A noise perhaps of la- mentation) picking up from the idea of grief in preceding lines: Aoz' occurs 172 times in the Oxford
manuscript
of Chanson de Ro-
40.
40.
A-Companion-to-the-Cantos-of-Ezra-Pound-II
, and the Soviets to stand firm against the Nazi-Fascist threat.
To that end, it was official policy not to upset the Western democracies by spon- soring worldwide revolution.
Thus, at the ti9'le of the people's revoiution against Fran- 10 and the Falangists in Spain, there were several Red or Communist groups.
Some joined the fight against Franco, but because of the Moscow line, some were actually fighting on the side of Franco.
The two
groups were represented among the Marxists in London and the U. S. Some English units left for Spain to join the battle, as did the Abraham Lincoln Battalion from the United States. But some, following the Moscow line meticulously, would not expose the agents of Franco working in London [George Or- well, Homage to Catalonia, Boston, Beacon Press, 1962].
14. Franco: Francisco F. , 1892? 1975, Span. ish general and dictator who was victorious with the help of Germany and Italy in the Spanish Civil War.
15. Alcazar: Alcazar de San Juan, town in central Spain which Pound visited in 1906. He lists it as one of the Islamic monuments that gave "a sense of man and of human dignity yet unobliterated" [GK, 53]. Ironi? cally, it was the bloody siege of Alcazar that Franco said won the war for him.
16. Eso es . . . muerto: S, "that is mourning, Ha! / my husband is dead. "
17. locanda: I, "inn. "
18. Cabranez: Prob. Dr. Augustin Cabanes, 1862-1928, author of some 60 volumes, in?
Glossary
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 452
81/518-519
81/519-521
453
Pound's criticism, agreeing with Bard, was that in novels and poetry ordinary people such as bakers and innkeepers were made to sound like people of wit and wisdom.
30. Te cavero . . . a te: I, "I'll cut your guts out / [and I] yours" [1O:21J. Highly idio- matic and strong talk in the language of the people.
31. Mencken: H. L. M. , 1880-1956, Ameri- can editor, author, critic, and philologist with whom Pound corresponded for years. Pound was much impressed with a remark of his and mentions it often: "Nevertheless, I believe that all schemes of monetary reform collide inevitably with the nature of man in the mass. He can't be convinced in anything less than a geological epoch" [GK, 182J.
32. Some cook . . . : [54: 14J.
33. 'Ivl'~ . . . "vap",: H, "Little wheel . . . . . man to my house. " The first word should be Iv'Y~ and the accent on 1roTt should be grave. The line occurs in Theocritus, "Idyll 2"
[Loeb, The Greek Bucolic Poets, 26J. The complete line is a refrain repeated 10 times as a magic spell worked by a young maid to draw her lover) who has taken up with an~ other) back to her.
34. Benin: The city and river in S Nigeria, whence Frobenius collected masks and arti~ facts.
35. Frankfurt: The German city in which the Frobenius Institute is located and where many cultural objects from Africa were housed. Pound's indirect way of saying that the black soldier who made his table was as handsome as any his race ever produced.
36. Kuanon: [90:29J.
37. And at first . . . : The next several lines
derive from Santayana's Persons and Places, which Pound prob. read in manuscript some- time in 1940 [L, 331, 333J. Santayana was born in Spain and tells of his first impres~ sions of Boston, where he arrived at age 9: "my eye . . . was caught by symbols ofY an- kee ingenuity and Y ankee haste . . . . I was fascinated by the play of those skeleton
disgusted by such a
wheels . . .
land, generally following the last lines of a laisse.
44. Althea: Intended to evoke the Lovelace poem, "To Althea from Prison," which says "And my divine Althea comes / To whisper at the grates. " Pound has no such visitor.
45. libretto: Just as Canto 75 is the musical score of Janequin, so the climactic pages of Canto 81 are given a musical label to under- score the extraordinary musical cadences de~ liberately evoked in one of the major climac- tic statements of the poem.
46. Lawes: Henry L. , 1596-1662, the En- glish musician and composer noted for his masques and airs for voice. But he did not write for the crowd, as Pound knew: "Lawes and Campion will not gather 10,000 ground- lings. Not in our time" [GK, 155J. Lawes set Waller's "Go, Lovely Rose" to music
[Espey, Mauberley, 98J.
47. Jenkyns: John Jenkins, 1592-1678, En- glish composer and musician to Charles I and II. He composed many fancies for viol and organ.
48. Dolmetsch: [80:197J. Arnold D. The Dolmetsch foundation (! 928) was founded to encourage interest in old music. Pound celebrates his work often [GK, 71, 248;LE, 431-440J.
