The Home Front

BOHN, WILLIAM E.

A Page of Features Americana Books and Writers Chatter The Home Front by William E. Bohn Jlwtft*" Pf : — .·.**, ?» Pia inevitable that comparisons be mad*. They are saying that Stephen...

...The GJf...
...Why is Louis Berne, of the Federation of Architects, Cosmiassi Technicians and Engineers, a notorious party-liner, hrosdceatiag to overseas for the OWI...
...soorchiatic) was "communistic," and that this union, jointly with the UCT...
...Counterfeiters...
...The Straight' Gate, the story of a woman wish a sanctity compulsion, is concerned with tog effect of immoderate virtue...
...The f>oi/y Telegraph of London, which in an hour of emergency had commissioned him as s string man, began carrying fantastic stories about events which no one else seemed to know were occurring...
...The vTmp Organisation got to work on Republicans and Democrats alike, with...
...Bat- oa the sidelines will be the Commies, yelling "foul" or "we was rooked...
...chilled by the contrasts of these rather pretentious earns...
...The legation was obliged to cable back the story was false...
...jf.'kwr...
...twist to satire—on occasion even to a salty wisecrack, ""they Were not Pilgrim Fathers in steeple-hats, &h with an iron jaw and a musketoon, p were not Pilgrim Mothers, sure of their fame...
...Both earned the title by a d*eP *"»° patient penetration into the national soul...
...Med sod the Yellow:—We didn't want to make an Isasw of M. * tor secret agents are experts at worming their troy into er-gantostioas...
...He accepts an alternate form of behavior: an individualism controlled and limited by social responsibility...
...because it has deposed upon the gullibility of so reputable a ftnr aa Harpers, it is necessary to throw toe egeatight on it and its author...
...Ideologically, one is justified in feetsing, this work was to trace the growth in the new world of jbuih concepts of freedom and democracy...
...Nest trick ef this is tost only the Commies can define exactly what a leoood front is...
...But in Stephen Vincent Benet's mind the spiritual dbgglei of Which the world-wide battle is but the reflex, was *e*dy on...
...toe Bright brushes thorn off with...
...It's true, ere ???-., paigneti against the Davie* Mission to Mosco-w long before &* filming, snd long before we saw it...
...But Matthew Lanyard, a London carpenter, plays more part than any of them...
...Algeria he met Oscar Wilde who, with diabolical pleasure, encouraged his penchant for svelte-skinned Arabian boys...
...Our fancy propagandists had boutor get .busy snd do some straight talking...
...The only thing he accomplishes is to demonstrate his incapacity to comprehend most elemental facts, a knowledge of which is indispenaible to a qualified reporter...
...Though this later, more modest man, may lack the sweep and swell of Whit-msa, he brings to consciousness things deeper, nearer the sources of hie...
...we might as well clear up the record: Heiser Wright, Dw2>y New* espy editor, hss just been indicted for failing to tnmfm with the U. S. government ss s isgulsr Japanese agent—Wrigfrt was a mtmtsi ef the Newspaper Guild, active ia New York local affairs—after Rober: t Daily Vew*i Conway's bid for the serdtsfA of to* Communist* in lost year's GutM eJeetton, WriMBt «t» ported Conway sad through the aid of the local StsftosM tatV chine he was paPaai into various minor union positions . . . Wurfe doesn't prove tost Earl Browdhr is a stooge for Hirohif...
...Today he is believed to be somewhere in Nor* Africa...
...Salter's axistsusi as one of those nondescript types toft one usually finds clinging to the fringes of ? British foreign community...
...But our information wss reliable, and af...
...We said Afft censorship would cut what they call "polities'' out of the picture (which ? the same as saying that they cut all honest feeling djuf*, that Fascism wouldn't be mentioned (the word isn't even useoj...
...world ? which war will be impossible...
...To drive forward, even without a specific goal, in the direction of self-understanding —that, according to Mann, is the core of Gide's message within the novel...
...He perceived his thousands going fcrth as a mighty giant.1 He heard the chanted chorus of state*, hum, end, to be born...
...To I edano obviously admires this lack-of thinkAt my naval training station there are quite s few sailors jjjthare the war and peace aims of Mr...
...It stimulated him to a cosmic sensuousnees...
...Tennyson built his stately and over-sweet staaso* about .ethical Jungs...
...This department hss tfP cstsicai of He GouUo and critical of Glraud, and we still feel ffmP whom the French people get into motion, toe present Hangern-o» of, "toe Bspuhttcin tradition" are going to be surprised- But who* was to* tsue story...
