Vol. 15 No.1 1948 - page 142

GEORGE WOODCOCK
IMAGINE
THE SOUTH
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pursuits of life, the tending of flow–
ers and bees, the manual tasks at
the work bench, the accumulation
of Church revenue, the diplomatic
negotiations with secular author–
ities, the repair of dry rot in the
buildings. Nor would the cycle of
his life have to deny. its origin or
stopping places on the way.
The following afternoon Mr.
Eliot read, before another overflow
audience, a recital of his poetry in
the air-conditioned, plush-seated
auditorium of the National Art
Gallery. He was an extremely sub–
tle, sensitive, and effective reader.
The recital included the following
poems from his collected works:
"The Love Song of J. Alfred Pruf–
rock," "La Figlia che Piange,"
"Sweeney among the Nightin–
gales," "What the Thunder Said,"
"Because I Do Not Hope To Turn
Again," "Journey of the Magi,"
"Animula," the five "Landscapes,"
and "East Coker."
Hans Meyerhoff
WHO ARE THE COUNTERFEITERS?
MOSCOW, Nov. 23 (UP)).-The
Soviet LITERARY GAZETTE, criti–
cising award of the 1947 Nobel Prize
in literature to Frenchman Andre
Gide, said yesterday that the prize
committee was a group of "reac–
tionary Swedish politicians who by
every means encourage the theoreti–
cians of national treachery."
Gide, the GAZETTE said, was an
admirer of Hitler and was saved from
arrest only by the intervention of
Gen. Charles de Gaulle.
-Daily
Worker
I...,132,133,134,135,136,137,138,139,140,141 143,144,145,146,147,148,149,150
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