49. Hast 'ou . . . shade: The 4 lines derive from the 3d stanza of Ben Jonson's "The Triumph of Charis," which goes: "Have you seen but a bright lily grow, / Before rude hands have touched it? / Ha' you marked but the fall 0 ' the snow / Before the soil hath smutched it? / Ha' you felt the wool 0' the beaver? Or swan's down ever? "
[74:504J.
50. Waller: Edmund W. , 1606-1687, the En- glish poet who wrote: "Go, lovely Rose. " Pound glances at this poem in his "Envoy" to Mauberley.
51. Dowland: John D. , 1563-1626, Irish composer and lutanist. Pound mentions his lute compositions [GK, 151J.
52. Y our eyen . . . susteyne: From Merciles Beaute, attributed to Chaucer.
53. Ed ascoltando . . . : I, "and listening to the gentle murmur. " Pound told HK: "Not a quotation, merely author using handy language. ' ,
54. new . . . eyes: Image of reflected divini- ty, with sexual overtones as the sacred vision (inluminatio coitu [36: 13J) becomes more urgent and pervasive here and in many later cantos [Peck, Pai, 1-1 J.
55. hypostasis: Here divinity of the object as object in itself, not as container for a spirit that might come or go.
56. Ed)w,: H, "knowing" or "seeing. " Part of a verb which in context and some of its forms may mean either "know" or "see. " Pound's source is debatable, because the word is pandemic. Since Pound was a devo- tee of the Pre-Sacratics (in particular the Pythagoreans) and kept John Burnet's Greek Philosophy at hand, he may have noticed the extenqed discussion Burnet gives to 'E[oo, and E[ofj as "figures" (in the sense of "forms") deriving from the "boundless" or unformed. Earlier thinkers had thought of air as a sort of "mist. " But Pythagoras was the first to conceive of abstract space in which forms had to exist to be seen and known. This line of thought led to the con- clusion that all things that are are numbers. "The early Pythagoreans represented num- bers and explained their properties by means
of dots arranged in certain 'figures or pat- terns'" [Burnet, 52J. The most famous fig? ure is the tetraktys. )t, as are all other figures or patterns, is an eiooc:;. Etowc:;, as participle substantive, would give us "shape, figure, or being apprehensible to the eyes and mind (seeing or knowing). "
57. Learn of the green world: Or in other words: "See the lilies of the field, they toil not neither do they spin; yet I say unto you Solomon in all his glory is not arrayed like one of these. "
58. Paquin: A Parisian couturier [80:434; WB,Pai, 11? 3, 444J.
and I was
dirty ramshackle pier for a great steamship
line" [Santayana, Persons and Places, I, 134].
38. Santayana: [80:49J.
39. Muss: Mussolini. He affected a populist image by cultivating localisms of the pro- vince he came from.
grief . . .
[These passages from Santayana were identi- fied by Carol H. Cantrell in a MS submitted to Paideuma. J
41. George Horace: G. H. Lorimer, 1868- 1937, American journalist and editor-in- chief of the Saturday Evening Post (1899- 1936), and a neighbor of the Pounds at Wyncote.
42. Beveridge: Albert Jeremiah B. , 1862- 1927, U. S. senator (1899-1911), a supporter of Theodore Roosevelt and an organizer of the Progessive party in 1912. He made an inspection trip to the Philippines in 1899. He refused to discuss or write about the trip because "he was saving his observations for the speech he planned to make as his initial bow to the Senate" [Bowers, Beveridge and the Progressive Party, 112J . All others failed to get an interview with the senator but Lorimer went to Washington and succeeded by persistence: "The spring and summer of
1900 found Beveridge feverishly at work. He had agreed with George H. Lorimer . . . to write six articles in the imperialistic vein, on his experiences in the Philippines" [ibid. , 131]. Thus, to be accurate Pound's "three articles" should read "six" [Fang, II, 68J .
43. AOI! : [79:109J.
A noise perhaps of la- mentation) picking up from the idea of grief in preceding lines: Aoz' occurs 172 times in the Oxford manuscript of Chanson de Ro-
40. the
about his aunt's grief at the death of her daughter, that it "was violent, but violent only by fits, as when each new visitor came to condole with her, and she had to repeat the whole story, with appropriate floods of tears, sobs, and lamentations" [ibid. , 127J.
climax:
Santayana
wrote
? ? ? 454
59. The green casque: The "bottle" from which Madam La Vespa is born [83:72].
60. "Master thyself . . . ": Paraphrase of the rhythm of Chaucer's "Subdue thyself, and others thee shall hear" from the "Ballade of Good Counsel" [Speare, 1].
