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Showing posts with label World. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World. Show all posts

1941: Literature, World

The books that have appeared this year, whether they deal with factual events or with experiences of mind and feeling, are for the most part documents of war. And even among those that seem remote from war there are many which are conscious escapes from it or rapid summings up of familiar things that war has altered. There are the active words of generals and statesmen; accounts and analyses of conflict and reconstruction by scholars, artists, journalists; simple records of disaster by ordinary men who had never thought of writing for the public; reminiscences of peaceful years; fictional narratives based on fighting and its results.

ENGLAND

Most important of the publications by leading men is, without doubt, Blood, Sweat and Tears, speeches delivered by Winston Churchill between May 1938 and February 1941. There are also collections of addresses by Lord Halifax between Feb. 6, 1934 and Feb. 27, 1940, Speeches on Foreign Policy, and one of excerpts from those of Ernest Bevin, The Balance Sheet of the Future. Sir Archibald Wavell's Generals and Generalship contains three lectures delivered two years ago at Trinity College, Cambridge; and his admiring biography, Allenby: a Study in Greatness, is another analysis by the renowned commander of qualities demanded of military leaders.

A number of outstanding men in the British Labour Party are represented in Labour's Aims in War and Peace, edited by C. R. Attlee. Francis Williams, former editor of the London Daily Herald, has published two books, Democracy's Battle and War by Revolution, concerning the rise of dictatorships and means of coping with them. The second volume of Professor W. K. Hancock's Survey of British Commonwealth Affairs, dealing with problems of economic policy from 1918 to 1939, has appeared. J. B. Priestley's Out of the People is a lecture about the political and social reconstruction which England faces; Julian Huxley's radio talks, Democracy Marches, are on the same subject, and his Man Stands Alone is a collection of essays 'towards some new formulation of our basic beliefs and attitudes.' The English Are Like That is an analysis of his compatriots by Philip Carr. This War We Wage by Herbert Morrison, Howard Spring, and E. M. Delafield, England Speaks, a symposium by eight well known writers, John Strachey's A Faith to Fight For, and David Thomson's The Democratic Ideal in France and England, are all discussions of the principles for which England fights.

Among personal narratives of England at war are John Strachey's direct account of his experiences as air raid warden, Digging for Mrs. Miller; Vera Brittain's journalistic, patriotic England's Hour; Phyllis Bottome's detailed description of London and Liverpool under bombardment, Mansion House of Liberty; Margaret Kennedy's journal from May to September 1940, Where Stands a Winged Sentry; Margery Allingham's narrative of life in a small English village during the first year and a half of war, The Oaken Heart; and Their Finest Hour, a collection of first hand stories gathered and edited by two American newspaper men, Allan Michie and Walter Graebner. There is a picture of Provence at the outbreak of the war and of a village in Sussex after the capitulation in Lady Winifred Fortescue's Trampled Lilies, and a personal record by an English aviator of air war over France, Paul M. Richey's Fighter Pilot. There are records of Dunkirk: a compilation by Douglas Williams, war correspondent of the Daily Telegraph, of ten accounts by British soldiers who took part in the evacuation, Retreat from Dunkirk; and John Masefield's simple, graphic little book of sixty pages, The Nine Days Wonder, with five heroic lyrics in memory of the event. And there is a day by day account of twenty days after the break-through at Sedan, The Road to Bordeaux, by two English volunteers in the French army, C. D. Freeman and Douglas Cooper. The chief interest of Somerset Maugham's record of the war, Strictly Personal, is its analysis of French morale at the time of the downfall. Several collections of letters from Britain have been published, among which: Women of Britain, from British women between August 1939 and January 1941, assembled by Jan Struther; War Letters from Britain, edited by Mrs. Vincent Sheean (Diana Forbes-Robertson); and London Front, edited by Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Harwood. In Invasion in the Snow; a Study of Mechanized War by John Langdon-Davies we have an analysis of the Finnish war by an English correspondent. Rebecca West's 'magnum opus,' Black Lamb and Grey Falcon stands to rank as the most impressive book of the year. It is a travel diary of a trip to Yugoslavia in 1937 which, however, purports to be much more than that: 'an analysis of our culture, the world of ideas and emotions in which we live,' a kind of allegory of the whole of modern civilization. A pleasant book about sheep-farming in Wales, Thomas Firbank's I Bought a Mountain, seems to belong to another world or another age.

Of novels about the war, the long serious one by Eric Knight, This Above All, and Jane Nicholson's story of domestic life in London during August and September 1940, Shelter, attracted most attention. Storm Jameson's short novel, The Fort, attempts to concentrate in a conversation between French and English soldiers and a German captive the national psychologies involved in both Great Wars. Robert Greenwood's Mr. Bunting in Peace and War pictures the average 'little man' of England in war-time. Of fiction that does not deal with the war, we have notably Virginia Woolf's posthumous Between the Acts; Elizabeth Bowen's collection of short stories Look at all those Roses; Hugh Walpole's posthumous novel, Blind Man's House; Charles Morgan's The Empty Room, an allegorical reassertion of life and love against a background of war; John Buchan's last romance, Mountain Meadow; Compton Mackenzie's West to North, fourth installment in his The Four Winds of Love; and Phyllis Bentley's Manhold, which continues her fictionalized history of Yorkshire. The popular author of The Citadel, A. J. Cronin, has produced another melodramatic but well-written novel of facile moral teaching, The Keys of the Kingdom; and the equally popular James Hilton has added to Lost Horizon and Good-bye, Mr. Chips another sentimental, genial, and skillful story, Random Harvest. C. Day-Lewis has written a gruesome detective tale, The Corpse in the Snowman; Evan John Simpson, a historical novel about Marie Antoinette, King's Masque, not so good as his Crippled Splendor; J. C. Powys a two volume romance of Wales in the fifteenth century, Owen Glendower; and John Masefield a brief tale of rebellion in Byzantium in 532, Conquer.

More important than fiction has been the poetry of the year, for apart from certain volumes of traditional verse — collections of poems by Alice Meynell, Hilaire Belloc, Walter de la Mare, and others — there have been two or three publications of authentic and significant new poetry: W. H. Auden's The Double Man, brilliant in statement of the day's philosophic perplexities; Plant and Phantom by Louis MacNeice, undemonstrative and exquisitely pure; and the bitter, clever, passionate Selected Poems by George Barker.

The biographies and autobiographies have a strangely remote flavor, apart from one or two, such as Viscount E.A.R. Cecil's story of his life, A Great Experiment, which deals mostly with the League of Nations, and Sir George Compton's Concerning W. S. Churchill. John Masefield has written of his work in a mill in Yonkers, N. Y., over forty-five years ago, In the Mill; Aldous Huxley has given in Grey Eminence a portrait of Father Joseph, Cardinal Richelieu's invaluable aide and collaborator; and the autobiographies of Ernest Rhys, Wales England Wed, of Lady Winifred Fortescue, There's rosemary ... there's rue; of Richard Aldington, Life for Life's Sake, all have the air of period pieces.

Among critical essays should be mentioned The Poetry of W. B. Yeats, a simple, discriminating study by Louis MacNeice; and of scholarly publications, the inauguration of a Cambridge Economic History of Europe.

FRANCE

Analyses by the French of their country's débâcle have been numerous, the most significant being probably Jacques Maritain's factual, closely reasoned A Travers le Désastre. Very valuable also are Robert de Saint Jean's Démocratie, Beurre et Canons, an interpretation by 'the average educated French bourgeois,' especially noteworthy for its portrait of Paul Reynaud, with whom the author was in close collaboration; and the merciless Pierre Laval by the famous French attorney Henry Torrès. Translation at this time of General Charles de Gaulle's The Army of the Future, originally published in 1934 when its author was captain at St. Cyr, seems tragically ironic, as does also the admiring biography of her brother, André Maginot, Mme. Marguerite Joseph's He Might Have Saved France. Men of Europe is a dramatic, gossipy, behind-the-scenes account of events in Europe in the last two decades by a journalist who writes under the name of André Simone. They Speak for a Nation is a collection of excerpts, edited by Eve Curie, from letters by French men and women to friends in England and America; and All Gaul is Divided is another such collection, containing some sixteen letters from a French family living in the occupied zone.

Four French novels have been translated into English this year: Roger Martin du Gard's continuation of The Thibaults, Summer 1914; Jules Romains' Aftermath, the seventeenth and eighteenth volumes in the French edition of his Men of Good Will; Louis Aragon's long novel of French life from 1889 to the first World War, The Century Was Young; and the slight thing by Henri Troyat, Judith Madrier, which uses the present war as a backdrop for a story of amorous intrigues. There is a book, not yet translated, of literary studies of André Maurois, Études littéraires, with essays on Paul Valéry, André Gide, Marcel Proust, Henri Bergson, Paul Claudel, and Charles Peguy. An analysis of dictatorship, written over a hundred years ago, has been translated, Benjamin Constant's Prophecy from the Past: On Conquest and Usurpation.

GERMANY

An edition of Hitler's utterances has appeared as a sequel to Mein Kampf. This important collection, My New Order, edited with commentary by Raoul de Roussy de Sales, is chronologically arranged with a list of important events that give the background for each speech. The collection extends from an address on March 7, 1918, to workers organized to form a 'Labor Committee for a Good Peace' to the proclamation on June 22, 1941, announcing the invasion of Russia. Gottfried Leske's I Was a Nazi Flier is a further revelation of Nazi mentality, the diary of a young German airman who took part in the bombing of Belgium, Holland, France, and England. Alfred von Wegerer's The Origins of World War II, based on official documents, attempts to prove, as did the author's previous books about World War I, Germany's innocence in these conflicts.

Hermann Rauschning, author of The Revolution of Nihilism, has given a further analysis of National Socialism in The Redemption of Democracy; and in The Conservative Revolution has attempted to explain why he and his friends had first accepted Hitler, thinking for three years that they might be able to use him for their own liberal ends. A similar account, Fritz Thyssen's I Paid Hitler, is of the part played by German business men in Hitler's rise to power. Ernst Fraenkel's The Dual State is an independent analysis of Nazi dictatorship, a study of Nazi law by a labor lawyer who had practised in Berlin before Hitler and, although anti-Nazi, stayed there until 1938. Sebastian Haffner's Germany: Jekyll and Hyde is a study by a young German emigré of 'the habits of mind that have dominated the German Reich from Bismarck to Hitler.' The author's theory is that because Germans lack the political sense to control a large state, they should, after the defeat of Nazism, return to the small states system of 1866. Emil Ludwig's The Germans is an attempt to explain German character through a historical résumé of 2,000 years. Similar attempts have been made through compilations of German works, such as Will Schaber's Thinker vs. Junker, a 'collection of speeches, aphorisms, essays and letters written by the best of German minds from the reign of Frederick the Great to Nazism,' ending with Thomas Mann's Christmas message to the German people in 1940.

