In spite of this,
President
Tyler was charmed by
89/599
Cushing and his idea, so money was appro~ priated.
89/599
Cushing and his idea, so money was appro~ priated.
A-Companion-to-the-Cantos-of-Ezra-Pound-II
The excava- tions at Anau showed several levels of civili- zation.
Identification was done partly by the bones of domesticated animals, The lower levels had only bones of wild animals.
In his Reminiscences he gives a fascinating account of his work and discoveries.
He says: "At the
123. "Trade
Lanier: Sidney
Lanier's
Anau I . . . there appeared a short? [of ox] which . . . may have
end of
horned breed
been brought in by the newcomers of Anau II, along with the goat, dog, and camel" But below that level they found no dogs, goats,
or other 804. 812].
domesticated
animals [II,
129. Said Bonaparte: When young, Napa? leon read some Rousseau and disagreed with it. He set forth his own ideas about how primitive man formed community: "Ex- change had to be made. Wealth and taste followed. Imagination then emerged from the cave in which it had been a prisoner"
[Wilson, Napoleon, 24. 27].
? 526
89/598
89/598-599
527
von Humboldt's 'art of collecting and arrang- ing a mass of isolated facts, and rising thence by a process of induction to general ideas. ' " From a bulletin announcing the Square Dol~ lar Series [NS, 556; CB-R, ZBC, 112J. The concept is basic to Pound's iciea of a "suffi- cient phalanx of particulars [74/441 J.
141. Frobenius: [38:45J.
142. Benton: [88:80J. Benton tells a sad story. After Fremont's successes, he re- turned to Washington to be court-martialed for exceeding his orders. He was found guil- ty and sentenced to loss of rank and dismis- sal from military service. President Polk par- doned him of some charges and restored him to the rank of Lt. Colonel, but Fremont said he wasn't guilty of any of them and resigned his commission in protest. Soon he was back on the trail west on a 4th expedition. As he was trying to cross the southern Rockies, however, a guide misled his party, which was caught in a blizzard high up. The 120 pack mules froze to death. They were ten days from any supplies and without food. Fre- mont sent the guide with a party of 2 to get food. After they had been gone 16 days, Fremont with 2 others went looking for them. The guide had died; his comrades had eaten part of him and were wandering around wild. He took them in tow and final- ly reached an Indian he knew, who gave them horses. He got supplies, went back for the survivors, and got there in time to save two-thirds of them: "finding the other third dead along the road, scattered at intervals as each had sunk exhausted and frozen. " Ben- ton says, "Fremont found himself in a situa- tion which tries the soul-which makes the issue between despair and heroism-and leaves no alternative but to sink under fate or to rise above it" [TYV, II, 721J. This passage may be the one Pound thinks is in
Benton.
143. Randolph . . . : [87:! OJ. JR applauded Jackson's veto of the bank bill, but he vio- lently opposed the Nullification Ordinances of 1832. Although he was weak, he would not see the Constitution so mistreated: "he attended large meetings at the Charlotte
Court House and again at Buckingham, fifty miles from his home, in so weak a condition that he could not stand to speak but was obliged to address them from his chair"
[MVB, Auto, 424J.
144. Henry's passion . . . : Thomas Jeffer- son, when asked about the mind and man- ners of Patrick Henry in 1759-60, wrote of him: "His manners had something of the coarseness of the society he had frequented; his passion was fiddling) dancing, and pleas- antry" [ibid. , 441 J. Charlotte Courthouse was the scene of Patrick Henry's last speech, which engaged the beardless young John Randolph in his first attempt at public speaking [ibid. , 436J.
145. "We ought not . . . : The "old crump" is James Kent of New York who met Van Buren after he was no longer president and asked pardon for being against him and help- ing put a "wholly unfit" man in his place: "Y ou made a very good President . . . you did nothing of which either of us has reason to be ashamed; and we ought not to have turned you out, without placing a more competent man in your place" [ibid. , 63].
146. "Great blackguard . . . : AJ went to Richmond to be present at the BUIT treason trial in 1807, which was presided over by John Marshall. AJ's boisterous conduct re- mained in the memory of one present: "As I was crossing the Court House Green, I heard a great noise at some distance off. Inquiring what it was, 1 was told it was a great black- guard from Tennessee, one Andrew Jackson, making a speech for Burr and damning. Jefferson as a prosecutor" [Bruce, Ran- dolph, 305-306J.
147. "No auction . . . : Randolph would not enter the debate about the relation of the slave to his owner, but he vehemently pro- tested a slave market in the heart of Wash- ington, the nation's capital. So he called upon the House to put a stop to "a practice which. . . was not surpassed for abomina- tion in any part of the earth; for in no part of it . . . was there so great and infamous a slave market as in this metropolis; in the
very seat of government of this nation which prided itself on freedom" [ibid. , 438-439J.
