He is to be honored because he
lightened
the burden of both taxes and tolls.
A-Companion-to-the-Cantos-of-Ezra-Pound-II
.
.
beehives of the sky-temple (Urania) with light as cloak.
" A pastiche of phrases enacting the flight of the mind to the High?
est Nature, which Anselm compared to the flight of bees.
A rhyme with the soul as sparks rising [5:6J .
amictus:
L, "carried
like
45. et sake . . . woden: [OE/NFJ.
mate source, Charter Hen. II in Anglia VII.
Proxi?
? ? ? ? ? ? ? 686
customs; since they were so created they should have the liberties to be so.
52. Khati: [93:2].
53. "ordine": I, "order"; L, "by order. "
54. Boamund: Bohemond I, c. 1056-1111, prince of Antioch after its capture from the infidels in 1098 during the first crusade. A violent exponent of brute force, he double- crossed the Byzantine emperor Alexius I, who defeated and humiliated him in 1108.
55. Alexis: Alexius Comnenus, 1048-118, Byzantine emperor (1081-1118). He repelled the first crusade invaders, Robert Guiscard and Bohemond.
56. Boniface: Prob. Pope B. VIII, Dante's great enemy.
57. Clermont: The capital of the Puy-de- Dome [100: 132] Dept. in SE France and long the center of religious activity [cf. 63 below]. It was also the center of the strug- gles between Boniface VIII and Philip IV of France. In these struggles the public did get excited at times. Once, when an emissary of Philip with an army behind him actually struck the pope, the outraged public literally drove the army away and rescued mm.
58. George Fifth: 1865-1936, king of En- gland (1910-1936). He was against England's becoming involved in WWI but loyally sup- ported the government. Pound wrote about seeing him on Armistice Day, Nov. 11, 1918, with "the crowds cheering" and "the general enthusiasm for George on his drive through the drizzle in an open carriage, with no es- cort save a couple of cops. Poor devil was looking happy, I should think, for the first time in his life. I happened to be in Picca- dilly about two feet from the carriage" [L, 141].
59. the Bard's death: Charles I was executed in 1649, 33 years after the death of Shake- speare: a king who also "willed no wrong. "
60. "Dalleyrand": Talleyrand, whose family came from Perigord near Hautefort (Alta- fort), the four-towered castle of Betrans de
105/749 Born [cf. "Sestina: Altaforte" and "Near
Perigord," P, 28, & 151-157]. The heavy dialect gives "Dalleyrand of Berigord," with the D and B initial sounds. D and B are also the initials of David Blumenthal, who bought the castle and lived there. Pound used to tell a story about Blumenthal's quick wit: "One evening at dinner a guest asked what the initials D. E. on the cutlery stood for. Blumenthal replied: "Dalleyrand Beri- gom' " [NS, Reading, 112].
61. "en gatje": [85:87]: "en gatge": P, mortgage (the castle).
62. Urban: Pope Urban II (1088-1099). He preached the call for the first crusade at Cler- mont in 1095, which is seen by Pound to be a needless instigation o f destructive wars against the infidels. He is also culpable for not taking a strong enough stand against ruthless rulers like William Rufus to prevent them from raising the rents [cf. 49 above].
63. Charles of the Suevi: L, "of the Swa- bians," called Charles the Fat, who became king of Spain in 876 and Frankish emperor (881-887). He witnessed a miraculous vision that caused him to abdicate the throne. The event is related in Migne in a chap. entitled "Visio Caroli" ("Vision of Charles"). He said he was led by a ball of light ("lucifiuum glomus") looped over his shoulder ("jactavit super scapulas meas filum glomeris") to sur- vey souls (especially those of priests) cast into dark perdition, his father in purgatorial pain, and his predecessors, Lothair I and his son Louis II, ensconced in paradisal joy, with Lothair on a rock of Topaz [104:116]. Said Charles: "suddenly I was seized by my spirit . . . and he held in his hand a solid ball emitting the brightest ray of light . . . and he began to unwind it and said to me: 'Take a thread of this brilliant light, and tie and knot it firmly around the thumb of your right hand, because you will be led by this through the labyrinthine punishments of Hell'" [JW,Later, 165].
64. Antoninus: [78:56].
65. Athelstan: Ruled 924-940. His distribu-
1
105/749-750
tions are recorded in William of Malmes- bury's Deeds ofEnglish Kings.
