /><lb />oWill you please, Franklin, answer the questions.�<lb />oAll right.�<lb />oAnswer the questions, Frank. I want to get<lb />out before seven oTclock tonight; no stories,<lb /><lb />please,� Lasher repeated.<lb /><lb />oDid you thereafter finish the book Willie the<lb />Whistle, Mr. Kapistrot?�<lb /><lb />Veg?�<lb /><lb />oDo you have the completed book with you?�<lb /><lb />oThe original is with De Jager, the two copies<lb />are with the publisher. I have only my handwrit-<lb />ten draft.�<lb /><lb />oMr. Kapistrot, can you tell us the role that<lb /><lb />Mrs. De Jager was going to play in this book?�<lb /><lb />oThe book was supposed to be about both Mr.<lb />and Mrs. De Jager and about the railroad.�<lb /><lb />oWas she to play a major role or a minor role<lb />in the book?�<lb /><lb />oShe played the role of the presidentTs wife,<lb />plus some extras... and she asked me to dedicate<lb />the book to her daughter Tessa.�<lb /><lb />oDid you ever discuss with the publisher the<lb />price at which your book was to be sold to the<lb />public?�<lb /><lb />oYes; six dollars per copy.�<lb /><lb />oDid anyone besides Mr. De Jager, Mrs. De<lb />Jager, and Mr. Leach on behalf of the railroad<lb />speak to you about purchasing copies of your<lb />book?�<lb /><lb />oYes, many people. Roach, Berryman, Cole-<lb />grove, Mellon, Puppett, even Amelia Leach and<lb />four directors. They promised to buy about two<lb />hundred and fifty thousand copies more; and Mrs.<lb />De Jager said, ~WeTll do everything possible to<lb />satisfy you.T �<lb /><lb />oT do not think,� interrupted Gilbert Lasher,<lb />oyou ought to go into these personal things.�<lb /><lb />oWhat did these others say to you?� asked<lb />Caroll Layton, with shrewdness in his black eyes.<lb /><lb />oThey clearly intimated that if I wrote plenty<lb />of pages about them, they too would help to see<lb />that I was well off.�<lb /><lb />oAm I correct, Mr. Kapistrot, that all the<lb />promises you have stated were merely to buy<lb />copies of your book?�<lb /><lb />oTwo hundred and fifty thousand copies, aug-<lb />mented by a hundred thousand, would mean a<lb />tidy bundle of cash for me.�<lb /><lb />oT will object to the form of the question,�<lb />said the attorney for the plaintiff, playing with<lb />a fresh cigar.<lb /><lb />oMr. Lasher, all objections are reserved for<lb />the trial.�<lb /><lb />oAll right.�<lb /><lb />oMr. Kapistrot, how much money did you earn<lb />last year?�<lb /><lb />oIt is not your business, Mr. Layton.�<lb /><lb />oAll right, I will not pursue it.�<lb /><lb />Mr. Layton conferred with his colleague Augus-<lb />tine Neely and asked a new question, oMr. Leach<lb />agreed that the CCRR was going to buy one hun-<lb />dred thousand copies of Willie the Whistle for<lb />his Public Relations Department; is that what<lb />you want us to understand?�<lb /><lb />oCanTt you read?�<lb /><lb />oView.<lb /><lb />oHereTs a letter from Mr. Leach.�<lb /><lb />oT see. Is it not true that in your publishing<lb />agreement your manuscript had to be satisfactory<lb />to the railroad, too, as well?�<lb /><lb />oYes. It was satisfactory to the railroad and<lb />to the publisher, Here are two more letters.�<lb /><lb />~SA. 1. Bee,�<lb /><lb />At that moment Augustine Neely, a fleshy man<lb />of about fifty-five, stepped into the questioning.<lb />oBy the way, I do not think this contract between<lb />yourself and your publisher undertakes to specify<lb />the amount of your royalty. Am I correct in<lb /><lb />that?�<lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0012" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />oYes, the first page, Mr. Neely.�<lb /><lb />oOh, yes.�<lb /><lb />oThis has nothing to do with the CCRR and<lb />the De JagerTs commitments. This is extra.�<lb /><lb />oT see; I will withdraw that question. I think<lb />you told us when you first met with Mr. Leach<lb />and he discussed the arrangements he would make<lb />with you, he told you that you would have to<lb />get a publisher, did he not?�<lb /><lb />Vou<lb /><lb />oYou knew that the CCRR was not in the pub-<lb />lishing business.�<lb /><lb />oYes, the CCRR is connected with everything<lb />"hbanks, oil, steel, glass, and social work"but<lb />not the publishing business.�<lb /><lb />oWas it your understanding that there was an<lb />agreement between the CCRR and the publisher ?�T<lb /><lb />ae Ad<lb /><lb />oWith respect to this book, Willie the Whistle?�<lb /><lb />oy on<lb /><lb />oAll right, I do not think I have anything more.�<lb /><lb />oAll right,� said his partner Caroll Layton.<lb />oDo you have anything, Mr. Lasher?�<lb /><lb />wren. 7.<lb /><lb />oMr. Kapistrot,� said roly-poly Augustine, lift-<lb />ing his two hundred pounds. oMay I have a few<lb />words with you in private, off the record?�<lb /><lb />oYes, why not?�<lb /><lb />oWe canTt have two books on the same subject,<lb />Mr. Kapistrot.�<lb /><lb />oWhat do you mean?�<lb /><lb />oTt is only fair, I think, to tell you that Mr. and<lb />Mrs. De Jager have given the assignment to<lb />Jack Small, Junior"as to why, I donTt know that<lb />myself.�<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />oOh, thatTs the reason?�<lb /><lb />oAnd you'll lose the case.�<lb /><lb />oWhy?�<lb /><lb />oSimple: they have money, plenty of money,<lb />over four billion dollars. They have power, tre-<lb />mendous power here in the city, in the capital, in<lb />the whole country.�<lb /><lb />oMr. Neely, help me.�<lb /><lb />oIT? What can I do? Nothing.�<lb /><lb />oBut they cheated me!T<lb /><lb />oSir, they cheated you; they cheat their friends;<lb />they cheat the whole nation; they cheat their<lb />wives and husbands; they cheat even themselves.�<lb /><lb />oWhat can be done?�<lb /><lb />oNothing.�<lb /><lb />oNothing?�<lb /><lb />oThey can afford to cheat.�<lb /><lb />oWhy?�<lb /><lb />oBecause theyTre fifthy rich. TheyTre builders<lb />of America, they say.�<lb /><lb />oWhy donTt you tell the country, the world,<lb />about their fraud?�<lb /><lb />oMe?TT<lb /><lb />oYes, you, you! YouTre an important member<lb />of their society and you have all the facts and<lb />figures about them.�<lb /><lb />oBut, I also have eight children. TheyTll put<lb />me and my children on the blacklist for life. WeTd<lb />get no jobs above a clerkTs position, and even that<lb />is questionable.�<lb /><lb />oPerhaps itTs better to be a clerk.�<lb /><lb />oThey'll assassinate me.�<lb /><lb />~oWhereTs the police, the law of the country?�<lb /><lb />oSir, the police and the law are on the right<lb />side, on their side.�<lb /><lb />BLACKBERRIES AND CREDIT<lb /><lb />by<lb /><lb />DWIGHT PEARCE<lb /><lb />We can live on blackberries and credit<lb />while social memories crowd backwards<lb />through peoples who were joined as one<lb />before the altar of monnaie.<lb />There comes a time and times<lb />when blackberries are gone<lb />and credit becomes old stuff<lb />and we choose briars.<lb />What we can and will do escapes the stain<lb />and we grow down, slowly down<lb />before nada and nada vines.<lb />Play the sweet sounds<lb />loud and louder<lb />until the juke stops<lb />and blackberries brown and fade<lb />and the watered credit laughs.<lb /><lb />10<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0013" />
        <p>ON SARTRETS LITERARY AND PHILOSOPHICAL<lb />ESSAYS<lb /><lb />by<lb /><lb />JOHN CLEMENT<lb /><lb />The original oman of a thousand faces� is Jean-<lb />Paul Sartre, and nowhere is this fact more obvious<lb />than in this rich collection of essays. The thou-<lb />sand unsuspected facets of the writer who has<lb />become the prototype of the modern philosopher-<lb />existentialist are all exposed to the light: Sartre<lb />as novelist, critic and philosopher; Sartre, as a<lb />writer, on other writers; Sartre as tourist and<lb />philosopher, exploring the values (to him) of<lb />foreign lands, and Sartre as logician and semanti-<lb />cist, probing the depths of the Hegelian-Marxist<lb />ethic. But always and principally it is Sartre the<lb />existentialist, exploring the significance of actions<lb />and words, studying the lives of his fellow men<lb />and looking for the meaning of existence with in-<lb />sight and erudition.<lb /><lb />One may at first be surprised at the thought of<lb />Sartre as an essayist, but the novelist-playwright<lb />seems to be at his best here. Whether this is due<lb />to his considerable skill as a writer, which makes<lb />him seem to belong to whatever style he writes<lb />in, or because, as William Barrett says of him, he<lb />is o... an idea man, an intellectual first. . se who<lb />makes his writings burn and crackle by mixing<lb />in just the right amounts of philosophy and litera-<lb />ture, is left for the reader to decide. In any case,<lb />however, one point is clear: Sartre the essayist<lb />writes powerfully and appealingly, and it is with<lb />some incredulity that the reader will find that<lb />the essays were all written circa 1950. Even the<lb />writerTs choice of subjects is in the main amazing-<lb />ly modern: there are essays on conformity in<lb />America, on the conflict of Marxism and prosperi-<lb />ty in modern Europe, on the morals of writers"<lb />an entire universe of those topics which one will<lb />hear today and tomorrow being discussed in<lb />literary circles. :<lb /><lb />For the dilettante not wishing to embroil him-<lb />self in the complexities of Marxist methodology<lb />or the novels of Dos Passos or Faulkner, the most<lb />interesting sections are the three essays on Ameri-<lb />ca, and of these the most penetrating by far is<lb />the one on conformity and individualism. In<lb />the land of free enterprise and rugged noncon-<lb />formity, says Sartre, individualism o. . . implies<lb />conformism. It represents, however, a new direc-<lb />tion, both in height and depth, within conform-<lb />ism.