148. Tiw T(;'V OAWV c,PXTW: H, "The begin- ning of all things" [Sophocles, Ajax, 1105- 1I06J.
149. Slave labour . . . : Randolph, in a slave vs. antislave states debate, said in 1803: "[It isJ the opinion of your committee, that the labor of slaves is not necessary to promote the growth and settlement of colonies in that region. That this labor, demonstrably the dearest of any, can only be employed to advantage in the cultivation of products more valuable than any known to that quar- ter of the United States" [TYV, II, 759- 560J.
150. But for Price: Exgovernor Rodman Price of New Jersey told the story of the raising of the flag at Monterey after Fremont had taken it. In those days Price was an officer serving under Commodore Sloat. Sloat had given him orders to go ashore but not to take part in any aid to Fremont whatsoever. He didn't know the people seemed to prefer the British to the Ameri- cans as rulers. When ashore, Price found the truth. Fremont was ready to raise the flag at San Francisco. In a nip-and-tuck situation, Price returned to the fiagship, roused the commodore in the middle of the night, and in an impassioned plea asked him to ignore "the treaty obligations with Mexico" and raise the fla&. Sloat was convinced. Price raised the flag at Monterey (July 7, 1848) and Fremont raised it at San Francisco: "The English admiral arrived a few days af- terwards, and the first thing he said on re- ceiving the Commodore was, 'Sloat, if your flag was not flying on shore I should have hoisted mine there'" [Fremont, Memoirs, 538-542J.
. . .
see-Quam paroa sapientia regitur mundus-
with how little wisdom this world is gov- erned. This administration [JQA'sJ seemed to have thought that even less than little would do for us" [Bruce, Randolph, 547J.
152. Ideogram: 14 [M2952J, "treat lightly. "
153. Macauley . . . : Said Van Buren, speak- ing of Robert Peel as a great orator: "Lord Macauley, a competent judge, altho' certain~ ly sometimes extravagant if not careless in his conclusions, ranks him [Peel] among the successors of Pitt" [MVB, Auto, 464 J.
154. Palmerston: Van Buren had much con- tact with Palmerston as secretary of state, as president, and as minister to Great Britain. Protesting anti~Palmerston sentiments in the U. S. , he said: "In the course of the exciting and truly important discussions in which we have been involved I never had occasion to suspect him of professing opinions he did not sincerely believe. . . . During my recent visit to England, twenty-five years later than the period of which I am writing, 1 saw much of him and was pleased to find him at the head of government" [MVB, Auto, 465-466; 42: 1J.
155. Jury from . . . : MVB speaks of the ways of liberty which the U. S. and Britain have in common: "liberty of speech and of the press . . . liberty of conscience in matters of religious faith-securities and safeguards for the enjoyment of personal liberty, such as the Writ of Habeas Corpus, trial by a jury of the vicinage etc" [ibid. , 480-481 J.
156. Disraeli sold: [48:19J. At a critical moment when Parliament was not in session, D (then prime minister) was dining at the Rothschild mansion when news came that shares controlling the Suez were available at Paris. D made a deal with the Rothschilds to transfer ? 4 million to the Egyptian Khe- dive's account. Other details of cost, etc, are hidden [86:6IJ.
157. Tory not a Liberal: On the right to search suspicious vessels at sea, which the British under the liberals asserted in provoca- tive tones of voice. With Robert Peel as prime
151. Quam
dom is hidebound. " Randolph, in a speech ca. 1827 supporting Jackson against JQA, is prompted to recall other great statesmen: "Cardinal Richelieu was what? A priest. Yes, but what a priest! Oxenstierna was a chan- cellor. He it was who sent his son abroad to
regitur:
L, "such
small
wis-
? 528
minister, says MVE, "a great change had
occurred in the tone of the English Minis~ try" [ibid. , 528-529].
, 89/599 I
gentlemanly; and he dispenses . . . a generous and liberal hospitality" [TYV, 11, 101]. Fre- mont said of THB: "Mr. Benton always re- laxed to the enjoyment of the interesting and cheerful dinner-table" [Memoirs, 414- 415].
165. Domvile: [102:29].
166. Uberti: [77:99; cf. 127 above].
167. "His agreeable niece . . . : MVB as minister to Britain speaks of Prince Talley? rand: "I visited his house as often as the habits of society in relation to persons in his position would justify, and was always re~ ceived with cordiality by himself and his agreeable niece the Duchesse de Dino"
[MVB, Auto, 458] .
168. Mihailovitch: Prob. Draza Mihajlovic, a Yugoslav adversary of Tito who believed Communism was a greater threat than Fas~ cism. He was tried for treason in 1946 and executed [104:2].
169. Henriot: Prob. Philippe H. , minister in Petain's Vichy government. Three weeks and a day after the Normandy invasion (June 28, 1944), he was shot to death by members of the French Resistance [Bosha, Pat, 4-1, 99-100; 84-39].
170. Gentile: Prob. Giovanni G. , 1875-1944, who taught philosophy at several Italian uni- versities. An early supporter of Mussolini, he was called "the philospher of Fascism. "
171. "China . . . treaty: A would-be con man by the name of Caleb Cushing sought notori- ety and fame by promoting a trade treaty between the U. S. and China. A bill spon- sored in Congress for money to promote this unwise project was opposed by Benton and many others. The idea came because China had signed a peace treaty with Great Britain; but that treaty was in settlement of a con- flict. Both China and wise men in this coun~ try said that trade between the two coun- tries had increased amid fine relationships and no such formality or costly administra- tive arrangement was needed.