66. Ethelbald: King E. , 716-757. He ruled "ut omnia monasteria . . . a publicis vecti- galibus . . . absolvantur" ("that all monas- teries be absolved from public taxes").
67. Egbert: King o f Wessex (802-839). Sometimes referred to as the first king of England, he really had control of only small areas of the island.
68. consuetudiness: [cf. 47 above].
69. Paschal: From letter 85, in which Pope
Paschal II (1099-1118) wrote to Anselm tel- ling him to withstand the efforts of English kings to control investiture of bishops
687
77. Anselm . . . Rufus: A question of the investiture of bishops as well as monetary matters.
78. "Ugly? . . . whore! ": adapted from one of Anselm's "nugas" called "Song on Con- tempt of the World. " The lines translate: "If anyone has a base wife, he loathes and hates her; / If pretty, he anxiously fears adul- terers" [Migne, vol 158, col. 697; JW,Later,
161] .
79. Anselm . . . weak: Because of his ex- hausting struggles, A. had periods of depres- sion, perhaps not helped by stomach trou- ble. A rhyme with Plotinus [99:60]?
80. Trinity: [cf. 31 above]. Pound de- spaired for years over the great destruction wreaked on some sects of the Christian church by other sects on just the one issue of what he called "the numbers game. " One can refer to the three sides of a box and be clear only one box is at issue.
81. Essentia . . . : L, "Essence, feminine, immaculate, unstainable," Anselm sees the essence of all created things as part of the breath (anima) or loving spirit of the Father and Son and hence spotless and pure. The Latin words for "essence," and even "the Father," the highest nature (summa natura), all end in -a and are feminine. By grammar male and female become one.
82. Ambrose: St. A. , 340? -397, bishop of Milan, father of the Church, and author of the apochryphal De Tobia [On Tobias] in which he attacked usury: the source of Pound's "Hoggers of harvest" [88:44] cal- ling them "the curse of the people. "
83. Franks . . . : William of Malmesbury, in Deeds of the English Kings, says of the Franks: "decenni vectigalium indulgentia" ("for ten years given tax indulgences"). They were called Franks because of their ferocity [1. 68 ff].
84. Valentinian: V. III, 419-455, Roman emperor of the West (425-455), the son of Galla Placidia [96:80], who acted as regent. Her attempts to oust the Vandals and Alani
[Migne, vol. Jesum . . . "].
70. Guillaume: [6:2].
163, col. 106: "Unde
William IX,
1071-1127
71. Henry: Henry I, 1068-1135, king of En- gland (1100-1135), successor of William Ru- fus [cf. 49 above]. He continued the con- flict between church and state. His economic program is recorded in Wiliiam of Malmes- bury's New History, where [1. 14] we read: "fere ad centum millia libras; erant et vasa" ("almost 100,000 pounds; and there were vessels"). He left an important monetary re- cord on the so-called Pipe Rolls.
72. Maverick: Lewis M. , editor of Kuan Tzu [106:4].
73. mosaic? : Pound is suggesting that the ideogram he is putting together, a collection of "luminous details" about economic wis- dom and repression, may well be called a mosaic.
74. ov . . . K00J. 10V: H, "You do not want to come into the world" [102:50].
75. Charta Magna: [107:passim].
76. accensio: L, "sparked, as in kindling, or to inflame"; but perhaps Pound meant ascensio, for "a lofty fiight" [JW, Later, 163].
? ? ? ? 688
105/750-751
tells the story (much disputed) that he was murdered by his students, who stabbed hhn with pens while he was teaching.
98. Athelstan . . . : [91:52].
99. Aunt EtheIfled: Source says: "Took . care of education by the great zeal of his
aunt" [JW, Later, 164].
100. Canute: King of England (! OI7? 1035).
He is to be honored because he lightened the burden of both taxes and tolls.
101. Gerbert: A Frenchman who was in? stalled as Pope Sylvester II (999-1003). He was educated in Spain in astronomy and mathematics, in the tradition of Averroes and Avicenna. Hence, the astrolabe, a new instrument that was an improvement over the tools of Ptolemy.
102. A tenth tithe . . . : A provision of Alfred to be honored because it was a share, not a blanket indiscriminate tax: a distinc- tion related to Social Credit.
