radiance: Pound's
visual
tion to the ideogram for "the name of the music of the legendary Emperor Shun.
visual
tion to the ideogram for "the name of the music of the legendary Emperor Shun.
A-Companion-to-the-Cantos-of-Ezra-Pound-II
?
?
I I,
378
74/438-439
74/439-440
379
as St. John of the Cross. He wrote of "the Dark Night of the Soul" as a stage in the mystic way.
289. Ugolino: [cf. 240 above] .
290. la vieille de Candide: F, "Candide's old
woman" [Voltaire, Candide, XI-XII].
291. Corporal Casey: Soldier in cadre of the
DTC.
303. olivi: I, "olive trees. "
304. Boreas Apeliota libeccio: Seriatim: "North Wind, East Wind, South Wind. "
305. "C'e il babao": [babau]. I, "there's the bugbear. "
306. i1 Pozzetto/al Tigullio: I, "the Little Well/at Tigullio. " The beach on the Bay of Tigullio, near Rapallo, where Pound lived in 1930s.
307. Oedipus: Greek hero who inadver? tently murdered his father and married his mother [Sophocles, Oedipus Rex].
308. nepotes Remi magnanimi: L, "grand? sons (descendants) of the great-souled Remus. "
309. Mr. Bullington: Prob. inmate at DTC.
310. Lady be good: Popular song of the 30s.
use in Japan? " "Hawk's eye," above, and "hawk's wing" in next line prob. recalled the Yeats play.
318. babao: I, "bugbear" [cf. 305 above].
319. no fortune . . . : [1/4].
320. J. Adams: [31: 15] Pound several times refers to the statement Adams often made: "every bank of discount . . . is down- right corruption" [71 :35; 76:113].
321. at 35 . . . 21. 65: Roosevelt's change of the value of gold.
322. Byzantium: Ancient city on the Bosphorus; site of modern Istanbul.
323. Meyer Anselm: Mayer Amschel Roths? child, 1743-1812, usually considered to be the founder of the House of Rothschild.
324. old H. : Henry Morgenthau, Sr. [DG/RO].
325. young H/: Henry Morgenthau, Jr. [DG/RO].
326. Sieff: Israel Moses S. , British mer? chant; reputed anonymous owner of the London tabloid the Daily Mirror during the late 1930s.
327. a rrromance: Idea that money, "high finance," and international money opera- tions were Ha great romance" was current during the 1930s.
328. yidd: [yitt, yit]: Yiddish dialect, "Jew. " G, Jude. A term of approbrium first applied by wealthy German Jews to low? class "ghetto" Jews from central European countries when they began migrating west. Pound associated "the blond bastards" with The Magnificat based on Luke 1. 52: "He hath put down the mighty from their seats, and exalted them of low degree" [DG/RO].
329. goyim: Yiddish, "gentiles. " A term used by Jews for non-Jews. In context, it can be pejorative or not.
330. versalzen: G, "to oversalt; to spoil. " Derived from Christ's remarks at the end of the Sermon on the Mount [Matthew 5. 13] : "Ye are the salt of the earth. " Pound said
Christ was addressing the Jews (not the gentiles) and refers at them as "oversalted"
[HK].
331. With justice: "Redeem Zion with justice" [cf. 99 above].
332. Yu: [53:15] Emperor after Shun. The laws of Jehovah on money and control of usury are better than those of the early Chinese emperors.
333. sha-o: The succession dance, which mimed the peaceful accession of Emperor Chun [Shun]. Analects III, XXV [CON, 205].
334. XIXth Leviticus: Verse 35: "Ye shall do no unrighteousness in judgment, in meteyard, in weight, or in measure. "
335. Jeremiah: Major Hebrew prophet: "the son of Hilkiah, of the priests that were in Anathoth in the land of Benjamin" [Jer. 1. 1].
336. tower of Hananel: In the north corner of Jerusalem on the wall. The data concerns directions for building the city [Jer. 31. 38? 40].