In spite of this, President Tyler was charmed by
89/599
Cushing and his idea, so money was appro~ priated. Cushing was launched on his mission with three battleships "carrying altogether near two hundred guns; a formidable accom~ paniment for a peace mission seeking a com~ mercial treaty" [TYV, 11,515]. Fortunately, fire and disaster disabled some of the ships or Cushing might have caused a war. When he got to China, he demanded to see the emperor. "The Emperor's governor-general, Ching, replied that the Emperor would not give audience to a trade mission, and that it was the custom and law for foreign trade missions to conduct business outside the heavenly empire, at Canton" [Watts, unpub. 206]. Cushing persisted and threatened to sail up the river and hunt down the emperor, who was "insulting the dignity of the United States. " Benton concludes that only the de- lay of the warships may have prevented Cushing blundering the U. S. into war-a re- sult that seems to have been narrowly avoided. The lines focus on several argu- ments. Our trade with China had gone on with little bureaucratic interference or con~ trol. Benton outlines Ching's response: "With respect to the treaty offriendship and commerce, the governor declares there is no necessity for it-that China and America have traded together two hundred years in peace and friendship without a treaty-that all nations now had the benefit of the treaty with Great Britain, which treaty was neces? sary to establish relations after a war; and that the United States, having had no war with China, had no need for a treaty" [TYV, 11,516].
172. Cambreling: [Cambreleng]. Jackson ap- pointed Samuel Swartwout, an old political ally, to be the customs collector of New York Harbor over the protests of his secre- tary of state, Van Buren) who considered resigning because he thought the appoint~ ment so unwise. His own choice was Churchill C. Cambreleng [37:58]. MVB de- cided, finally, to stay on but with the pro- viso that he be allowed to state his objec~ tions to his friends in New Yark. In response to his letters) Cambreleng ended a long re- ply: "and now mark me-if our Collector is
529
not a defaulter in four years, I'll swallow the Treasury if it was all coined in coppers . . . C. C. Cambreleng" [MVB, Auto, 268]. It was discovered in 1838 that Swartwout had embezzled $1,250,000.
173. Tazewill . . . St James: Jackson wanted to appoint Randolph's friend Littleton W. Tazewell (senator from Virginia) as minister to England. MVB thought he was too old and unsuited to the pomp of English court life: "I am sure he derived more social enjoy- ment from his games at quoits with Chief Justice Marshall . . . and others . . . than he could promise himself abroad" [ibid. , 259] . Tazewell declined the appointment.
174. "Of great . . . resolved on: Although Jackson had turned over office to MVB with the nation not only free of debts but with a surplus in the treasury, the politicians in consort with the bankers put up a big and destructive fight in the next round of bank battles. One thousand banks in all the states were empowered to issue paper money with- out specified specie reserves. Some went so far as to issue 20 times as much paper as they had specie to redeem it. Financial ruin loomed. Daniel Webster Ca henchman of Biddle) and the bank were conniving to force the bank's rechartering. At a critical
moment Webster made a famous speech to a large crowd in New York blaming Jackson and MVB for all the monetary troubles. Ben- ton writes of the Webster performance and explains what he was up to: "It was the first formal public step which was to inaugurate the new distress, and organize the proceed- ings for shutting up the banks, and with them, the federal treasury, with a view to coerce the government into submission to the Bank of the United States and its con- federate politicians. Mr. Van Buren was a man of great suavity and gentleness of de- portment, and, to those who associated the idea of violence with firmness, might be sup~ posed deficient in that quality. An experi~ ment upon his nerves was resolved o n - a pressure of public opinion, in the language of Mr. Webster, under which his gentle tem- perament was expected to yield" [TYV, 11,
158. Galileo: [85:7]. 159. jb: : Meng4
[M4428], "great, emi- nent"; + :tzu3 [M6939], "a son, a philoso- pher. " "Meng-tzu," Mencius ["Mang Tsze,"
SP ,81-97].
160. caliginern vespertinum: L, "evening fog" or "darkness. "
161. 1fvpwatv . . . e"AC<TTT),: H, "and he set fire to the sea. "
162. Caleb . . . christening": Meigs says of THE: "Benton was . . . often outrageously personal in his criticisms. " During the slave VS. free-state debates of 1849: "Claiborne Jackson and two other leading enemies at- tended one of his meetings and took front seats with a view to interrupting him with questions; but the interruption did not oc- cur, after Benton early in his speech said,
'And here are Claib Jackson [and the others, naming them] . . . as demure as three prosti- tutes at a christening' " [Meigs, Life o f THB, 456). Pound's "Johnson" is an error.