103. CrommeIyn . . . : Any of 5 Crommelin brothers who became American heroes in WWII [HM, Caged, 69; Zapatka, Pai, 2? 3, 423].
104. del Valle: Lt. Gen. Pedro A. del Valle, who commanded the U. S. Marines in the Battle of Okinawa, WWII. He became a staunch defender of Pound in the 1950s [EM, Difficult, 355]. David Horton, Rex Lampman, Harry Meacham, and others 0[- chestrated a campaign of such heroes in their efforts to get Pound out of St. Elizabeths. They all saw him as a defender of the Can? stitution.
105. 7rcxVDvp-yicx: H, "knavery" [99/706]. 106. Guido: G. Cavalcanti [4:46].
107. Proslogion: The major theological work of St. Anselm.
108. Villon: [97:35]. Franl'ois V. , 1431- 1464? , one of Pound's favorite French poets [SR, 166-178].
106/752 689 CANTO CVI
Sources
Lewis Maverick, ed. , Economic Dialogues in Ancient China: Se- lections from the Kuan-tzu, trans. T'an Po-fu and Wen Kung-wen, Carbondale, Ill. , 1954 [Kuan]; Analects XIX, 18 [CON, 285] ; Paul the Deacon, History o f the Langobards, trans. William Dud? ley Foulke, N. Y. 1906 [Deacon, Langobards]; Ovid,Meta, VIII, 580-683; EP, SR, 34; Hagoromo [CNTJ, 103].
Background
EP, Bridson Interview,ND 17, 175;SP, 53.
Exegeses
EH, Pai, 10? 3, 285-286; HK, Era, 107? 108, 119, 185, 546; MB,
Trace, 425-443; CFT, Pai, 2? 3, 453-454.
Glossary
from France only led to their conquest of Africa in 429 [JW].
85. Alani: Nomadic peoples from the Cau? casus who merged with the Vandals in France and Spain and eventually conquered North Africa.
86. Omnia Galli. : L, "All Gaul. " Here refers to Faramond, the first king of the Franks in 425.
87. Pepin . . . : [96:51]. King of the Franks (751? 768). He was crowned over an altar to Zagreus (Dionysus) at the Church of St. Denis in Paris [95:73]. He is thus linked with St. Dionysius [95:72].
88. Ethelbald: [Cf. 66 above].
89. Charles: Charlemagne, son of Pepin the Short.
90. Offa: King of Mercia (757. 796). His laws became highly regarded and his coinage system was used for 500 years. Wm. of Malmesbury says Charlemagne gave him a "baltheum" ("belt") and a "gladium Huni? scum" ("sword of the Huns") as part of the first recorded commercial treaty in English history [97:64].
91. Quendrida . . . Kenelm: In 821 the 7? year? old king of Mercia (later called St. Kenelm) was killed by his sister Quendrida
1. her daughter: Kore/Persephone. The opening pages of this canto are a sort of subject-response incantation between the Eleusinian mystery rites and the oriental wis- dom that climaxed in Neoconfucianism, or "between Kung and Eleusis" [52: 18].
2. Demeter: [98/684-685]. Mother of Per? sephone, who was abducted by Dis, the god of the underworld.
3. Phlegethon: [75:1].
4. Ideograms: Kuan3 [M3557], "to gov? ern"; tzu [M6939], "master"; together, the name of Kuan Chung, or Kuan I-Wu, prime minister of the state of Ch'i, 684-645 B. C. He was given the honorific title tzu ("mas- ter, teacher, philosopher") after his death. His extensive writings became known by his name. The book by Maverick [Kuan] has a selection of 32 essays, followed by a detailed commentary. All of the essays reflect the primacy of agriculture and appear to be a major source for Kung's thought 150 years later. Essay 1, titled "On Shepherding the People," starts: "Every ruler. . . should above all things adjust his administration to
the four seasons. He should flll and watch over the granaries and public storehouses . . . When the granaries have been fllled, then the people will obey the laws and the rules of courtesy" [Kuan, 31]. Later: "The ancient kings . . . enriched their subjects through the increased production of grain. The people cannot live without grain to eat" [Kuan, 70].
decrees . . .
[JW, Later, 163].