Among personal narratives of German refugees are O. Zarek's autobiography, Splendor and Shame; Renée Brand's Short Days Ago; the accounts in William Allen Neilson's collection, We Escaped, which contains stories also of fugitives of other nationalities; and The Spoil of Europe, an apparently authentic 'exposition of the Nazi technique in the political and economic conquest of Europe' by one who has had access to important documents and who writes under the name Thomas Reveille. Martin Gumpert's First Papers, with a preface by Thomas Mann, gives flattering impressions of America by a distinguished doctor who escaped from Nazi Germany five years ago. Lion Feuchtwanger's The Devil in France is an account of his experiences in concentration camps in France, and A. Reiner's The Coward Heart is a melodramatic novel of German exiles in Paris before the invasion. E. M. Remarque's new novel, Flotsam, tells of three German refugees obliged to flee from country to country in Europe.

The most distinguished German work of the year is a short novel by Thomas Mann, The Transposed Heads, an allegory, based on an Indian fable. A book of poems by Rudolf Fuchs, who is well known for his translations of Czech poetry, Gedichte aus Reigate, has appeared in England in a limited edition of 150 copies. There is a new edition of Franz Kafka's The Castle, with a brief introduction by Thomas Mann, and A Franz Kafka Miscellany, which contains an autobiographic sketch, unpublished parts of The Castle, and extracts from Max Brod's biography of Kafka and from Kafka's Letter to my Father.

Alex Bein's Theodore Herzl is an able biography of the originator of the Zionist movement. Friedrich Engels' unfinished work on the philosophy of science from the Marxist standpoint, Dialects of Nature, has appeared in translation, as has also, for the first time, a classic of German religious philosophy, Herder's God, Some Conversations.

OTHER COUNTRIES

From what it is possible to gather, the literary output of all other countries has been so slight this year that is seems wiser to consider it as a whole instead of separately, according to nationalities.

There are, to begin with, important accounts of the German invasion: that of Czechoslovakia in Ten Million Prisoners by Vojta Beneš, elder brother of Eduard Beneš and once Senator in his country's Republic, written in collaboration with R. A. Ginsburg; of the Netherlands, in Juggernaut over Holland, an extraordinarily restrained account by the Dutch Foreign Minister, E. N. V. Kleffens; of Norway, by her Minister of Foreign Affairs, Halvdan Koht, Norway Neutral and Invaded, the most authoritative account to date of that phase of the war. We have also personal narratives of imprisonment and escape, among the best of which are those by two Hungarians: Hans Habe's A Thousand Shall Fall, and Arthur Koestler's Scum of the Earth. Koestler is already known for his unusual work on the Moscow Trials, Darkness at Noon.

There are several important works of history and on the theory of history. The 1911 one volume abridgment of Mikhail Sergeevich Grushevskü's standard A History of the Ukraine has been translated into English and brought up to date; Salvador de Madariaga, whose excellent Christopher Columbus appeared in 1940, has published a magnificent history of the conquest of Mexico, Hernan Cortes, Conqueror of Mexico; and Count Carlo Sforza, one time Foreign Minister of Italy, has written in Fifty Years of War and Diplomacy in the Balkans a story principally of Yugoslavia and of her remarkable peasant statesman, Nicholas Pashich. Professor Guglielmo Ferrero's The Reconstruction of Europe, the second volume in a trilogy on the Napoleonic Wars, deals with the post-war European situation of 1814 and 1815, pointing out analogies between that time and ours. Benedetto Croce, in History as the Story of Liberty, continues his previous work on the nature of historical thought; and Ortega y Gasset, in a collection of essays, Toward a Philosophy of History, ventures some novel theories concerning the origin of the State.

Outstanding among works of fiction is the Polish novel, Salt of the Earth, by Josef Wittlin. It is the story of the first World War, part of a trilogy, to be called The Saga of the Patient Foot-Soldier, which, although only now translated into English, has already appeared in nine other languages. Mikhail Sholohov has written another long novel of the Cossacks, The Don Flows Home to the Sea; from Sweden we have Harald Hornborg's Passion and the Sword, which won a prize as the best novel in Swedish by a Finnish author, and Vilhelm Moberg's The Earth Is Ours; and from Iceland, a simple, deeply pious story, The Good Shepherd, by Gunnar Gunnarsson. From Holland comes an able psychological novel, Willy Corsari's Man without Uniform. The Latin-American Prize Novel was Ciro Alegria's tale of a small village in the Peruvian mountains, Broad and Alien Is the World; and from China has come a translation of short stories, Ah Q, and Others, by the influential writer, Lusin, who died in 1936.

For the rest, the year has brought translations from two of the greatest modern Spanish authors: Truth of Two, poems by Pedro Salinas, and From Lorca's Theatre, five of Federico García Lorca's plays; a book of tributes from critics of many lands to Belgium's outstanding novelist, Témoignages sur Jean Tousseul, edited by J. P. Bonnami; a book about Switzerland, D. de Rougemont's and C. Muret's The Heart of Europe, 'neither history nor guide book,' but an attempt to describe how 'one people has managed to remain free and diverse yet united'; reminiscences by Mme. Pilsudska of her great husband, Pilsudski; a second book about China by Mme. Chiang Kai-Shek, China Shall Rise Again; an unusually entertaining travel book from Denmark, Hakon Mielche's Journey to the World's End; further translations from Soren Kierkegaard, The Present Age and Stages on Life's Way; and a new, American edition of Jawaharlal Nehru's autobiography, Toward Freedom.

1939: Literature, World

ENGLAND

Fiction.

Outstanding in this year's fiction were four works of different kinds: Sirocco by Ralph Bates, The Death of the Heart by Elizabeth Bowen, The Professor by Rex Warner, and Captain Horatio Hornblower by Cecil Scott Forester. They represented distinct categories of narrative into which the other novels of the year seemed naturally to fall.

Ralph Bates, who had helped to organize the International Brigade during the Spanish Civil War and who for many years before had lived in Spain and known it well, brought together in Sirocco some of his short stories about its people. Spanning the last fifteen years of Spanish history, they were honest, understanding tales that ranged in method from the symbolic to the journalistic, — one of the few works of English fiction this year that dealt seriously with the present scene. Another was Christopher Isherwood's volume of short stories, Good-bye to Berlin. They were about the German capital in the years immediately preceding Hitler, written in the exact, lucid, unemphatic prose which is coming to be recognized as Isherwood's medium. But, on the whole, the 'problem novel' seemed to have all but vanished. This was notably true of the novel of social and industrial problems, of which there was one only, Sailor Comes Home, the tragic tale of a Welsh mining town by Howard Clewes. Somerset Maugham's Christmas Holiday had to do with a wealthy young man's discovery of how the 'other half' lives, but it was too light in tone and its emphasis too much on melodrama to be taken seriously as 'proletarian fiction'; and the same can be said of Storm Jameson's picturesque tale of a Soho slum, Here Comes a Candle. Those English novelists who were interested in the contemporary scene turned their attention to other aspects of it. Richard Aldington, for example, whose first novel, Death of a Hero (1928) was of the war, gave in Rejected Guest, through the life story of a man born during the Great War, a history of the period between that war and the present. H. M. Tomlinson, well known for his All Our Yesterdays (1930) now wrote a period piece of England on the brink of 1914, The Day Before. George Buchanan's Entanglement was a depressing, composite picture of London in 1937 and 1938. Pamela Frankau's The Devil We Know, Louis Golding's Mr. Emanuel, and Mary Borden's Passport for a Girl were sympathetic studies of Jews as they are affected by Hitler's régime.

A greater number of novelists turned from sociology to psychology, from social questions to analyses of individuals. Among these Elizabeth Bowen's The Death of the Heart, her fifth novel and by general consent her best, had deeper implications than its subject might at first glance indicate. A piece of delicate characterization, somewhat in the manner of Henry James, a study of the repressive effect of a sophisticated, politely conventional English household on an adolescent girl, it seemed to some critics to be a symbol of the general heartlessness of upper-class Englishmen to-day; the death of the child's heart stood for the 'death of an era.' Other novels were more or less conventional love stories in a variety of settings: a hospital in Mary Renault's Promise of Love, a rural English parish in Margaret Mathews' Such Harmony, London musical halls in Storm Jameson's Straws in Amber. Elswyth Thane Beebe's Tryst had to do with the love of a girl for the ghost that haunts the house she lives in. There were studies of neurotics, such as Leonard Strong's The Open Sky, Angry Man's Tale by Peter de Polnay, As for the Woman by Anthony Cox, and Phyllis Bottome's Danger Signal, a kind of psychoanalytic detective story. There were tales of married life and amiable sketches of pleasant people in English suburbs and country homes: an ordinary suburban couple during the first year of marriage in Norman Collin's Love in Our Time; several maladjusted pairs of the upper bourgeoisie in Alec Waugh's Galsworthian Going their Own Ways, a Novel of Modern Marriage; the 'nicest sort of English family life' in Alice Grant Rosman's William's Room.

Striking a somewhat deeper note, in its unadorned presentation of modern English aristocracy, was Mrs. Dorothy Whipple's The Priory. And in at least two other novels modern English society was looked at critically: in Warwick Deeping's Bluewater, a contrast of urban sophistication and rural simplicity; and in Archibald MacDonell's Autobiography of a Cad, a satire of the upper classes during the post-war years. Storm Jameson's The Captain's Wife was a gloomy study of a willful, egotistic woman. Margaret Kennedy, who some time ago made her mark with The Constant Nymph, produced this year a novel of sensational episodes, The Midas Touch. G. B. Stern's The Woman in the Hall had to do with a professional beggar who managed to give her daughters an upper class education. James Hill's No Victory for the Soldier was the story of a musical child prodigy, a frustrated genius, who ultimately found fulfilment by taking part in the Spanish Civil War. Freda Lingstrom in Axel traced the fortunes of three children adopted by a lonely man. Olive Warner's Uncle Lawrence was a warm-hearted little sketch of the 'black sheep' of an English family, self-exiled to an island in Lake Erie. Considerable popularity was attained by Rumer Godden's Black Narcissus, a quiet story of how a group of Anglican nuns attempted and failed to set up a school in the Himalayas.

Stories of romantic adventure were also in the ascendant. Chief of these was Cecil Scott Forester's Flying Colors which completed the trilogy about his remarkable sea captain in Napoleonic times. Together with the two earlier books, Ships of the Line and Beat to Quarters, it was published in an omnibus volume, Captain Horatio Hornblower. Another trilogy of adventure was John Masefield's romance, the second and third parts of which were published under title Live and Kicking Ned. Sir Hugh Walpole's The Sea Tower was a story of melodramatic horror. Two semi-historical novels by Norah Lofts also had to do with adventurous heroes. One was of the eighteenth century, Colin Lowrie, the tale of an exiled Jacobite Scotsman who was sold into slavery in the West Indies and escaped to Virginia before he returned to his native land; the other, Blossom Like the Rose, was a romantic novel of America in the late seventeenth century. Seventeenth century Germany was the background of A. E. W. Mason's Königsmark.