337. Goah: Goath: "And the measuring line shall yet go forth . . . and shall compass about to Goath" [ibid. ].
338. Anatoth: A city of Benjamin where Jeremiah was born. The value of its currency was slightly different from that of Jerusalem: one-half of 17shekels was $8. 50 there: "And I bought the field of Hanameel my uncle's son, that was in Anathoth, and weighed him the money, even seventeen shekels of silver" [Jer. 32. 6? 1O].
339. Benjamin: The plateau of E central Palestine, near the Jordan River, between Jerusalem and Bethel.
340. Chocorua: Mount Chocorua, E New Hampshire, in the Sandwich Range of the White Mountains.
341. meteyard and measure: [cf. 334 above ] .
342. cornman': Sound of "corps man," for soldiers from the medical corps.
Paradis . . .
is not
292. Le
artificial" [ef. Baudelaire, Les Paradis Artificiels] .
293. spezzato: I, "broken,"
294. mint: One of the hieratic herbs related to the vision of paradise.
295. Ladro: I, "thief, rogue. " Reference to acatintheDTC [MdeR].
296. Nemi: Lake Nemi, a small crater lake in the Alban Hills of Latium, Italy; here were the sacred grove and the temple of Diana, guarded by a priest who held the post until he was killed by another who sought the office [Frazer, The Golden Bough, 3].
297. Zarathustra: Zoroaster, fl. 5th century B. C. , a religious teacher of ancient Persia; founder of Zoroastrianism, originally a kind of fertility religion which later developed a more complex cosmogony and eschatology deriving from the struggle of the Zoroastrian supernatural spirits.
298. desuete: F, "obsolete, out of date. "
. . .
300. castellaro: [Poss. castello] : I, "castle. " Prob. here "small castle. " A place near Sant Ambrogio, near Rapallo [EH].
301. sa&ulorum Athf. Jlae: L, "immemorial of Athena. "
302. 'YAc>"t 'YAC>VKW7n~: H, "little owl, with gleaming eyes. " Note in context that the olive is sacred to Athena, who created it, and that 'YAC>VKC", like 'YAC>VKO, is used to de? scribe the sheen of the olive [79: 60] .
: F,
"Paradise
299. Jupiter
the train of thought evoked by the idea of paradise as not artificial.
that no Chinese philologist sees anything of the kind [Fang IV, 74]. )
314. Chi: [Ch'i], principality in Shensi Province; ruled by Wen Wang.
315. Shun:
[M5936]. Pound calls him Chun [53:23].
316. AL"jVP': H, "clear, shrill. "
317. tanka: The Japanese verse form of five
lines; the first and third have five syllables, the others seven. Memory of "A Shadow," tanka by Katue Kitasono. Pound once asked him, "Did you see the Hawk's Well-is it any
Hermes: Major
deities in
311. in harum . . . : [haram]: L, "into pig? sty I too have gone" [ef. 260 above].
a
312. three months . . . : Pound translates Analects VII, XIII: "In Ch'i he heard the 'Shao' sung, and for three months did not know the taste of meat; said: didn't figure the performance of music had attained to
that summit" [CON,220].
313. song . . .
radiance: Pound's
visual
tion to the ideogram for "the name of the music of the legendary Emperor Shun. " Shao [M5691]. In the left component he sees the sun under an image of rays. (Note
Legendary
Chinese
ruler
reac-
? ? ? ? ? ? ? 380
343. METATHEMENON . . . : H, "if those who use a currency give it up in favour of another. " From Aristotle,Politics 1275b, 16
[53:157; 77:67; 97:77].
