" In
citing lines from Gourmont's Les Litanies de la Rose to show his sense of "tonal varia- tions," Pound gives one in particular: "Femmes, conservatrices des traditions mile- siennes" [LE, 345].
citing lines from Gourmont's Les Litanies de la Rose to show his sense of "tonal varia- tions," Pound gives one in particular: "Femmes, conservatrices des traditions mile- siennes" [LE, 345].
A-Companion-to-the-Cantos-of-Ezra-Pound-II
The Pollok .
.
.
sea": Sir Ian Hamilton [93:163], 1853-1947, who commanded the British Mediterranean Expeditionary Force in WWI and after became an adviser on Near Eastern affairs, told the Poles that if Ger- many invaded Poland they could expect help via the Black Sea.
But the Soviet-Nazi pact intervened, which made it impossible to get
to Poland via the Black Sea [WC, Guide] . 38. Pitonessa: I, UPythoness. " Name of a
woman seer, such as at the Oracle of Delphi, who became inspired by breathing intoxi- cating fumes: "[She] took her stand on a three-legged stool, or tripod, placed over a crack in the floor of a cave, and became literally inspired by the fumes that issued from the earth" [Upward, Mystery, 15].
39. Ideogram: Ling2 [85:1]. The top com-
. . .
28. agitante
are warmed" [93:107].
29. nos otros: S, "we others. "
"stirs
calescimus: L,
us we
30. Murare, tradurre: I, "to build, to translate. "
31. Pope Nicolo: Nicolo V, 1397-1455, who as pope (1447-1455) was a founder of the
677
? ? 678
104/740-741
104/741-742
679
ponent stands for clouds. The repeated cen- tral component [M3434], "mouth," gives "the three voices," over the bottom com- ponent, which stands for a wizard or seer, such as the Pythoness.
40. And stopped . . . metals: Prob. the reli? gious ecstasy that led some to dedicate themselves to values other than gold and silver.
41. Once gold . . . burrows: Waddell says: "The gold? digging 'ants' are described by Strabo as having 'skins as large as leopards. ' They were evidently the large Tibetan rabbit? like Marmots, which burrowed in the auriferous sand and brought gold to the sur? face" [Seals, 13].
42. paothree: [M4956J, "treasure. " Charac- ter as given.
43. paoth",: [M4953], "a bird said to be like the wild goose. " Character not given.
44. paofOll': [M4954], "a leopard; a pan? ther; a kind of wildcat. " Character as given.
45. da radice torbida: I, "of turbid root. "
46. maalesh: A colloquial Arabic expression that means "never mind," "don't worry about it," "take things as they come," "que sera sera," ot all these things.
47. Adolf: A. Hitler. Pound seems to have believed that Hitler got onto the bankers and usurocrats; his perception of their interna- tional plot is what made him furious [Pound, Speaking, 49, 79, 433, passim]. But Pound also wrote, in a piece entitled "From Italy" [NEW, May 24, 1934]: "Adolphe is, an, almost, pathetic hysteric; . . . he is, so far as I can make out, a tool of almost the worst Huns. "
48. they . . . : FDR, Churchill, and all those who were blind to what WWII was really all about.
49. "Beg the . . . him": The source of the remark is unknown, but clearly the speaker is a wonderful lady of the old school, who knows it is immoral to embarrass anyone.
50. And the cap . . . nuance: The lines are an enigma. This gloss number and space are reserved for the time when someone will have a reasonable clue.
of England, such as Athelstan or Lear, whose prayers were often to Diana [91/612? 613].
60. "Wash . . . Ian'. ": Prob. remark of Elder Lightfoot [95:42].
71. monoceros: H, "unicorn. " Yeats wrote of "Magical Unicorns" and "cloud-pale uni- corns" in the last stanza of The Tower. His bookplate shows a rampant unicorn in heral~ dic style.
n. Gladstone: William Ewart G. , 1809? 1898, dominant personality of the British Liberal party and erstwhile prime minister toward end of the century. Earlier, as a young man, he served in the cabinet of Pal~ merston and may have tried to cultivate one of his important lady supporters, which may have been bad but was not as bad as Dis? raeli's act of selling the country.