Of more strictly historical interest were several volumes on a variety of themes. Louis Golding's Biblical narrative In the Steps of Moses the Conqueror, continuing his In the Steps of Moses the Lawgiver (1938), told of the Israelites' journey through Transjordan, giving the author an opportunity to describe the country through which he himself had traveled. There were two novels of the Boer War: Francis Brett Young's The City of Gold, a sequel to They Seek a Country, and Watch for the Dawn by Stuart Cloete, popular author of The Turning Wheels. Francis Hackett, well known for his Henry the Eighth, produced another carefully documented piece of fictionalized history, Queen Anne Boleyn. Margaret Irwin's The Bride was concerned with the Stuart cause. And Joseph Walter Cove's Vanessa and the Dean retold in the form of a novel, the usually slighted story of Jonathan Swift's relationship with Esther Vanhomrigh. Dorothy Hewlett's Victorian House and Muriel Coxon's Family Circle were pictures of family life in Victorian England. Henry Handel Richardson's Young Cosima had as its theme one of the most notable figures in modern chronicles of love, the daughter of Franz Liszt and the wife of Richard Wagner; but whether in spite or because of the intrinsic fascination of the theme, this novel did not come up to Ultima Thule which in 1929 had established its author's fame for skill in manipulating psychological intricacies.

One of the most significant developments of English fiction in recent years has been its marked tendency to allegory. Influenced by the work of Franz Kaffka, serious younger writers have chosen to express themselves in the form of satiric fantasy. Last year Rex Warner wrote The Wild Goose Chase; this year he published The Professor; and although the relative merits of these two novels might be disputed, the nightmare power of many scenes in the latter book could not be denied. It was a satire on the pathetic ineptitude of liberals in the face of modern dictatorships; newspaper accounts of the falls of small democracies were the tragic realities on which the fantasy was based. Over the Mountain by the young poet, Ruthven Todd, was another allegory of fascism and a satire of Englishmen. Other imaginary stories were of a different, non-Kaffkian order. Nevil Shute Norway's Ordeal, a graphic account of a family's plight during the bombardment of a British seaport town was too plausible in its grim details to be convincing as fantasy; it was a realistic picture of what actually would occur under the circumstances. In The Hopkins Manuscript, the author of Journey's End, Robert Cedric Sheriff, tried his hand, not too successfully, at the genre. And H. G. Wells in The Holy Terror looked once more into the face of things to come, but more despairingly than usual. Sylvia Townsend Warner's After the Death of Don Juan was an exquisitely polished, ironic re-working of the legend of the Great Lover and Rebel. Light and humorous in tone were T. A. White's playful, anachronistic pseudo-historical fantasies of King Arthur, The Sword in the Stone and Witch in the Wood.

Best of the 'hammock reading' novels were Angela Thirkell's The Brandons: Naomi Royde-Smith's detective tale, The Altar-Piece and her avowedly escapist The Younger Venus, recommended by one American reviewer to 'day-dreaming adolescents'; Michael Arlen's tale of international intrigue, The Flying Dutchman; Cecil Roberts' They Wanted to Live, sequel to Victoria, Four-thirty; and Somerset Maugham's 'sophisticated fairy-tale' Princess September and the Nightingale.

Poetry.

Robert Graves, known especially for his novels and historical romances, Good-bye to All That, I, Claudius, etc., published this year a selection of the poetry he has written, Collected Poems. A new edition of Hilaire Belloc's Sonnets and Verse, first published in 1923, came out with many new poems; and Walter de la Mare brought out an anthology, Behold this Dreamer, a collection of prose and verse, of which the sub-title indicated its nature: 'of reverie, night, sleep, dream, love-dreams, nightmare, death, the unconscious, the imagination, divination, the artist, and kindred subjects.'

Of new poetry very little appeared. There was a long poem by Victoria Sackville-West, Solitude, a stately, melancholy, reflective piece on man's essential loneliness and on death. There was a volume of thirty short, compact, cerebral lyrics, Poems, by Anne Ridler, known to date as a Shakespearean critic. Christopher Isherwood and W. H. Auden wrote together, partly in verse and partly in prose, an allegorical play of capitalism and socialism, On the Frontier. Stephen Spender translated from the German and the Spanish: together with J. B. Leishman, Rainer Maria Rilke's Duino Elegies; with J. L. Gili, poems of Garcia Lorca. There were poems by Auden in Journey to a War, a travel book on China, also written in collaboration with Isherwood.

It is perhaps not irrelevant to mention here that Auden and Isherwood are both now in the United States, as is also Richard Aldington; and that Stephen Spender is reported to have said at the outbreak of the war: 'As I haven't been told to do anything, I can devote myself to writing, perhaps my posthumous works.'

Criticism and Essays.

Among the few works of literary criticism that appeared this year, there was none of outstanding importance. Modern Poetry by Louis MacNeice combined literary autobiography with a critical discussion of poetry. Herbert Edward Read's Poetry and Anarchism, 'a personal confession of faith,' was an examination of the poet's place in an industrial society. Joan Evans' Taste and Temperament was 'a brief study of psychological types in their relation to the visual arts'; and Cyril Connolly's Enemies of Promise, a book of practical advice about the writer's craft. In The Price of Leadership, John Middleton Murry propounded the theory that 'the continuance of Democracy depends upon the ruling class being consciously Christian.' J. Bronowski's The Poet's Defense, essays on Sidney, Shelley, Dryden, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Swinburne, Housman, and Yeats, was based on the thesis that poetry itself diverges from poetic theory. A lecture delivered at Cambridge by John Dover Wilson was published: Leslie Stephen and Matthew Arnold as Critics of Wordsworth. Malcolm Elwin's Old Gods Falling dealt in a youthful, breezy way with English literature from 1887 to 1914. Sir James Barrie's hitherto unpublished speeches, from 1893 to 1935, were brought together in McConnachie and J.M.B.; and over forty articles on a variety of topics by Dean Inge were collected in a volume called Our Present Discontents.

Biography.

In the realm of biography documents and studies of Victorial England continued to accumulate in 1939. One of the most valuable records of the period, a serious chronicle of political events as well as a revelation of a curious personality Charles Greville's Memoirs, came out in an unabridged edition by Lytton Strachey and Roger Fulford. Lord David Cecil, who some years ago wrote a very sensitive biography of the poet William Cowper, The Stricken Deer, now published a study of Queen Victoria's first Prime Minister, The Young Melbourne, good as a portrait not only of the man but of the political scene in which he functioned in his early days. A very important work was J. L. Hammond's monumental life of Gladstone, Gladstone and the Irish Nation. There was also a biography, by R. L. Arkell, of the little known queen consort of George II, Caroline of Ansbach. Clive of Plassey by Alfred Mervyn Davies was a study of the political background and activity of the hero of India; and A Number of People by Sir Edward Marsh, consisted of amusing, anecdotal reminiscences of aristocratic and literary London before 1914.

Among publications of a more strictly literary interest there was, to begin with, David Garnett's edition of the Letters of T. E. Lawrence. The collection included diaries and unpublished notes as well as letters, and although by no means complete, formed an extremely valuable addition to the biographical material concerning this baffling person. A Poet and Two Painters was a memoir of that other, very different but also extraordinary, Lawrence, D. H. By Knud Merrild, one of the two Danish painters who spent the winter of 1922-23 with the Lawrences near Taos, it was a refreshingly detached account of the writer whose personality has suffered through disciples' idolatry. A pathetic and amusing collection was the edition by George Paston and Peter Quenell of letters written to Byron by the women who had loved him, To Lord Byron.

Edward Lear, author of many limericks, of 'The Owl and the Pussycat' and other famous nonsense, was honored this year for the first time in a biography. Edward Lear by Angus Davidson was a well documented record of the humorist's tragic life. Professor F. C. Green's Stendhal, a semi-popular biography of the great French novelist, about whom little has been written in English, did something to clarify the facts of his life, but attempted no thorough going analysis of his work. One of the most exotic of Victorian literary figures was the subject of a sketch by Yvonne French, Ouida: a Study in Ostentation. There was a scholarly biography of Coleridge, Lawrence Hanson's The Life of S. T. Coleridge; it dealt only with the poet's youth, and a sequel was promised. Professor Ernest de Selincourt's final volume of Wordsworth's correspondence, Letters, the Later Years, covered the last thirty years of the poet's life. The third volume of Arthur Bryant's definitive biography of Pepys was published in 1939, Samuel Pepys, the Saviour of the Navy; it dealt with the period from 1693 to 1689 when the illustrious diarist was serving at the Admiralty. One of the most able studies of the year was Enid Starkie's critical biography of the daemonic French poet, Arthur Rimbaud. Phyllis Bottome published a biography of the former friend and later opponent of Sigmund Freud, and the founder of the school of Individual Psychology, Alfred Adler. Official, in a sense, since Adler himself had asked her to write it, her biography was perhaps too much the work of a friend and not enough that of a scientist.

Certain autobiographies published during 1939 threw an oblique light on the contemporary state of mind. Siegfried Sassoon, for example, whose poems of the war, Counter Attack (1918), were among the most graphic and bitter of those written by young men who had fought at the front, has gone, it would seem, from disillusion to reminiscent nostalgia. At any rate, The Old Century and Seven More Years, retreating to a period earlier than that of his other autobiographic books, Memoirs of a Fox-Hunting Man and Memoirs of an Infantry Officer, was an idyllic picture of his boyhood and youth. Ralph Hale Mottram's Autobiography with a Difference was also a quiet volume of reminiscence; and A. A. Milne's Autobiography, frankly designed to entertain, was as distant from the world of violence as might have been expected from the creator of Christopher Robin.

Other records, however, were of a different kind, as, for example: John Gielgud's Early Stages, which was not so much a personal history of the brilliant young Shakespearean actor as the story of the theater as he has known it; J. B. Priestley's Rain upon Godshill, continuing his Midnight on the Desert (1937); or Sir George Compton Arthur Archer's 'memoirs of an English soldier,' Not Worth Reading. Havelock Ellis, who will be long remembered for his monumental Studies in the Psychology of Sex, died this year, having before his death completed a history of himself. My Life was a frank narrative, concerned in large part with the story of his tempestuous relations with his wife. Not strictly classifiable as autobiography, and yet too personal and impressionistic an account to be taken as a conventional book of travel, was the story told by W. H. Auden and Christopher Isherwood of their trip to China, Journey to a War.

Political Writings.

The future historian of our times will be enlightened if he is not overwhelmed, by the mass of documents which political leaders and journalists are preparing for his examination. The two-volume Memoirs of the Peace Conference by David Lloyd George appeared this year, an account by the only surviving member of those who manipulated the destinies of nations in 1918, of what transpired at Versailles. Actual documents of the conference were here, but they did not obscure the nature of the work as special pleading in the author's own defense. Neville Chamberlain's chief speeches on foreign affairs from May 1937 to April 1939 were published in a collection bearing the ironically tragic title, In Search of Peace. Brief articles on domestic and foreign affairs written by Winston Churchill between 1936 and 1939 came out in Step by Step, and speeches by Anthony Eden from 1924 to 1938, in a volume called Foreign Affairs. There was also The British War Blue Book which contained, among other important documents relative to England's position in the present war, Sir Nevile Henderson's reports of his interviews with Ribbentrop and Hitler. Liddell Hart's In Defense of Britain, written before the outbreak of the war, recommended a policy of 'defense by defense,' on the principle that in event of conflict only through a war of sporadic battles had modern civilization a chance to survive. In Security: Can We Retrieve It? Sir James Arthur Salter analysed the political and economic reasons that have brought Europe to its present pass and attempted to sketch a 'constructive policy for a new foundation of peace' based on his belief in the power of organized military and economic planning. One of the most eloquent condemnations of the Munich settlement was Betrayal in Central Europe by the eminent journalist G. E. R. Gedye, a harrowing eyewitness account of the Nazi conquest of Austria and Czechoslovakia. Another such condemnation was Lost Liberty? by Joan and Jonathan Griffin, two English people who chancing to be in Prague during the summer and autumn of 1938, obtained access to important official documents. In Survey after Munich Graham Hutton, one of the editors of 'The London Economist' dealt with the likely consequences, rather than the causes, of the Munich agreement, concluding that despite Germany's new gained strength, France and England would remain unconquered. Philip Guedalla's The Hundredth Year was an episodic history of 1936, done in the vein of his The Hundred Years, largely through sketches of important personalities.