61. Blunt: Wilfred Scawen B. , 1840-1922, poet, diplomat, politician, world traveler, and defender of home rule for India, Egypt, and even Ireland, for which he became the first Englishman to go to prison. In the Lon- don years, Pound thought highly of Blunt and sent some of his poetry to Harriet Mon- roe, saying, "the Blunt stuff, glory of the name etc. ought to build up our posi- tion . . . " [L, 34]. On Jan. 18, 1914, a com- mittee of poets including Yeats, Masefield, Pound, and several others "presented to Wil-
81/521-522
fred Seawen Blunt 'in token of homage' a
82/523-524 455 Glossary
CANTO LXXXII Sources
EP, CON, 22; Aeschylus, Agamemnon; Morris Speare, The Pocket Book of Verse, 1940 [Speare]; Petrarch, Sonetti e Canzoni,
Fano, 1503.
Background
EP, "Salve a Pontifex;" ALS, 63; SP, 227; L, 7, 55, 62, 65,
80-83; LE, 269-270, 274-275;ABCR, 48; The Cambridge History of English Literature, Vol. XII [CHEL] ; Edmund Gosse, The Life of A. C. Swinburne, London, 1917 [Gosse, SWInburne]; Dafne Fielding, Those Remarkable Cunards, New York, Atheneum, 1958 [DF, Cunards] ;Dial, vol. 71, Aug. 1921; Rudolph Hirsch, Printing, Selling, and Reading, 1450-1550, Wiesbaden, 1967; H. Price, Fifty Years of Psychical Research, New York, Arno Press, reprinted 1975.
Exegeses
Knox, Pai, . 3-1, 77-78; LL, Motive, 118-120; EH, Approaches, 338-350; WB, Rose, 95-156; HK, Era, 486-488; Achilles Fang, "Materials for the Study of Pound's Cantos," Ph. D. dissertation, Harvard University, 1958, Vol. II [Fang].
1I. EMO~ . . . : H, "my husband . . . hand. " Clytemnestra [Agamemnon, 1404- 1406] says: "This is Agamemnon, my hus- band, dead by my right hand, and a good job" [cf. LE, 269-270].
12. hac dextera mortus: [dextra mortuus] : L, "dead by this right hand. " Pound, in comparing the Thomas Stanley Greek and Latin editions of the play, cites these lines.
13. Lytton: It was not Lytton but Lady Gregory's husband, Sir William Gregory, who first saw Blunt in the bullring. In 1862, at a bullfight in Madrid, Sir William was "struck by the extraordinary good looks of the young matador . . . and asking who he was, heard that he was an attache from the English Embassy, Wilfred Blunt" [Lady Gre- gory's preface to Blunt's diaries, cited by Fang, U, 163].
14. Packard: Frank Lucius P. , 1877-1942, Canadian author of such books as Greater
carved . . . by the brilliant Gaudier-Brzeska. . . ," So
reliquary
sculptor,
wrote in Poetry [vol. 3, no. 4. , March 1914, 220-223]. Edith Finch [Wilfred Scawen Blunt1 J reporting on a visit made to Blunt by Pound and Aldington says that Pound said: "I am trying to persuade them both into some kind of sanity, . . . Where there is neither decency nor art . . . verse is a mere outrage" [po 338]. In "Homage to Wilfred Blunt" Pound wrote about Blunt's double sonnet, "With Esther": "Mr Blunt is about the last man who has been able to use the
old-fashioned Elizabethan 'grand style' effec- tively" [Poetry, vol. 3, no. 4, 220-223]. These impressions flooded back over 30 years later. Blunt was a man of action who with a fine old eye helped create "a live tradition. "
10. "On the
at the opening of Agamemnon says: "I ask the gods some respite . . . of this watch time measured by years I lie awake . . . upon the Atreides roof dogwise to mark the grand processionals of all the stars at night" (trans. by Richmond Lattimore). One of Pound's main preoccupations during his Pisa captivi~ ty was to mark the grand processional of all the stars and planets.
young Pound
I. hunting dog: [80: 112]. Prob. Orion and Sirius, the dog~star.
beach, the captain of a fishing boat fished the poet out of the water and let him ashore
at Yport (not Le Portell, a little north of Etretat. As soon as he was picked up, Swin~ burne began preaching to the captain and his men. He told Gosse that they surrounded him "in rapturous approval. " So, being a
o f
. . .
2. "Guten
. . .