...TRYOUT IN SPAIN" by Cedrie Salter, if it had to be published t* all...
...In the opening sections of the book Salter attempts to put the reader straight about the general Spanish setup...
...Se was a snsssoeS of the crew of s snip which had been used m North Africa to trans port Axis prisoners...
...of kindly countryfolk whom I knew hrasgwap fees) to my own door as their geft bee suss they loss id I wss hungry...
...A goal that had beert psssdttssrto but vague was so me who* dorised...
...Another day Cedrie in Bogieland ptoys host to- several fear-haunted nuns...
...jy**k °nly for jthe "class-conscious clothing workers ef New Mb' * COU,d '** ?^?**^ out tn*t numerous workers in all oceu-»*7A.tllroU*hout th* nation ere becoming more militant...
...Crawford went to North Africa...
...springs in scores of common breasts, each one of which S eiJtinguished by*something not quite common...
...In 1931, Ms attraction for the Soviet Unior incapacitated him as a novelist, hut relieved his perptoxttp about toe function of toe artist within the framework of society...
...And this beosest of wing...
...Benet, coming later, with more patience to n» history in detail, pictured the little people one by one...
...oermte Ron Ada ?: — Nothing feaxes the Kremlin Set...
...Aspasentsyv if we win in the air, it's rot good enough...
...Such s situation, he loperted, ondessgess toe haust» dm* life of the eivuias crews who carry these prisoners...
...New York, Pennsylvania and badete ate merely glanced at...
...After The Counterfeiters, regarded by 6ide ss his only "pure" novel, his interest shifted- from fiction to moral and philosophical sphere Always susceptible to environmental current*, Gide had been tempted in 1916 by the conversion, to Catholicism of his friends...
...Was bo, , bosk...
...Here he is holding himself in, exercising fine mrfmint to keep himself close to the facts and the moods ef life, ?|ng every thing that a sensitive soul can do to keep from sound...
...This makes easy and natural a quick and...
...The authorities welcomed- atsd encouraged the prevalent practices of friends and relatives in toe country bringing food to friends and relatives in the city...
...poes-Merte*:— It's nothing to gloat aboat, but the poiitonal * criticism of our item on FDR snd the Connelly-Smith veto, implicating by implication toe President m the Congressional overriding, took a bod ride with toe news of hew the Adrnmilslsaama sustained toe veto of the anti -Subsidy bill...
...There are no masses...
...372...
...Kipling went to the edges ef ?mpire...
...Indeed, most of his writing seems to reduce itself to s confessional in Which' Gide exposes his conflicting impulses toward exaggerated renunciation and rampant self-indulgence...
...What happened to feto waa ? mystery...
...As readers know...
...the Anarchists' strong man, Durruti, sod learns from him haw Ins Durruti—had on that very day ex ecu cod 2M etir, ? following girls to keep the hoys pare...
...Well, he's showed up at toe right pfeeu St the right some...
...from this you will know that I have been reading Wettern Star, gruben Vincent Benet's fine legacy to the American people...
...ahoaJd have been called "Cedrie in Bogieland...
...and m the lottery he must have pioekod Ote Sicily berth oat ef the hot...
...a^JjJrfdr XTmg...
...Bat...
...have picked a bettor spec, if we ssfhpj the assignment...
...to mere anti-Labor bill could be vetoed, to save face, and then 1st slide...
...An editorial tots week reaffirm* its new line...
...Next day the veto onto sustained...
...Hence the necessity to scrutmixe one's own being, to syntheeise destructive and constructive impulses ip such ? way as to make use of the potentialities of both...
...Mr' ToIedano'3 intimation that "intellectuals and Social-ye...
...But new comet toe-story from North Africa, by Demaree Bess, Satevepeet corre-spasntospj who had been given access to all of Eisenhower's files, that Kusphy's secret pre-isvasjon deal with Giraud gosswaptaod' him...
...Harpen...
...He paraph res si where he can, lirarto f&noelf to Gsdais own prono jncemen.» snd explanations...
...supremacy, and forbade either British or Free Frenak mien fetenee wiilt hit regime...
...Again Salter imparts to his readers the amas-ing information that toe C.N...
...bd» serves ss evidence of toe hind of scruples controlrtrer IrSOXan Set pi'upwgnsda...
...The author misses completely the drama arx] tragedy of the Spanish Civif War but walke instead in an atmosphere of...