Harold Nicolson, who resigned from the Foreign Affairs Committee in protest against Chamberlain's policy at Munich, wrote a compact history of the officially prescribed methods of international relations, Diplomacy. An interesting experiment in discovering and reporting public opinion was Britain by Mass-Observation, a valuable record, as gathered by impartial observers, of what people of all classes were thinking on a variety of current topics. There was a final despairing criticism of modern civilization by H. G. Wells. In The Fate of Man he gave over as hopeless even his cherished idea of the World Brain, and concluded that man was 'being carried less and less intelligently and more and more rapidly along the stream of fate to degradation, suffering, and death.'

History and Philosophy.

A sketch of the year's literary output would not be complete without mention of several important works of history and philosophy. The second volume of the History of the London Times, covering the period from the 1840's through the 1880's was issued. (The first volume had appeared in 1935.) Sir Bernard Pares published a story of the Russian Revolution, the title of which, The Fall of the Russian Monarch, was indicative of its sympathy and angle of approach. The British Common People 1746-1938 by George Cole and R. M. Postgate was a very thorough history of the English working class. The problem that continued to preoccupy English philosophers was that of the relation of science and society. An important contribution to the discussion was J. D. Bernal's The Social Function of Science which without claiming that science had power to change the world was an argument for what it could do in a changed world. J. B. S. Haldane's The Marxist Philosophy and the Sciences was an explanation of the Marxist position with reference to science, an analysis of the application to the sciences of dialectical materialism; and Professor Hyman Levy's Modern Science was, to quote the summary of one of his reviewers: 'a closely reasoned seven hundred page manifesto proclaiming the essential unity between scientific ideas, technical discoveries and social development.'

IRELAND

The literary event of the year was the publication of James Joyce's Finnegan's Wake. Seventeen years had gone into the composition of it, and parts had already appeared as Work in Progress. In its completed form it aroused much discussion. A longer and more difficult book than Ulysses, it was an attempt to recreate directly the experience of sleep and dreaming. For this purpose Joyce evolved an extremely complex symbolism, a rich, involved language that compounded English with foreign tongues. Whether it was a work of mere ingenuity, or of profundity, or of sheer madness, was a question among critics; but all were obliged to concede that it contained passages of extraordinary lyric beauty.

Oliver St. John Gogarty, whose volume of reminiscences As I Was Walking Down Sackville Street came out a few years ago, published another book of autobiographic recollections, Tumbling in the Hay. It told, with the vividness and careless, robust humour characteristic of him, of his days as a medical student in Dublin some thirty years ago. The author of Juno and the Paycock, The Plough and the Stars, The Silver Tassie, etc., Sean O'Casey, published the touching story of his early boyhood in a Dublin slum, I Knock at the Door. The Green Fool, the autobiography of the peasant poet, the 'Irish Jesse Stuart,' written in the dialect of his country, had none of the social implications which the world has learned to expect from Irish writers. Nor was the volume of anecdotal reminiscence by Elizabeth, Countess of Fingall, Seventy Years Young, as profound a picture of the country as might have come from one who was acquainted with 'every one who touched Ireland from Edward VII to Michael Collins' and whose husband's estate was one of the oldest in Ireland. Sons of the Sword Maker by Maurice Walsh was a historical romance, based partly on Gaelic Saga, of Ireland at the time of the Emperor Augustus. Myrtle Johnston's The Rising was a picture of Ireland during the American Civil War. In Red Sky at Dawn Philip Rooney told a simple tale of love and adventure in the nineteenth century. And Call My Brother Back was a quiet autobiographical novel by Michael McLaverty of a family in the north of Ireland. The Fountain of Magic was a collection of poems, translated from the Irish by Frank O'Connor, the selection having been made by William Butler Yeats.

CANADA, AUSTRALIA, NEW ZEALAND

Among works from Canada must be mentioned the important volume of memoirs, Robert Laird Borden; His Memoirs, by the Canadian Prime Minister during the first World War. There was also a study of Anglo-American relations, Lionel M. Gelber's The Rise of Anglo-American Friendship; and an analysis of the literature of French Canada, Ian Forbes Fraser's The Spirit of French Canada, A Study of the Literature. Ted Allan's This Time a Better Earth was an autobiographical novel by a young Canadian journalist, telling the story of six comrades who had joined the International Brigade in Spain. A daring Australian journalist, Janet Mitchell, gave a record of her adventures in various parts of the world in Spoils of Opportunity. From New Zealand came Eileen May Duggan's Poems, with an introduction by Walter de la Mare, a volume which received much praise from critics.

GERMANY

Hitler's Mein Kampf was published this year for the first time in an unabridged English translation. The version that had been known hitherto was the bowdlerized one of 1933. Now for the first time English speaking people could study the political theory with the practical application of which they have become all too familiar in the last few years. The strident, rhapsodic book gave lasting form to the individualistic, nationalistic, anti-materialist, anti-rational attitude on which the National Socialist system operated. It was pointed out in an analysis by Max Lerner, who called Hitler 'the Edward Lear of political thinking' that just as the strength of Lear's absurdities rested on non-sequiturs, so the importance of Hitler's theorizing depended on the terrible power of the irrational.

Nearly all the other books that came from Germany were more or less direct reflections of the policies announced in the Fuehrer's autobiography. Outstanding among these was The Revolution of Nihilism by Hermann Rauschning, a former leader of the National Socialist movement and one time president of the Danzig senate who resigned from both the party and the presidency in 1935. The book was written in 1938, but not translated into English until the following year. It traced the history of the Nazi movement from its inception and predicted both the conquest of Czechoslovakia and the Russo-German alliance. For the future, Herr Rauschning prophesied that 'the new National Socialist social order will consist of . . . blind obedience to an absolute despotism . . . a progressive economic destruction of the middle classes, and the all-pervading atmosphere of barracks and prison . . . desolation, impoverishment, regimentation, and the collapse of civilized existence.' Rauschning's analysis confirmed that of Peter D. Drucker, a former Viennese editor, now in America, whose The End of Economic Man was a philosophic explanation of the rise of National Socialism, an attempt to account for the mass movement toward fascism. It went farther back in history than Rauschning's book and differed from it in its emphasis on fascist success as evidence of the failure of both socialism and capitalism to create a satisfactory life for the great masses of men. A. C. Grezinski, one of the organizers of the Weimar Republic, in Inside Germany gave an account of the fall of the German republic and of the events leading up to the rise of Hitler. Norbert Muhlen's Schacht: Hitler's Magician, was a hostile picture of the financial wizard which emphasized the shrewdness and rapacity of his dealings, but was not so much his biography as an analysis of the economic conditions of the Third Reich.

Personal accounts of European horrors continued to flow in their tragic stream. There was Konrad Heiden's The New Inquisition, one of the most graphic and painful records of the Nazis' repressive measures against the Jews. There was the minute, partly fictionalized story of Austria's last three years, Showdown in Vienna by Martin Fuchs, who had been one of Schuschnigg's personal aides. Erika and Klaus Mann gave in Escape to Life a series of pen portraits of notable artists and intellectuals exiled from Germany, among them the scientist Einstein, the musicians Busch and Serkin, and their own father Thomas Mann. I Was in Prison, a collection of suppressed letters by German pastors in Nazi prisons was also published. And there was an interesting, but not wholly authoritative account of anti-Nazi underground movements in Germany, Men against Hitler by Fritz Max Cahen, a journalist who has been in opposition to Hitler since 1932. Hans Habe's Three over the Frontier was a story of three German exiles wandering about Europe in search of safety.

Two books of memoirs deserve mention: Autobiography of a German Rebel, the straightforward, unadorned journal of Toni Sender, who now lives in the United States but was once a member of the Reichstag and one of the leaders of the Weimar Republic; and My Life and History, the personal story of Berta Szeps, sister-in-law of Clemenceau, daughter of a famous liberal newspaper editor of Vienna, who having known people close to the center of European events from the 1880's to 1938, had unusual opportunity to observe the political scene. In her book she included not only many of her own letters and excerpts from her diary but also material given her by her father and her friends.

Posthumously translated were two novels by a remarkable young German author. Odon von Horvath, self-exiled to Paris, was killed in 1938 in an untoward accident, crushed by a falling tree in the Champs Élysées. He was known abroad as a writer of great promise and already fine accomplishment. The Age of the Fish and A Child of Our Time were both of them tragic fantasies which in the guise of simple, realistic stories, Dostoierskian in their intensity, were forceful criticisms of our times and bitter analyses of Nazi philosophy. The former, a story of a German schoolmaster, pointed by implication the lesson that 'the souls of men' in the modern world were becoming 'as rigid as the face of a fish'; the latter, about a soldier obliged to take part in the invasion of a defenseless country, gave its central meaning in the following words: 'Your children will tell you that this soldier was a common murderer — but don't revile him. Just think, how could he help himself? He was a child of his time.'

An early novel of Thomas Mann, first published in Germany in 1905, Royal Highness, came out this year in a new translation, with a preface by its author. An allegory of deeper meanings than its humorous, fantastic, simple story might superficially indicate, it was an early statement — and one of which Thomas Mann has declared himself to be especially fond — of the humanistic, democratic principles developed in his later works.

Of other novels translated from the German should be mentioned Heinrich Mann's Henry: King of France, a sequel to his Young Henry of Navarre, a thorough, well documented work, more history than fiction; Stefan Zweig's Beware of Pity, the first full length novel by the well known biographer, a 'psychological' tale, the theme of which was the futile tragedy of personal sacrifice; Emil Ludwig's Quartet, a soulful story of a small group of secluded intellectuals in Switzerland. There was also a first novel of unusual merit, Five Destinies, by a German refugee in London, writing under the assumed name of Anna Reiner; it was about life in Germany since 1920. The Gladiators by Arthur Koestler, expatriate German journalist, was ostensibly a historical novel of the gladiators' war which Spartacus had led in 72 bc, but the story held sharp implications for modern Germany. Herman Kesten's Children of Guernica was a tale of the Spanish war, told as if by one who had come from it to a German refugee in Paris.

Two plays by Ernst Toller, the tragic, forceful author of Man and the Masses, who committed suicide in New York in the summer of 1939, were translated by Stephen Spender and Hugh Hunt. They were Pastor Hall and Blind Man's Buff, the first, a play about the persecution by the Nazis of a Protestant minister, based on the Niemoller case; the other, concerning a murder trial. Also translated by Stephen Spender, in collaboration with J. B. Leishmann, were Rainer Maria Rilke's Duino Elegies, published with both the German and the English texts and with explanatory notes. Walter Riezler's biography, Beethoven, contained detailed interpretations of some of the composer's greatest works. Ludwig Marcuse's Soldier of the Church was a fictionalized account of St. Ignatius Loyola.