": G,
"Good morning,
sir. "
3. Jeffers et aI: Trainees at the DTC.
4. Swinburne: Algernon Charles S. , 1837-
1909. The English poet whose richness of pattern, cadence, and sound impressed Pound early and late. He was still living when Pound arrived in England, but he missed seeing him and always regretted it. Pound's "Salve 0 Pontifex" is dedicated to Swinburne [ALS, 63].
5. Landor: Walter Savage L. , 1775-1864, English poet and essayist. Swinburne visited the 90-year-old Landor twice in the year of his death. Gosse says about the first visit that "the unknown little poet, with his great aureole of fluffed red hair," merely confused the old man. But Landor called him "dear friend" and was charmed into giving him "a Correggio in commemoration of the occa~ sian" [Gosse, Swinburne, 101-104].
6. old Mathews: ElkinM. , 1851-1921, Lon- don publisher who did several of Pound's early works. Pound mentions him quite of~ ten in his early letters [L, 7, 55, 62, 65, etc. ; SP, 227]. Pound prob. heard the anecdote from Mathews himself, perhaps at the time of Swinburne's death in 1909.
7. Watts Dunton: Theodore Walter Watts- Dunton, 1832-1914, English poet, novelist, and critic; the friend and caretaker of Swin~ burne who lived with him from 1879 until his death in 1909.
8. Dirce's shade: [cf. 39 beloW].
9. Le Portel: Swinburne told Gosse the sto- ry of the rescue at sea and Gosse wrote it down soon afterwards. It seems that around 10 o'clock on an early October morning in 1869, Swinburne went alone to Porte d'Amont near Etretat, where he was staying with a friend named Powell. He jumped into the sea and was shortly carried away by the tide. While people stood helpless on the
man Violently in favor
preached to them "the doctrines of the Re~ public [of France], and then he recited to them 'by the hour together,' the poems of Victor Hugo" [Gosse, Swinburne, 178-179]. Pound's memory played him false with Aeschylus.
Atreides'
: The
watchman
d"emocracy, he
? ? ? 456
Love Hath No Man (1913), The Beloved
Traitor (1915), Doors of The Night (1922), The Devil's Mantle (1927), and a dozen others.
15. Percy: Percy B. Shelley [MSB].
16. Basinio: [9:7]. On the argument about the merits of Greek poetry vs, Latin poetry, Pound said [ABCR, 48] some snobs pre? ferred any Greek over any Latin. Then, "Ba- sinia of Parma, proclaimed a very different thesis: he held that you couldn't write Latin poetry really well unless you knew Greek. . . . In the margins ofhis Latin narra- tive you can still see the tags of Homer that he was using to keep his melodic sense ac- tive. " "Mould" is used instead of "model" to accent the sense of shape and form in the melodic line.
17. Otis: James O. [71:89, 91J. Said Pound: "Otis wrote a Greek Grammar which he destroyed, or which was lost for the lack ofa competent printer" [SP, 174J.
18. Soncino: [30:16. 19J. The spread of learning, activated by the art of printing, increased dramatically at the end of the 16th century. Demand for paper resulted in im- proved technology for producing paper. An increase in the number of printers increased competition. Competition created demand for ways to decrease costs. Says Rudolph Hirsch [Printing, Selling, and Reading, 1450? 1550, 70J, "the general trend was the reduction of prices for printed books . . . AIda Manuzio [30: 17J proceeded on this plan, when he started his octavo series . . . in
1501. . . . He kept expenses low by intra? ducing an italic type, designed for him by Francesco Griffo da Bologna, which permit- ted him to place more text on one page. " Hieronymous Soncinus "pointed out with some venom" that Franceso and not AIda was the designer. In a dedication to Cesare Borgia, which appeared in Petrarch's Sonetti e Canzoni [Fano, 1503J, Soncinus wrote: "Francesco da Bologna . . . ha escogitato una nova forma de littere dicta cursiva, 0 vera cancelleresca, de la quale non Aido Roma- no . . . rna esso M. Francesco e stato primo
82/524
inventore et designatore" ("Francesco of Bo- logna has devised a new form of handwriting called cursive, or rather chancery writing, whose first inventor and designer was not AIda Romano but this M. Franceso"). The implication in the context suggests that Son- cinus and Francesco are memorialized in thousands of books and, like other great printers and designers, did much to spread knowledge and civilization, while many sup- posedly great men carved in statues in public squares are only "marble men. " The classic books will reappear in ever new editions; the statues will slowly wither away.
19. Mr Clowes: A member of William Clowes and Sons, Ltd. , a firm of English printers, which did Pound's Lustra and Gaudier? Brzeska in 1916. The story involved concerns 25 poems the printer objected to as obscene and the publisher agreed should be left out of the volume. Negotiations cut down the number to 17. Yeats was called in but didn't manage to help, so Pound issued a private "unexpurgated" edition. The story is told in various letters [L, 80? 88J and men? tioned in "Murder by Capital" [SP,227].