� The people of America show to an outsider<lb /><lb />11<lb /><lb />a fascinating array of types, the individuals<lb />standing out in terms of an already abandoned<lb />but still used Puritan ethic, the masses outstand-<lb />ing in their uniformity. Much like the skyline<lb />of New York, the many skyscrapers of individuali-<lb />ty only point up their similarity.<lb /><lb />SartreTs point of view is not always critical;<lb />the sharpness of his writing is mellowed by ad-<lb />miration for the feeling of raw power in most<lb />of the great cities and constructions of the U. 8.<lb />Indeed, in some sections of these three essays he<lb />becomes almost whimsical in his fond contempla-<lb />tion of American energy, while perhaps sitting<lb />back a little and chuckling under his breath.<lb /><lb />But elsewhere Sartre is back as of old, and the<lb />acid is at its full strength. In an incisive critique<lb />of Brice ParainTs Investigations into the Nature<lb />and Function of Language, for example, one can<lb />fairly feel the paper crackle. Parain is one who<lb />has touched the extremes of surrealism, and as<lb />one semanticist to another, Sartre condemns him<lb />both for having gone too far out and for not hav-<lb />ing gone far enough. Harking back to Descartes,<lb />Sartre uses the cogito as a powerful weapon to<lb />support the priority of self-understanding over<lb />language, and from here to base all language on<lb />self-understanding. Where Parain sees only the<lb />confusion of a medley of different individuals<lb />using a tool they cannot comprehend to convey<lb />meanings that are not theirs, Sartre sees a striv-<lb />ing toward order as each individual accumulates<lb />knowledge and proceeds toward a better under-<lb />standing of his fellow man, a process which makes<lb />communication easier and leads to more knowl-<lb />edge and more understanding, the whole culminat-<lb />ing in that realization of oneTs true position, which<lb />constitutes existential freedom.<lb /><lb />There are other riches in the book, also: a dis-<lb />cussion on the semantics of surrealistic writing, a<lb />redefinition of freedom from a Cartesian point of<lb />view, an existentialistTs view of Aristotle, and<lb />more. Atop it all is the pure joy of matching<lb />wits with a mind of the first order, of leading, and<lb />being led by, a master in the subtle art of living<lb />and seeing. Death can remove the mind that<lb />wrote, but it cannot touch the immortal joy of<lb />living that may be sampled in these few pages.<lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0014" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />COMA<lb /><lb />by<lb /><lb />CHARLOTTE McMICHAEL<lb /><lb />12<lb /><lb />|<lb />The ceiling rides<lb />with engravings.<lb />I cannot sleep.<lb />[ am rushed paper-weight up<lb />with the moon taking its share<lb />of reflections<lb />from off white glass<lb />near my bed.<lb />The moon sighs<lb />taller and taller<lb />with metallic threads<lb />ribbing outlines<lb />spared and fine over me.<lb /><lb />II<lb />I find up there<lb />a star and tree design,<lb />one encased ship,<lb />a bead and wool wreath<lb />all formed opaque<lb />from off the gilded reflector.<lb />[ ride still taller.<lb />A dolphin rides;<lb />and still taller,<lb />a powdering tub<lb />spilling over me<lb />ground cedar bark.<lb /><lb />III<lb />I see my mother<lb />carrying a bread tray,<lb />for my sickness was then a fever,<lb />and her cool hand,<lb />churned by yeast,<lb />takes my burden away;<lb />but wooden spoons turn me<lb />back when I remember her gone.<lb />I cannot sleep.<lb /><lb />IV<lb />Her death left no mahogany<lb />list of woods or wooden ware<lb />and with her gone,<lb />I turn in bed<lb />and find her pained with plan<lb />the time we fed the winter birds<lb />outside our kitchen window;<lb />snow flaked our paned dimension<lb />till we touched another time.<lb />My mother wrapped her aproned<lb />arms secure around that young day<lb />and me and rocked my laughter<lb />past a faceted knob<lb />that opens no door.<lb /><lb />V<lb />And still taller and taller<lb />[ fall.<lb />Moonlight blows out<lb />my flown motif<lb />and my slender pea<lb />plays a womanTs profile on a plate,<lb />etched honored and sad;<lb />my mother made a mood,<lb />a silksurfaced dream,<lb />and made a moonstone<lb />lie heavy on my sleep.<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0015" />
        <p>
          <lb />
        </p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0016" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
        </p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0017" />
        <p>9 »§ """<lb /><lb />"<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />eS<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />Horace Farlowe: Born, Robbins, N. C., 1983. Studied, North Carolina<lb />State College, 1957-1960, with George Bireline, Joe Cox, and Roy Gussow;<lb />Atlantic Christian College, 1960-1962, with Russell Arnold, B.S.; East<lb />Carolina College, 1963-1964, M.A. N. C. Museum of Art, 1963 Purchase<lb />Award. Recent one-man show, Garden Gallery, Raleigh.<lb /><lb />15<lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0018" />
        <p>16<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0019" />
        <p>" ""<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />Horace FarloweTs studio at Raleigh is only a knightTs move from the<lb />North Carolina Museum of Art (looking out the doorway, Knight to<lb />King Bishop three).<lb /><lb />T Loitering around the King Bishop three square, around the eminently<lb />rectangular factory building on it, of brick, with the tall, arched windows<lb />which date it before the turn of the century, one notices that the general<lb />tone of the place " second hand washing machines in the adjacent lot,<lb />boarded up cellar windows "is something seen before associated with<lb />young artists. One has made an appointment with Horace, of course, and<lb />presently he arrives and unlocks a side door labeled 20014. Turn right, up<lb />old gray stairs lit at the top by window light diagonally suspended in<lb />dust; turn left at the top and look down a long high corridor into a rich<lb />dark, occasionally relieved by various warm reflections of daylight. Follow<lb />Horace down the corridor; half-way, he unlocks his studio door; turn left<lb />into a large whitewashed room and southern light, admitted under a<lb />twenty foot ceiling by four of the tall, arched windows. From the ceiling<lb />hangs a piece of living room sculpture which Horace-says he made when<lb />he once ran out of paint. On the wall adjacent to the light is an eight foot<lb />square wall easel. Then the paintings.<lb /><lb />17<lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0020" />
        <p>
          <lb />
        </p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0021" />
        <p>se we E<lb /><lb />=<lb /><lb />a et ee<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />19<lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0022" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />Life is an experience of man in search of himself. And the life of the<lb />artist should not be of only giving through his creations but should really<lb />be one of receiving or better understanding himself through the act of<lb />creating. For art is not a profession that can be put aside with the blowing<lb />of the 3 oTclock whistle, but it is a way of living centered around truth, or<lb />rather, truth to oneTs self. And so if the artist is to compromise, let it<lb />be on matters extraneous to art; for to compromise in art is to lie with<lb /><lb />the hope that you will not find yourself out.<lb />"HORACE FARLOWE<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />20<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0023" />