163. Calhoun called . . . : Henry Clay in open Senate debate said Calhoun used this epithet for MVB. MVB drew up a bill pro- posing a national treasury system and Cal~ houn endorsed it: "What the drawer thinks of the indorser, his cautious reserve and stif? fled enmity prevent us from knowing. But the frankness ? of the indorser has not left us in the same ignorance with respect to his opinion of the drawer. He has often ex~ pressed it upon the floor of the Senate. On one occasion. . . denying him any of the royal beast of the forest, he attributed to him those which belong to the most crafty, most skulking, and the meanest of the quad~ ruped tribe" [TYV, II, 101].
164. Firm taste . . . : Clay's own opinion of MVB is different: "I do not . . . share with [Calhoun] . . . in this opinion of the Presi- dent of the United States [MVB]. 1 have always found him . . . civil, courteous and
? 530
89/600
89/600
531
15-16]. MVB did not yield. He even man- aged to restore the situation and get federal notes issued backed by specie and taxes to resolve the crisis without rechartering the bank. But his acts were "political suicide. " In 1840 the bankers and their cohorts mounted "the most scurrilous and fradulent campaign against a Presidential incumbent in American history. " MVB was defeated by the innocuous Harrison, who would, they believed, restore the bank to power.
175. Had Crab . . . day: Pound's translation of Dante's "Sf che, se il Cancro avesse un tal cristallo, / L'inverno avrebbe un rnese d'un sol di" [Par. XXV, 101-102]. Guided by Beatrice, Dante comes to the Heaven of the fixed stars where he is questioned about his hopes. After his response, a splendid vision takes place in which the soul of St. John flashes across the heavens: "then one light among them shone out so bright that if the Crab had one such crystal, winter would have a month of one unbroken dayn [Singleton ] .
King we read: "The prosperity and unset- tledness of a State may arise from one man. The glory and tranquillity of a State also may perhaps arise from the excellence of one man" [Grieve, Pai, 4-2 & 3, 471, 492].
180. "even if . . . : Source unknown, but the idea applies in all the significant political struggles of Cantos 87-89.
181. M. Hottinguer . . . : [Hottenguer]. A month after the bank was declared insolvent, Biddle and others were indicted as criminals for lending $30 million in unrecoverable loans to their friends, supporters, and others, in contravention of the bank's charter. In trying to cover their tracks, they had sought to raise money abroad, especially with their agents in Paris and London. But the "state of the accounts of the bank with its agents abroad did not warrant any large drafts upon them, expecially that of the Messrs. Hottin- guer in Paris" [TYV, II, 370-372; 101-32].
as well as the multitude of other crimes the American bankers were guilty of, and almost sighs at the comparison: "For misappropri- ating sixty thousand dollars of one of their customers-using it [not to steal but] with- out his consent-these three great London bankers were sentenced to fourteen years' transportation: for misappropriating thirty- five millions, and sinking twenty-one millions more in other institutions) the wrong-doers go free in the United States"
[ibid. ] .
183. The sub-treasury: In place of renewing the bank charters, MVB had proposed a sub? treasury system that would perform the same services. To accomplish this, the Inde- pendent Treasurer Act was passed in 1840, MVB's last year in office. The first thing the Whig-dominated Congress of 1841 did waS repeal the act in a special session. But the regular session of that year revived it. Said Benton: "The measures passed, had no dura- tion . . . were repealed by the same congress that passed them. . . . The sub? treasury sys- tem, believed to have been put to death, came to life again" [TYV, 11,372-373].
184. Louis Philippe: Tyler, in his second annual message, proposed another scheme for a quasi-public agency to issue paper cur- rency. Benton opposed it and in doing so remarked on the soundness of French cur- rency: "And here let me do justice to the wisdom and firmness of the present king of the French. The Bank of France lately re- solved to reduce the minimiJm size of its notes to two hundred francs (say forty dol- lars). The king gave them notice that if they did it, the government would consider it an injury to the currency) and would take steps to correct the movement. The Bank re- scinded its resolution; and Louis Philippe . . . showed himself to be a patriot king"
[ibid. , 391].
185. From '34 . . . : In praising the success of the hard-money policy adopted, Benton said: "The long . . . struggle between paper money and gold was now [1842] verging to a crisis. The gold bill, rectifying the errone-
ous valuation of that metal, had passed in 1834: an influx of gold coin followed. In seven years the specie currency had gone up from twenty millions to one hundred. . . . There was as much as the current business of the country and of the federal government could use: for these 100 million . . . in every ten hands that they passed through, would do the business of one thousand millions"
[ibid. , 406].
186. "ad valorem": L, "in proportion to the value. " Tariffs were a longtime source of conflict between the North and the South. The North wanted them in order to protect their manufacturing interests. The South didn't because it decreased their markets. One plan was to go ~'to a uniform ad valo- rem duty of twenty per centum on all dutied articles. ') Those who knew could see this ploy would end in an increase in the tariff. Benton says: "The introduction of the uni- versal ad valorem the exception. " The trou- ble would be in hundred of customs officers trying to determine value, which would lead to legal actions: "So that this ad valorem system, besides its great expense, its chance for diversity of opinions among the ap-
praisers, and its openness to corruption, also gave rise to differences among the highest administrative and law officers of the gov- ernment, with resorts to courts of law, in nearly all of which the United States was the loser" [ibid. , 189-190].