73. Palmerston: [89:154].
74. Hollis: Author of The Two Nations, A
Financial Study of English History, a book that exposed the "Whiggery" of the profes? sorships as well as the diliberate and know? ing creation of a nation of poverty in order to maintain a nation of wealth.
75. Regius: [46:29]. 76. Coke: [107:3].
51. 1910: Pears': Although
claimed suzerainty over Tibet since 1720, the British began challenging that control in the 20th century. In 1904 they sent to Thasa Sir Frances Younghusband, who by 1910 had managed to get a number ofvalu? able trading rights. In those years Pears' soap
was supposedly a measure of the civilization Britain was bringing to the "unwashed" world: it functioned as a symbol with ironic
overtones, somewhat as Coca-Cola does today.
52. Les Douze: Prob. a Parisian literary group of the old school who met occasional? ly at a restaurant but were quite oblivious to the important things going on, such as Ford's new Transatlantic Review.
53. Fordie: Ford Madox F. [74:165]. In the early twenties, when he was editing the Transatlantic Review in Paris.
54. Ambro[i]se Pare: French army surgeon, ca. 1510? 1590, famous for introducing hu? mane methods into medicine. He did away with "the boiling oil treatment of wounds" (which sometimes caused death by shock), promoted the use of artificial limbs, and saved many lives by introducing the tour- niquet.
55. before Zeus . . . bluejays: "The bluebird
regarded
. . .
as the
outcome of aerial
mo-
is
tion; that is, as a pure association of ideas"
[Cirlot, 26]. In Hellenic folklore birds in general indicate the spiritual nature of man.
56. THEMIS: Greek goddess of justice.
57. Yo? Yo: A friendly inmate at St. Eliza?
beths whom Pound was fond of [MSB, Pai, 3? 3, 332].
58. raise up guilds: [91:52]. Religious, not craft, orders.
59. the moon kings: Perhaps the early kings
China
had
61. Luigi . . . communion:
Pound: "The religious man communes every time his teeth sink into a bread crust"
[SP ,70].
62. lasso: [105:63].
63. Yseult . . . : Iseult Gonne MacBride, the daughter of Maud Gonne, to whom Yeats proposed in 1917 after Maud had turned him down finally [Schmitz, Pai, 3? 2, 286; EH, Pai, 3? 3, 416].
64. Walter: W. Morse Rummel [80:5] died in 1953 [ibid. ].
65. Fordie: He died in 1939.
66. familiares: I, "intimate friends. "
67. HOWells: William Dean H. , 1837? 1920, longtime dean of American letters. Pound is recalling a scene in which Henry James is reacting to a request to send some congratu- lations to be read at a dinner in honor of Howells. He did, but the American Academy suppressed them. Pound first wrote of it in a 1924 article on the Nobel Prize, in which he said (of James): "One can still hear the slow suave voice: 'Eh, I, eh, belong to a body, eh, doubtless you also belong to it . . . and there is another inner and more secret body . . . ' etc. ending magnificently: 'and how my dear old friend . . . eh . . . Howells . . . ! " [Peck, Pai, 2? 1, 144; FR,P/l, 216? 22IJ.
68. Remy's: R. de Gourmont [87:88].
69. "miIesiennes"; F, "Milesian women.
" In
citing lines from Gourmont's Les Litanies de la Rose to show his sense of "tonal varia- tions," Pound gives one in particular: "Femmes, conservatrices des traditions mile- siennes" [LE, 345]. Pound liked the word so much he wrote it in a letter to John Quinn to describe Maude Gonne [L, 140].
70. William's: W. B. Yeats.
[97:232]. Said
77. V on
von B. , 1755? 1816, the Prussian general who assisted in the defeat of Napoleon at Gross Beeren and at Waterloo (not to be confused with Bernhard von B. at 86:9 and 89/601).
78. (Wells): [42:2; 46/232]. 79. Orage: [80:322; 89:239].