344. Salamis fleet: [cf. 110 above] .
345. Worgl: (Woergl), a small town in the Austrian Tyrol which in the early 1930s issued its own money, a form of the stamp script [41:44]. The new money created prosperity: "The town had been bankrupt: the citizens had not been able to pay their
74/440-442
74/442
381
rates . . . etc.
everything had been put right. . . . All went well until an ill-starred Wergl note was presented at the counter of an Innsbruck bank. . . . The burgomaster was deprived of his office, but the ideological war had been won" [SP,314].
346. Gedichte: G, "Poems. "
347. Heine: Heinrich H. , 1797-1856, Ger- man lyric poet and critic.
348. Tyrol: i. e. , N Tyrol, Austria.
349. Innsbruck: Capitol of N Tyrol, W Austria.
350. N. E. P. : "New Economic Policy. " The
Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 left the "tountry in an economic doldrums that it could not get out of. Marx had provided an
analysis of the workings and functions of "capital," but he provided no economic program for a socialist state, The country continued in a state of shock while the people suffered terribly. Lenin finally created the N. E. P. as a temporary five-year plan. It was a capitalist economic device that was criticized by a number of Marxist purists, but Lenin conceived it to be a temporary transitional economic device between the former bourgeoiS system of exploitation and the dictatorship of the proletariat, in whicl an economic paradise would be created. Pound's theory here is
that all Lenin needed to have done was issue certificates to the workers for work done, which could have been used as money and thus have created the kind of prosperity had by Wergl. Instead, the N. E. P. was
But in
less than two
years
started by borrowing money at high interest rates, which kept the people enslaved in the same old way [103:6].
351. canal work: The Soviets used forced labor (nearly 300,000 prisoners from labor camps) to build the White Sea-Baltic Canal, begun in 1931 and completed in 1933-34. David J. Dallin, in his book The Real Soviet Russia [Yale University Press, 1947], quotes '"a French engineer . . . sentenced to forced labor," who "managed to escape across the Finnish border": "More than 50,000 [pris- oners] died during a period of a year and a
half" [po 242].
352. dumping: PlaCing large quantities of a basic commodity on the market at a price less than the cost of producing it. Pound wrote: "The Roman Empire was ruined by the dumping of cheap grain from Egypt, which sold at an unjustly low price. And usury corrodes" [SP, 316]. Similar devices were employed by Roosevelt's New Deal to
restore the market economy.
353. each . . . god: One of the several paraphrases Pound makes of a biblical line: "For all people will walk everyone in the name of his god, and we will walk in the name of the LORD our God for ever and ever" [Micah 4. 5].
354. Aristotle: The Nicomachean Ethics, 1095a, has such a statement. Pound analyzes the Ethics with a conclusion as premise: "As ethics, Arry is not fit to clean the boots of Confucius" [GK,326].
355. Katholon: H, "generalities. " 356. hekasta: H, "particulars. " 357. Yaou: Yao [cf. 94 above].
358. Shun: Pound ends the passage about Shun [Chun; cf. 315 above] from Chung Yung in these words: "Shun was a son in the great pattern . . . he perforce came to the throne, perforce had these high honors, perforce this enduring fame, and longevity"
[CON, 133]. And, "He liked to ask ques- tions of people, and to listen to their simple answers. He passed over the malice and
: H,
"Daughter,
the blind
winnowed out the good. He observed their discordant motives and followed the middle line" [CON, 107]. And, "He said: lofty as the spirits of the hills and the grain mother, Shun and Yu held the empire, as if not in a mortar with it" [CON,227].
359. wd/. . . seacoast: In a discussion of what Shun as emperor would have done had his father been guilty of murder. Seeing that he could not order that his father not be arrested as the law justly required, he said: "Shun would have regarded abandoning the empire as throwing away a worn-out sandal. He would privately have taken his father on his back, and retired into concealment, living somewhere along the seacoast" [Legge, 965; Pound's source was Pauthier, 443]. An ana- log to Aeneas carrying his father, Anchises, to safety on his back.
360. son pere: F, "his father. " Both Legge and Pauthier italicize the phrase.