        <p>THREE O°CLOCK<lb /><lb />by<lb /><lb />ALBERT PERTALION<lb /><lb />oIn the dimly lit regions of the soul,<lb />itTs always three oTclock in the morning.�<lb /><lb />I think Fitzgerald said that. I donTt know for<lb />sure; or if he did say it that those are his exact<lb />words. I do know that I like three oTclocks in the<lb />morning, and I miss them sorely since moving to<lb />Baton Rouge. You see, some towns have no three<lb />A.M.Ts; that is, no place, assuming you have the<lb />right attitude yourself, where you can count on<lb />finding the sometimes sad, oftimes talkly and<lb />drowzily numb aura that is three oTclock before<lb />daybreak. Baton Rouge is such a town. Oh, there<lb />are cafes and eateries that stay open all night, and<lb />even two Krispy-Kreme doughnut stands, but<lb />these places never approach the feeling. Not the<lb />feeling ITm thinking of now. Not the one I<lb />associate with Foster McTaggart.<lb /><lb />For all I know, the real three oTclock in the<lb />morning might not stay at any place permanently.<lb />Maybe it slips into an unsuspecting beanery like<lb />SandburgTs cat-footed fog, and just as quietly slips<lb />away. I donTt know. I just know I like it, or its<lb />offsprings: good talk, stories that would die if ex-<lb />posed to ultra-violet rays, the sad hillbilly juke-<lb />box music that the just-jilted waitresses always<lb />play, and a drippy compassionate feeling for man-<lb />kind that you can sometimes acquire. But espe-<lb />cially the stories.<lb /><lb />Before I came to Baton Rouge and the Univer-<lb />sity, I lived in Hammond, and took classes at the<lb />small college located there. Hammond is a little<lb />town situated somewhere below the instep in the<lb />boot that is Louisiana; and, in a better time than<lb />when ITm writing, was known as the strawberry<lb />capital of the world. During the picking and ship-<lb />ping season (beginning late in March and lasting<lb />through mid-May), hundreds of big company ber-<lb />ry buyers with their straw hats and long Havanna<lb />cigars would step off the Illinois CentralTs crack<lb />Panama Limited and move into HammondTs Casa<lb />de Fresa Hotel.<lb /><lb />When buying strawberries didnTt keep these<lb />fun-loving, money-spending men up half the<lb />night, the local poker games did; and the need<lb />arose for a place to drink coffee, eat breakfast,<lb />sober up, and exchange lies about the dayTs bid-<lb />ding"for strawberries, cards, and the robust,<lb /><lb />comfortably phlegmatic daughters of the Italian<lb />berry farmers. The Casa de Fresa didnTt have a<lb />restaurant then, so the Hammond Cafe, one of<lb />those cavernous old restaurants that populate<lb />small southern towns, started the practice of stay-<lb />ing open all night during the berry season.<lb /><lb />The berry season was a grand time of the year.<lb />The bunting-hanging, queen-picking, street-parad-<lb />ing season. For the Casa de Fresa"the house of<lb />berries"Hotel, and the Hammond Cafe, and every<lb />other commercial establishment in town, March,<lb />April, and May were as much a banner season to<lb />Hammond as the winter months are to the hostel-<lb />eries and restaurants of Miami Beach. In those<lb />good times, there were probably no dimly lit three<lb />oTclock regions in Hammond, but the potential was<lb />present.<lb /><lb />Then the depression and the thirties came to<lb />Hammond as surely as they came to the rest of the<lb />country ; few people in Podunk, Kansas, could af-<lb />ford strawberry ice cream, and molasses was<lb />cheaper for biscuits than strawberry preserves.<lb />The farmers formed syndicates and co-operatives<lb />and the big companies ordered"if at all"berries<lb />by wire. And if a yellow telegram was less color-<lb />ful than a bandana-bearing, brow-wiping berry<lb />buyer, it was also less expensive, and cutting costs<lb />was an essence of the thirties. Sometimes the<lb />buyers would come to Hammond anyway, but<lb />when they stepped off the tracks they had hitch-<lb />hiked in on, they found that WPA checks didnTt<lb />cut as wide a swath as big-company expense ac-<lb />counts. The House of Berries didnTt realize any<lb />business from these infrequent visitations, but the<lb />Hammond Cafe saw them all. The middle-of-the-<lb />night eggs with steak breakfasts of the past gave<lb />way to half cups of coffee, ordered with grimy-<lb />shirted sophistication and accompanied by the<lb />blase confession that the drinker had just lost a<lb />thousand dollars in a poker game that had lasted<lb />for two days. Thus was the foundation laid for an<lb />edifice that could almost be depended on to exude"<lb />for at least three months of the year"the atmos-<lb />phere that, wanting the proper eloquence, I call<lb />the three oTclock in the morning feeling.<lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0024" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />The Hammond Cafe that I haunted in 1958<lb />wasnTt the one that knew the elation of the twen-<lb />ties and the depression of the thirties; it was<lb />never even partially full during the late hours<lb />when the cafe stayed open all night. The manage-<lb />ment must have lost money in March, April, and<lb />May; but tradition dies slowly in Hammond, and<lb />the place still remained open all night during the<lb />picking season as if expecting a hoard of long lost<lb />berry buyers to walk in any minute. The big<lb />empty cafe made a good place to study, and I used<lb />to sit in back at a table from about two till five<lb />A.M., when ITd go back to the dorm to shower for<lb />breakfast and classes. I usually slept in the after-<lb />noon. If I didnTt feel like studying, there was<lb />usually one or two truck drivers who were good<lb />for stories, or some students would come into the<lb />cafe and start a conversation. There must have<lb />been some congenital malignancy handed down<lb />from the lies and stories of the old berry buyers,<lb />because the talks that that lonesome hour and old<lb />restaurant spawned seemed (like all malignan-<lb />cies) more interesting than ordinary conversat-<lb />ions at the college coffee shop.<lb /><lb />One night I was just sitting"trying to get into<lb />some Latin I had to translate"and listening to<lb />the juke box, when Foster McTaggart came in.<lb />Foster was something of a hypersensitive misfit<lb />from my home town. Well, not exactly a misfit,<lb />but he was usually bothered by any particular<lb />status quo. We had been friends for years; not<lb />really close friends, but we could always sit down<lb />and talk to each other. I hadnTt seen too much of<lb />Foster since the Christmas holidays when we had<lb />gone duck hunting together. The trip had be-<lb />come involved, and wasnTt too successful.<lb /><lb />Before the hunt, I had to take Foster over to<lb />the local skeet club so I could explain the twelve-<lb />guage pump that I was lending him. He knew<lb />nothing about shotguns, although he had been in<lb />the service for three years. To my embarrass-<lb />ment and the delight of the other club members,<lb />he did most of the things that I told him were<lb />wrong and still managed to beat my score the last<lb />three sets we fired. Maybe he was something of a<lb />natural shot if he hadnTt picked it up in the Ma-<lb />rine Corps; who knows. I knew matters would be<lb />different with live ducks. They were.<lb /><lb />Our first morning out"after what seemed like<lb />the longest and gaudiest Louisiana sunrise ITve<lb />ever had to sit through in a duck blind"we didnTt<lb />see a single duck; we didnTt see a feather. I<lb />couldnTt have been more disappointed; Foster<lb />couldnTt have been more elated. He said he hadnTt<lb />any idea that sunup in the marshes could be so<lb />beautiful. I hadnTt any such idea either, and still<lb />donTt. We moved the blind the second day, and<lb />things started looking up. A pair of baldpates<lb />passed over the decoys, circled, set their wings,<lb />and glided in to a spot about thirty feet in front<lb />of us. I modestly noted that the blind was in<lb />perfect position. Foster was mesmerized. He<lb />had that sunup watching look in his eyes. I<lb />snapped my fingers to spook the birds up and<lb />knocked down the hen when she was about ten<lb />feet off the water.<lb /><lb />22<lb /><lb />oWhy didnTt you get the drake, Foster? It was<lb />an easy shot.�<lb /><lb />Foster didnTt say anything. He was watching<lb />the male baldpate. The startled duck had flown<lb />in a long circle and was about to come back"for<lb />the hen I suppose. A mallard would have flown<lb />straight away, but this pattern was not unusual<lb />for baldpates. I knew the drake would never land<lb />again, and when he made a low pass over the de-<lb />coys and his mate floating belly up in the water,<lb />I cut him down with the remaining barrel of my<lb />over and under. The one-ounce load of shot my<lb />twenty-gauge carried was too light to kill the<lb />bird at that distance, and after he fell, he started<lb />swimming away through the marsh.<lb /><lb />oDammit, Foster, ITm empty; will you kill that<lb />duck?�<lb /><lb />He just looked at me. For a brief second, I do<lb />believe Foster considered shooting me instead of<lb />the duck.<lb /><lb />oYou canTt just let him suffer.� Somehow this<lb />statement didnTt seem appropriate, but I knew it<lb />would get some action. oAt least put him out of<lb />his misery.�<lb /><lb />Foster finally brought the gun to his shoulder<lb />and fired. The shot knocked the swimming duck<lb />over, but he righted himself and kept swimming.