92. Egbert: [Cf. 67 above]. 93. looping the light . . . :
5. NINE
"Basic Methods of Government," records de- crees adopted by 9 assemblies. "At the first assembly, the following regulation was is- sued: 'Unless ordered by the God of the Sombre Heavens . . . none shall conduct a military campaign, even for only one day. ' At the second assembly, this regulation: 'Take care of the aged who have lost their relatives; feed those who are permanently ill; give shelter to helpless persons'" [Kuan, 58]. The 9 together add up to a precis of the Analects.
94. Harlulf's . . . : Wm. of M. says he took the story of Charles of the Suevi's visions from H. 's Chronicon Centulense [Migne, vol. 174, col. 1211 ff].
95. For a thousand . . . versa: Pound's judg? ment of all the people and events he has been reading about and, in the canto, giving cues to.
96. Alfred: A. the Great (849? 899? ). He "instituted the tenth'parts called tithings" [JW, Later, 164].
97. Erigena: [36:9; 74: 104]. Wm. of M.
6. Venice shawls: [98:14,15].
7. ThisTzu. . . :Theguideinthefinalrites
[Cf. 63
above].
: Essay 8,
entitled
? 690
106/752-753
106/753-755
691
of Eleusis, or a reference to Kuan Tzu above, or perhaps both.
8. Kuan Chung: [Cf. 4 aboveJ.
9. Patera: Patara. Legend has it that a cup of white gold preserved at the temple at Lyndos on the island of Rhodes was mod- elled on the breast of Helen. Pound first marvelled in print at the thought in 1917 [PD, 102J. Pound's spelling appears to come from Paul the Deacon [96: 10J, who said of the goblet Alboin made out of Cunimund's head: "This kind of goblet is called among them 'scala,' but in the Latin language 'pa- tera'" (Deacon, Langobards, 51; EH, Pat, 10-3, 585-586J.
10. beEO"H,"thegod. "
11. Caledon: Prob. a reference to the swift-
footed Atalanta of Calydon, whose speed was like the wind but who was tricked by the golden apples to lose the race to Hippo- menes; or perhaps the destruction of Caly~ don by fire after the death of Maleager at the hands of his mother / sister Althea
[Meta. VIII, 580-683J .
12. Apeliota: [74:304J. The East Wind.
13. deep waters . . . : [91:4J
14. nueva lumbre: P, "new reflections.
amictus:
L, "carried
like
45. et sake . . . woden: [OE/NFJ.
mate source, Charter Hen. II in Anglia VII.
Proxi?
? ? ? ? ? ? ? 686
customs; since they were so created they should have the liberties to be so.
52. Khati: [93:2].
53. "ordine": I, "order"; L, "by order. "
54. Boamund: Bohemond I, c. 1056-1111, prince of Antioch after its capture from the infidels in 1098 during the first crusade. A violent exponent of brute force, he double- crossed the Byzantine emperor Alexius I, who defeated and humiliated him in 1108.
55. Alexis: Alexius Comnenus, 1048-118, Byzantine emperor (1081-1118). He repelled the first crusade invaders, Robert Guiscard and Bohemond.
56. Boniface: Prob. Pope B. VIII, Dante's great enemy.
57. Clermont: The capital of the Puy-de- Dome [100: 132] Dept. in SE France and long the center of religious activity [cf. 63 below]. It was also the center of the strug- gles between Boniface VIII and Philip IV of France. In these struggles the public did get excited at times. Once, when an emissary of Philip with an army behind him actually struck the pope, the outraged public literally drove the army away and rescued mm.
58. George Fifth: 1865-1936, king of En- gland (1910-1936). He was against England's becoming involved in WWI but loyally sup- ported the government. Pound wrote about seeing him on Armistice Day, Nov. 11, 1918, with "the crowds cheering" and "the general enthusiasm for George on his drive through the drizzle in an open carriage, with no es- cort save a couple of cops. Poor devil was looking happy, I should think, for the first time in his life. I happened to be in Picca- dilly about two feet from the carriage" [L, 141].