361. Dai Nippon Banzai: J, "Hail to Great Japan. "
362. Kagekiyo: A one-act play [CNTJ, 105-112]. The story of an old blind man whose daughter goes to extremes to find him, but in the end they part. Near the end of the play the chorus says: "The vizard broke and remained in his hand and Miyo- noya still fled afar, and afar, and he looked back crying in terror, 'How terrible, how heavy your arm! ' And Kagekiyo called at him, 'How tough the shaft of your neck is! ' And they both laughed out over the battle, and went off each his own way" [CNTJ, lll].
363. Kumasaka: A play in two acts [CNTJ, 39-45]. The ghost of the hero, Kumasaka, "comes back to praise the bravery of the young man who had killed him in single combat" [CNTJ, 39].
364. quia", est: L, "because it is impossi- ble. " From Tertullian: "Credo qui impossi- ble"; i. e. , "in these domains only faith will sustain me" [HK].
365. Gassir: [cf. 134 above].
. . .
[cf. 362 above].
367. Wemyss: Rosslyn Erskine W. , 1864- 1933, became admiral of the fleet and was created Baron Wester Wemyss in 1919. With Foch, he signed the WWI armistice on behalf of the Allies. He and Lady Wemyss spent part of each year at Cannes, where Pound may have seen the mishap which he de-
scribes of the monocled (glass-eyed) admiral. 368. Gesell: Silvio G. , 1862-1930. Finance
minister in First (independent Socialist) Munich Councils Republik, which lasted from April 7 to 16, 1919. He was subse- quently tried for high treason but was acquitted; thereafter, he wrote numerous books and pamphlets on anarchist and monetary theories.
369. Lindhauer government: Gustave Land- hauer, 1870-1919, German literary scholar. An independent Socialist he was appOinted minister of education to the First Munich Councils Republik in 1919, which resigned after ten days in office. Following the violent overthrow of the Second Munich Councils Republik (600 civilians killed in the streets by the military acting under the orders from the Social Democratic Govern- ment in Berlin), of which he was not a member, Landhauer was arrested and taken to Stadelheim Prison, where he was shot dead on arrival by an army officer [EH].
370. il danaro c'e: I, "the money is there. " Statement made by Pellegrini [cf. 371 below] on November 27,1943. P. told Mhe would allot 125,000 lira per month to him as Hil capo della stato. " M refused, saying that 4000 lira for his family of four would be enough. P. 's response was that M should t,ake it because "the money is there. " M . agreed for a while, but on December 27, 1944 he had further payment stopped [Fang, III, 88]. But M thought it strange
[78/479].
371. Pellegrini:
366. KOPH
man's shining," Persephone and Tiresias are evoked [I :7, 11], also Kagekiyo's daughter
Gianpietro
undersecretary in the Italian Ministry of
Domenico P. ,
? ? ? ? ? I'
403. ~pobob&KTVAO(: pobob&KTVAO(, "rosy- fingered," is the Homeric epithet of Hw 0:;,
382
Finance (1943) in the government of the Salo Republic; official in the Consigli Nazionale and the Corporazione della Providenza e del Credito.
372. cires: Circumstances.
373. musketeers . . . : Prob. "partisans" or a Sale Republic guard. "Rather more" in English idiom suggests several years more. Thus, 20 years plus several after Landhauer's death would be the time of the Sal6 Re- public.
374. IIepoeq,ove,,,: H, "Persephone. " 375. Che pende: I, "that leans. "
376. Pontius: Prob. Pontius Pilate.
377. Von Tirpi! z: Alfred von T. , 1849- 1930, German admiral, who developed submarine and torpedo warfare against Allied commerce in WWI. "Beware of their charm" refers to the English [DG; 77 :2].
378. ~EIPHNE~: H, "Sirens. " The Sirens who charmed sailors are suggested by the Von Tirpitz warning to his daughter.