80. Nicht Bosheit . . . DUMMheit: G, "not cowardice . . . stupidity" [86:4].
81. Margherita Regina: [86:5].
82. Mirabeau: Honore G. Riquetti, Comte de M. , 1749? 1791, because of a wild and dissolute youth was repeatedly jailed. In 1785 he was in exile in England, and in 1786 he waS sent on a secret mission to Prussia which failed. He published an account of the affair which some believed to be treasonous. After the revolution he acted as a moderate behind the scenes and collaborated to estab? lish a constitutional monarchy. He predicted
Bulow: Freidrich W. , Freiherr
? 680
104/742-744
88. Selvo: Dornenigo Selvo [26:25, 26] doge of Venice (1071-1081); he put the first mosaics into the Cathedral of San Marco.
89. Franchetti: Luigi F. , a Venetian friend of Pound's during the 1930s. In the context o f a discussion o f words and meaning ("Man- kind's fog . . . comes from NOT defining one's terms. First the clear definition, then the clear articulation"), Pound draws paral- lels with musical composition and playing, and cites a comment of Franchetti to illus- trate [GK,248].
90. "V ery cleverly drained": Source un- known. Perhaps there is a connection with the discoveries of Del Pelo Pardi and his underground canals [101 :16,17]. Or Lana- naga [cf. 106 below] .
91. Chauncey Aleo! : C. Olcott, 1860-1932, Irish actor and tenor who wrote "My Wild Irish Rose. " He was so popular in the 1890s that the songwriting team of William Jerome and Jean Schwartz immortalized him in the chorus of a 1903 song of their own named "Bedelia," which starts: "Bedelia, I want to steal ya, / Bedelia, I love you so. / I'll be your Chauncey Olcott / If you'll be my Mol- ly, O! " Pound prob. heard it at St. Eliza- beths, either sung by another patient or in the media [M. Fournier, Pai, 12-2 & 3].
92. Ionides: [40:26]
93. Pulchra documenta: L, "beautiful examples. "
94. Bulow: [cf. 77 above].
97. kalos kagathos: H, "beautiful and well born" [33:11].
. . .
99. Cythera PAGGKALA: H, "All-beautiful
104/744-745
Cytherian": Aphrodite. The Greek n in pan
("all") becomes g before kappa, gamma, or chi.
100. Mond: Alfred Moritz M. , 1868-1930, of a family famous for chemical research and manufacturing. In 1910 he bought the En- glish Review (then being edited by F. M. Ford) for political purposes, and Ford was soon out of it. Said Pound: "no greater condemnation of the utter filth of the whole social system of the time can be dug up than the fact of that review's passing out ofhis hands" [HK, Poetry, 308]. It was Mond's brother who said, "it will not take 20 years to crwuth Mussolini" [SP, 313; 78:10]. The "interval" refers to the dozen years before Ford went to Paris to edit the Transatlantic Review [ef. 53 above].
101. . . . Quatorze: F, "fourteenth. " The celebration of Bastille Day, July 14th, the national holiday of republican France.
102. Brits paid . . . : The first issue of the Transatlantic Review may be referred to. But "installment" may suggest some kind of war reparations.
103. Alex . . . : [89:230].
104_ the king lost . . . : When
the right of the sovereign alone-was lost, such monetary chaos took place that even Del Mar is amazed. See his chapter entitled "Private Coinage," "Bank Suspensions under Coinage," and the analysis that starts: "From the day when the royal voluptuary resigned a prerogative . . . " [HMS, 389].
681
106. Larranaga: Pedro Juan Manuel L. , 1893-? , civil engineer and road builder. Au- thor of Gold, Glut, and Government: A New Economic Dawn, G. Allen and Unwin, 1932, and Successful Asphalt Paving, London, 1926.
107. Tremaine: Poss. Herbert Tremaine, poet (The Wide Garden and Other Poems, London, 1917) and author of novels such as The Tribal God (London, 1921) and The Feet of the Young Men, a domestic war novel (London, 1917).
108. prescrittibile: I, "stamp script," as money [101:80;SP ,315].
109. False Middles: When the second or middle premise of a syllogism is false, the conclusion is false. A major premise o f Pound's ideas about economists is that they base their reasoning on this kind of illogic. Thus, the acts of the state in taxing are ridiculous: "As ridiculous as . . . for some- one who possessed a tin mine to go about collecting old tin cans" [SP, 315]. When one has understood completely the truth of this sentence, he will be on the way to knowing how needless, destructive, and cruel the in- ternational banking and monetary mess is.