The list of important German writers and thinkers is beginning to sound like a necrology: Rilke, von Horvath, Toller are dead. So is the great Viennese psychologist, Sigmund Freud. He died this year in London, having completed there in exile a study which, started some years earlier, had been laid aside in the hostile environment of his own home. A psychoanalytic, anthropological analysis of anti-Semitism, Moses and Monotheism was based on the hypothesis that the founder of the Jewish religion was not a Jew at all but an Egyptian. The scientific accuracy of its argument has been questioned but however fanciful it may be, this final work of a great thinker must remain, at the very least, a provocative example of his speculative, revolutionary intelligence. The last work of Freud's former disciple and later rival, Alfred Adler was also published this year, Social Interest, a final restatement of the theory of Individual Psychology.

FRANCE

An omnibus volume, The Thibaults, containing the first six parts of Roger Martin du Gard's monumental novel of a middle-class French family before 1914, was published in 1939, the first two parts in a new translation, which does not yet complete the English version of the work. Another volume, Verdun, was added to Jules Romains' Men of Good Will, bringing his roman fleuve down to the period of the Great War. For the rest, French novels seemed to indicate an extraordinarily marked tendency to rural retreat. Two years ago Jean Giono's The Song of the World was translated. This year came a story that had been written earlier, The Harvest, a simple idyll of French peasantry. The same effort to capture something of permanent value in a shifting world was apparent in Raymonde Vincent's quiet novel of country people, Born of Woman, and in Claire Sainte-Soline's Mountain Top, the tale of a business man's escape to Nature from the life of industry and finance. But the French book which in English translation gained greatest popularity was one of a very different philosophy from these having more in common with the school of Unanimisme than with that of escape to the country. Several years ago the translation of Night Flight had won its author, Antoine de Saint Exupéry, an admiring audience. This year he published another book about the craft he knows and loves, Wind, Sand, and Stars, noteworthy not only as an addition to the growing literature of flying but for its admiring sense of the deep human value in the comradeship of men working together. Of interest to the student of French literature was the translation of Leon Bloy's The Woman Who Was Poor. This book first appeared in 1897 and although, by common consent not a good novel, it has historic value as the work of an important member of the group of late romanticists. Speeches delivered by Premier Daladier 1938-39 were collected in a volume called In Defense of France.

SCANDINAVIA

To be noted especially in the year's work from the countries of Northern Europe was a novel by Unto Seppänen, Sun and Storm, a remarkable chronicle of Finnish peasantry from the late nineteenth century to about 1920. On Oct. 15 Stanley Young wrote of it in words that now have an ominous ring: 'If Finland vanishes to-morrow, Sibelius and Seppänen will have made her monument.' The Norwegian author Gosta af Geijerstam, known for his Northern Summer and Storevik, published a novel, Iva, which unlike his earlier work was a tragic story of a man's defeat. Alexander Brinchmann's The Rich Man was the tale of an industrialist who, dissatisfied with his wealth, seeks happiness in poverty. And The Long Dream by Sigrid Boo was a slow-paced psychological study of a woman, written with an eye to the romantic requirements of the screen. Sigrid Undset published a book of essays, composed over a period of years, on a variety of subjects, Men, Women, and Places. There was a workmanlike biography of Edvard Grieg by David Monrad-Johansen, and one of Rölvaag by Theodore Jorgensen and Nora O. Solum. From Denmark came a humorous, modernized, symbolic version of the Jonah legend, Reluctant Prophet, by Harold Tandrup. Joachim Joesten's Rats in the Larder was an account of the influence of Nazis in Denmark. A volume of selections from Sren Kierkegaard's Journals, edited and translated by Alexander Dru, inaugurated a definitive translation of his works, another one of which, Fear and Trembling, 'a dialectical lyric,' was also translated this year by Robert Payne. There was a mystical story of a peasant girl, The Crown, by the Swedish author Fru Elisabeth Paulsen. And the famous Arctic explorer, Vilhjalmur Stefansson published two books: one, a historical account of Iceland and a study of it as it is at present, Iceland, the First American Republic; the other, Unsolved Mysteries of the Arctic, an analysis of five unexplained cases of lost explorers.

RUSSIA

Another account of the Arctic was that by the Russian explorer Ivan Dmitrievich Papanin, the diary of men stranded for a winter on an ice floe, Life on an Ice Floe. A Book of Short Stories by Maxim Gorki was a collection of fifteen stories by the illustrious Russian author. They were translated by several men and published with a short introduction by Aldous Huxley. Six of them now appeared in English for the first time; and the whole series, chronologically arranged, spanning the years from 1894 to 1924, could be taken as a record of the progress of Gorki's convictions from a vague humanism to socialism. Posthumously published was an unfinished historical novel of the Russian Revolution, Born of the Storm, by Nikolai Alekseevitch Ostrovski, author of The Making of a Hero (1937). A new translation of Chekhov's The Sea Gull by Stark Young appeared with an essay by the translator. The memoirs of Vladimir Iosifovich Gurko, Features and Figures of the Past, covered the years from 1894 to 1917, a record of the reign of Nicholas II by a member of Russia's ruling class before the War. Stalin by Boris Souvarine was a biography of the Russian dictator by one who had been a member of the Executive of the Communist International. It came out in English translation only this year, although it had first appeared in France several years ago. Speeches by Maksim Litvinov and other documents concerning the relations of Russia with other countries were collected in a volume entitled Against Aggression.

OTHER COUNTRIES

Two books about contemporary wars aroused considerable interest. One came from Spain, the other from Japan. In Place of Splendor by Constancia de la Mora, daughter of a great Spanish statesman and herself head of the Loyalist Foreign Press Bureau during the Civil War, was an authoritative, personal, simple, horrifying account of the war. Equally simple and very moving was the Japanese best seller Wheat and Soldiers. Purporting to be the diary of an infantry corporal fighting in China, Ashihei Hino, it was actually the work of Katsumori Tamui, one of Japan's most popular and brilliant authors. Poems by Federico Garcia Lorca was a selection from the work of the young Spanish poet killed in 1936, translated by Stephen Spender and J. L. Gili. Nineteen stories of the two hundred written by the famous Italian author Luigi Pirandello were collected this year, Medals. Emilio Lussu's Sardinian Brigade was a narrative of the Italian campaign in the Alps in 1916-1917 by the author of Road to Exile (1936). Ignazio Silone's The School for Dictators was a lucid, satiric analysis of dictatorship, done in the form of dialogues by the author of Bread and Wine. There was a nostalgic idyll of peasant life, Jean Clarambaux, by a little known Belgian novelist, Oliver Degée, writing under the pseudonym Jean Tousseul. Vincent Van Gogh's Letters to Émile Bernard was a collection dating from the artist's most creative period at Arles from 1887 to 1889. A Hungarian journalist, writing in English, Tibor Koeves, published a volume of casual essays on travel, Time-table for Tramps. Jolan Földes, author of The Street of the Fishing Cat, wrote another novel about a European colony abroad, Egyptian Interlude. The Swiss journalist Gretede Francesco's The Power of the Charlatan was a history of quacks and of the social conditions that have made quackery possible. The former President of Czechoslovakia, Eduard Benes, traced the growth of democracy and the development of the totalitarian states in a book based on lectures delivered by him at the University of Chicago, Democracy To-day and To-morrow. Arthur Waley annotated in a scholarly way The Analects of Confucius.

1938: Literature, World

ENGLAND

Fiction. On the basis of this year's novels, it would be difficult to detect any marked tendency in British fiction. All kinds of narratives were produced; in substance, historical, psychological, social; in method, realistic, allegorical, satiric. Perhaps the most significant factor was that of dissatisfaction and self-criticism. English publishers declared that American novels were in greater demand in England than the English, and rightly so. Storm Jameson in a critical essay, The Novel in Contemporary Life condemned the fiction of her country as 'completely ineffective.' It was, she said, 'immensely competent' but 'immensely unimportant'; and she pointed out as the chief reasons for this state of affairs; first, today's 'tendencies to standardization' not only in 'the torrent of standardized fiction' but 'in the book market itself,' the demand for and supply of the commonplace being the bad money that drove out the good; and secondly, the modern man's fundamental sense of insecurity; his feeling, that is, of having 'no roots in the past' and no certainty about the future. Confronted by these profoundly disturbing elements in his existence, the serious novelist had attempted to meet them by two esthetically false approaches, the surrealist and the proletarian. These, she said, were no longer promising, and hope now lay in a method of objectivity whereby the novelist would 'present not himself — not his raw personal emotions and reflections . . . but the thing observed' and would, in so doing, use words that were 'in closer touch with the language of nonliterary activities.'

The year's crop of English novels did not, however, seem to bear out Storm Jameson's contentions, for, although there were many that attempted to present life with complete objectivity, they were none of them so distinguished as one that was frankly interpretative. This was an allegory. The Wild Goose Chase. by Rex Warner, one of the advanced group of young writers of whom Auden and Spender are the chief. The novel, avowedly influenced by the work of Franz Kafka, was an outstanding example of a literary movement to which Selden Rodman has given the name of 'Social Symbolism.' Nor was Starting Point, the second novel by C. Day Lewis, a work of objective realism. Its subject was the history of the fortunes of four young men from the time of their studentship at Oxford in 1926, the year of the General Strike, to the moment, ten years later, when one of them joins the Loyalist forces in Spain; but these four young men, although not allegorical figures, were distinctly types, symbolizing certain kinds of people in capitalist society.

As successful as any in the realm of the self-abnegating fiction recommended by Storm Jameson, was her own The Moon Is Making, in which she pictured the harshness, pettiness, and greed of a York-shire family at the turn of the century. The Cleft Stick by Walter Greenwood, already known as the author of Love on the Dole, was more strictly documentary in character, a volume of stories depicting slum life in the industrial cities of Manchester and Salford. There were other topical, or up-to-the-minute journalistic novels. Such was Lettice Cooper's record of English social and political attitudes since the Ethiopian crisis, as exhibited within the bounds of a single industrial community. National Provincial. And such were Pamela Hanford Johnson's The Monument and World's End, novels of poor white-collar workers, with emphasis, however, laid not on the material hardships of their lives but on their recognition of these hardships as representing a socially significant problem, and on the moral strength of their socially-minded actions. In a preface to her study of textile families in Yorkshire. Sleep in Place. Phyllis Bentley explained that her purpose in writing the novel had been to probe the transition made by her generation 'from Victorian England . . . to the confused revolts and uncertain loyalties of to-day.' Philip Gibbs' Great Argument used a slender thread of story as vehicle for presenting various conflicting political faiths in England to-day. Phyllis Bottome's. The Mortal Storm was concerned with a German family, split on racial and political grounds during the Nazi persecutions. In The Big Firm. Annabel Williams-Ellis, presented from the standpoint of the owners of a large concern of 'Scientific Products,' the responsibilities toward war of English industrial society. Sheila Kaye-Smith's The Valiant Woman and Faithful Stranger, a volume of short stories, were notable for their craftsmanship, but touched a little too comfortably on uncomfortable social problems. And Glyn Jones' stories of Welsh colliers, The Blue Bed, were only partially realistic.