187. Wright: Silas W. , 1795?
123. "Trade
Lanier: Sidney
Lanier's
Anau I . . . there appeared a short? [of ox] which . . . may have
end of
horned breed
been brought in by the newcomers of Anau II, along with the goat, dog, and camel" But below that level they found no dogs, goats,
or other 804. 812].
domesticated
animals [II,
129. Said Bonaparte: When young, Napa? leon read some Rousseau and disagreed with it. He set forth his own ideas about how primitive man formed community: "Ex- change had to be made. Wealth and taste followed. Imagination then emerged from the cave in which it had been a prisoner"
[Wilson, Napoleon, 24. 27].
? 526
89/598
89/598-599
527
von Humboldt's 'art of collecting and arrang- ing a mass of isolated facts, and rising thence by a process of induction to general ideas. ' " From a bulletin announcing the Square Dol~ lar Series [NS, 556; CB-R, ZBC, 112J. The concept is basic to Pound's iciea of a "suffi- cient phalanx of particulars [74/441 J.
141. Frobenius: [38:45J.
142. Benton: [88:80J. Benton tells a sad story. After Fremont's successes, he re- turned to Washington to be court-martialed for exceeding his orders. He was found guil- ty and sentenced to loss of rank and dismis- sal from military service. President Polk par- doned him of some charges and restored him to the rank of Lt. Colonel, but Fremont said he wasn't guilty of any of them and resigned his commission in protest. Soon he was back on the trail west on a 4th expedition. As he was trying to cross the southern Rockies, however, a guide misled his party, which was caught in a blizzard high up. The 120 pack mules froze to death. They were ten days from any supplies and without food. Fre- mont sent the guide with a party of 2 to get food. After they had been gone 16 days, Fremont with 2 others went looking for them. The guide had died; his comrades had eaten part of him and were wandering around wild. He took them in tow and final- ly reached an Indian he knew, who gave them horses. He got supplies, went back for the survivors, and got there in time to save two-thirds of them: "finding the other third dead along the road, scattered at intervals as each had sunk exhausted and frozen. " Ben- ton says, "Fremont found himself in a situa- tion which tries the soul-which makes the issue between despair and heroism-and leaves no alternative but to sink under fate or to rise above it" [TYV, II, 721J. This passage may be the one Pound thinks is in
Benton.
143. Randolph . . . : [87:! OJ. JR applauded Jackson's veto of the bank bill, but he vio- lently opposed the Nullification Ordinances of 1832. Although he was weak, he would not see the Constitution so mistreated: "he attended large meetings at the Charlotte
Court House and again at Buckingham, fifty miles from his home, in so weak a condition that he could not stand to speak but was obliged to address them from his chair"
[MVB, Auto, 424J.
144. Henry's passion . . . : Thomas Jeffer- son, when asked about the mind and man- ners of Patrick Henry in 1759-60, wrote of him: "His manners had something of the coarseness of the society he had frequented; his passion was fiddling) dancing, and pleas- antry" [ibid. , 441 J. Charlotte Courthouse was the scene of Patrick Henry's last speech, which engaged the beardless young John Randolph in his first attempt at public speaking [ibid. , 436J.
145. "We ought not . . . : The "old crump" is James Kent of New York who met Van Buren after he was no longer president and asked pardon for being against him and help- ing put a "wholly unfit" man in his place: "Y ou made a very good President . . . you did nothing of which either of us has reason to be ashamed; and we ought not to have turned you out, without placing a more competent man in your place" [ibid. , 63].
146. "Great blackguard . . . : AJ went to Richmond to be present at the BUIT treason trial in 1807, which was presided over by John Marshall. AJ's boisterous conduct re- mained in the memory of one present: "As I was crossing the Court House Green, I heard a great noise at some distance off. Inquiring what it was, 1 was told it was a great black- guard from Tennessee, one Andrew Jackson, making a speech for Burr and damning. Jefferson as a prosecutor" [Bruce, Ran- dolph, 305-306J.
147. "No auction . . . : Randolph would not enter the debate about the relation of the slave to his owner, but he vehemently pro- tested a slave market in the heart of Wash- ington, the nation's capital. So he called upon the House to put a stop to "a practice which. . . was not surpassed for abomina- tion in any part of the earth; for in no part of it . . . was there so great and infamous a slave market as in this metropolis; in the
very seat of government of this nation which prided itself on freedom" [ibid. , 438-439J.
148. Tiw T(;'V OAWV c,PXTW: H, "The begin- ning of all things" [Sophocles, Ajax, 1105- 1I06J.
149. Slave labour . . . : Randolph, in a slave vs. antislave states debate, said in 1803: "[It isJ the opinion of your committee, that the labor of slaves is not necessary to promote the growth and settlement of colonies in that region. That this labor, demonstrably the dearest of any, can only be employed to advantage in the cultivation of products more valuable than any known to that quar- ter of the United States" [TYV, II, 759- 560J.