379. this cross: The grammate cross adopted by Nazi Germany. The swastika with arms directed to the right was thought to repre- sent the vernal progress of the sun
[Shuldiner,Pai, 4-1,81].
380. fau!
378
74/438-439
74/439-440
379
as St. John of the Cross. He wrote of "the Dark Night of the Soul" as a stage in the mystic way.
289. Ugolino: [cf. 240 above] .
290. la vieille de Candide: F, "Candide's old
woman" [Voltaire, Candide, XI-XII].
291. Corporal Casey: Soldier in cadre of the
DTC.
303. olivi: I, "olive trees. "
304. Boreas Apeliota libeccio: Seriatim: "North Wind, East Wind, South Wind. "
305. "C'e il babao": [babau]. I, "there's the bugbear. "
306. i1 Pozzetto/al Tigullio: I, "the Little Well/at Tigullio. " The beach on the Bay of Tigullio, near Rapallo, where Pound lived in 1930s.
307. Oedipus: Greek hero who inadver? tently murdered his father and married his mother [Sophocles, Oedipus Rex].
308. nepotes Remi magnanimi: L, "grand? sons (descendants) of the great-souled Remus. "
309. Mr. Bullington: Prob. inmate at DTC.
310. Lady be good: Popular song of the 30s.
use in Japan? " "Hawk's eye," above, and "hawk's wing" in next line prob. recalled the Yeats play.
318. babao: I, "bugbear" [cf. 305 above].
319. no fortune . . . : [1/4].
320. J. Adams: [31: 15] Pound several times refers to the statement Adams often made: "every bank of discount . . . is down- right corruption" [71 :35; 76:113].
321. at 35 . . . 21. 65: Roosevelt's change of the value of gold.
322. Byzantium: Ancient city on the Bosphorus; site of modern Istanbul.
323. Meyer Anselm: Mayer Amschel Roths? child, 1743-1812, usually considered to be the founder of the House of Rothschild.
324. old H. : Henry Morgenthau, Sr. [DG/RO].
325. young H/: Henry Morgenthau, Jr. [DG/RO].
326. Sieff: Israel Moses S. , British mer? chant; reputed anonymous owner of the London tabloid the Daily Mirror during the late 1930s.
327. a rrromance: Idea that money, "high finance," and international money opera- tions were Ha great romance" was current during the 1930s.
328. yidd: [yitt, yit]: Yiddish dialect, "Jew. " G, Jude. A term of approbrium first applied by wealthy German Jews to low? class "ghetto" Jews from central European countries when they began migrating west. Pound associated "the blond bastards" with The Magnificat based on Luke 1. 52: "He hath put down the mighty from their seats, and exalted them of low degree" [DG/RO].
329. goyim: Yiddish, "gentiles. " A term used by Jews for non-Jews. In context, it can be pejorative or not.
330. versalzen: G, "to oversalt; to spoil. " Derived from Christ's remarks at the end of the Sermon on the Mount [Matthew 5. 13] : "Ye are the salt of the earth. " Pound said
Christ was addressing the Jews (not the gentiles) and refers at them as "oversalted"
[HK].
331. With justice: "Redeem Zion with justice" [cf. 99 above].
332. Yu: [53:15] Emperor after Shun. The laws of Jehovah on money and control of usury are better than those of the early Chinese emperors.
333. sha-o: The succession dance, which mimed the peaceful accession of Emperor Chun [Shun]. Analects III, XXV [CON, 205].
334. XIXth Leviticus: Verse 35: "Ye shall do no unrighteousness in judgment, in meteyard, in weight, or in measure. "
335. Jeremiah: Major Hebrew prophet: "the son of Hilkiah, of the priests that were in Anathoth in the land of Benjamin" [Jer. 1. 1].
336. tower of Hananel: In the north corner of Jerusalem on the wall. The data concerns directions for building the city [Jer. 31. 38? 40].