<lb />One of his wings was broken and it caused him to<lb />move in a circle, but he fought desperately to<lb />widen the arc and still escape. Foster had to<lb />pump the mechanism of the shotgun twice and<lb />fire three times before the duck lay still. By the<lb />third shot, Foster was crying like a baby.<lb /><lb />He handed me the pump and crawled out of the<lb />blind to where the pirogue was hidden. He left<lb />me in the middle of the marsh with my two dead<lb />trophies.<lb /><lb />One of the men we shared our camp with had<lb />to paddle out to get me.<lb /><lb />oThat other fellow left for town. He told me<lb />you were out here without a boat,� the man said.<lb />oSay, what are you doing with two shotguns?�<lb /><lb />Actually, I suppose I hadnTt seen Foster at all<lb />since the duck hunt, so I was glad to see him come<lb />into the cafe. Foster looked as if he hadnTt slept<lb />in days and when he sat down at the table, he<lb />smelled like he had been drinking cheap wine for<lb />just about as long.<lb /><lb />oWhatTs happening, Foster?�<lb /><lb />He didnTt say anything; he just leaned back in<lb />his chair and shut his eyes. When I was sure he<lb />had gone to sleep, he sat up and whistled for the<lb />waitress to bring him some coffee. He looked at<lb />me and began laughing in the kind of laugh that<lb />seems to propagate itself in weariness. Foster<lb />kept giggling in that numb, limp way until I<lb />thought he was hysterical. He laid his head down<lb />on his hands, and finally running down he said<lb />with mock gravity: oDonTt you think that in this<lb />day and age of modern, scientific technology, ar-<lb />chitects could design shit-house walls so people<lb />couldnTt write on them?�<lb /><lb />It was usually impossible to guess what was on<lb />FosterTs mind, but I was almost certain that"<lb />although they irritated him"the bathroom scrib-<lb />blers were not what was worrying Foster.<lb /><lb />�<lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0025" />
        <p>oYou know the brand new library?�<lb /><lb />ped fate<lb /><lb />oWell, the commode stall walls are a nice neu-<lb />tral grey, just like a gesso ground for an oil paint-<lb />ing, and the poets just canTt resist writing on<lb /><lb />them. It seems to me the designers could have<lb />thought of something. The building cost over a<lb />million dollars.� He was talking about the new<lb />library the college had just dedicated, and al-<lb />though it was the latest thing in libraries, Foster<lb />wasnTt satisfied with the bathrooms.<lb /><lb />oTf I could only change my habit of going out<lb />in the middle of the day, I could use the bathroom<lb />back at the dorm. I wonder what I could do about<lb />it?�<lb /><lb />The question was rhetorical; he didnTt wait for<lb />my answer.<lb /><lb />oThursday I was in the one on the bottom floor<lb />before I went to linguistics class, and dTyou know<lb />what was staring me right in the eye?�<lb /><lb />~What Foster?�<lb /><lb />He fished a note out of a pocket and passed it<lb />over for me to read. The scrawling said: oCivil-<lb />ization is a blessing to the unfit and the degenerate<lb />"others it breaks and demoralizes.�<lb /><lb />oDoesnTt that just kill your ass?� Foster said.<lb />oT wonder if the bastard who wrote it realized he<lb />was capable of such irony?�<lb /><lb />oMaybe he copied it from Bartlett.�<lb /><lb />oProbably, but canTt you just picture the poor,<lb />demoralized bastard putting up his message to the<lb />world right under the toilet paper?�<lb /><lb />Foster started his limp, fanatical laughing again<lb />and I was sure that he wasnTt so upset just over<lb />the philosopher.<lb /><lb />oWhatTs really bugging you, Foster?�<lb /><lb />oWhatTs bugging me? WhatTs bugging me?<lb />Why, man, civilization. ITm broken and demoral-<lb />ized. CanTt you see?� He kept laughing.<lb /><lb />I just sat and looked at him. After awhile, his<lb />gurgling trailed off and he sat there with his head<lb />down. Eventually, Foster would tell me what was<lb />bothering him, but I would have to wait.<lb /><lb />oAl,� Foster started off hesitantly. oI canTt go<lb />back to my room.�<lb /><lb />oWhat dTyou mean, didnTt you pay the rent?�<lb /><lb />oYes, yes.� The two affirmations slipped out<lb />as patient sighs to my corny question. oI paid the<lb />rent"itTs my roommate. I canTt... ITm not going<lb />back to the room while that bastard is living<lb />there. ITm not going to stay in the same room<lb />with him.�<lb /><lb />FosterTs roommate was a graduating senior who<lb />was studying business, Willie Maynor. About all<lb />I knew about Willie was that he drove Foster<lb />crazy. Foster was constantly arguing with Willie<lb />about his attitude toward people and business.<lb />Foster was sure that his roommate was a born<lb />charlatan and would become rich and write a<lb />book about his life.<lb /><lb />oCanTt you just see some scout master using<lb />Willie as an example of what ~good hard workT and<lb />starting at the top will get you?� Foster said af-<lb />ter one of their harangues. Foster claimed that<lb />Willie knew"or cared"nothing about ethics and<lb />he was afraid his roommate was a true represen-<lb /><lb />28<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />tation of the business man.<lb /><lb />Such naivete from anyone else but Foster, I<lb />would have sloughed off as being phoney, but not<lb />Foster. He could brood for days, missing classes<lb />and doing little more than just moping around<lb />town wondering about people and what they some-<lb />times did to each other. He was fascinated with<lb />Arthur MillerTs Willie Loman. Foster couldnTt<lb />have identified himself with Willie, but he thought<lb />they were both guilty of the same thing"~ringing<lb />up zero.T When Foster doodles on his notebook,<lb />the scratchings usually took the form of some<lb />synonym of zero. I used to kid him about his<lb />negative attitude; one time I checked Norman<lb />Vincent PealeTs book out of the library and left<lb />it on his bed. I thought it was funny, but Foster<lb />only reacted seriously to the content and asked me<lb />if I really thought Peale believed that stuff.<lb /><lb />oI hope he does since he wrote it,� Foster had<lb />said. oSometimes I wish I could.�<lb /><lb />oWell anyway, WillieTs grandmother died about<lb />four days ago. He came back yesterday"that is,<lb />day before yesterday; I keep thinking itTs still<lb />yesterday, but itTs a little after three isnTt it? Any-<lb />way, he told me about his grandmother dying. You<lb />know about Willie and his new job donTt you?�<lb /><lb />oWhat about it?� I leaned back and gave the<lb />coffee sign to the waitress. FosterTs conversation<lb />would never win any prize for continuity, but he<lb />gave you all the details, no matter how disjointed-<lb />ly.<lb />4 ee know Willie"look ahead, be pre-<lb />pared, get there first and all. He started talking to<lb />some pharmaceutical company at the beginning of<lb />the spring semester about a job when he gradu-<lb />ates. Well, they hired him over a month ago, but<lb />he doesnTt start working until after graduation.<lb />They pay him about half salary, and all he does is<lb />study up on the drugs heTs going to be selling. He<lb />calls it ~detailing to physicians,T but itTs selling. I<lb />donTt see why you donTt know all this; WillieTs<lb />been bragging his ass off.�<lb /><lb />Actually, I heard of WillieTs new job from one<lb />of his friends, but I was sure FosterTs version<lb />would be more interesting.<lb /><lb />oSo WillieTs grandmother had all sons, four of<lb />them, and...�<lb /><lb />The story was circuitous even for Foster.<lb /><lb />o|. HeTs always bragging about how his grand-<lb />father only took time off from his business long<lb />enough to get sons with his wife. Can you imag-<lb />ine anyone but Willie bragging about such a<lb />thing? She not only had sons, but leaders in the<lb />business world. Leaders. And they all"at least<lb />three of them, one didnTt get married"had sons.<lb />When WillieTs grandfather died about three years<lb />ago, all his benevolent boys managed the business<lb />for their mother. They bought her a little house in<lb />the suburbs and hired the best nurses to stay on<lb />the place. She wasnTt even sick; that shows how<lb />generous they were; they wanted the very best for<lb />their mother. I asked Willie why they didnTt just<lb />let her live with them, and he said, ~Aw, sheTd<lb />rather have a place of her own and be independ-<lb />ent.T Independent, hell, they gave her a spending<lb />allowance every month, because ~she was senile<lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0026" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />and would just give money to anyone who asked<lb />for it, not even checking to see if it was a recog-<lb />nized charity for income tax deductions, if she<lb />had control of GrandfatherTs estate.T<lb /><lb />oAbout two months ago, they all found out that<lb />Grandmother Maynor had an incurable disease. I<lb />donTt know what, but she must have had it for<lb />some time before the nurses took her to the hos-<lb />pital, because after she went in, she didnTt last<lb />very long. Those premium nurses they rented<lb />must not have paid much attention to her. Then<lb />they all got really concerned because the doctor<lb />told them that ~Mrs. Maynor might would live a<lb />little longer, but she was in such a state of mental<lb />depression that it would surely have the effect of<lb />speeding up her death.T<lb /><lb />oYou know what I think, Al? She wanted to<lb />die unhappy. The men who surrounded her had<lb />never let her do anything she wanted to, and I<lb />think she at least wanted to die registering her<lb />feelings about her life. Unhappy, thatTs what her<lb />life was. Even if they were her own flesh and<lb />blood, I think the idea that her body had been the<lb />matrix for such a tribe of pharisees was too much<lb />for her, and dying in a depressed state of mind<lb />was her only way of expressing herself.