59. the Bard's death: Charles I was executed in 1649, 33 years after the death of Shake- speare: a king who also "willed no wrong. "
60. "Dalleyrand": Talleyrand, whose family came from Perigord near Hautefort (Alta- fort), the four-towered castle of Betrans de
105/749 Born [cf. "Sestina: Altaforte" and "Near
Perigord," P, 28, & 151-157]. The heavy dialect gives "Dalleyrand of Berigord," with the D and B initial sounds. D and B are also the initials of David Blumenthal, who bought the castle and lived there. Pound used to tell a story about Blumenthal's quick wit: "One evening at dinner a guest asked what the initials D. E. on the cutlery stood for. Blumenthal replied: "Dalleyrand Beri- gom' " [NS, Reading, 112].
61. "en gatje": [85:87]: "en gatge": P, mortgage (the castle).
62. Urban: Pope Urban II (1088-1099). He preached the call for the first crusade at Cler- mont in 1095, which is seen by Pound to be a needless instigation o f destructive wars against the infidels. He is also culpable for not taking a strong enough stand against ruthless rulers like William Rufus to prevent them from raising the rents [cf. 49 above].
63. Charles of the Suevi: L, "of the Swa- bians," called Charles the Fat, who became king of Spain in 876 and Frankish emperor (881-887). He witnessed a miraculous vision that caused him to abdicate the throne. The event is related in Migne in a chap. entitled "Visio Caroli" ("Vision of Charles"). He said he was led by a ball of light ("lucifiuum glomus") looped over his shoulder ("jactavit super scapulas meas filum glomeris") to sur- vey souls (especially those of priests) cast into dark perdition, his father in purgatorial pain, and his predecessors, Lothair I and his son Louis II, ensconced in paradisal joy, with Lothair on a rock of Topaz [104:116]. Said Charles: "suddenly I was seized by my spirit . . . and he held in his hand a solid ball emitting the brightest ray of light . . . and he began to unwind it and said to me: 'Take a thread of this brilliant light, and tie and knot it firmly around the thumb of your right hand, because you will be led by this through the labyrinthine punishments of Hell'" [JW,Later, 165].
64. Antoninus: [78:56].
65. Athelstan: Ruled 924-940. His distribu-
1
105/749-750
tions are recorded in William of Malmes- bury's Deeds ofEnglish Kings.
66. Ethelbald: King E. , 716-757. He ruled "ut omnia monasteria . . . a publicis vecti- galibus . . . absolvantur" ("that all monas- teries be absolved from public taxes").
67. Egbert: King o f Wessex (802-839). Sometimes referred to as the first king of England, he really had control of only small areas of the island.
68. consuetudiness: [cf. 47 above].
69. Paschal: From letter 85, in which Pope
Paschal II (1099-1118) wrote to Anselm tel- ling him to withstand the efforts of English kings to control investiture of bishops
687
77. Anselm . . . Rufus: A question of the investiture of bishops as well as monetary matters.
78. "Ugly? . . . whore! ": adapted from one of Anselm's "nugas" called "Song on Con- tempt of the World. " The lines translate: "If anyone has a base wife, he loathes and hates her; / If pretty, he anxiously fears adul- terers" [Migne, vol 158, col. 697; JW,Later,
161] .
79. Anselm . . . weak: Because of his ex- hausting struggles, A. had periods of depres- sion, perhaps not helped by stomach trou- ble. A rhyme with Plotinus [99:60]?
80. Trinity: [cf. 31 above]. Pound de- spaired for years over the great destruction wreaked on some sects of the Christian church by other sects on just the one issue of what he called "the numbers game. " One can refer to the three sides of a box and be clear only one box is at issue.
81. Essentia . . . : L, "Essence, feminine, immaculate, unstainable," Anselm sees the essence of all created things as part of the breath (anima) or loving spirit of the Father and Son and hence spotless and pure. The Latin words for "essence," and even "the Father," the highest nature (summa natura), all end in -a and are feminine. By grammar male and female become one.
82. Ambrose: St. A. , 340? -397, bishop of Milan, father of the Church, and author of the apochryphal De Tobia [On Tobias] in which he attacked usury: the source of Pound's "Hoggers of harvest" [88:44] cal- ling them "the curse of the people. "
83. Franks . . . : William of Malmesbury, in Deeds of the English Kings, says of the Franks: "decenni vectigalium indulgentia" ("for ten years given tax indulgences"). They were called Franks because of their ferocity [1. 68 ff].