[Currently, Feb. 1982, the international bankers and oil men are "full of alarm" at the prospect of declining oil prices. ]
110. NOOS: H, nous, "mind" [40/201]: "the ineffable crysta1. "
111. Stink Saunders': [87:123].
112. pen yeh: [98:55,56].
113. Homestead . . . kolschoz: [103:5,6].
114. tessera: I, "ticket" [cf. 98 above; SP, 310-311].
that, should the monarchy not be preserved, a violent course of revolution would materi- alize. It did, in all its horror, after his death at age 42.
83. Ovid . . . Pontus: [76/462]. Ovid was exiled, for reasons kept secret, to the far borders of the empire at Tomi on the Black Sea, where he suffered greatly. His Epistulae ex Ponto delineate his misery and plea for him to be allowed to return to Rome. But neither Augustus nor Tiberius would hear of it. He died at Pontus in A. D. 17.
84. Goa: Portuguese colony on the west coast of India founded by Afonso de Albu? querque in 1510, where st. Francis Xavier spent 10 years doing successful missionary work. Xavier's tomb is there. At first Goa was a center of trade for spices, but that trade declined in the 17th and 18th cen? turies [89 :238]. The immediate effect of the arrival of Christian missionaries in this tropical paradise was a chain of destruction. Why? Money! [97/674].
85. Intorcetta: Prospera I. , Jesuit mission- ary to China during the late Ming and early Manchu dynasties. He is still remembered in his native Sicily, to which he returned with artifacts in 1671 [Dunne, Giants, 174? 175, 292].
86. Webster, Voltaire and Leibnitz: Grouped here as lexicographers and refiners o f language. V oltaire: Dictionnaire philoso- phique. Leibnitz: Monadology (1714) and Principles o f Nature and Grace (1714). Said Pound: "Leibniz was the last philosopher who 'got hold of something' . . . Up till Lei- bniz you can find men who really struggle with thOUght. After Leibniz the precedent kind of thought ceased to lead men"
[GK,74].
87. phyllotaxis: The biological laws that dictate the arrangement of leaves on a stem. The force that makes the cherry stone be- come a cherry tree, which to Pound is one of the ways divine intelligence works in the world. Its highest expression is through the mind of great thinkers such as those above [ef. Sieburth, Pai, 6-3, 383-384; 109 :49].
coinage-once
. . .
95. Gold
96. El Melek: [97:1-15].
1204:
[89:79].
105.
of dozens of books on dozens of subjects, including history, medicine, and money. Said Pound: "There is a body of sane writing in our time and/or a body of writing by enlightened men . . .
to Poland via the Black Sea [WC, Guide] . 38. Pitonessa: I, UPythoness. " Name of a
woman seer, such as at the Oracle of Delphi, who became inspired by breathing intoxi- cating fumes: "[She] took her stand on a three-legged stool, or tripod, placed over a crack in the floor of a cave, and became literally inspired by the fumes that issued from the earth" [Upward, Mystery, 15].
39. Ideogram: Ling2 [85:1]. The top com-
. . .
28. agitante
are warmed" [93:107].
29. nos otros: S, "we others. "
"stirs
calescimus: L,
us we
30. Murare, tradurre: I, "to build, to translate. "
31. Pope Nicolo: Nicolo V, 1397-1455, who as pope (1447-1455) was a founder of the
677
? ? 678
104/740-741
104/741-742
679
ponent stands for clouds. The repeated cen- tral component [M3434], "mouth," gives "the three voices," over the bottom com- ponent, which stands for a wizard or seer, such as the Pythoness.
40. And stopped . . . metals: Prob. the reli? gious ecstasy that led some to dedicate themselves to values other than gold and silver.
41. Once gold . . . burrows: Waddell says: "The gold? digging 'ants' are described by Strabo as having 'skins as large as leopards. ' They were evidently the large Tibetan rabbit? like Marmots, which burrowed in the auriferous sand and brought gold to the sur? face" [Seals, 13].
42. paothree: [M4956J, "treasure. " Charac- ter as given.
43. paoth",: [M4953], "a bird said to be like the wild goose. " Character not given.
44. paofOll': [M4954], "a leopard; a pan? ther; a kind of wildcat. " Character as given.