<lb /><lb />oBut you know they wouldnTt even give her the<lb />right to die the way she wanted to. Can you be-<lb />lieve that? They wouldnTt let her die that way.�<lb /><lb />While he was telling the story, FosterTs normal-<lb />ly pleasant voice had lost its quiet resonance and<lb />had turned flat and hollow sounding with the vol-<lb />ume level rising in a slow crescendo. I was about<lb />to quieten him a little when he paused in his speak-<lb />ing and just stared down into his cold coffee.<lb />When he continued talking, his voice was soft and<lb />deliberate, starting the bolero from the beginning<lb />again.<lb /><lb />oBut my roommate fixed his grandmother. He<lb />had been studying about a new drug that his com-<lb />pany was introducing. It seems that certain types<lb />of gloom induce physical conditions in the brain.<lb />Some cavities fill up with fluid or something. This<lb />perpetuates the feeling of depression. So this<lb />pharmaceutical company developed this drug that<lb />physically drains these cavities. No matter what<lb /><lb />the patient is thinking about or wants to think<lb />about, the goddam drug drains the cavity and<lb />their gloom disappears. Willie told Mrs. MaynorTs<lb />doctor about it and since it ~could do her no harm,T<lb />he agreed to giving her the drug. That was about<lb />three weeks ago. When Willie came back from the<lb />funeral, he told me the story and, in that sancti-<lb />monius canting that he can fall into, said that ~he<lb />would always be proud that he had helped his<lb />grandmother die happy.T Can you believe that?<lb />Can you believe it? Poor little shriveled-up wo-<lb />man. Pushed around all her life by those bastards<lb />and then stripped of her dignity in death. YouTd<lb />think a person could at least die like he wants to.<lb />Oh, no, Grandmother! You have to make your<lb />exit from this farce with a shit-eating grin on<lb />your face.�<lb /><lb />Foster was almost screaming by this time; I got<lb />up and pulled him out of the cafe with me and into<lb />an empty street that echoed his shouts.<lb /><lb />oYm not going back to the dorm, Al. ITm not<lb />staying in the same room with him. ITm not.�<lb /><lb />oO.K., Foster, you donTt have to.�<lb /><lb />Foster had a sort of fragile sensitivity ; I won-<lb />dered if it would ever let him be happy. No sleep<lb />and telling the story he had walked around with<lb />for two days had left him limp. He was exhausted.<lb />I leaned him against the facade of the cafe and<lb />said: oWait here just a second.� I ran back in-<lb />side to pay for the coffee.<lb /><lb />oYou could have waited and paid tomorrow<lb />night,� the painted cashier said.<lb /><lb />I started to ask her howTd she know ITd be back<lb />tomorrow, but I just picked up my change and<lb />started out to Foster. We were in the middle of<lb />April, with a month and a half of three A.M.Ts left<lb />before the cafe started closing at night again. I<lb />knew, and the cashier knew, that I would be back.<lb /><lb />Foster was where I had left him, and we walked<lb />slowly down the oak-arched street that led to the<lb />college, passing on our way a large barn-red build-<lb />ing that loomed darkly above the branches. A<lb />bright neon light on the roof blinked out its story<lb />for all the sleeping world of Hammond to see"<lb />first in green: The Casa de Fresa Hotel; and then<lb />in red: House of Berries.<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0027" />
        <p>REVIEWS<lb /><lb />Visions and Revisions<lb />by<lb />B. TOLSON WILLIS<lb /><lb />Julian. Gore Vidal. Boston: Little, Brown, and Company,<lb /><lb />$6.95.<lb /><lb />Julian Augustus, Julian the Apostate, A.D. 361:<lb />last of the Flavians, last successful Caesar of Gaul,<lb />last of the Hellenistic emperors of Rome.<lb /><lb />Julian, the man: his struggles with the enter-<lb />prising and highly organized Christian church;<lb />the intrigues of the court eunuchs coupled with<lb />the bloody suspicions of his immediate predeces-<lb />sor, Constantius; the rebellious Germanic tribes<lb />and the proud Persians on the borders of a Rome<lb />lacking the polar magnetism of a leader or world<lb />view.<lb /><lb />His mission: a return to the old gods, the over-<lb />seers of high Greece and Rome.<lb /><lb />The catalyst: a watered down version of PlatoTs<lb />philosopher-king.<lb /><lb />His answer: a leader of military brilliance who<lb />read and expounded the old way.<lb /><lb />The unfolding of the life of this man and his<lb />times is the chosen task of Gore Vidal in his first<lb />novel in ten years, Julian. Vidal presents a man<lb />of staid conviction in an age of frustration and<lb />change. The novel develops out of the interaction<lb />of these two forces; and in a consideration of the<lb />overview of this situation, one is struck favorably<lb />by the authorTs ability to capture the spirit of the<lb />age embodied in the innerly tormented and out-<lb />wardly attacked man of the 4th century (follow-<lb />ing the Nazerine) whose world and actions give a<lb />clear indication of some of the causal factors re-<lb />sulting in the centuries of other-worldliness which<lb />were to come. The generalized mortal fear of the<lb />uncertainties of this temporal world fill the pages<lb />of Julian. The sense of decay is to be felt every-<lb />where. This insecure world needs some answers,<lb />fast; Julian and his Christian bishops offer two<lb />possible ones. The dramatization of these pos-<lb />sible choices is where Vidal does his finest work.<lb /><lb />The novelist presents these primal forces<lb />through character as well as recreated circum-<lb />stances. No doubt, Julian does see himself resur-<lb />recting the Ozymandiased remains of Alexander<lb />the Great as a blueprint for recapturing past<lb />greatness. But all about him, his Christianized<lb />generals and advisors conspire against their em-<lb />peror whom they consider a scatter-brained an-<lb />tique. His military successes they cannot ques-<lb />tion; but the motive behind them, a re-establish-<lb /><lb />25<lb /><lb />ment of the old Hellenistic borders, and his<lb />extensive plans for further campaigns, in spite of<lb />short supply and popular unrest, seem to them am-<lb />ple reason for revolt.<lb /><lb />That Julian was, in truth, a Manfred-on-the-<lb />mountain is further pointed out through the ac-<lb />tions and attitudes of his two squeamish teachers,<lb />Libanius and Priscus, who wring their hands on<lb />the outskirts of conflict and just hope that their il-<lb />lustrious names will not be soiled by implication<lb />in one of JulianTs overzealous schemes; otherwise,<lb />they are content with their own sense of reputa-<lb />tion and a few worldly comforts.<lb /><lb />The 4th century struggle between figures and<lb />social forces throughout the Empire may be ap-<lb />proximated in terms a little more immediate than<lb />the implications of JulianTs allegiance to a pagan<lb />past against an ardently Christian present. To<lb />simplify, it is as if one were able to peep into a<lb />contemporary university hangout and eavesdrop<lb />on two select tables. At one, a group of students<lb />consume beer furnished by a long-winded vision-<lb />ary at the head, who insists that much of this new<lb />physics offers more problems than satisfactory<lb />answers to the already existing ones hampering<lb />our quest for the stars; and that we would do bet-<lb />ter just to modify and perfect what Von this or<lb />that had done in the forties when we took over<lb />where the Germans left off. But those enjoying<lb />the free beer insist, through the suds, that on the<lb />contrary, anyone up-to-date and fully oriented<lb />should be able to realize that the post-Einsteinian<lb />way is already too well established as the only way<lb />to get to the moon, and beyond, in our time.<lb /><lb />Meanwhile at the second table, the two old uni-<lb />versity professors, both on edge from listening<lb />to the echoes of sophomore lectures, deliberate as<lb />to whether they should, or should not, have an-<lb />other cup of Expresso, particularly since both<lb />have experienced some insomnia as of late. But<lb />they decide, after much discussion, to have an-<lb />other round. They are confident that a review of<lb />tomorrowTs lectures on the existence of God and<lb />Truth, respectively, will provide more than ade-<lb />quate somnolence to counteract any excess of caf-<lb />feine they may choose to imbibe.