Page:The Dial (Volume 73).djvu/137

Rh Like the old steamboat captains on the Mississippi we'll have to forget the hissing of the safety-valve and stoke like beavers if we are to get off the sticky shoals into the deeper reaches beyond. And many an old tub will blow sky high with all hands before someone makes the course. The Enormous Room for one seems to me at least to have cleared the shoals.

Along with Sandburg and Sherwood Anderson, E. E. Cummings takes the rhythms of our American speech as the material of his prose as of his verse. It is writing created in the ear and lips and jotted down. For accuracy in noting the halting cadences of talk and making music of it, I don't know anything that comes up to these two passages. This is a poem that came out in :

This from The Enormous Room:

"Sunday: green murmurs in coldness. Surplice fiercely fearful, praying on his bony both knees, crossing himself The Fake French Soldier, alias Garibaldi, beside him, a little face filled with terror the Bell cranks the sharp-nosed priest on his knees  titter from bench of whores—

"And that reminds me of a Sunday afternoon on our backs spent with the wholeness of a hill in Chevancourt, discovering a great apple pie, B. and Jean Stahl and Maurice le Menusier and myself; and the sun falling roundly before us.

"—And then one Dimanche a new high old man with a sharp violet face and green hair—'You are free my children, to achieve immortality—Songez, songez, donc—L'Eternité est une existence sans durée—Toujours le Paradis, toujours l'Enfer' (to the silently