A number of novels, although serious in tone and modern in setting, were of an impact less immediate than the foregoing. Several of them were deliberately reminiscent in mood. Frank Swinnerton's Harvest Comedy, for instance — his twenty-sixth novel — was an analysis of the lives of three men, looked at in retrospect. Wyn Griffith's The Wooden Spoon attempted to recapture, in the form of autobiographic reminiscence, the deep-lying, intangible emotional currents of a life. And Francis Brett Young's very popular Doctor Bradley Remembers presented a 'human' country doctor thinking about his past struggles and achievements. The same author's Portrait of a Village, a novel without a plot, was a genial picture of a small rural community which, without being actual, was representative of many. In H. E. Bates' 'success story' Spella Ho! a great industrialist rose from a job as coal-stoker to a position of commanding importance in the world of business. Evelyn Waugh's Scoop was a satire on sensational journalism. Howard Spring's My Son, My Son!, one of the year's 'best sellers,' was a rather sentimental story of two generations. In The Brothers H. G. Wells portrayed two brothers fighting against each other in an imaginary war, only to discover in the end that they were really fighting for the same thing, — which was a way of expounding fable-wise the author's views on Communism and Fascism. His Apropos of Dolores, the portrait of a thoroughly repulsive woman, intended, perhaps, to point the thesis that human beings are most intelligently and usefully classifiable in psychological categories. An imaginative treatment of the ethics of government was F. L. Lucas', the well known critic's The Woman Clothed with the Sun, short stories brought together in an ingenious chronological scheme to show the progress of social ideals from the establishment of Christianity to a revolt against Fascism in the year 1943. The author of A High Wind in Jamaica. Richard Hughes, published a short novel of the seas. In Hazard, a tale of a hurricane on the Caribbean, which called forth numerous comparisons with Coarad's Typhoon.

Evan John's Crippled Splendour, a vivid historical novel, recreated the times and the mysterious personality of James I of Scotland. From John Masefield came a fantastic, picaresque tale against the background of eighteenth century traditions and setting. Dead Ned; its sub-title. 'The Autobiography of a Corpse Who Recovered Life' stated the theme, and a sequel was promised. Edith Sitwell for the first time tried her hand at fiction. I Live under a Black Sun was her free transposition into the twentieth century of Dean Swift's relationship to Stella and Vanessa. R. C. Hutchinson's Testament was a novel of the Russian Revolution.

In the face of fears and social distress, several novelists remained determinedly cheerful. Thus Richard Aldington, in what has been called the 'least humane' of his novels. Seven Against Reeves, wrote a humorous tale of a retired English business man: Hugh Walpole produced a joking account of London during the depression. The Jovfid Delaneys, and reprinted in Head in Green Bronze a number of the light-hearted stories published by him within the last fifteen years: Naomi Jacob in The Lenient God presented a satire of middle-class lives and Angela Thirkell's Summer Half and Pamifret Towers were pleasant and inconsequential comedies of upper-class English families. Stella Gibbons in Nightingale Wood and I, Compton-Burnett in Daughters and Sons also wrote social comedies. J. P. Priestley's The Doomsday Men having the American Southwest as background, was a story of mystery and adventure.

Of interest especially to students of literary history was the publication of Dorothy Richardson's Pilgrimage, for here were brought together the already well known volumes, eleven in number, which minutely analyze the reactions of their heroine. Miriam Henderson, together with a twelfth, not previously published; and thus presented in its entirety one of the earlier and most complete experiments in the 'stream-of-consciousness' method of narration.

Poetry.

In the realm of poetry there was nothing this year of outstanding importance, although Stephen Spender's symbolic verse drama of the conflict between Fascism and Communism, Trial of a Judge, contained passages of great beauty. It was, however, an uneven work, often falling short of the delicacy and precision that characterized his earlier lyrics. There was also a collection by Rex Warner, Poems, realistic in statement and optimistic in tone, and undeniably distinguished, but lacking the imaginative insight that marks great poetic utterance. A volume of verse, Proems, by six young English poets, Todd, Evans, Heppenstall, Foxall, Durrell, and Blakeston, was not very promising. Its all too timely accent of uncertainty suggested to one American critic 'a bank clerk watching the fall of his own currency' or 'a member of Parliament lamenting the inefficiency of his own air force.' W. H. Auden published a new anthology. The Oxford Book of English Light Verse, with a critical preface, excellent in definition and condensed analysis of a poet's relationship to his audience and of the interaction between his work and the world he lives in. For the rest, there was a volume of verse by Walter de la Mare, Memory and Other Poems; a re-issue of an early volume by John Masefield, Selected Poems; and a collection of twenty-one autobiographic poems by Richard Aldington, The Crystal World.

Criticism, Letters, Memoirs, Biographies.

Two of the year's essays in literary criticism have already been mentioned: Storm Jameson's The Novel in Contemporary Life and Auden's preface to The Oxford Book of English Light Verse. More ambitious in scope and very different in purpose were Ford Madox Ford's The March of Literature and Mightier than the Sword. The former, a kind of glorified but unconventional textbook, a commentary on the literature of the world 'From Confucius' Day to Our Own,' was designed to make great works of all time palatable to the general reader. It followed no order of chronology nor any well defined system of presentation, but was guided by the author's personal predilections and his interest in pointing out similarities between widely disparate civilizations and distant ages. The latter was a collection of criticisms and memoirs, — some of them highly diverting, — of the author's illustrious literary acquaintances: Henry James, Joseph Conrad, Thomas Hardy, H. G. Wells, Stephen Crane, D. H. Lawrence, John Galsworthy, W. H. Hudson, Theodore Dreiser, and Algernon Charles Swinburne. In Enjoyment of Literature, the sensitive and highly individual novelist and critic, John Cowper Powys, brought together a number of essays on a variety of literary subjects, from the Greeks to Dostoevsky. There was a new edition, with a preface by Van Wyck Brooks, of Llewellyn Powys's character sketches, nature studies, and comments on art, Earth Memories. In Rainer Maria Rilke — Aspects of His Mind and Poetry, William Rose and G. Craig Houston published four essays by different contributors, together with a preface of Stefan Zweig who had known Rilke personally, on this poet whose importance is coming to be ever more clearly recognized. Rose Macaulay's The Writings of E. M. Forster was an enthusiastic analysis of the books, though neither of the man or the thought, of that scrupulous and insufficiently appreciated novelist. Professor R. G. Collingwood's The Principles of Art was an exposition of Croce's theory of esthetics. John Middleton Murry's Heaven and Earth, published in America as Heroes of Thought, was an attempt, according to its epilogue 'to reveal the actual growth of the modern world through the minds of some great men who experienced in act or imagination the travail of its becoming.' The dozen great men singled out for the purpose were Chaucer, Montaigne. Shakespeare, Cromwell, Milton, Rousseau, Goethe, Godwin, Wordsworth. Shelley, Marx and Morris. New Writing, the annual of Leftist prose, was again edited by John Lehmann. C. Day Lewis and C. Fenby collaborated in preparing an anthology of little known comments about Oxford, Anatomy of Oxford.

The third volumes of letters by Gerard Manly Hopkins was published this year, Further Letters of Gerard Manly Hopkins, supplementing the two that had come out in 1935. Perhaps not so important, on the whole, as the earlier volumes, this one included, nevertheless, two unusually interesting series; the correspondence with Coventry Patmore, which contained some meticulous analyses of Patmore's poems, and the letters to Mowbray Baillie. Laurence Housman's My Brother, A. E. Housman: Personal Recollections together with Thirty Hitherto Unpublished Poems was a volume of fragments that did not offer much toward a better understanding of his mysterious personality, nor did the new poems enhance his artistic stature. Augmenting the already lengthy list of works on the subject, Hugh Kingsmill published The Life of D. H. Lawrence, an episodic biography which, without being authoritative, was refreshing as the work of one who was not a disciple and so was capable of cool-headed and even humorous objectivity. Dorothy Hewlett's Adonais: A Life of John Keats was a sensitively appreciated interpretation which, in certain matters, supplemented the monumental biography of Amy Lowell. Be Loved No More was a history of Fanny Burney by Arthur Bernon Tourtellot. J. A. Roy's J. M. Barrie presented with critical comments passages from the work of his countryman and townsman, and added some biographical material. And in The Greenwood Hat were reprinted some two dozen early articles on various subjects contributed by Barrie to The St. James's Gazette. The eminent scholar Sir Herbert Grierson wrote a much needed biography, Sir Walter Scott, correcting and supplementing Lockhart's. In Unforgotten Years the author of Trivia, the American expatriate and gentleman-scholar, Logan Pearsall Smith, gathered together reminiscences of his literary life; and in The Summing Up, one of today's most popular literary craftsmen, Somerset Maugham, wrote a spiritual autobiography which, without 'laying bare his heart,' threw considerable light on his career. Thinking It Over was the title of Hesketh Pearson's volume of amusing reminiscences of his colorful life. And in Son of Scotland, R. H. Bruce Lockhart, author of British Agent, set down memories of his childhood. For the many admirers of Winifred Holtby, author of Mandoa, Mandoa, there were this year two posthumous publications of her work: The Pavements of Anderby, an uneven collection of essays and short stories, and Letters to a Friend, written from 1920-1935. It may be that the publication of Chestertonia, The Coloured Lands, should never have occurred; yet there were in it some characteristic pieces. A very unusual publication was T. E. Lawrence to His Biographers, an edition by Liddell Hart and Robert Graves of their correspondence with Lawrence together with the text of their biographies of him and his own careful annotations of them.

Travel.

Hugh Kingsmill's and Hesketh Pearson's Skye High was an entertaining account, parodying Boswell's manner, of a trip to the Hebrides in the wake of Boswell and Johnson. To the Hebrides also went Louis MacNeice, and wrote a delightful book about it, I Crossed the Minch. Sacheverell Sitwell's Rumanian Journcy was a somewhat condescending but pleasant enough description of a four weeks' trip to the Balkans; it consisted principally of splendid photographs on which the written text was but a commentary. Very different was John Lehmann's Prometheus and the Bolsheviks, a sympathetic, perhaps too rosy book about Soviet Georgia and the Caucasus. It contained translations of Georgian lyrics and was better as poetic description than as social commentary. Thrice a Stranger was the cordial but superficial account by Vera Brittain of her three visits to the United States, in 1926, 1934, and 1937, and of her gradual change of attitude toward this country from irritation to appreciative affection, for which she held both herself and the country responsible.

Science, Government, Economics.

Probably the most important British publication of the year was neither in the realm of fiction nor of belles-lettres but in that of science, for Lancelot Hogben's Science for the Citizen is likely to rank in the history of thought with the popularizations of Herbert Spencer and Thomas Huxley. It proceeded with the task undertaken by him several years ago in Mathematics for the Million of making available to the general reader the substance and meaning of scientific development. But it was more than a compendious record of theories and inventions. In keeping with the growingly popular theory of 'scientific humanism,' of which Professor Hogben is one of the most brilliant exponents, it was a demonstration of the philosophic thesis that human thought, even abstract scientific theory, is a product of man's economic struggle with his environment; and so, a bountifully substantiated statement of the necessity for integrating social ethics and scientific knowledge, a history, that is, not only of scientific progress but also of the interrelationship between this progress and social needs. The Conway Memorial Lecture of 1937, delivered by Professor Hoghen, and now published as Retreat from Reason, formulated concisely the fundamental position which informs his work; faith in scientific rationalism as the only reasonable and hopeful approach to the solution of social problems.