337. Goah: Goath: "And the measuring line shall yet go forth . . . and shall compass about to Goath" [ibid. ].
338. Anatoth: A city of Benjamin where Jeremiah was born. The value of its currency was slightly different from that of Jerusalem: one-half of 17shekels was $8. 50 there: "And I bought the field of Hanameel my uncle's son, that was in Anathoth, and weighed him the money, even seventeen shekels of silver" [Jer. 32. 6? 1O].
339. Benjamin: The plateau of E central Palestine, near the Jordan River, between Jerusalem and Bethel.
340. Chocorua: Mount Chocorua, E New Hampshire, in the Sandwich Range of the White Mountains.
341. meteyard and measure: [cf. 334 above ] .
342. cornman': Sound of "corps man," for soldiers from the medical corps.
Paradis . . .
is not
292. Le
artificial" [ef. Baudelaire, Les Paradis Artificiels] .
293. spezzato: I, "broken,"
294. mint: One of the hieratic herbs related to the vision of paradise.
295. Ladro: I, "thief, rogue. " Reference to acatintheDTC [MdeR].
296. Nemi: Lake Nemi, a small crater lake in the Alban Hills of Latium, Italy; here were the sacred grove and the temple of Diana, guarded by a priest who held the post until he was killed by another who sought the office [Frazer, The Golden Bough, 3].
297. Zarathustra: Zoroaster, fl. 5th century B. C. , a religious teacher of ancient Persia; founder of Zoroastrianism, originally a kind of fertility religion which later developed a more complex cosmogony and eschatology deriving from the struggle of the Zoroastrian supernatural spirits.
298. desuete: F, "obsolete, out of date. "
. . .
300. castellaro: [Poss. castello] : I, "castle. " Prob. here "small castle. " A place near Sant Ambrogio, near Rapallo [EH].
301. sa&ulorum Athf. Jlae: L, "immemorial of Athena. "
302. 'YAc>"t 'YAC>VKW7n~: H, "little owl, with gleaming eyes. " Note in context that the olive is sacred to Athena, who created it, and that 'YAC>VKC", like 'YAC>VKO, is used to de? scribe the sheen of the olive [79: 60] .
: F,
"Paradise
299. Jupiter
the train of thought evoked by the idea of paradise as not artificial.
that no Chinese philologist sees anything of the kind [Fang IV, 74]. )
314. Chi: [Ch'i], principality in Shensi Province; ruled by Wen Wang.
315. Shun:
[M5936]. Pound calls him Chun [53:23].
316. AL"jVP': H, "clear, shrill. "
317. tanka: The Japanese verse form of five
lines; the first and third have five syllables, the others seven. Memory of "A Shadow," tanka by Katue Kitasono. Pound once asked him, "Did you see the Hawk's Well-is it any
Hermes: Major
deities in
311. in harum . . . : [haram]: L, "into pig? sty I too have gone" [ef. 260 above].
a
312. three months . . . : Pound translates Analects VII, XIII: "In Ch'i he heard the 'Shao' sung, and for three months did not know the taste of meat; said: didn't figure the performance of music had attained to
that summit" [CON,220].
313. song . . .
radiance: Pound's
visual
tion to the ideogram for "the name of the music of the legendary Emperor Shun. " Shao [M5691]. In the left component he sees the sun under an image of rays. (Note
Legendary
Chinese
ruler
reac-
? ? ? ? ? ? ? 380
343. METATHEMENON . . . : H, "if those who use a currency give it up in favour of another. " From Aristotle,Politics 1275b, 16
[53:157; 77:67; 97:77].
344. Salamis fleet: [cf. 110 above] .
345. Worgl: (Woergl), a small town in the Austrian Tyrol which in the early 1930s issued its own money, a form of the stamp script [41:44]. The new money created prosperity: "The town had been bankrupt: the citizens had not been able to pay their
74/440-442
74/442
381
rates . . . etc.
everything had been put right. . . . All went well until an ill-starred Wergl note was presented at the counter of an Innsbruck bank. . . . The burgomaster was deprived of his office, but the ideological war had been won" [SP,314].