82/524-525
457
vol. 71, August 1921; Poems 1918. 1921; Fang, II, 142J.
groups were represented among the Marxists in London and the U. S. Some English units left for Spain to join the battle, as did the Abraham Lincoln Battalion from the United States. But some, following the Moscow line meticulously, would not expose the agents of Franco working in London [George Or- well, Homage to Catalonia, Boston, Beacon Press, 1962].
14. Franco: Francisco F. , 1892? 1975, Span. ish general and dictator who was victorious with the help of Germany and Italy in the Spanish Civil War.
15. Alcazar: Alcazar de San Juan, town in central Spain which Pound visited in 1906. He lists it as one of the Islamic monuments that gave "a sense of man and of human dignity yet unobliterated" [GK, 53]. Ironi? cally, it was the bloody siege of Alcazar that Franco said won the war for him.
16. Eso es . . . muerto: S, "that is mourning, Ha! / my husband is dead. "
17. locanda: I, "inn. "
18. Cabranez: Prob. Dr. Augustin Cabanes, 1862-1928, author of some 60 volumes, in?
Glossary
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 452
81/518-519
81/519-521
453
Pound's criticism, agreeing with Bard, was that in novels and poetry ordinary people such as bakers and innkeepers were made to sound like people of wit and wisdom.
30. Te cavero . . . a te: I, "I'll cut your guts out / [and I] yours" [1O:21J. Highly idio- matic and strong talk in the language of the people.
31. Mencken: H. L. M. , 1880-1956, Ameri- can editor, author, critic, and philologist with whom Pound corresponded for years. Pound was much impressed with a remark of his and mentions it often: "Nevertheless, I believe that all schemes of monetary reform collide inevitably with the nature of man in the mass. He can't be convinced in anything less than a geological epoch" [GK, 182J.
32. Some cook . . . : [54: 14J.
33. 'Ivl'~ . . . "vap",: H, "Little wheel . . . . . man to my house. " The first word should be Iv'Y~ and the accent on 1roTt should be grave. The line occurs in Theocritus, "Idyll 2"
[Loeb, The Greek Bucolic Poets, 26J. The complete line is a refrain repeated 10 times as a magic spell worked by a young maid to draw her lover) who has taken up with an~ other) back to her.
34. Benin: The city and river in S Nigeria, whence Frobenius collected masks and arti~ facts.
35. Frankfurt: The German city in which the Frobenius Institute is located and where many cultural objects from Africa were housed. Pound's indirect way of saying that the black soldier who made his table was as handsome as any his race ever produced.
36. Kuanon: [90:29J.
37. And at first . . . : The next several lines
derive from Santayana's Persons and Places, which Pound prob. read in manuscript some- time in 1940 [L, 331, 333J. Santayana was born in Spain and tells of his first impres~ sions of Boston, where he arrived at age 9: "my eye . . . was caught by symbols ofY an- kee ingenuity and Y ankee haste . . . . I was fascinated by the play of those skeleton
disgusted by such a
wheels . . .
land, generally following the last lines of a laisse.
44. Althea: Intended to evoke the Lovelace poem, "To Althea from Prison," which says "And my divine Althea comes / To whisper at the grates. " Pound has no such visitor.
45. libretto: Just as Canto 75 is the musical score of Janequin, so the climactic pages of Canto 81 are given a musical label to under- score the extraordinary musical cadences de~ liberately evoked in one of the major climac- tic statements of the poem.
46. Lawes: Henry L. , 1596-1662, the En- glish musician and composer noted for his masques and airs for voice. But he did not write for the crowd, as Pound knew: "Lawes and Campion will not gather 10,000 ground- lings. Not in our time" [GK, 155J. Lawes set Waller's "Go, Lovely Rose" to music
[Espey, Mauberley, 98J.
47. Jenkyns: John Jenkins, 1592-1678, En- glish composer and musician to Charles I and II. He composed many fancies for viol and organ.
48. Dolmetsch: [80:197J. Arnold D. The Dolmetsch foundation (! 928) was founded to encourage interest in old music. Pound celebrates his work often [GK, 71, 248;LE, 431-440J.
49. Hast 'ou . . . shade: The 4 lines derive from the 3d stanza of Ben Jonson's "The Triumph of Charis," which goes: "Have you seen but a bright lily grow, / Before rude hands have touched it? / Ha' you marked but the fall 0 ' the snow / Before the soil hath smutched it? / Ha' you felt the wool 0' the beaver? Or swan's down ever? "
[74:504J.