84. Valentinian: V. III, 419-455, Roman emperor of the West (425-455), the son of Galla Placidia [96:80], who acted as regent. Her attempts to oust the Vandals and Alani
[Migne, vol. Jesum . . . "].
70. Guillaume: [6:2].
163, col. 106: "Unde
William IX,
1071-1127
71. Henry: Henry I, 1068-1135, king of En- gland (1100-1135), successor of William Ru- fus [cf. 49 above]. He continued the con- flict between church and state. His economic program is recorded in Wiliiam of Malmes- bury's New History, where [1. 14] we read: "fere ad centum millia libras; erant et vasa" ("almost 100,000 pounds; and there were vessels"). He left an important monetary re- cord on the so-called Pipe Rolls.
72. Maverick: Lewis M. , editor of Kuan Tzu [106:4].
73. mosaic? : Pound is suggesting that the ideogram he is putting together, a collection of "luminous details" about economic wis- dom and repression, may well be called a mosaic.
74. ov . . . K00J. 10V: H, "You do not want to come into the world" [102:50].
75. Charta Magna: [107:passim].
76. accensio: L, "sparked, as in kindling, or to inflame"; but perhaps Pound meant ascensio, for "a lofty fiight" [JW, Later, 163].
? ? ? ? 688
105/750-751
tells the story (much disputed) that he was murdered by his students, who stabbed hhn with pens while he was teaching.
98. Athelstan . . . : [91:52].
99. Aunt EtheIfled: Source says: "Took . care of education by the great zeal of his
aunt" [JW, Later, 164].
100. Canute: King of England (! OI7? 1035).
He is to be honored because he lightened the burden of both taxes and tolls.
101. Gerbert: A Frenchman who was in? stalled as Pope Sylvester II (999-1003). He was educated in Spain in astronomy and mathematics, in the tradition of Averroes and Avicenna. Hence, the astrolabe, a new instrument that was an improvement over the tools of Ptolemy.
102. A tenth tithe . . . : A provision of Alfred to be honored because it was a share, not a blanket indiscriminate tax: a distinc- tion related to Social Credit.
103. CrommeIyn . . . : Any of 5 Crommelin brothers who became American heroes in WWII [HM, Caged, 69; Zapatka, Pai, 2? 3, 423].
104. del Valle: Lt. Gen. Pedro A. del Valle, who commanded the U. S. Marines in the Battle of Okinawa, WWII. He became a staunch defender of Pound in the 1950s [EM, Difficult, 355]. David Horton, Rex Lampman, Harry Meacham, and others 0[- chestrated a campaign of such heroes in their efforts to get Pound out of St. Elizabeths. They all saw him as a defender of the Can? stitution.
105. 7rcxVDvp-yicx: H, "knavery" [99/706]. 106. Guido: G. Cavalcanti [4:46].
107. Proslogion: The major theological work of St. Anselm.
108. Villon: [97:35]. Franl'ois V. , 1431- 1464? , one of Pound's favorite French poets [SR, 166-178].
106/752 689 CANTO CVI
Sources
Lewis Maverick, ed. , Economic Dialogues in Ancient China: Se- lections from the Kuan-tzu, trans. T'an Po-fu and Wen Kung-wen, Carbondale, Ill. , 1954 [Kuan]; Analects XIX, 18 [CON, 285] ; Paul the Deacon, History o f the Langobards, trans. William Dud? ley Foulke, N. Y. 1906 [Deacon, Langobards]; Ovid,Meta, VIII, 580-683; EP, SR, 34; Hagoromo [CNTJ, 103].
Background
EP, Bridson Interview,ND 17, 175;SP, 53.
Exegeses
EH, Pai, 10? 3, 285-286; HK, Era, 107? 108, 119, 185, 546; MB,
Trace, 425-443; CFT, Pai, 2? 3, 453-454.
Glossary
from France only led to their conquest of Africa in 429 [JW].
85. Alani: Nomadic peoples from the Cau? casus who merged with the Vandals in France and Spain and eventually conquered North Africa.
86. Omnia Galli. : L, "All Gaul. " Here refers to Faramond, the first king of the Franks in 425.
87. Pepin . . . : [96:51]. King of the Franks (751? 768). He was crowned over an altar to Zagreus (Dionysus) at the Church of St. Denis in Paris [95:73]. He is thus linked with St. Dionysius [95:72].