150. But for Price: Exgovernor Rodman Price of New Jersey told the story of the raising of the flag at Monterey after Fremont had taken it. In those days Price was an officer serving under Commodore Sloat. Sloat had given him orders to go ashore but not to take part in any aid to Fremont whatsoever. He didn't know the people seemed to prefer the British to the Ameri- cans as rulers. When ashore, Price found the truth. Fremont was ready to raise the flag at San Francisco. In a nip-and-tuck situation, Price returned to the fiagship, roused the commodore in the middle of the night, and in an impassioned plea asked him to ignore "the treaty obligations with Mexico" and raise the fla&. Sloat was convinced. Price raised the flag at Monterey (July 7, 1848) and Fremont raised it at San Francisco: "The English admiral arrived a few days af- terwards, and the first thing he said on re- ceiving the Commodore was, 'Sloat, if your flag was not flying on shore I should have hoisted mine there'" [Fremont, Memoirs, 538-542J.
. . .
see-Quam paroa sapientia regitur mundus-
with how little wisdom this world is gov- erned. This administration [JQA'sJ seemed to have thought that even less than little would do for us" [Bruce, Randolph, 547J.
152. Ideogram: 14 [M2952J, "treat lightly. "
153. Macauley . . . : Said Van Buren, speak- ing of Robert Peel as a great orator: "Lord Macauley, a competent judge, altho' certain~ ly sometimes extravagant if not careless in his conclusions, ranks him [Peel] among the successors of Pitt" [MVB, Auto, 464 J.
154. Palmerston: Van Buren had much con- tact with Palmerston as secretary of state, as president, and as minister to Great Britain. Protesting anti~Palmerston sentiments in the U. S. , he said: "In the course of the exciting and truly important discussions in which we have been involved I never had occasion to suspect him of professing opinions he did not sincerely believe. . . . During my recent visit to England, twenty-five years later than the period of which I am writing, 1 saw much of him and was pleased to find him at the head of government" [MVB, Auto, 465-466; 42: 1J.
155. Jury from . . . : MVB speaks of the ways of liberty which the U. S. and Britain have in common: "liberty of speech and of the press . . . liberty of conscience in matters of religious faith-securities and safeguards for the enjoyment of personal liberty, such as the Writ of Habeas Corpus, trial by a jury of the vicinage etc" [ibid. , 480-481 J.
156. Disraeli sold: [48:19J. At a critical moment when Parliament was not in session, D (then prime minister) was dining at the Rothschild mansion when news came that shares controlling the Suez were available at Paris. D made a deal with the Rothschilds to transfer ? 4 million to the Egyptian Khe- dive's account. Other details of cost, etc, are hidden [86:6IJ.
157. Tory not a Liberal: On the right to search suspicious vessels at sea, which the British under the liberals asserted in provoca- tive tones of voice. With Robert Peel as prime
151. Quam
dom is hidebound. " Randolph, in a speech ca. 1827 supporting Jackson against JQA, is prompted to recall other great statesmen: "Cardinal Richelieu was what? A priest. Yes, but what a priest! Oxenstierna was a chan- cellor. He it was who sent his son abroad to
regitur:
L, "such
small
wis-
? 528
minister, says MVE, "a great change had
occurred in the tone of the English Minis~ try" [ibid. , 528-529].
, 89/599 I
gentlemanly; and he dispenses . . . a generous and liberal hospitality" [TYV, 11, 101]. Fre- mont said of THB: "Mr. Benton always re- laxed to the enjoyment of the interesting and cheerful dinner-table" [Memoirs, 414- 415].
165. Domvile: [102:29].
166. Uberti: [77:99; cf. 127 above].
167. "His agreeable niece . . . : MVB as minister to Britain speaks of Prince Talley? rand: "I visited his house as often as the habits of society in relation to persons in his position would justify, and was always re~ ceived with cordiality by himself and his agreeable niece the Duchesse de Dino"
[MVB, Auto, 458] .
168. Mihailovitch: Prob. Draza Mihajlovic, a Yugoslav adversary of Tito who believed Communism was a greater threat than Fas~ cism. He was tried for treason in 1946 and executed [104:2].
169. Henriot: Prob. Philippe H. , minister in Petain's Vichy government. Three weeks and a day after the Normandy invasion (June 28, 1944), he was shot to death by members of the French Resistance [Bosha, Pat, 4-1, 99-100; 84-39].
170. Gentile: Prob. Giovanni G. , 1875-1944, who taught philosophy at several Italian uni- versities. An early supporter of Mussolini, he was called "the philospher of Fascism. "
171. "China . . . treaty: A would-be con man by the name of Caleb Cushing sought notori- ety and fame by promoting a trade treaty between the U. S. and China. A bill spon- sored in Congress for money to promote this unwise project was opposed by Benton and many others. The idea came because China had signed a peace treaty with Great Britain; but that treaty was in settlement of a con- flict. Both China and wise men in this coun~ try said that trade between the two coun- tries had increased amid fine relationships and no such formality or costly administra- tive arrangement was needed.