<lb /><lb />And to round out the presentation of our cap-<lb />tain of the board, we must carry him from the<lb />table and his beer drinking friends, forward with<lb />his ideas, from the Harvard Club to the White<lb />House. Such were Julian and his associates.<lb /><lb />Unfortunately, Gore Vidal chose to use one of<lb />the oldest and most cumbersome machines in the<lb />history of prose fiction as a means of revealing<lb />his Julian; the diary"letter exposition. He allows<lb />us to see the characters and incidents of JulianTs<lb />life and times almost exclusively through re-<lb />capitulations found by his two old teachers in the<lb />Memoirs of the dead emperor. I say exclusively,<lb />for the only other indicators are the marginal<lb />notes and casual correspondence of Priscus and<lb />Libanius who tell us nothing of consequence. The<lb />twosome, however, do provide some comic relief<lb />from JulianTs harangue, occasionally interchang-<lb />ing news about the oneTs amazing virility beyond<lb />his years as opposed to the otherTs complaints ot<lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0028" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />the necessity of reducing his intake of culinary<lb />delights because of his unaesthetic predisposition<lb />to gout.<lb /><lb />But the dramatically conceived and immediate-<lb />ly envisioned lives unfolded in such narratives<lb />as I, Claudius and Claudius, the God by Robert<lb />Graves are sadly absent here. The characters and<lb />incidents in Gore VidalTs Julian seem to be desper-<lb />ately trying to break through the wall of time<lb />that separates them from Julian-of-the-MemoirsT<lb />ability to recreate. The effect of this rendering<lb />upon the reader is a damaging one.<lb /><lb />For example, the parting assurances of Rich-<lb />ardsonTs Pamela of her being ~still virtuousT kept<lb />the reader alive in the early novel; here unfortun-<lb />ately, they find no counterpart. We have been as-<lb />sured far too many times of the emperorTs pristine<lb /><lb />mold to count on a juicy reversal at some pain-<lb />fully late date. JulianTs death at the hands of his<lb />discontented army, however, does add symmetry<lb />to his old teacherTs concluding remarks, for then<lb />Julian too has become history.<lb /><lb />The variety and swiftness of change, as well as<lb />diversity of character, available to the novelist<lb />who wishes to explore such an age as the 4th cen-<lb />tury A.D. in themselves stimulate the reader. But<lb />Mr. Vidal has not been able to provide the essen-<lb />tial ingredient"immediacy ; immediacy that spurs<lb />on recounted man and years, and in the process,<lb />irrevocably thrusts the reader into the thick of<lb />things. In retrospect, the authorTs statment in<lb />his prefatory remarks oThe Emperor JulianTs<lb />life is remarkably well documented� makes for<lb />a rather drab irony.<lb /><lb />ALWAYS NEVER"EVER<lb /><lb />by<lb /><lb />PAT SCOTT<lb /><lb />Always wailing nightingales chanting alleluias of<lb /><lb />yesterdayTs messiahs<lb /><lb />in never-ever enchantment of a beckoned sigh.<lb />Endless tides rise skyless and splash against the<lb /><lb />moon<lb /><lb />yet beyond the sand, the tides tease endlessly<lb />Motionless in a dirge of devotion cast aside<lb />with spoiled fruit in a garden of idol gods<lb />Infinitely patient as a spider meandering across<lb /><lb />his woven rainbow<lb /><lb />The doll is caught freely in the steaming Inferno<lb />"______thrown into a hallowed holocast<lb />Carelessly the slave drives waves of uninformed<lb /><lb />ragdolls<lb /><lb />always accepting the being of one as of the other,<lb />never rising always contented as vultures to<lb />pick the flesh of the unforgiven<lb /><lb />Sanctus, Sanctus, Dominus, the unforgiven rise in the<lb /><lb />beckoned sighs<lb /><lb />Sanctus, Sanctus, Dominus, never-ever as the<lb /><lb />sand replies<lb /><lb />Virgins rejoice at the judgment of a savior.<lb /><lb />26<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0029" />
        <p>The Story of MichelangeloTs Pieta<lb /><lb />The Story of MichelangeloTs Pieta. By Irving Stone. Garden<lb />City, New York: Doubleday &amp; Company, Inc., 1964. 60 pp.<lb /><lb />The Pieta, which means in English the Pity or<lb />the Sorrow, is regarded by many as Michelange-<lb />loTs masterpiece in sculpture. Since having been<lb />brought from Rome to be displayed in the Vati-<lb />can Pavilion of the New York WorldTs Fair last<lb />summer, it is of special interest to Americans.<lb />This representation in white Carrara marble of<lb />the crucified Christ resting in the right arm<lb />and on the draped knees of the sorrowing Mother<lb />Mary is beautifully pictured against a black<lb />background on both the front and back hardboard<lb />covers of the present edition of IrvingTs StoneTs<lb />The Story of MichelangeloTs Pieta.<lb /><lb />Those wishing a full account of MichelangeloTs<lb />life should refer to StoneTs biographical novel The<lb />Agony and the Ecstasy, for though the present<lb />volume tells about all that is known regarding<lb />the creation of the Pieta, it tells only enough<lb />more to provide sufficient context for compre-<lb />hension; it focuses rather sharply on its subject.<lb /><lb />The brief prologue observes that Columbus was<lb />discovering America while Michelangelo was do-<lb />ing his earliest carving leading up to his sculpture<lb />of the Piet&amp; in 1498-1499. Then a biographical<lb />sketch fills in the artistTs early life, training, and<lb />sculpture until he was commissioned by Jacopo<lb />Galli, a Roman banker, to carve a Bacchus.<lb />Among GalliTs friends was the French Cardinal<lb />Groslaye, a Benedictine, who visited Michelange-<lb />loTs workroom to see the unfinished Bacchus and<lb />was moved to say, oI can feel the blood and muscle<lb />under your marble skin.� So impressed was<lb />the Cardinal that he commissioned Michelangelo<lb />to carve a lifesized sculpture for a niche in the<lb />Chapel of the Kings of France in St. PeterTs.<lb />Thus Michelangelo turned from the profane to<lb />the sacred and the result was the Pieta.<lb /><lb />But not until after the sculptor and his teen-<lb />age apprentice Argiento had experienced priva-<lb />tions and sacrifices comparable to those experi-<lb />enced by M. and Mme. Curie in turning tons of<lb />pitchblende to find a bit of radium, was the<lb />Piet&amp; completed. Indeed, the human-interest as-<lb />pects of the struggle through cold, hunger, and<lb />disease in a leaking and crumbling studio to pro-<lb />duce the immortal Piet&amp;é must engross any read-<lb />er; the reciprocal loyalty between Michelangelo<lb />and Argiento is as impressive as the Pieta itself.<lb /><lb />Meanwhile Cardinal Groslaye died, and the<lb />Pieta had to be smuggled into its intended niche<lb />in St. PeterTs; Michelangelo could not call at-<lb />tention to his own work. He could not forever<lb />bear, however, standing by as a spectator hear-<lb />ing the Pieta attributed to rival sculptors; so<lb /><lb />_ one night by candlelight he carved upon his work<lb /><lb />~Michelangelo Buonarroti of Florence made this.�<lb /><lb />27<lb /><lb />An epilogue traces the history of the Pieta<lb />through several moves to its present location.<lb />One could hardly expect a sixty-page book so<lb />full of struggle and human concern as this is<lb />and centered around a subject so important to<lb />religion and art as the Pieta to be boring, and<lb /><lb />it is not.<lb />"VERNON WARD<lb /><lb />The Lost City<lb /><lb />The Lost City. By John Gunther. New York: Harper and<lb />Row, Publishers, 1964. pp. x-594. $5.95.<lb /><lb />For the reader who has become familiar with<lb />GuntherTs oinside� books (Inside U. S. A., Inside<lb />Africa, Inside Asia, etc.), The Lost City provides<lb />an oinside� look at the journalistic world of old<lb />Vienna during the years immediately prior to the<lb />rise of Hitler. The book is a novel and, conse-<lb />quently, contains much fiction; however, the at-<lb />mosphere and flavor of Vienna during the early<lb />1930Ts is real"at times, almost too real.<lb /><lb />The novel is centered upon the lives of Mason<lb />Jarrett, chief correspondent in Vienna for a Chi-<lb />cago newspaper, and his wife Paula. The plot<lb />enmeshes both, but principally Mason, in the<lb />economic decay of Austria and in the conditions<lb />that made possible the formation and success of<lb />the Nazis. The chief conflict is the complete fall<lb />of the A. G. O. (Allgemeine Osterreichische Ge-<lb />sellschaft), the chief bank of Austria, and Mason<lb />JarrettTs own involvement with the A. G. O. In<lb />a most credible manner it is shown that Mason<lb />was partly responsible for the fall of this bank.