A different attitude toward these matters was that of Sir Bertrand Russell who, in Power, expressing the liberal's characteristic belief in the possibility and the importance of individual solutions, took his stand on the ground of individual psychology. Developing the thesis that in dictatorships, just as in every individual enterprise, love of power rather than economic self-interest is the basic motivating force, he declared the hope of democracy to lie in the kind of education which develops a sense of independence in every man and trains him for intelligent citizenship in a democratically controlled socialism. The lectures delivered before the Fabian Society in 1937 were collected in a volume entitled Dare We Look Ahead? and the fact that at the time of publication they already seemed in many ways outmoded, was a measure of the rapidity with which events had moved within one year. The British scientist and philosopher Professor Hyman Levy gave in A Philosophy for a Modern Man a more complete synthesis of the theories he had expounded in The Universe of Science and Science in an Irrational Society, examining the relation of science to human desires and demonstrating the possibilities of dialectical materialism as a scientific philosophy designed toward an intelligent transformation of society. In Socialism versus Capitalism, Professor H. C. Pigou of Cambridge, one of the outstanding orthodox economists, declared himself in favor of Socialism. John Strachey's What Are We to Do? was a study from the Marxist standpoint of the British and American labor movements; and his Hope for America, a sympathetic analysis of the New Deal.

Discussions of the present state of Europe were numerous this year. Professor Seton-Watson's Britain and the Dictators was a respected scholar's examination of his country's position with reference to the dictatorships of Europe. It expressed the view that a policy of isolation was not tenable and advocated an alliance of the democracies, including those of the United States and of the Soviet Union, in opposition to the Nazi-Fascist states. Something of the same opinion was held by the 'Prose Laureate of Peace.' Sir Norman Angell, who, in Peace with the Dictators dramatized the attitudes of various nations whose aims are in conflict one with the other; condemned the opportunism of the Chamberlain Government; and declared that peace between the democracies and the dictatorships could not be reached through policies of isolation and nonresistance. An extremely violent denunciation of Great Britain was written by the author of Europa. Robert Briffault; in his Decline and Fall of the British Emipire, he damned his country as hypocritical on all counts, and wholly deserving the doom which he envisaged for her. Geoffrey T. Garratt's Mussolini's Roman Empire was another vigorous denunciation of recent British foreign policy. Paul Frischauer's England's Years of Danger attempted to show, through the evidence of letters, speeches, public documents at the time of the Napoleonic wars, the position traditionally taken by England when the stability of Europe is threatened. It tended to point the moral that dictatorship, through excesses, is self-doomed to collapse. Winston Churchill's While England Slept, a collection of his speeches in Parliament from 1932 to 1938, edited with notes that gave the intervening events, threw light on the present situation. Fascist in sympathies were Beverly Nichols' News of England and Walter Starkie's The Waveless Plain.

History.

In the midst of concern for the present, the past was not forgotten. The vogue for Queen Victoria, for instance, continued unabated. Hector Bolitho translated and edited letters of the Queen to her German cousins, Letters of Queen Victoria, which, although adding little to what was already known, confirmed the general impression of the Queen's character. The Letters of the Prince Consort, on the other hand, containing miscellaneous papers, many of them published for the first time, helped to explain both the personal qualities and the political attitudes which had made for his unpopularity in England. The well-known popularizer of the Victorian period, E. F. Benson, turned his attention to the daughters of the royal house, but the dominating figure in his Queen Victoria's Daughters was still the Queen. A study of that powerful figure in the Victorian court, the Queen's physician, friend, and adviser, Baron Stockmar, was written by Pierre Crabites, Victoria's Guardian Angel. And some previously unpublished, but politically unimportant, letters of Benjamin Disraeli appeared in Letters from Benjamin Disraeli to Frances Anne Marchioness of Londonderry, 1837-1861, edited with an introduction by the Marchioness.

With the publication of its sixth volume, War's End, Winston Churchill brought to completion his monumental life of Marlborough. The Captains and the Kings Depart, Journals and Letters of Reginald Viscount Esher continued the publication of documents concerning the remarkable liberal whom government leaders consulted and who himself consistently refused cabinet posts. According to Harold Laski this volume was 'the most important contribution to the inner understanding of British politics since the publication of the famous Greville Diaries nearly eighty years ago.' On the other hand, Herbert A. Asquith's Moments of Memory were personal rather than political reminiscences; they told more about the former Prime Minister's family than about his cabinet. Harold Nicolson's Helen's Tower was a genial and charming but not very illuminating picture of the writer's uncle, Lord Dufferin. It was the first volume of a projected autobiography which is to be given, as it were, obliquely, through the portrayal of personages known to the author. Hilaire Belloc's Louis XIV was not so much a biography as an encomium of monarchy as the best form of government. E. H. Carr, known, among other things, for his studies of Dostoevsky and of Herzen and his circle, wrote the first English biography of that very picturesque Russian revolutionary of the nineteenth century, Michael Bakunin.

IRELAND

At the age of seventy-three William Butler Yeats [died Jan. 29, 1939] wrote with his great lyric gift unimpaired. Such was the evidence of New Poems and of the three allegorical verse dramas in The Herne's Egg and Other Plays. Two other publications from his pen came out this year: A Vision, a highly mystical collection of verse and prose, comparable to the prophetic books of Blake, which had been published privately in a limited edition in 1925, and now appeared revised; and a new edition in a single volume, called Autobiography, consisting of Reveries over Childhood and Youth, The Trembling of the Veil, and Dramatis Personae. The Living Torch, an edition of A. E.'s (George Russell's) contributions to The Irish Statesman, of which he had been editor, was an important addition to an understanding of his personality and his thought; and there was a good deal in it also about Yeats. Three publications of different kinds by Seán O'Faol in, author of A Nest of Simple Folk and Bird Alone, came out this year; a collection of Old Irish lyrics, translated and edited by him. The Silver Branch: a group of his own bitter, beautiful short stories of Ireland. A Purse of Coppers; and a remarkably balanced biography of Daniel O'Connell, King of the Beggars, wherein the democratic leader appeared with both his virtues and his imperfections on his head. There was a quiet, narrative poem by Padraic Colum, The Story of Loury Maen, based on a myth of the traditional king of Ireland. Oliver St. John Gogarty's I Follow St. Patrick, much more than a history of the Saint, was an ebullient record of a poet's journey in his wake. In Patches of Sunlight Lord Dunsany gave an impressionistic and not very revealing account of his early years. Of fiction might be mentioned Kate O'Brien's novel of Irish intellectuals. Pray for the Wanderer; Norah Hoult's realistic, warm-hearted picture of the Dublin of the public houses, Coming from the Fair; and a powerful first novel by Louis Lynch D'Alton, Death Is So Fair, about the unsuccessful Dublin Easter Day Rising of 1916.

GERMANY

The most important literary event of the year was the publication of Thomas Mann's Joseph in Egypt, the third part of the Biblical tetralogy in which one of the great authors of all time is setting down his epic of modern man. In an age distinguished by its explorations of the psyche and its consciousness of the difficulties involved in an adherence to democratic ideals, this work is a synthesis of liberal ethical evaluations and of the modern understanding of psychology and myth. It is important, therefore, not as a historical novel but as a philosophical interpretation of history; and also as a brilliant example of a narrative method whereby events are presented symbolically but not in terms of abstractions, the individual instances always concrete in their reality but bearing meanings beyond themselves. In addition, two political essays were written this year by Thomas Mann; The Coming Victory of Democracy, an analysis of the democratic temper and a proclamation of faith in its ultimate survival, and This Peace, a philippic in eloquent condemnation of the Four-Power Munich pact.

The work of Thomas Mann overshadowed that of his exiled fellow artists. Beside his profound sanity, for instance, Franz Werfel's Biblical fantasy of the prophet Jeremiah, Hearken unto the Voice, appeared doubly fanciful. Fortunately, other novels were on subjects so different from his that they did not readily court comparison. In The Crowning of a King Arnold Zweig added a fourth novel to the series (The Case of Sergeant Grischa, Young Woman of 1914, Education before Verdun) in which he has been analysing the mentality of modern Germany. It concerned the German occupation of Lithuania in 1917. Peter Mendelssohn's All That Matters, Irmgard Keun's After Midnight, and H. W. Katz' The Fishmans bore the authentic stamp of personal experience. The first of these was a story, related with impressive calm, of Hitler's coming to power; the second, a short novel about the difficulties encountered by an 'Aryan' girl of the middle-classes in the Nazi state; the third, which is to have a sequel, concerned the early childhood of a Jewish boy living in an environment of pre-war anti-Semitism in a Galician village. Walter Schoenstedt's In Praise of Life. published here in both the German original and in translation, was a novel of the fortunes of two young German friends, of their boyhood during the war, and their wanderings and suffering in the post-war period. Hans Fallada, author of Little Man What Now? one of the few unexiled German writers known abroad, produced a fairy tale for adults, Sparrow Farm, and a realistic story of Germany during the inflation of 1923. Wolf among Wolves. Heinrich Hauser's Last Port of Call was a sea yarn, the hero of which had fled to sea in escape from the tension of a fear-haunted Europe. A Great Lord was a historical novel of a Polish nobleman in the time of Napoleon by the Austrian Paul Frischauer, who is not so well known as his compatriots Stefan Zweig and Franz Weriel.

Two popular biographies were written by exiles; a life of Magellan by Stefan Zweig. Conqueror of the Seas; and a narrative of Offenbach. Orpheas in Paris, by Siegfried Kracauer. The rendering into English of Rilke's poems was continued by both J. B. Leishman. Later Poems, and M. D. Herter Norton. Translations from the Poetry of Rainer Maria Rilke.

Of personal narratives, the autobiography of the Bavarian nobleman and foe of Nazism. Prince Hubertus zu Loewenstein's Conquest of the Past had besides its inherent interest as autobiography, the importance of a document in explanation of the present regime. The same might be said of the second volume of Gustav Streseman's papers, Diaries, Letters, and Papers, which covered the period from January 1925 to September 1926, the months during which Herr Streseman effected Germany's entry into the League of Nations. Savage Symphony by Eva Lips was the story of the wife of a German anthropologist, professor at the University of Cologne, of her husband's expulsion from the Third Reich after he refused to falsify his scientific findings for the sake of Nazi propaganda. In The War against the West, Aurel Kolnai, born in Budapest of Austrian nationality, but writing in English, sought to examine in scholarly fashion the theory of National Socialism in the works of Nazi writers themselves. The Austrian journalist Willi Frischauer, in Twilight in Vienna, gave, from the standpoint of the average Austrian citizen's experience of it, an account of the German annexation. And a similarly up-to-date review of the crisis was The Last Fire Hours of Austria by Eugene Lennhoff, editor of the anti-Nazi Vienna Telegraph. Kurt Schuschnigg's My Austria, published in Vienna a few months before Austria ceased to exist, was a history of his country by her last Chancellor, from the time of the Armistice to the summer of 1937.