50. Waller: Edmund W. , 1606-1687, the En- glish poet who wrote: "Go, lovely Rose. " Pound glances at this poem in his "Envoy" to Mauberley.
51. Dowland: John D. , 1563-1626, Irish composer and lutanist. Pound mentions his lute compositions [GK, 151J.
52. Y our eyen . . . susteyne: From Merciles Beaute, attributed to Chaucer.
53. Ed ascoltando . . . : I, "and listening to the gentle murmur. " Pound told HK: "Not a quotation, merely author using handy language. ' ,
54. new . . . eyes: Image of reflected divini- ty, with sexual overtones as the sacred vision (inluminatio coitu [36: 13J) becomes more urgent and pervasive here and in many later cantos [Peck, Pai, 1-1 J.
55. hypostasis: Here divinity of the object as object in itself, not as container for a spirit that might come or go.
56. Ed)w,: H, "knowing" or "seeing. " Part of a verb which in context and some of its forms may mean either "know" or "see. " Pound's source is debatable, because the word is pandemic. Since Pound was a devo- tee of the Pre-Sacratics (in particular the Pythagoreans) and kept John Burnet's Greek Philosophy at hand, he may have noticed the extenqed discussion Burnet gives to 'E[oo, and E[ofj as "figures" (in the sense of "forms") deriving from the "boundless" or unformed. Earlier thinkers had thought of air as a sort of "mist. " But Pythagoras was the first to conceive of abstract space in which forms had to exist to be seen and known. This line of thought led to the con- clusion that all things that are are numbers. "The early Pythagoreans represented num- bers and explained their properties by means
of dots arranged in certain 'figures or pat- terns'" [Burnet, 52J. The most famous fig? ure is the tetraktys. )t, as are all other figures or patterns, is an eiooc:;. Etowc:;, as participle substantive, would give us "shape, figure, or being apprehensible to the eyes and mind (seeing or knowing). "
57. Learn of the green world: Or in other words: "See the lilies of the field, they toil not neither do they spin; yet I say unto you Solomon in all his glory is not arrayed like one of these. "
58. Paquin: A Parisian couturier [80:434; WB,Pai, 11? 3, 444J.
and I was
dirty ramshackle pier for a great steamship
line" [Santayana, Persons and Places, I, 134].
38. Santayana: [80:49J.
39. Muss: Mussolini. He affected a populist image by cultivating localisms of the pro- vince he came from.
grief . . .
[These passages from Santayana were identi- fied by Carol H. Cantrell in a MS submitted to Paideuma. J
41. George Horace: G. H. Lorimer, 1868- 1937, American journalist and editor-in- chief of the Saturday Evening Post (1899- 1936), and a neighbor of the Pounds at Wyncote.
42. Beveridge: Albert Jeremiah B. , 1862- 1927, U. S. senator (1899-1911), a supporter of Theodore Roosevelt and an organizer of the Progessive party in 1912. He made an inspection trip to the Philippines in 1899. He refused to discuss or write about the trip because "he was saving his observations for the speech he planned to make as his initial bow to the Senate" [Bowers, Beveridge and the Progressive Party, 112J . All others failed to get an interview with the senator but Lorimer went to Washington and succeeded by persistence: "The spring and summer of
1900 found Beveridge feverishly at work. He had agreed with George H. Lorimer . . . to write six articles in the imperialistic vein, on his experiences in the Philippines" [ibid. , 131]. Thus, to be accurate Pound's "three articles" should read "six" [Fang, II, 68J .
43. AOI! : [79:109J.
A noise perhaps of la- mentation) picking up from the idea of grief in preceding lines: Aoz' occurs 172 times in the Oxford manuscript of Chanson de Ro-
40. the
about his aunt's grief at the death of her daughter, that it "was violent, but violent only by fits, as when each new visitor came to condole with her, and she had to repeat the whole story, with appropriate floods of tears, sobs, and lamentations" [ibid. , 127J.
climax:
Santayana
wrote
? ? ? 454
59. The green casque: The "bottle" from which Madam La Vespa is born [83:72].
60. "Master thyself . . . ": Paraphrase of the rhythm of Chaucer's "Subdue thyself, and others thee shall hear" from the "Ballade of Good Counsel" [Speare, 1].