In spite of this, President Tyler was charmed by
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Cushing and his idea, so money was appro~ priated. Cushing was launched on his mission with three battleships "carrying altogether near two hundred guns; a formidable accom~ paniment for a peace mission seeking a com~ mercial treaty" [TYV, 11,515]. Fortunately, fire and disaster disabled some of the ships or Cushing might have caused a war. When he got to China, he demanded to see the emperor. "The Emperor's governor-general, Ching, replied that the Emperor would not give audience to a trade mission, and that it was the custom and law for foreign trade missions to conduct business outside the heavenly empire, at Canton" [Watts, unpub. 206]. Cushing persisted and threatened to sail up the river and hunt down the emperor, who was "insulting the dignity of the United States. " Benton concludes that only the de- lay of the warships may have prevented Cushing blundering the U. S. into war-a re- sult that seems to have been narrowly avoided. The lines focus on several argu- ments. Our trade with China had gone on with little bureaucratic interference or con~ trol. Benton outlines Ching's response: "With respect to the treaty offriendship and commerce, the governor declares there is no necessity for it-that China and America have traded together two hundred years in peace and friendship without a treaty-that all nations now had the benefit of the treaty with Great Britain, which treaty was neces? sary to establish relations after a war; and that the United States, having had no war with China, had no need for a treaty" [TYV, 11,516].
172. Cambreling: [Cambreleng]. Jackson ap- pointed Samuel Swartwout, an old political ally, to be the customs collector of New York Harbor over the protests of his secre- tary of state, Van Buren) who considered resigning because he thought the appoint~ ment so unwise. His own choice was Churchill C. Cambreleng [37:58]. MVB de- cided, finally, to stay on but with the pro- viso that he be allowed to state his objec~ tions to his friends in New Yark. In response to his letters) Cambreleng ended a long re- ply: "and now mark me-if our Collector is
529
not a defaulter in four years, I'll swallow the Treasury if it was all coined in coppers . . . C. C. Cambreleng" [MVB, Auto, 268]. It was discovered in 1838 that Swartwout had embezzled $1,250,000.
173. Tazewill . . . St James: Jackson wanted to appoint Randolph's friend Littleton W. Tazewell (senator from Virginia) as minister to England. MVB thought he was too old and unsuited to the pomp of English court life: "I am sure he derived more social enjoy- ment from his games at quoits with Chief Justice Marshall . . . and others . . . than he could promise himself abroad" [ibid. , 259] . Tazewell declined the appointment.
174. "Of great . . . resolved on: Although Jackson had turned over office to MVB with the nation not only free of debts but with a surplus in the treasury, the politicians in consort with the bankers put up a big and destructive fight in the next round of bank battles. One thousand banks in all the states were empowered to issue paper money with- out specified specie reserves. Some went so far as to issue 20 times as much paper as they had specie to redeem it. Financial ruin loomed. Daniel Webster Ca henchman of Biddle) and the bank were conniving to force the bank's rechartering. At a critical
moment Webster made a famous speech to a large crowd in New York blaming Jackson and MVB for all the monetary troubles. Ben- ton writes of the Webster performance and explains what he was up to: "It was the first formal public step which was to inaugurate the new distress, and organize the proceed- ings for shutting up the banks, and with them, the federal treasury, with a view to coerce the government into submission to the Bank of the United States and its con- federate politicians. Mr. Van Buren was a man of great suavity and gentleness of de- portment, and, to those who associated the idea of violence with firmness, might be sup~ posed deficient in that quality. An experi~ ment upon his nerves was resolved o n - a pressure of public opinion, in the language of Mr. Webster, under which his gentle tem- perament was expected to yield" [TYV, 11,
158. Galileo: [85:7]. 159. jb: : Meng4
[M4428], "great, emi- nent"; + :tzu3 [M6939], "a son, a philoso- pher. " "Meng-tzu," Mencius ["Mang Tsze,"
SP ,81-97].
160. caliginern vespertinum: L, "evening fog" or "darkness. "
161. 1fvpwatv . . . e"AC<TTT),: H, "and he set fire to the sea. "
162. Caleb . . . christening": Meigs says of THE: "Benton was . . . often outrageously personal in his criticisms. " During the slave VS. free-state debates of 1849: "Claiborne Jackson and two other leading enemies at- tended one of his meetings and took front seats with a view to interrupting him with questions; but the interruption did not oc- cur, after Benton early in his speech said,
'And here are Claib Jackson [and the others, naming them] . . . as demure as three prosti- tutes at a christening' " [Meigs, Life o f THB, 456). Pound's "Johnson" is an error.
163. Calhoun called . . . : Henry Clay in open Senate debate said Calhoun used this epithet for MVB. MVB drew up a bill pro- posing a national treasury system and Cal~ houn endorsed it: "What the drawer thinks of the indorser, his cautious reserve and stif? fled enmity prevent us from knowing. But the frankness ? of the indorser has not left us in the same ignorance with respect to his opinion of the drawer. He has often ex~ pressed it upon the floor of the Senate. On one occasion. . . denying him any of the royal beast of the forest, he attributed to him those which belong to the most crafty, most skulking, and the meanest of the quad~ ruped tribe" [TYV, II, 101].