...A full day before th* rarssog* was sent up, Jim Byrnes got hold oi Majority Leader McConnsea, who conferred with Speaker Sam Ray bum...
...And so it runs true to the mentalities of those loiterers in Spain who wove their >*n parrticutor versions of reality around Barcelona's British Club Bar...
...We are ail a...
...mho were sup . porters of the ojd jasea rehy which the Repe ?? had broken hot whose partisans soueivesV As for fill Robles, known as- Spain's chief lop Jesuit, leader of the Catholic ss call—I popular- nasty, toe Cariists, far from setoff under has ItsntaatNfc hsted his entrails snd would aa ????» heme accepted the leadership of del Vayo or the Republican big chief—Aiana...
...Y ? It is not much beside the gift of the brave _L\ And yet accept it since tis all I have...
...Since 1939, he hot been polstfeotty mlessv Bh> •pes* ssowh ofhfo tone in Seeth Fiance aelptog anti-Hitler refugees, and refused comforts Uses might harre resulted from colfeboratiorassa...
...sniff, on the issue of Mayor Hague raked up s political ¦randat of front-page proportions...
...e*°'ution or the mighty march of men westward to the SsWrJfteL1 ?i* we snaU never have- Out the reality we st»l *- Tnh war has roused again the old imaginative and venture-Mi wiX^' Again> in the m'dst of cowardly scheming and sour jnib2r^ln**' we scre surging forward toward "the line of unimag-|(e'Mi|»to...
...Klaus Mann hss the virtues of toorooghHBOs and familiarity with Ms subject...
...With...
...However, soon after the war broke,, he blossomed out es s kind of messenger whose speciality as I know (and as he himself now adm.-.s ? consisted in smuggling across the border lurid tales of what was supposed to be happening in Spain...
...It just ilotasft run right -'-ess that "Second Front" is "opened...
...Whitman as his Americano in the large...
...experience...
...There are fine lyric passages, but the narrative is kept close to 4· tamper of prose...
...of V-chyjA Houtsfe rnssiest, to go over toe "difficulties...
...The expanding personality combines reason and instinct, love and hate...
...The hero of hit impish novel, The Vatican Sunndle, is a brilliant but conscienceless rake with a capricious eede of honor...
...In his writing, he oscillates between the hypersentitfve idealism of ? he Notebooks of Andre Walter and the violent non-con-forrmem snd sensuehfy of The Nourishments af the Earth and The Immoralxti...
...The book is worse than worthless...
...8,V^ woerios shout the facts...
...Inside and Out...
...Had these Germans, he say a. known toe inarhasiiary of toe gussMMfe force, th« lives of the merchant crew wouldn't have boss worth a plugged nicket...
...Both have to be visualized as entities, not divided into distinct and isolated phases...
...To us he ia much closer, much more meaningful...
...But now that the Daily Werber hss SroOgfit ft up...
...SPS pages...
...ispuasMtsl to Spam ? MY OUT IN SPAIN, By Cedrie Salter...
...The African incident seems to have been' a crucial one...
...You just got to be on the right side...
...This statement is all right except for a few details such as that, in the Spanish lexicon the Cariists were just the opposite of the monarchists...
...As a result, his biography is largely interpretive...
...Otherwise it may impose on the good faith of other well-meaning readers Besse tone before the Civil War broke eat hi Spain I eras aware ef Mr...
...But in HMD • tjSi- ** Ws mMterPie*e...
...What lisertT A loosened spirit brings: kmilv...
...Tolls...
...dispatoHes from London for months insisted that tie eVitie* Wefe Gsullist sad the U. S. was playing the Darland-Girapd gerne...
...Yon invade North Africa—but that, you see, is oasp "preparation" for a second front- You invade SicHy—go* soli that a second front...
...Forreot came bad, with m> ? hange of ntrsd st al...
...T™JJoet was a soldier, too...
...For Whom the...
...to the heart M the struggle for world mastery...
...fecJoVasaffy, Fnblisber Jee Fatterso* ? ?? allowing the...
...A trip to Russia unearthed a glaring inequity of living conditions, a fanatical euit of Statin-worship, end a disturbing compose en cy...
...He looked inward rather than backward er outward gbe knows...
...If Mann has any single thesis, it is this: that beneath Whitman-like contradictions and uncontrollable appetites, Gide's art and ethics have had an essentially consistent and logical progression...
...TJ^iuhbitious project was plotted and begun in 1934, long miiifp war...
...He hss the bright idea—tor Cedric is a bright boy always saying bright things—of dressing them up is insppy Jsutaea bathing costumes snd sending sheen et...