45. da radice torbida: I, "of turbid root. "
46. maalesh: A colloquial Arabic expression that means "never mind," "don't worry about it," "take things as they come," "que sera sera," ot all these things.
47. Adolf: A. Hitler. Pound seems to have believed that Hitler got onto the bankers and usurocrats; his perception of their interna- tional plot is what made him furious [Pound, Speaking, 49, 79, 433, passim]. But Pound also wrote, in a piece entitled "From Italy" [NEW, May 24, 1934]: "Adolphe is, an, almost, pathetic hysteric; . . . he is, so far as I can make out, a tool of almost the worst Huns. "
48. they . . . : FDR, Churchill, and all those who were blind to what WWII was really all about.
49. "Beg the . . . him": The source of the remark is unknown, but clearly the speaker is a wonderful lady of the old school, who knows it is immoral to embarrass anyone.
50. And the cap . . . nuance: The lines are an enigma. This gloss number and space are reserved for the time when someone will have a reasonable clue.
of England, such as Athelstan or Lear, whose prayers were often to Diana [91/612? 613].
60. "Wash . . . Ian'. ": Prob. remark of Elder Lightfoot [95:42].
71. monoceros: H, "unicorn. " Yeats wrote of "Magical Unicorns" and "cloud-pale uni- corns" in the last stanza of The Tower. His bookplate shows a rampant unicorn in heral~ dic style.
n. Gladstone: William Ewart G. , 1809? 1898, dominant personality of the British Liberal party and erstwhile prime minister toward end of the century. Earlier, as a young man, he served in the cabinet of Pal~ merston and may have tried to cultivate one of his important lady supporters, which may have been bad but was not as bad as Dis? raeli's act of selling the country.
73. Palmerston: [89:154].
74. Hollis: Author of The Two Nations, A
Financial Study of English History, a book that exposed the "Whiggery" of the profes? sorships as well as the diliberate and know? ing creation of a nation of poverty in order to maintain a nation of wealth.
75. Regius: [46:29]. 76. Coke: [107:3].
51. 1910: Pears': Although
claimed suzerainty over Tibet since 1720, the British began challenging that control in the 20th century. In 1904 they sent to Thasa Sir Frances Younghusband, who by 1910 had managed to get a number ofvalu? able trading rights. In those years Pears' soap
was supposedly a measure of the civilization Britain was bringing to the "unwashed" world: it functioned as a symbol with ironic
overtones, somewhat as Coca-Cola does today.
52. Les Douze: Prob. a Parisian literary group of the old school who met occasional? ly at a restaurant but were quite oblivious to the important things going on, such as Ford's new Transatlantic Review.
53. Fordie: Ford Madox F. [74:165]. In the early twenties, when he was editing the Transatlantic Review in Paris.
54. Ambro[i]se Pare: French army surgeon, ca. 1510? 1590, famous for introducing hu? mane methods into medicine. He did away with "the boiling oil treatment of wounds" (which sometimes caused death by shock), promoted the use of artificial limbs, and saved many lives by introducing the tour- niquet.
55. before Zeus . . . bluejays: "The bluebird
regarded
. . .
as the
outcome of aerial
mo-
is
tion; that is, as a pure association of ideas"
[Cirlot, 26]. In Hellenic folklore birds in general indicate the spiritual nature of man.
56. THEMIS: Greek goddess of justice.
57. Yo? Yo: A friendly inmate at St. Eliza?
beths whom Pound was fond of [MSB, Pai, 3? 3, 332].
58. raise up guilds: [91:52]. Religious, not craft, orders.
59. the moon kings: Perhaps the early kings
China
had
61. Luigi . . . communion:
Pound: "The religious man communes every time his teeth sink into a bread crust"
[SP ,70].
62. lasso: [105:63].
63. Yseult . . . : Iseult Gonne MacBride, the daughter of Maud Gonne, to whom Yeats proposed in 1917 after Maud had turned him down finally [Schmitz, Pai, 3? 2, 286; EH, Pai, 3? 3, 416].