346. Gedichte: G, "Poems. "
347. Heine: Heinrich H. , 1797-1856, Ger- man lyric poet and critic.
348. Tyrol: i. e. , N Tyrol, Austria.
349. Innsbruck: Capitol of N Tyrol, W Austria.
350. N. E. P. : "New Economic Policy. " The
Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 left the "tountry in an economic doldrums that it could not get out of. Marx had provided an
analysis of the workings and functions of "capital," but he provided no economic program for a socialist state, The country continued in a state of shock while the people suffered terribly. Lenin finally created the N. E. P. as a temporary five-year plan. It was a capitalist economic device that was criticized by a number of Marxist purists, but Lenin conceived it to be a temporary transitional economic device between the former bourgeoiS system of exploitation and the dictatorship of the proletariat, in whicl an economic paradise would be created. Pound's theory here is
that all Lenin needed to have done was issue certificates to the workers for work done, which could have been used as money and thus have created the kind of prosperity had by Wergl. Instead, the N. E. P. was
But in
less than two
years
started by borrowing money at high interest rates, which kept the people enslaved in the same old way [103:6].
351. canal work: The Soviets used forced labor (nearly 300,000 prisoners from labor camps) to build the White Sea-Baltic Canal, begun in 1931 and completed in 1933-34. David J. Dallin, in his book The Real Soviet Russia [Yale University Press, 1947], quotes '"a French engineer . . . sentenced to forced labor," who "managed to escape across the Finnish border": "More than 50,000 [pris- oners] died during a period of a year and a
half" [po 242].
352. dumping: PlaCing large quantities of a basic commodity on the market at a price less than the cost of producing it. Pound wrote: "The Roman Empire was ruined by the dumping of cheap grain from Egypt, which sold at an unjustly low price. And usury corrodes" [SP, 316]. Similar devices were employed by Roosevelt's New Deal to
restore the market economy.
353. each . . . god: One of the several paraphrases Pound makes of a biblical line: "For all people will walk everyone in the name of his god, and we will walk in the name of the LORD our God for ever and ever" [Micah 4. 5].
354. Aristotle: The Nicomachean Ethics, 1095a, has such a statement. Pound analyzes the Ethics with a conclusion as premise: "As ethics, Arry is not fit to clean the boots of Confucius" [GK,326].
355. Katholon: H, "generalities. " 356. hekasta: H, "particulars. " 357. Yaou: Yao [cf. 94 above].
358. Shun: Pound ends the passage about Shun [Chun; cf. 315 above] from Chung Yung in these words: "Shun was a son in the great pattern . . . he perforce came to the throne, perforce had these high honors, perforce this enduring fame, and longevity"
[CON, 133]. And, "He liked to ask ques- tions of people, and to listen to their simple answers. He passed over the malice and
: H,
"Daughter,
the blind
winnowed out the good. He observed their discordant motives and followed the middle line" [CON, 107]. And, "He said: lofty as the spirits of the hills and the grain mother, Shun and Yu held the empire, as if not in a mortar with it" [CON,227].
359. wd/. . . seacoast: In a discussion of what Shun as emperor would have done had his father been guilty of murder. Seeing that he could not order that his father not be arrested as the law justly required, he said: "Shun would have regarded abandoning the empire as throwing away a worn-out sandal. He would privately have taken his father on his back, and retired into concealment, living somewhere along the seacoast" [Legge, 965; Pound's source was Pauthier, 443]. An ana- log to Aeneas carrying his father, Anchises, to safety on his back.
360. son pere: F, "his father. " Both Legge and Pauthier italicize the phrase.