...It is because this first act in a national drama finds ?**·**)» responsive in our mood that this poem—wonder of won-T^wds itself on best-seller lists...
...The caarpsign against too Welt Disney film version of Victory Through Air Power is beginning to rumble in fellow-traveler circles...
...Anyway, these second thoughts oa to* second front tame to mind as the poor Seversky cartoon is going • to get the pinko's drubbing...
...than either of the others...
...That lost ? m Sgl Oph hr MM sasTP 4b-second-interview-with-th*-nns»-ia^tos^sars« teseM . . . ^ The Career of Andre Gide By tSA...
...Ml Oca Story:—News is so official these days, you don't knew a has a *·* to turn to pick up an original story, or a fresh slant . . . BMC we got a whole of s taie the other sight from s merchant-marine*, and now that his story hss been told by his no inn nsgsssY wSS Seafarers Leg, I suppose we can spill...
...repealing the edition's earlier great ajstojL . That North Afrtoan affair is stall renting people excited, J» «awjMeus soma here us very corrfueed...
...But I cannot but reflect with deep pain y*Ftot depths and heights would have been reached in the sage JsV...
...Here there was no sliding...
...As Walter Liapasajkp ? racked the other day (in his blistering attack on Boas for "ausging for his supper"): "Propaganda ia that branch of the art of lying which nearly deceives your friends without deceiving year enemies...
...eaingiorious and chauvinistic and silly...
...ft seems, aha, that more than all this has come true...
...Jacoues ? a ri tarn, Paui Claudel, and Charles Peguy But he had declared finally, "I am neither a Catholic nor s Protestant, I am a Christian, quite simply...
...Or try this look forward to the time of the descendants: "I may be wrong...
...Am 1 can say is that they just didn't do- things hke that...
...do I look ?? a mother superior* I could perhaps smile st> seme of these tales, but my anger rises whoa I find him ?ujstsiig haw he—but seem.ngiy no other outsider—saw sonst $ aar dm* it malto shoot down m eoW based an old man who had committed the hniaous crime— so the author says—of smuggling ? tow potatoes isto the city to stone osT his linage...
...His writing is a litte too exclamatory' for smoothness: he has * tstadawsp to pile hp misaismml maitinm, erat hm sack cd concern with style and structure ip dteaopcoimr.g Since (?&?ideas are recurrent and so* etssuikoffc esoteric, there seams to be ne ras ism to exesses s discussion of their artistic manpuisaon...
...Winston Churchill recently triad to clear the air by stating thai the Brit*** had becked Giraud all along...
...It may be, as they ?'??' feat toe scope of this work went beyond the possible, arti ??"' **ter "™e beginning, the end would have failed to y*4toe Poet's dream...
...to cswors en the beach...
...But, thinking of some well-dressed gentlemen And well-fed ladies I have met at times *· who spent their years despairing of toe Republic And'trying ways to beat an income tax, (dunk I con hear the comment of Captain Smith Chan- from St Sepulcre's, the biting voice, ^ and Inge chimera-scorn...
...We...
...By Klaue Mown...
...Union President Harry I ¦namhtra, ? mktsg tW issue up with what he calls "the master minds in Washington...
...Salter's record and the whole trend of his book sll too forcibly suggest that his resl role is that of what Spaniards call* us tmboteaao—an enemy hiding behind the bush...
...They are saying that Stephen Vincent Benet was an unofficial American laurea teething like Tennyson, something like Kipling...
...In saying this I am not unmindful cd «treake...
...They were the Catholic traditionarists whose very existence was due to the bit tame** oi their hatred toward the nsonarchiato...
...socialistic) and toe P.O.U.M...
...I will not say—as many have—that it is bettor, b, the Civil war epic the poet let himself go, played with all stops op<n...
...In a „ose it is deeper than John Brown's Body, but less bold, less lyrical its* rampageous...
...Toledano's buddies, but »4l*i*** tJso a large number who, in addition, want to build a i...
...I liked it...
...So it gees, Geesfsey...
...Even those forgotten souls, the tough -mouthed sailors of the Mayflower, have their place in the tapestry, tit poor little ballad maker who writes his ridiculous little rhymes at ? penny a line to lure bond-buyers and emigrants—even he is ¦nautili 11 il as a human soul and a part of this westward-stream's* oeesn-erossing tide...
...A member of Gide's intimate circle in Paris since 1925, he evidently feels more at ease in elucidation than in criticism...