64. Walter: W. Morse Rummel [80:5] died in 1953 [ibid. ].
65. Fordie: He died in 1939.
66. familiares: I, "intimate friends. "
67. HOWells: William Dean H. , 1837? 1920, longtime dean of American letters. Pound is recalling a scene in which Henry James is reacting to a request to send some congratu- lations to be read at a dinner in honor of Howells. He did, but the American Academy suppressed them. Pound first wrote of it in a 1924 article on the Nobel Prize, in which he said (of James): "One can still hear the slow suave voice: 'Eh, I, eh, belong to a body, eh, doubtless you also belong to it . . . and there is another inner and more secret body . . . ' etc. ending magnificently: 'and how my dear old friend . . . eh . . . Howells . . . ! " [Peck, Pai, 2? 1, 144; FR,P/l, 216? 22IJ.
68. Remy's: R. de Gourmont [87:88].
69. "miIesiennes"; F, "Milesian women.
" In
citing lines from Gourmont's Les Litanies de la Rose to show his sense of "tonal varia- tions," Pound gives one in particular: "Femmes, conservatrices des traditions mile- siennes" [LE, 345]. Pound liked the word so much he wrote it in a letter to John Quinn to describe Maude Gonne [L, 140].
70. William's: W. B. Yeats.
[97:232]. Said
77. V on
von B. , 1755? 1816, the Prussian general who assisted in the defeat of Napoleon at Gross Beeren and at Waterloo (not to be confused with Bernhard von B. at 86:9 and 89/601).
78. (Wells): [42:2; 46/232]. 79. Orage: [80:322; 89:239].
80. Nicht Bosheit . . . DUMMheit: G, "not cowardice . . . stupidity" [86:4].
81. Margherita Regina: [86:5].
82. Mirabeau: Honore G. Riquetti, Comte de M. , 1749? 1791, because of a wild and dissolute youth was repeatedly jailed. In 1785 he was in exile in England, and in 1786 he waS sent on a secret mission to Prussia which failed. He published an account of the affair which some believed to be treasonous. After the revolution he acted as a moderate behind the scenes and collaborated to estab? lish a constitutional monarchy. He predicted
Bulow: Freidrich W. , Freiherr
? 680
104/742-744
88. Selvo: Dornenigo Selvo [26:25, 26] doge of Venice (1071-1081); he put the first mosaics into the Cathedral of San Marco.
89. Franchetti: Luigi F. , a Venetian friend of Pound's during the 1930s. In the context o f a discussion o f words and meaning ("Man- kind's fog . . . comes from NOT defining one's terms. First the clear definition, then the clear articulation"), Pound draws paral- lels with musical composition and playing, and cites a comment of Franchetti to illus- trate [GK,248].
90. "V ery cleverly drained": Source un- known. Perhaps there is a connection with the discoveries of Del Pelo Pardi and his underground canals [101 :16,17]. Or Lana- naga [cf. 106 below] .
91. Chauncey Aleo! : C. Olcott, 1860-1932, Irish actor and tenor who wrote "My Wild Irish Rose. " He was so popular in the 1890s that the songwriting team of William Jerome and Jean Schwartz immortalized him in the chorus of a 1903 song of their own named "Bedelia," which starts: "Bedelia, I want to steal ya, / Bedelia, I love you so. / I'll be your Chauncey Olcott / If you'll be my Mol- ly, O! " Pound prob. heard it at St. Eliza- beths, either sung by another patient or in the media [M. Fournier, Pai, 12-2 & 3].
92. Ionides: [40:26]
93. Pulchra documenta: L, "beautiful examples. "
94. Bulow: [cf. 77 above].
97. kalos kagathos: H, "beautiful and well born" [33:11].
. . .
99. Cythera PAGGKALA: H, "All-beautiful
104/744-745
Cytherian": Aphrodite. The Greek n in pan
("all") becomes g before kappa, gamma, or chi.
100. Mond: Alfred Moritz M. , 1868-1930, of a family famous for chemical research and manufacturing. In 1910 he bought the En- glish Review (then being edited by F. M. Ford) for political purposes, and Ford was soon out of it. Said Pound: "no greater condemnation of the utter filth of the whole social system of the time can be dug up than the fact of that review's passing out ofhis hands" [HK, Poetry, 308]. It was Mond's brother who said, "it will not take 20 years to crwuth Mussolini" [SP, 313; 78:10]. The "interval" refers to the dozen years before Ford went to Paris to edit the Transatlantic Review [ef. 53 above].