361. Dai Nippon Banzai: J, "Hail to Great Japan. "
362. Kagekiyo: A one-act play [CNTJ, 105-112]. The story of an old blind man whose daughter goes to extremes to find him, but in the end they part. Near the end of the play the chorus says: "The vizard broke and remained in his hand and Miyo- noya still fled afar, and afar, and he looked back crying in terror, 'How terrible, how heavy your arm! ' And Kagekiyo called at him, 'How tough the shaft of your neck is! ' And they both laughed out over the battle, and went off each his own way" [CNTJ, lll].
363. Kumasaka: A play in two acts [CNTJ, 39-45]. The ghost of the hero, Kumasaka, "comes back to praise the bravery of the young man who had killed him in single combat" [CNTJ, 39].
364. quia", est: L, "because it is impossi- ble. " From Tertullian: "Credo qui impossi- ble"; i. e. , "in these domains only faith will sustain me" [HK].
365. Gassir: [cf. 134 above].
. . .
[cf. 362 above].
367. Wemyss: Rosslyn Erskine W. , 1864- 1933, became admiral of the fleet and was created Baron Wester Wemyss in 1919. With Foch, he signed the WWI armistice on behalf of the Allies. He and Lady Wemyss spent part of each year at Cannes, where Pound may have seen the mishap which he de-
scribes of the monocled (glass-eyed) admiral. 368. Gesell: Silvio G. , 1862-1930. Finance
minister in First (independent Socialist) Munich Councils Republik, which lasted from April 7 to 16, 1919. He was subse- quently tried for high treason but was acquitted; thereafter, he wrote numerous books and pamphlets on anarchist and monetary theories.
369. Lindhauer government: Gustave Land- hauer, 1870-1919, German literary scholar. An independent Socialist he was appOinted minister of education to the First Munich Councils Republik in 1919, which resigned after ten days in office. Following the violent overthrow of the Second Munich Councils Republik (600 civilians killed in the streets by the military acting under the orders from the Social Democratic Govern- ment in Berlin), of which he was not a member, Landhauer was arrested and taken to Stadelheim Prison, where he was shot dead on arrival by an army officer [EH].
370. il danaro c'e: I, "the money is there. " Statement made by Pellegrini [cf. 371 below] on November 27,1943. P. told Mhe would allot 125,000 lira per month to him as Hil capo della stato. " M refused, saying that 4000 lira for his family of four would be enough. P. 's response was that M should t,ake it because "the money is there. " M . agreed for a while, but on December 27, 1944 he had further payment stopped [Fang, III, 88]. But M thought it strange
[78/479].
371. Pellegrini:
366. KOPH
man's shining," Persephone and Tiresias are evoked [I :7, 11], also Kagekiyo's daughter
Gianpietro
undersecretary in the Italian Ministry of
Domenico P. ,
? ? ? ? ? I'
403. ~pobob&KTVAO(: pobob&KTVAO(, "rosy- fingered," is the Homeric epithet of Hw 0:;,
382
Finance (1943) in the government of the Salo Republic; official in the Consigli Nazionale and the Corporazione della Providenza e del Credito.
372. cires: Circumstances.
373. musketeers . . . : Prob. "partisans" or a Sale Republic guard. "Rather more" in English idiom suggests several years more. Thus, 20 years plus several after Landhauer's death would be the time of the Sal6 Re- public.
374. IIepoeq,ove,,,: H, "Persephone. " 375. Che pende: I, "that leans. "
376. Pontius: Prob. Pontius Pilate.
377. Von Tirpi! z: Alfred von T. , 1849- 1930, German admiral, who developed submarine and torpedo warfare against Allied commerce in WWI. "Beware of their charm" refers to the English [DG; 77 :2].
378. ~EIPHNE~: H, "Sirens. " The Sirens who charmed sailors are suggested by the Von Tirpitz warning to his daughter.
379. this cross: The grammate cross adopted by Nazi Germany. The swastika with arms directed to the right was thought to repre- sent the vernal progress of the sun
[Shuldiner,Pai, 4-1,81].
380. fau!