61. Blunt: Wilfred Scawen B. , 1840-1922, poet, diplomat, politician, world traveler, and defender of home rule for India, Egypt, and even Ireland, for which he became the first Englishman to go to prison. In the Lon- don years, Pound thought highly of Blunt and sent some of his poetry to Harriet Mon- roe, saying, "the Blunt stuff, glory of the name etc. ought to build up our posi- tion . . . " [L, 34]. On Jan. 18, 1914, a com- mittee of poets including Yeats, Masefield, Pound, and several others "presented to Wil-
81/521-522
fred Seawen Blunt 'in token of homage' a
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CANTO LXXXII Sources
EP, CON, 22; Aeschylus, Agamemnon; Morris Speare, The Pocket Book of Verse, 1940 [Speare]; Petrarch, Sonetti e Canzoni,
Fano, 1503.
Background
EP, "Salve a Pontifex;" ALS, 63; SP, 227; L, 7, 55, 62, 65,
80-83; LE, 269-270, 274-275;ABCR, 48; The Cambridge History of English Literature, Vol. XII [CHEL] ; Edmund Gosse, The Life of A. C. Swinburne, London, 1917 [Gosse, SWInburne]; Dafne Fielding, Those Remarkable Cunards, New York, Atheneum, 1958 [DF, Cunards] ;Dial, vol. 71, Aug. 1921; Rudolph Hirsch, Printing, Selling, and Reading, 1450-1550, Wiesbaden, 1967; H. Price, Fifty Years of Psychical Research, New York, Arno Press, reprinted 1975.
Exegeses
Knox, Pai, . 3-1, 77-78; LL, Motive, 118-120; EH, Approaches, 338-350; WB, Rose, 95-156; HK, Era, 486-488; Achilles Fang, "Materials for the Study of Pound's Cantos," Ph. D. dissertation, Harvard University, 1958, Vol. II [Fang].
1I. EMO~ . . . : H, "my husband . . . hand. " Clytemnestra [Agamemnon, 1404- 1406] says: "This is Agamemnon, my hus- band, dead by my right hand, and a good job" [cf. LE, 269-270].
12. hac dextera mortus: [dextra mortuus] : L, "dead by this right hand. " Pound, in comparing the Thomas Stanley Greek and Latin editions of the play, cites these lines.
13. Lytton: It was not Lytton but Lady Gregory's husband, Sir William Gregory, who first saw Blunt in the bullring. In 1862, at a bullfight in Madrid, Sir William was "struck by the extraordinary good looks of the young matador . . . and asking who he was, heard that he was an attache from the English Embassy, Wilfred Blunt" [Lady Gre- gory's preface to Blunt's diaries, cited by Fang, U, 163].
14. Packard: Frank Lucius P. , 1877-1942, Canadian author of such books as Greater
carved . . . by the brilliant Gaudier-Brzeska. . . ," So
reliquary
sculptor,
wrote in Poetry [vol. 3, no. 4. , March 1914, 220-223]. Edith Finch [Wilfred Scawen Blunt1 J reporting on a visit made to Blunt by Pound and Aldington says that Pound said: "I am trying to persuade them both into some kind of sanity, . . . Where there is neither decency nor art . . . verse is a mere outrage" [po 338]. In "Homage to Wilfred Blunt" Pound wrote about Blunt's double sonnet, "With Esther": "Mr Blunt is about the last man who has been able to use the
old-fashioned Elizabethan 'grand style' effec- tively" [Poetry, vol. 3, no. 4, 220-223]. These impressions flooded back over 30 years later. Blunt was a man of action who with a fine old eye helped create "a live tradition. "
10. "On the
at the opening of Agamemnon says: "I ask the gods some respite . . . of this watch time measured by years I lie awake . . . upon the Atreides roof dogwise to mark the grand processionals of all the stars at night" (trans. by Richmond Lattimore). One of Pound's main preoccupations during his Pisa captivi~ ty was to mark the grand processional of all the stars and planets.
young Pound
I. hunting dog: [80: 112]. Prob. Orion and Sirius, the dog~star.
beach, the captain of a fishing boat fished the poet out of the water and let him ashore
at Yport (not Le Portell, a little north of Etretat. As soon as he was picked up, Swin~ burne began preaching to the captain and his men. He told Gosse that they surrounded him "in rapturous approval. " So, being a
o f
. . .
2. "Guten
. . .
": G,
"Good morning,
sir. "
3. Jeffers et aI: Trainees at the DTC.
4. Swinburne: Algernon Charles S. , 1837-
1909. The English poet whose richness of pattern, cadence, and sound impressed Pound early and late. He was still living when Pound arrived in England, but he missed seeing him and always regretted it. Pound's "Salve 0 Pontifex" is dedicated to Swinburne [ALS, 63].