101. . . . Quatorze: F, "fourteenth. " The celebration of Bastille Day, July 14th, the national holiday of republican France.
102. Brits paid . . . : The first issue of the Transatlantic Review may be referred to. But "installment" may suggest some kind of war reparations.
103. Alex . . . : [89:230].
104_ the king lost . . . : When
the right of the sovereign alone-was lost, such monetary chaos took place that even Del Mar is amazed. See his chapter entitled "Private Coinage," "Bank Suspensions under Coinage," and the analysis that starts: "From the day when the royal voluptuary resigned a prerogative . . . " [HMS, 389].
681
106. Larranaga: Pedro Juan Manuel L. , 1893-? , civil engineer and road builder. Au- thor of Gold, Glut, and Government: A New Economic Dawn, G. Allen and Unwin, 1932, and Successful Asphalt Paving, London, 1926.
107. Tremaine: Poss. Herbert Tremaine, poet (The Wide Garden and Other Poems, London, 1917) and author of novels such as The Tribal God (London, 1921) and The Feet of the Young Men, a domestic war novel (London, 1917).
108. prescrittibile: I, "stamp script," as money [101:80;SP ,315].
109. False Middles: When the second or middle premise of a syllogism is false, the conclusion is false. A major premise o f Pound's ideas about economists is that they base their reasoning on this kind of illogic. Thus, the acts of the state in taxing are ridiculous: "As ridiculous as . . . for some- one who possessed a tin mine to go about collecting old tin cans" [SP, 315]. When one has understood completely the truth of this sentence, he will be on the way to knowing how needless, destructive, and cruel the in- ternational banking and monetary mess is.
[Currently, Feb. 1982, the international bankers and oil men are "full of alarm" at the prospect of declining oil prices. ]
110. NOOS: H, nous, "mind" [40/201]: "the ineffable crysta1. "
111. Stink Saunders': [87:123].
112. pen yeh: [98:55,56].
113. Homestead . . . kolschoz: [103:5,6].
114. tessera: I, "ticket" [cf. 98 above; SP, 310-311].
that, should the monarchy not be preserved, a violent course of revolution would materi- alize. It did, in all its horror, after his death at age 42.
83. Ovid . . . Pontus: [76/462]. Ovid was exiled, for reasons kept secret, to the far borders of the empire at Tomi on the Black Sea, where he suffered greatly. His Epistulae ex Ponto delineate his misery and plea for him to be allowed to return to Rome. But neither Augustus nor Tiberius would hear of it. He died at Pontus in A. D. 17.
84. Goa: Portuguese colony on the west coast of India founded by Afonso de Albu? querque in 1510, where st. Francis Xavier spent 10 years doing successful missionary work. Xavier's tomb is there. At first Goa was a center of trade for spices, but that trade declined in the 17th and 18th cen? turies [89 :238]. The immediate effect of the arrival of Christian missionaries in this tropical paradise was a chain of destruction. Why? Money! [97/674].
85. Intorcetta: Prospera I. , Jesuit mission- ary to China during the late Ming and early Manchu dynasties. He is still remembered in his native Sicily, to which he returned with artifacts in 1671 [Dunne, Giants, 174? 175, 292].
86. Webster, Voltaire and Leibnitz: Grouped here as lexicographers and refiners o f language. V oltaire: Dictionnaire philoso- phique. Leibnitz: Monadology (1714) and Principles o f Nature and Grace (1714). Said Pound: "Leibniz was the last philosopher who 'got hold of something' . . . Up till Lei- bniz you can find men who really struggle with thOUght. After Leibniz the precedent kind of thought ceased to lead men"
[GK,74].
87. phyllotaxis: The biological laws that dictate the arrangement of leaves on a stem. The force that makes the cherry stone be- come a cherry tree, which to Pound is one of the ways divine intelligence works in the world. Its highest expression is through the mind of great thinkers such as those above [ef. Sieburth, Pai, 6-3, 383-384; 109 :49].
coinage-once
. . .
95. Gold
96. El Melek: [97:1-15].
1204:
[89:79].
105.
of dozens of books on dozens of subjects, including history, medicine, and money. Said Pound: "There is a body of sane writing in our time and/or a body of writing by enlightened men . . .