...BRs attitude is rather sets-effacing...
...But- precisely because the book is worse than worthless by which I mean irresponsible and vicious—and precise...
...An impulse to abandon his literary and social heritage took Gide to the African desert in 1894...
...4ne eay Sorter saantere forth to become toe father confessor of...
...Here, for on* reason or another, was something th* White House wss aood sat on...
...But who cares what people think in a hundred years...
...Bitot Wssf to constant possibility, and there mass very few sensed guards...
...Request of Wings He ate and drank toe pre aba ns words, ?spirit grew robust knew no ssere that he was poor, tost his frame was dost...
...PPRO ACHING Gide's work as a microcosm *¦ that involves the entire "crisis of modern thought,** Klaas Mann has made his emphasis a moral-philosophic one...
...Telegrams were despatched to more than 50 absentees...
...I arc also rhindful^of toe friendliness of guardias asalto Salter calls his book "Tryout in Spain" and poses as the critic of the democratic powers in allowing the -fascists to win the tattle of Spain...
...But suddenly, the drawing-rooms became stifling...
...But the treatment •corded the American Indian shows that all the elements which en*, to the making of our wide and multicolored way of life would sire been given due place and understanding...
...Manny Farbers' bitter review of FWTBT is called "Tinkle...
...Actually, both doctrines represent permanent, though partial, facets of Gide's belief...
...He began his literary career among a galaxy of ??-de-tieele literati who clustered around the poet Mallerme...
...A Phoney Correspondent by Lawrence Fernsworth Former London Times...
...3...
...Nobody bothered to...
...on* thong—I have too many...
...Th* prisoners stowed away, the hotehes were toon battened down...
...an* 0Bte about Ralph Toledano's statement of the war aims * iS***0* terms °* *ne American soldier has grown so hot and lobr'toat I can spill only driblets of it before eager readers, j^^eeb writes from a naval training station: "Mr...
...Sammy was ates wuehiflg for the London Newe Chre-meet...
...But the Daily Werker hos indicated no backtrackinff...
...Benet stayed closer home, maim to us...
...And I con just see, also, an Allied fine k* France and the lowlands of 3 million men collaborating with toe Eastern Russian line of 3 million and ten men—butt yen ss# that a second front...
...But what d*y came up with was different aa prone from poetry...
...lnmputraliti, though it demonstrates the impracticability of complete license, suggests the appeal ef a life beyond good and evil...
...Thar appears to me as mere protective coloring, a sop to the present public temper...
...Reared in a bourgeois Puritan family with occasional streaks of Catholism, Gide wss by no accident continuously concerned with moral a'nd religious themes...
...m feet, there were human beings aboard the Mayfower, Not merely ancestors...
...tconomic ideas will benefit all workers...
...The rtresm of national meaning and movement is seen rising in spares af...
...in a gesture of revolt against the sociologist*—Zola, Tarne, the Goncourts...
...They were such tales ss the Franco press picked up snd printed with gusto...
...The appalling thing is that so reputable s house ea Harper's should sponsor it...
...The great and the small are here—and Sft* delineated and dignified as sharer in some bright flash of the irmm that was to become America...
...e * Cor instance, in the Spring of 1937 one of these * stories told how a Peasants' Army was marching on Valencia threatening to drive out the Republican government then installed there...
...reign Ceeeesssasdaat: Hew he got there we don't know, hat ther* is toe dispatch *u the front page this amah ft teats, U Solon, written on tie beach at Sicily...
...To begin wito, toe prisoners were trwoted with the utmost callousness by th* authorities and were loaded into to* cargo holds, 400 to a hold...
...A group of British correspondents in Valencia protested to the Telegraph against this kind of reporting, I do not wonder that the TiUgmph as Salter relates, finally decided to dispense with his services...
...He tolle am that the Cariists were monarchists and were pert of tne rightists led By Git Robles...
...This caused consternation in the British Foreign Office which called upon its Valencia delegation for information...
...I can just see, say, ? million planes destroying Hitler and the whole Asia...
...demanded that the whole war be played over...
...In a hundred years he may net be so well remembered ss they...
...carries us to Jamestown and Plymouth . The French •d Spaniards are barely mentioned...
...We hope to see the Mm tonight, and report more next week...
...sgewt to work at his desk st toe .Veer...
...Creative Af* Preee...
...It was only natural that he should drift to the Mail, with its reputation for friendliness toward Hitler snd Mussolini, and toward Franco, their puppet...