<lb />Mason, also Paula sometimes, keeps fast company<lb />with journalistic colleagues and their friends,<lb />both male and female, and the details (often sor-<lb />did) of the personal lives of friends of the Jar-<lb />retts are interwoven skillfully with events in<lb />the lives of Mason and Paula and history.<lb /><lb />Parallel to the insecureness of the time is the<lb />sense of non-permanence in the marriage of<lb />Mason and Paula. MasonTs intense love affair<lb />with the Austrian artist Erika makes clear his<lb />feelings of incompleteness and non-fulfillment;<lb />PaulaTs temporary sterility, complete practicality,<lb />and her all-pervading love for her husband add<lb />to his problem. Mason becomes involved with<lb />other women, even after Paula has presented him<lb />with a son. She, out of loneliness, has affairs of<lb />her own. Life to both, however, proves kind, and<lb />there evolves eventually a closeness between the<lb />two which is complete.<lb /><lb />Gunther writes in a racy, journalistic style.<lb />The book reads fast because the life and events<lb />depicted move quickly. He has _ successfully<lb />brought to life his fictitious hero and heroine;<lb />their problems are extricably human and uni-<lb />versal. Suspense and interest are maintained,<lb />and the conclusion comes naturally. It will be<lb />worth your time to take a look inside old Vienna,<lb />oThe Lost City.�<lb /><lb />"JOHN D. EBBS<lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0030" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />The Modern Short Story<lb />in the Making<lb /><lb />The Modern Short Story in the Making. By Whit and Hallie<lb />Burnett (eds.). New York: Hawthorn Books, Inc. 1964.<lb />405 pages. $6.95.<lb /><lb />The Modern Short Story in the Making is a<lb />collection of previously printed short stories<lb />edited by Whit and Hallie Burnett, editors of<lb />Story magazine, whatever that is. For the most<lb />part, the stories are early works of people who<lb />have become some of our leading contemporary<lb />writers. Like many anthologists, the Burnetts<lb />could not resist putting some of their own work<lb />in the book. More on that later. Most of the<lb />stories, fortunately, are ones which are seldom<lb />seen in anthologies; that is one of the best points<lb />of the book.<lb /><lb />The book is divided into seven parts, each with<lb />an introduction of its own. We neednTt go into<lb />that because it is a customary thing to do and, in<lb />this case particularly, is important for only tak-<lb />ing up space. Following each of the stories is<lb />a short biography of the author, and, if possible,<lb />an interview of about ten questions which, for<lb />the most part, also do nothing more than take<lb />up space. One of the questions is: oWhat are<lb />the qualities necessary for a good short-story<lb />writer?� The writers tried to answer that as<lb />best as possible without outright mentioning<lb />talent. Erskine Caldwell, for example, answered:<lb />oAn extraordinary familiarity with words and<lb />their usage.T�T Which is a big help to all of us.<lb /><lb />Leading the book is Norman MailerTs oThe<lb />Greatest Thing in the World,� an undergraduate<lb />attempt at writing while still at Harvard. That<lb />is fortunate because you donTt have to read Ad-<lb />vertisements for Myself to understand the thing<lb />It is not a very good story and Mailer is honest<lb />enough to admit it and even compares his work<lb />at eighteen to the work of Truman Capote at<lb />the same age, which is much better. This upset<lb />the editors who oconsider Mailer unduly harsh<lb />in retrospective judgment. He permitted his<lb />storyTs inclusion in this workshop book with the<lb />provision it be noted that it was written when he<lb />was eighteen and that as a short story writer<lb />he has done relatively few since ....� I really<lb />canTt blame Mailer for wanting to make that<lb />clear because his first published work should not<lb />be interpreted by anyone to have been written<lb />about the same time as his better works. Per-<lb />haps he realized that William Styron would<lb />probably make fun of the story, so he wanted<lb />to set the record straight in print.<lb /><lb />oClothes Make the Man� by Jesse Stuart is<lb />the second story. It is about a lumberjack who<lb />géts tired of the quiet life and decides to cause<lb />an uproar. He takes off his clothes and stands<lb />on the side of a mountain next to the road and<lb />yells like a wild man. The results are hilarious.<lb />Unless standards are changed, this story will<lb />never be considered any great literary piece,<lb />[or it is very funny, and that is what Stuart was<lb />after.<lb /><lb />28<lb /><lb />James T. Farrell has a very tightly construct-<lb />ed little story called ooA Casual Incident.� Like<lb />many writers, Farrell chooses not to use quo-<lb />tation marks to indicate dialogue. The editors<lb />were kind enough to give the reader a footnote<lb />explaining that in this story and in another.<lb />Thank you, Mr. and Mrs. Burnett. The story<lb />is a conversation between a young man and an<lb />older man who is homosexual. They met near a<lb />religious meeting and the homosexual is trying<lb />to talk the young man into visiting his apart-<lb />ment. The conversation, of course, is very awk-<lb />ward, but it reads very well and does a good job<lb />of illustrating the characters. This story shows<lb />more of the making of a good writer than any<lb />of the introductions or interviews in the book<lb />because it shows the training a writer must go<lb />through.<lb /><lb />Mary OTHaraTs contribution is her famous<lb />short story oMy Friend Flicka,� which has been<lb />made into a novel and a movie, and in the process<lb />made a fortune for the author. When it was<lb />first published as a short story, it brought $25.<lb />In a way, it is sort of a typical story about a boy<lb />who fights to get a horse and then has to fight<lb />keep it, but it is more than that. The talent lies<lb />in how she can get into the actual feelings of a<lb />child. That is the magic, something that most<lb />authors shouldnTt even try.<lb /><lb />Whit BurnettTs oSherrelT�T is an unusual little<lb />story which shows a lot of promise, but that is<lb />all. The story is told by a boy, eighteen, who<lb />believes that he is responsible for his younger<lb />brotherTs death nine years ago. His brother, who<lb />was five, died of scarlet fever. He insists that he<lb />killed his brother onot by giving him sickness,<lb />but by meanness.� This could have been an<lb />excellent story had Burnett pursued it a bit<lb />further. Had he taken more time, and gone into<lb />the mind of the older boy to a greater extent, it<lb />could have made a very good novella. What there<lb />is of the story is marred by the inclusion of a<lb />very long, paragraph by paragraph, analysis by<lb />Edward J. OTBrien. Naturally, it is quite a fa-<lb />vourable analysis, if you like that sort of thing.<lb />An editor should never include his own creative<lb />work. If for no other reasons, just out of some<lb />sort of ethical standards. That goes for Oscar<lb />Williams and Louis Untermeyer.<lb /><lb />Erskine CaldwellTs oThe Windfall� is a funny<lb />story about a woman and her husband who in-<lb />herits some money. The husband refuses to let<lb />his wife so much as touch the money. That night<lb />she tries to sneak over to where he has hung<lb />his pants and get a look at the money. He sees<lb />her just as she reaches for the pants. She lies<lb />there all night and just as. morning comes she<lb />crawls over to the chair. where the pants are<lb />draped. He catches her again. It goes on and on<lb />like that until the husband decides that he isnTt<lb />wise enough to handle that much money and<lb />turns it over to his wife. She, in turn, gives it<lb />to the maid so she can get married. I donTt think<lb />that makes much of a point, but it is very amus-<lb />ing.<lb /><lb />oRest Cure� by Kay Boyle is the story of an<lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0031" />