164. Firm taste . . . : Clay's own opinion of MVB is different: "I do not . . . share with [Calhoun] . . . in this opinion of the Presi- dent of the United States [MVB]. 1 have always found him . . . civil, courteous and
? 530
89/600
89/600
531
15-16]. MVB did not yield. He even man- aged to restore the situation and get federal notes issued backed by specie and taxes to resolve the crisis without rechartering the bank. But his acts were "political suicide. " In 1840 the bankers and their cohorts mounted "the most scurrilous and fradulent campaign against a Presidential incumbent in American history. " MVB was defeated by the innocuous Harrison, who would, they believed, restore the bank to power.
175. Had Crab . . . day: Pound's translation of Dante's "Sf che, se il Cancro avesse un tal cristallo, / L'inverno avrebbe un rnese d'un sol di" [Par. XXV, 101-102]. Guided by Beatrice, Dante comes to the Heaven of the fixed stars where he is questioned about his hopes. After his response, a splendid vision takes place in which the soul of St. John flashes across the heavens: "then one light among them shone out so bright that if the Crab had one such crystal, winter would have a month of one unbroken dayn [Singleton ] .
King we read: "The prosperity and unset- tledness of a State may arise from one man. The glory and tranquillity of a State also may perhaps arise from the excellence of one man" [Grieve, Pai, 4-2 & 3, 471, 492].
180. "even if . . . : Source unknown, but the idea applies in all the significant political struggles of Cantos 87-89.
181. M. Hottinguer . . . : [Hottenguer]. A month after the bank was declared insolvent, Biddle and others were indicted as criminals for lending $30 million in unrecoverable loans to their friends, supporters, and others, in contravention of the bank's charter. In trying to cover their tracks, they had sought to raise money abroad, especially with their agents in Paris and London. But the "state of the accounts of the bank with its agents abroad did not warrant any large drafts upon them, expecially that of the Messrs. Hottin- guer in Paris" [TYV, II, 370-372; 101-32].
as well as the multitude of other crimes the American bankers were guilty of, and almost sighs at the comparison: "For misappropri- ating sixty thousand dollars of one of their customers-using it [not to steal but] with- out his consent-these three great London bankers were sentenced to fourteen years' transportation: for misappropriating thirty- five millions, and sinking twenty-one millions more in other institutions) the wrong-doers go free in the United States"
[ibid. ] .
183. The sub-treasury: In place of renewing the bank charters, MVB had proposed a sub? treasury system that would perform the same services. To accomplish this, the Inde- pendent Treasurer Act was passed in 1840, MVB's last year in office. The first thing the Whig-dominated Congress of 1841 did waS repeal the act in a special session. But the regular session of that year revived it. Said Benton: "The measures passed, had no dura- tion . . . were repealed by the same congress that passed them. . . . The sub? treasury sys- tem, believed to have been put to death, came to life again" [TYV, 11,372-373].
184. Louis Philippe: Tyler, in his second annual message, proposed another scheme for a quasi-public agency to issue paper cur- rency. Benton opposed it and in doing so remarked on the soundness of French cur- rency: "And here let me do justice to the wisdom and firmness of the present king of the French. The Bank of France lately re- solved to reduce the minimiJm size of its notes to two hundred francs (say forty dol- lars). The king gave them notice that if they did it, the government would consider it an injury to the currency) and would take steps to correct the movement. The Bank re- scinded its resolution; and Louis Philippe . . . showed himself to be a patriot king"
[ibid. , 391].
185. From '34 . . . : In praising the success of the hard-money policy adopted, Benton said: "The long . . . struggle between paper money and gold was now [1842] verging to a crisis. The gold bill, rectifying the errone-
ous valuation of that metal, had passed in 1834: an influx of gold coin followed. In seven years the specie currency had gone up from twenty millions to one hundred. . . . There was as much as the current business of the country and of the federal government could use: for these 100 million . . . in every ten hands that they passed through, would do the business of one thousand millions"
[ibid. , 406].
186. "ad valorem": L, "in proportion to the value. " Tariffs were a longtime source of conflict between the North and the South. The North wanted them in order to protect their manufacturing interests. The South didn't because it decreased their markets. One plan was to go ~'to a uniform ad valo- rem duty of twenty per centum on all dutied articles. ') Those who knew could see this ploy would end in an increase in the tariff. Benton says: "The introduction of the uni- versal ad valorem the exception. " The trou- ble would be in hundred of customs officers trying to determine value, which would lead to legal actions: "So that this ad valorem system, besides its great expense, its chance for diversity of opinions among the ap-
praisers, and its openness to corruption, also gave rise to differences among the highest administrative and law officers of the gov- ernment, with resorts to courts of law, in nearly all of which the United States was the loser" [ibid. , 189-190].
187. Wright: Silas W. , 1795?