88. Ethelbald: [Cf. 66 above].
89. Charles: Charlemagne, son of Pepin the Short.
90. Offa: King of Mercia (757. 796). His laws became highly regarded and his coinage system was used for 500 years. Wm. of Malmesbury says Charlemagne gave him a "baltheum" ("belt") and a "gladium Huni? scum" ("sword of the Huns") as part of the first recorded commercial treaty in English history [97:64].
91. Quendrida . . . Kenelm: In 821 the 7? year? old king of Mercia (later called St. Kenelm) was killed by his sister Quendrida
1. her daughter: Kore/Persephone. The opening pages of this canto are a sort of subject-response incantation between the Eleusinian mystery rites and the oriental wis- dom that climaxed in Neoconfucianism, or "between Kung and Eleusis" [52: 18].
2. Demeter: [98/684-685]. Mother of Per? sephone, who was abducted by Dis, the god of the underworld.
3. Phlegethon: [75:1].
4. Ideograms: Kuan3 [M3557], "to gov? ern"; tzu [M6939], "master"; together, the name of Kuan Chung, or Kuan I-Wu, prime minister of the state of Ch'i, 684-645 B. C. He was given the honorific title tzu ("mas- ter, teacher, philosopher") after his death. His extensive writings became known by his name. The book by Maverick [Kuan] has a selection of 32 essays, followed by a detailed commentary. All of the essays reflect the primacy of agriculture and appear to be a major source for Kung's thought 150 years later. Essay 1, titled "On Shepherding the People," starts: "Every ruler. . . should above all things adjust his administration to
the four seasons. He should flll and watch over the granaries and public storehouses . . . When the granaries have been fllled, then the people will obey the laws and the rules of courtesy" [Kuan, 31]. Later: "The ancient kings . . . enriched their subjects through the increased production of grain. The people cannot live without grain to eat" [Kuan, 70].
decrees . . .
[JW, Later, 163].
92. Egbert: [Cf. 67 above]. 93. looping the light . . . :
5. NINE
"Basic Methods of Government," records de- crees adopted by 9 assemblies. "At the first assembly, the following regulation was is- sued: 'Unless ordered by the God of the Sombre Heavens . . . none shall conduct a military campaign, even for only one day. ' At the second assembly, this regulation: 'Take care of the aged who have lost their relatives; feed those who are permanently ill; give shelter to helpless persons'" [Kuan, 58]. The 9 together add up to a precis of the Analects.
94. Harlulf's . . . : Wm. of M. says he took the story of Charles of the Suevi's visions from H. 's Chronicon Centulense [Migne, vol. 174, col. 1211 ff].
95. For a thousand . . . versa: Pound's judg? ment of all the people and events he has been reading about and, in the canto, giving cues to.
96. Alfred: A. the Great (849? 899? ). He "instituted the tenth'parts called tithings" [JW, Later, 164].
97. Erigena: [36:9; 74: 104]. Wm. of M.
6. Venice shawls: [98:14,15].
7. ThisTzu. . . :Theguideinthefinalrites
[Cf. 63
above].
: Essay 8,
entitled
? 690
106/752-753
106/753-755
691
of Eleusis, or a reference to Kuan Tzu above, or perhaps both.
8. Kuan Chung: [Cf. 4 aboveJ.
9. Patera: Patara. Legend has it that a cup of white gold preserved at the temple at Lyndos on the island of Rhodes was mod- elled on the breast of Helen. Pound first marvelled in print at the thought in 1917 [PD, 102J. Pound's spelling appears to come from Paul the Deacon [96: 10J, who said of the goblet Alboin made out of Cunimund's head: "This kind of goblet is called among them 'scala,' but in the Latin language 'pa- tera'" (Deacon, Langobards, 51; EH, Pat, 10-3, 585-586J.
10. beEO"H,"thegod. "
11. Caledon: Prob. a reference to the swift-
footed Atalanta of Calydon, whose speed was like the wind but who was tricked by the golden apples to lose the race to Hippo- menes; or perhaps the destruction of Caly~ don by fire after the death of Maleager at the hands of his mother / sister Althea
[Meta. VIII, 580-683J .
12. Apeliota: [74:304J. The East Wind.
13. deep waters . . . : [91:4J
14. nueva lumbre: P, "new reflections.