...Nor do I marvel at Salter's complaints, in his boost, that the British diplomatic and consular officials in Spain kept him at arm's length...
...The priooneve set* Mit in the black, airless holds without saw provisions fee santos tion...
...I cannot comfort myself as some T^wer his passing in the midst of battle...
...In this last voter, torn Which we shall probably ever receive from' Stephen Vin-ent fienH there is no one hero—though history gave him a good aosm to choose from...
...arguments and swaps...
...The Communists welcomed httn effusively: he woe enthusiastically praised By Ilya Hsreaenarg, the Kremlin's leading literary agent in Western Burens...
...Toledano's ^•tothat the average serviceman's only war aims ore to get kh *j?i0Ter quickly so as to be able to go home may...
...be true at i^6"*^-¦ · · Mr...
...Walter Raleigh and John Smith and Poea-heatss are there, Miles Standish and Governor Bradford, They play their part like any others...
...His was an appalling story of conditions aboard their ship...
...And Mother Billington, common in r<erf sense, stands out as ? warm and rugged representative of un-Puritan Merrie England...
...Had they no competent manuscript readers to toll them how little in common it had with Spain's realities...
...He does not know the elemental lact that the C.N.?., as aa affiliate of the Anarchistic Iberian Federation, came into swing pretmeto because it was not communistic, that it thhqeped Communism with all the fervor of a Bakuntn abhorring a Marx...
...them back when trade-unionism was at stake...
...Herald Tribune, wtuch has been vigorously critics...
...It established Gide's major fictional theme: curiosity as ethical impulse, man's self-discovery at sufficient purpose...
...But this is the one contrast that makes jog...
...and fantasy wherein he is continuously the hero of strange and bloodcurdling events such as are entirely foreign to the experiences of this correspondent and, I am certain, of my colleagues...
...3.00...
...Return From the U.SS.&., altooaflh it uXtissoon Gide's coneictiou that the Soviet Unto weald triumph over too errors he had pointed out...
...predictions more than came true...
...ANDRE GIBE...
...SM ¦usnffod hss mind completely about the "guilt" of Robert Morph* and the State Deportaient- . . . WMbur Forrest of the 4ew...
...God knows why...
...And when he died, on Marth 18th, d* Wfa "0teS obvious,y intended as sketches for the continustion ? ^g***1* Star was found the last quatrain which he was ever "Now for my country that it still may live, All that I have, all that I am 111 give...
...Wt lure* swung full cycle away from the hero...
...The one comparison that should have been made has—sa far tt I know—not been made...
...This is democratic literature » e very real and literal sense...
...TroUkyite) altogether constituted the, aasrrcho» syndicalisu...
...No one has tried to set Benet down betide Walt Whitman...
...fct iter Thai Never Sets WHAT we have is Book I. of an epic that was to fill four or five J* bjooks...
...VfeOp ? montAs ago or so we let loose at the Paramount production jof the Hemingway novel...
...Story-.—l^rrybody wmJ...
...Wit-jj* new demands for a national independent Labor Party, ^^uite also speak for leas militant workers, since Social Derao...
...And I like this, toe...
...So does Dickon Heme}, a London apprentice...
...It Tolls for Hoflywood:—Somebody or other always barges ??, * ???siding us for hitting before the hell...
...Although I was President of the assoeistiuq of foreign correspondents sod anew about everyone who hod even a remote pretense to being a foreign journalist, I had never heard of Satter making any such claim...
...Re danced along the dingy days...
...Nest thing, "suae inomffh toons bearded toughs- armed with rifles," appear at his door and ask foe the nans...
...The men who move through the drama are to ? im "ruffians, stubble-bearded villains,* wild-looking miiirianos, lawless mobs," sad so on...
...But flto final resolution is even mope obviously dialectical...
...1926), a slight reevaluation occurs...
...Both were poets of democracy...
...an almost indiscriminate thirst for...
...Solon's regular cabled dispatches from London nsv* sag aMtt appearing for am** than a month new...
...Oed, men...
...JseMrsueedfbe...
...provoked i storm of insults from Bbmaos iottoec Lk>n> Fsmhloatiaei, and Enrenfe-ure- Gide was left almost completely in mmtssan...
...genug feuds in cdrrhecfion with food, which have nothing to do with the general case...
...After a time he put the work aside in favor of smaller ^k»tWAch would be^ of mow immediate relevance...

Vol. 26 • July 1943 • No. 29


 
Developed by
Kanda Sofware
  Kanda Software, Inc.