5. Landor: Walter Savage L. , 1775-1864, English poet and essayist. Swinburne visited the 90-year-old Landor twice in the year of his death. Gosse says about the first visit that "the unknown little poet, with his great aureole of fluffed red hair," merely confused the old man. But Landor called him "dear friend" and was charmed into giving him "a Correggio in commemoration of the occa~ sian" [Gosse, Swinburne, 101-104].
6. old Mathews: ElkinM. , 1851-1921, Lon- don publisher who did several of Pound's early works. Pound mentions him quite of~ ten in his early letters [L, 7, 55, 62, 65, etc. ; SP, 227]. Pound prob. heard the anecdote from Mathews himself, perhaps at the time of Swinburne's death in 1909.
7. Watts Dunton: Theodore Walter Watts- Dunton, 1832-1914, English poet, novelist, and critic; the friend and caretaker of Swin~ burne who lived with him from 1879 until his death in 1909.
8. Dirce's shade: [cf. 39 beloW].
9. Le Portel: Swinburne told Gosse the sto- ry of the rescue at sea and Gosse wrote it down soon afterwards. It seems that around 10 o'clock on an early October morning in 1869, Swinburne went alone to Porte d'Amont near Etretat, where he was staying with a friend named Powell. He jumped into the sea and was shortly carried away by the tide. While people stood helpless on the
man Violently in favor
preached to them "the doctrines of the Re~ public [of France], and then he recited to them 'by the hour together,' the poems of Victor Hugo" [Gosse, Swinburne, 178-179]. Pound's memory played him false with Aeschylus.
Atreides'
: The
watchman
d"emocracy, he
? ? ? 456
Love Hath No Man (1913), The Beloved
Traitor (1915), Doors of The Night (1922), The Devil's Mantle (1927), and a dozen others.
15. Percy: Percy B. Shelley [MSB].
16. Basinio: [9:7]. On the argument about the merits of Greek poetry vs, Latin poetry, Pound said [ABCR, 48] some snobs pre? ferred any Greek over any Latin. Then, "Ba- sinia of Parma, proclaimed a very different thesis: he held that you couldn't write Latin poetry really well unless you knew Greek. . . . In the margins ofhis Latin narra- tive you can still see the tags of Homer that he was using to keep his melodic sense ac- tive. " "Mould" is used instead of "model" to accent the sense of shape and form in the melodic line.
17. Otis: James O. [71:89, 91J. Said Pound: "Otis wrote a Greek Grammar which he destroyed, or which was lost for the lack ofa competent printer" [SP, 174J.
18. Soncino: [30:16. 19J. The spread of learning, activated by the art of printing, increased dramatically at the end of the 16th century. Demand for paper resulted in im- proved technology for producing paper. An increase in the number of printers increased competition. Competition created demand for ways to decrease costs. Says Rudolph Hirsch [Printing, Selling, and Reading, 1450? 1550, 70J, "the general trend was the reduction of prices for printed books . . . AIda Manuzio [30: 17J proceeded on this plan, when he started his octavo series . . . in
1501. . . . He kept expenses low by intra? ducing an italic type, designed for him by Francesco Griffo da Bologna, which permit- ted him to place more text on one page. " Hieronymous Soncinus "pointed out with some venom" that Franceso and not AIda was the designer. In a dedication to Cesare Borgia, which appeared in Petrarch's Sonetti e Canzoni [Fano, 1503J, Soncinus wrote: "Francesco da Bologna . . . ha escogitato una nova forma de littere dicta cursiva, 0 vera cancelleresca, de la quale non Aido Roma- no . . . rna esso M. Francesco e stato primo
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inventore et designatore" ("Francesco of Bo- logna has devised a new form of handwriting called cursive, or rather chancery writing, whose first inventor and designer was not AIda Romano but this M. Franceso"). The implication in the context suggests that Son- cinus and Francesco are memorialized in thousands of books and, like other great printers and designers, did much to spread knowledge and civilization, while many sup- posedly great men carved in statues in public squares are only "marble men. " The classic books will reappear in ever new editions; the statues will slowly wither away.
19. Mr Clowes: A member of William Clowes and Sons, Ltd. , a firm of English printers, which did Pound's Lustra and Gaudier? Brzeska in 1916. The story involved concerns 25 poems the printer objected to as obscene and the publisher agreed should be left out of the volume. Negotiations cut down the number to 17. Yeats was called in but didn't manage to help, so Pound issued a private "unexpurgated" edition. The story is told in various letters [L, 80? 88J and men? tioned in "Murder by Capital" [SP,227].
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457
vol. 71, August 1921; Poems 1918. 1921; Fang, II, 142J.