        <p>old author who is visited by a young publisher.<lb />The old man is an invalid and knows he is about<lb />to die. The young publisher is very patronizing<lb />and very careful to say that he is sure the old<lb />man will still turn out a lot of material and he<lb />hopes that he can publish all of it. The old man,<lb />based on D. H. Lawrence, tries to put the pub-<lb />lisher out of his mind by examining a lobster.<lb />The black eyes of the lobster remind him of the<lb />eyes of his coal-miner father and dew-like sub-<lb />stance on the lobsterTs lip reminds him of his<lb />fatherTs mustache after drinking beer. It is a<lb />rather weird account of an old manTs mind and<lb /><lb />its play with the past and the morbid certainty<lb />of the future.<lb /><lb />Modern literature deals a lot with societyTs<lb />persecution of the individual and how one should<lb />strive to keep his identity even if he is in the<lb />minority. oSeventy Thousand Assyrians� by Wil-<lb />liam Saroyan is about a proud Armenian and an<lb />Assyrian who wants to oget over it� because the<lb />greatness of his people is washed up. This is an<lb />experimental short story which is as much essay<lb />as it is fiction. Saroyan explains that a man<lb />should not be so bitter about the course of history<lb />but try to make the best of his heritage. The<lb />Assyrian who spiritually destroys himself is as<lb />guilty of the downfall of his people as the Arabs<lb />who massacre them.<lb /><lb />George Sumner AlbeeTs oThe Top� is one of<lb />those symbolic things which is supposed to<lb />summarize all America in one sweep, but doesnTt<lb />do a very good job of it. The main character,<lb />Jonathan Gerber, works for an organization<lb />which is housed in a building shaped like a pyra-<lb />mid. If you havenTt figured that out, it stands for<lb />the Great Seal of the United States. Clever.<lb />Gerber works on the eighth floor and the object<lb />is to get to the top, the American ideal, so to<lb />speak. After working there for over twenty years,<lb />Gerber is promoted and given an elevator pass<lb />which will allow him entrance to floors above his<lb />own. When he goes up to the top floor, the 15th,<lb />which must be reached by stairs from the 14th,<lb />he finds nothing but rubble. There we have the<lb />top of the ladder as seen by someone who never<lb />made it. If Ray Bradbury had thought of this<lb />story first he probably would have been able to<lb />do something with it.<lb /><lb />Another story which was expanded into a<lb />movie is Kressmann TaylorTs oAddress Un-<lb />known.� Normally, when an author uses a let-<lb />ter in a story, it is just a cheap trick to explain<lb />something he hasnTt got the talent to portray.<lb />Miss TaylorTs story is an unusual thing which<lb />is composed of nothing but letters and does not<lb />fall into the category of cheap trick. She presents<lb />the letters as being written in the early 1930Ts<lb />between two native Germans, one living in Ger-<lb />many and the other, a Jew, living in the United<lb />States. We are shown how a man during the<lb />rise of Hitler slowly turns against his once close<lb />Jewish friend and learns to hate him. Another<lb />story about the persecution of the minority, but<lb />done in a very unique and forceful way. The Jew<lb />continues to write the man in Germany despite<lb /><lb />29<lb /><lb />their differences and the fact that he has been<lb />asked not to write because government suspicion<lb />has been aroused concerning their correspond-<lb />ence. The last letter from the Jew is returned<lb />oAddressat Unbekannt,� address unknown. ItTs<lb />an odd twist and leaves you with a rather funny<lb />feeling.<lb /><lb />The longest, and, in my opinion, the best story<lb />in the anthology is Katherine Ann PorterTs oNoon<lb />Wine.� Miss Porter has an annoying tendency<lb />to turn out flawless stories. She does it slowly, but<lb />they are perfect, and it is somehow disgusting<lb />to see someone do it right all the time. Every-<lb />thing she does is put together just the way it<lb />should be, never too much or too little of anything.<lb />There are so few good women writers around<lb />these days, Miss Porter probably feels she has<lb />to do what she can to make up for the others.<lb />In oNoon Wine,� Olaf Helton, a Swede, gets a<lb />job on Royal Earle ThompsonTs farm. The farm<lb />had never been real productive, and was some-<lb />what run down, but through HeltonTs hard work<lb />it is turned into a rather productive place. Hel-<lb />ton seldom ever speaks, he just works quietly and<lb />lives by himself in a shack behind the house. He<lb />doesnTt drink, and seldom goes into town. After<lb />he has been there for nine years, a man named<lb />Homer T. Hatch comes by the farm to tell Thomp-<lb />son that Helton is crazy. He says that Helton<lb />killed a man, was declared insane, and later es-<lb />caped from the asylum. This is the force in<lb />Miss PorterTs work. A man practically works<lb />himself to death to redeem himself and is de-<lb />stroyed by a force which should have been buried<lb />by the act of his redemption.<lb /><lb />There are many other stories in the book,<lb />twenty-two of them in all, most of them good,<lb />but the explanatory material is not, which shows<lb />how a person can botch up a good thing. When<lb />they are put together along with the notes, it<lb />comes out looking like a bad textbook. In the<lb />notes on Norman Mailer, the editors seem almost<lb />vindictive. Some of the notes seem picked just<lb />to glorify the editors. They are just too obviously<lb />biased. The least they could do was be subtle<lb />about it. However, despite the efforts of the Bur-<lb />netts, the book is not ruined. It is saved by the<lb />calibre of the fiction in it, and it should be read<lb /><lb />only for the stories.<lb />"JAMES FORSYTH<lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0032" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />TO MARIWIN (To Shake Such A Time)<lb /><lb />by<lb />GALE F. MORGAN<lb /><lb />Mariwin,<lb /><lb />had we known a privater affair<lb /><lb />in some primal Then,<lb /><lb />ere man created God"created man"<lb /><lb />and asked, and gratefully received<lb /><lb />of his own creation<lb /><lb />the gift of guilt"<lb /><lb />We might have gotten better odds on love.<lb /><lb />Even though<lb />laboured love lost;<lb /><lb />even now,<lb /><lb />I feel the sweet-remembered devil-touch<lb />of pale, trembling hands on Baptist flesh,<lb />and in the afterglow<lb /><lb />the spirit bears again the blow<lb /><lb />of a jealous FrankensteinTs chastening rod.<lb /><lb />Even though<lb /><lb />the Image-monster, grown rawly real,<lb /><lb />is condor-eyed ;<lb /><lb />new-promethean fire I bring<lb /><lb />to warm a guilt-cold cultureTs unrequited love.<lb /><lb />Even so,<lb /><lb />if this be treason,<lb /><lb />make a boast of it<lb /><lb />and down the icy fear the Monster feeds on.<lb /><lb />Pray,<lb />will you come again to me and lay the odds on love.<lb /><lb />30<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0033" />
        <p>I WILL NOT MOURN<lb /><lb />by<lb /><lb />CHARLOTTE McMICHAEL<lb /><lb />I will not mourn<lb />night riding<lb />black asters<lb />decking the slide<lb />that otters use<lb />for tag and touch-me-not.<lb />Or Eurydice ladies<lb />letting fly<lb />their saris<lb />to catch dry wind<lb />in their<lb />designs.<lb />Or jugs drinking<lb />water cups of sun<lb />that resign to<lb />evening dips<lb />and come<lb />with me.<lb />We picked lemons by the roadside;<lb />our shadows not close, not far away<lb />and after our gathering, we drank<lb />tea together on straw in moonshade,<lb />watched red berries shift into morning<lb />on a bed of otter down<lb />and yet<lb />I will not mourn<lb />yesterdays, even the<lb />ankling<lb />of clams<lb />round your barefeet<lb />in past walking away.<lb />I wait an ownership<lb />of otter cries;<lb />salient black aster<lb />lost<lb />and you.<lb />I will not mourn.<lb /><lb />31<lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0034" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />CONTRIBUTORS<lb /><lb />Contributors: Sanford Peele, poet, English instructor, a director of the<lb />Poetry Forum; Guy Beining, New York writer; Antoni Gronowicz, New<lb />York writer, has published several biographies and a novel; John Clement,<lb />student; Albert Pertalion, instructor in the Drama and Speech Department ;<lb />B. Tolson Willis, poet, a director of the Poetry Forum; Vernon Ward,<lb />English instructor, poet; John D. Ebbs, Professor of English; James<lb />Forsyth, student.<lb /><lb />This issue of the REBEL features selected poems by members of the<lb />East Carolina College Poetry Forum. Charlotte McMichael, Dwight<lb />Pearce and Pat Scott are student members; Gale F. Morgan is a cor-<lb />responding member from Raleigh.<lb /><lb />Joe Brannon made and developed the pictures for the article on<lb />Horace Farlowe.<lb /><lb />STAFF<lb /><lb />Editor, Thomas Speight; Associate Editor, Dwight Pearce; Art Editor,<lb />W. Louis Jones; Business Manager, Jan Sellers Coward; Copy Editor, Ann<lb />Regan Barbee; Book Review Editor, Robert Malone; Typist, Margaret<lb />DeLong.<lb /><lb />SUBSCRIPTIONS<lb /><lb />Subscriptions to the REBEL now available. Three dollars for three<lb />issues or one dollar and a quarter for single issues. Send requests to the<lb />REBEL magazine, Box 2486, Greenville, North Carolina.<lb /><lb />32<lb /><lb /><lb /></p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0035" />
        <p>
        </p>
        <pb facs="00062563_0036" />
        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />
          <lb />THE POETRY FORUM<lb /><lb />EAST CAROLINA COLLEGE<lb />TO DISCUSS AND READ<lb />POETRY<lb /><lb />SEEKS REGULAR AND CORRESPONDING MEMBERS<lb />_ MEETINGS THIS YEAR ON ALTERNATE THURSDAYS<lb /><lb />8 O'CLOCK IN 30614 AUSTIN BUILDING<lb /><lb />SEEKS BOOKINGS FOR PUBLIC READINGS<lb />EXPERIENCED: RESPONSE HAS BEEN SOMEWHAT<lb /><lb />PHENOMENAL<lb /><lb />DIRECTORS: SANFORD L. PEELE<lb />B. TOLSON WILLIS<lb />PAT R. WILLIS<lb /><lb />WRITE TO: POETRY FORUM<lb />BOX 2605<lb />GREENVILLE, N. C.<lb /></p>
        <p>
        </p>
      </div>
    </body>
  </text>
</TEI>