FRANCE

Of French novels this year the most remarkable was Andre Malraux's Man's Hope. An account of the first eight months of the Spanish Civil War, it was comparable in recent fiction only to the author's own work on the Chinese revolution of 1927, Man's Fate. Written on the very scene of action, it had the vivid qualities of journalistic immediacy of record, but was much more than a bit of skillful reporting. It struck through to the deeper implications of the brutal actualities it depicted. It showed the urgency of moral problems and the sharpness of conflicting ideals when the intensity of life has been heightened by the imminence of death, and was, therefore, more than the history of a chaotic war, an examination of ethical philosophies. From the standpoint of esthetics, it bore eloquent testimony to its author's thesis that important art must come as the result of action.

Also concerned with the Spanish War, were the works of Georges Bernanos. A Diary of My Times, The Great Cemeteries under the Moon, but they had not the intellectual brilliance of Malraux's book. Louis-Ferdinand Céline's Death on the Installment Plan was a continuation of his Journey to the End of Night. Dealing with the childhood and adolescence of the protagonist of the earlier novel, it was a brutal and often revolting story of the boy's growing cynicism and sense of inferiority, a savagely pessimistic book, with, however, something Rabelaisian in the gusto of its exaggerated grotesquery. The author's incredibly violent anti-Semitic tirade, Trifles for a Massacre, created a sensation in France, but was not translated. André Gide thought it should be taken as a joke. Residential Quarter by Louis Aragon was about the France of Paris and the provinces just before the World War. It was the second — (the first was The Bells of Basel, 1936) — of a projected series to be called The Real World, 'in memory of the long inner conflict' of its author, who had been in the vanguard of the Dada and Surreaiist movements. Pity for Women, written in 1930-1931 and published in France in 1936, but only now translated, was the work of Henri de Montherlant, author of Perish in Their Pride, and recipient of several French literary awards. It was a polished narrative of the philanderings of a cynical, irresponsible, and fatuous Don Juan of the post-war era. In Shadows around the Lake, Guy de Pourtalès wrote a novel of Calvinistic Geneva from 1890 to 1920. Roger Vercel in Tides of Mont St. Michel produced one of the most popular books of the year, probably because it showed a young man 'finding himself' and emphasized qualities of simplicity, solidity, and independence. Another, much less hopeful history of an individual's struggle with himself was Henri Troyat's tale of a middle-aged actor, One Minus Two. Jules Romains' monumental historical novel of France in the twentieth century, Men of Good-Will, was continued in its seventh volume, Death of a World, which brought the narrative down to the beginning of the World War; and the five parts of Georges Duhamel's saga of a middle-class Paris family were newly translated and collected in a single volume, The Pasquier Chronicles. Neither cycle was completed. Another 'roman fleuve,' as these lengthy novels are called in France, was undertaken by René Béhaine, to be called History of a Society. The first volume, The Survivors, royalist and anti-clerical in sympathies, was translated and published with a foreword by Ford Madox Ford who pronounced its author 'the most remarkable living writer.' Interesting as a document of literary history was Edouard Dujardin's We'll to the Woods No More, a novel that fifty years ago introduced the stream-of-consciousness method, but was only now translated for the first time.

Powerful, and more fantastic than fiction, was the story of his twelve years' imprisonment on Devil's Island, Dry Guillotine, by René Belbenoit, who escaped after four unsuccessful attempts — a minutely factual narrative, a horrifying record of socially sanctioned brutality. A biography of Léon Blum, which presented him as a leader equal in stature to Lenin, was written by Geoffrey Fraser and Thadée Natanson, Léon Blum: Man and Statesman. And an autobiography by the general secretary of the French Communist party, Maurice Thorez, was translated this year, A Son of the People. The popular André Maurois, turning from English to French Romanticism, wrote a life of Chateaubriand. Cloudy Trophy by Léon Daudet was a superficial interpretation of Victor Hugo's marriage and of his liaison with Juliette Brouet. There was an amusing volume of memoirs of the period between 1870 and 1914, Portraits of a Lifetime, by the portrait painter Jacques-Emile Blanche, who 'knew everybody.' Paul Valéry's essays in criticism, Variety: Second Series, were translated. Written on literary, sociological, and artistic subjects, they had a fundamental unity as illustrations of the view that modern civilization imposes a complexity on man that runs counter to the unconscious and lasting simplicity which is native to him. In After-thoughts on the U.S.S.R. André Gide continued his disillusioned condemnation of Soviet Russia. Charles Seignobos, one of the foremost living historians, wrote in The Rise of European Civilization a survey of European cultures and institutions from their beginnings to the rise of Hitler, which was intended for the general public.

RUSSIA

The last of Gorky's novels was published in translation this year, The Spectre, completing the series entitled Forty Years — The Life of Clim Samghin, of which the others were The Bystander, The Magnet, and Other Fires. It covered the period between the two Russian revolutions, 1905-1917. And as an analysis of the modern 'intellectual' born in the nineteenth century, and of his era, it is to be compared with the works of Mann, Proust, and Joyce, from which it differs principally in laying emphasis on changes in the social structure as well as in the men who in turn make it and are made by it.

Less important Russian novels of the year were Benjamin Kaverin's The Larger View, about young intellectuals in Leningrad in 1928; Yuri Herman's Tonia, the story of a woman's happy transition from the pre-revolutionary ideals of her childhood to those of Soviet Russia; Valentin Tikhonov's The Mountain and the Stars, a tale of cruelty and adventure among Cossacks in 1921 under the command of the notorious Baron Ungern-Sternberg, concerning whom there was also a novel by Vladimir Pozner, The Bloody Baron; and Piotr Pavlenko's Red Planes Fly East, which centered about Russia's attempt to fortify Eastern Siberia in anticipation of conflict with Japan. Vladimir Nabokov's Laughter in the Dark was a 'psychological' novel by a Russian émigré.

The most remarkable of living women revolutionists, Angelica Balabanoff, published her autobiography, My Life As a Rebel. The Secret Letters of the Last Tsar, a selection of the royal correspondence released from the public archives, contained letters, many of them intimate ones to his mother, dating from the Tsar's childhood to his imprisonment in 1917. There were several important publications concerning the Revolution: The Life of Lenin by one of his earliest supporters, P. Kerzhentsov; the History of the Civil War in the U.S.S.R., a compilation of documents edited by Stalin, Molotov, Voroshilov, Gorki, Zhdanov, and Kirov, for the period from February to October 1917, the first installment of what is to be a series giving within the scope of a few volumes a comprehensive and consecutive survey of the Revolution; and supplementing the factual information of the History. The Russian Revolution by Lenin and Stalin, a collection, in chronological order, of many of the speeches and writings of these two leaders from February to November 1917. Over the North Pole by George Baidukov, noted in Russia both as writer and explorer, was interesting not only as the story of a remarkable flight but also as an account of Soviet methods in organizing such enterprises. A preface by Vilhjalmar Steffanson was a tribute to the fliers.

SCANDINAVIA AND ICELAND

From Denmark came an autobiography by the important novelist Martin Anderson Nexo, author of Pelle the Conqueror; it was the tragic, but by no means pessimistic picture of his childhood, Under the Open Sky. Peter Freuchen's It's All Adventure was a story of himself by the Danish explorer and journalist, a sequel to his Arctic Adventure. Peter Tutein's The Sealers was a vigorous yarn of those whose business it is to get seal skins. The Baroness Karen Blixen-Finecke who, under the pseudonym of Isak Dinesen, captured the imagination of the reading public several years ago with her Seven Gothic Tales, wrote this year an account of life on a coffee plantation in Kenya, Out of Africa. Sigrid Undset's Images in a Mirror was a novelette of marital troubles and adjustments. Gösta af Geijerstam continued in Storevik the portrait of the idyllic family of his Northern Summer. Aksel Sandemose, author of A Fugitive Crosses His Tracks, wrote a direct, brutal. and buoyant tale of life aboard a freighter, Horns for Our Adornment. Gösta Larsson, already known through his novel of three years ago. Our Daily Bread, reconstructed in Fatherland, Farewell! the plight of impoverished Swedish workers who, after a long drawn out strike in the early years of this century, embarked for America. A new name to the American public was that of the Swedish editor Vilhelm Moberg, whose Memory of Youth, translated by Edwin Björkman, was a reminiscent tale of the peasant childhood and young manhood of a thirty-five year old editor; it was the first volume of a projected trilogy. One of the Swedish prize-winners in the All-Nations Prize Novel Competition was Curt Berg's The Blue Dragoons, about life in a Swedish regiment forty years ago in Norrland, a province of Northern Sweden. Gunnar Gunnarsson wrote two autobiographic novels of rural life in Iceland, Ships in the Sky and The Night and the Dream, both parts of a series to be called Church on the Hill. Gudmundur Kamban's I See a Wondrous Land, based on Viking sagas, was another tale of violence and adventure. From Finland came an appreciative biography of the musician who is considered by many to be the greatest of living composers, Jean Sibelius: His Life and Personality, by Karl Ekman. And Meck Heritage was the short, stark, tragic history of a poor peasant, by Finland's leading novelist, F. E. Sillanpaä.

OTHER COUNTRIES

The year's best work concerning Spain was Malraux's novel, mentioned above. But Burgos Justice by Ruiz Vilaplana, court clerk and coroner of the town, was a significant record of a conservative's change of heart after the Rebel occupation. And The Martyrdom of Spain by the liberal Catholic Professor of Law at Oviedo, Alfred Mendizabal, was a history of Spain from 1923 to 1936, as non-partisan and scholarly as anything that has been published about the background of the War. The strongly Leftist Spain between Death and Birth by the German-Swiss war correspondent, Peter Merin, added little to what was already known. Mr. Will among the Rebels by Ramon J. Sender, written before his Counterattack in Spain, dealt with the earlier Civil War of 1873; by comparison with the later work it showed how much the present conflict had served to mature the author.

Ignazio Silone's School for Dictators was an imaginary dialogue in which was analysed the effect of dictatorship on the lives of men, a subject which had been previously dramatized in his two novels, Fontamara and Bread and Wine. Two historical novels were translated from the Dutch: Maurits Dekker's Beggars Revolt, a story of the Netherlands' struggle for freedom in the sixteenth century, and Jo van Ammers-Kueller's tale of Holland in the eighteenth century, The House of Tavelinck. From other parts of the world, Hungary, Greece, Australia, came several romantic novels. Jolán Földes, who last year won the All-Nations Prize Novel Competition with The Street of the Fishing Cat, was responsible this year for two slight love stories. Prelude to Love and I'm Getting Married. C. P. Rodocanachi's Forever Ulysses recast the ancient epic to suit modern times. The hero was a combination of Homer's great wanderer and Sir Basil Zaharoff — an adventurous and successful entrepreneur, equal in cunning to his prototype, he covered the world in his travels. The Paderewski Memoirs was an authentic autobiographic document of one of the most extraordinary figures of our age. Dictated to Mary Lawton, the book had both the qualities and the defects of this form of informal presentation. The record covered the early years only, stopping with 1914, but a supplementary volume was promised.