continuous, renewable resource, which is dif- ferent from
nonproduc!
A-Companion-to-the-Cantos-of-Ezra-Pound-II
Long before Clay's visit to JQA, he told Benton that he planned to support Adams even though they had been political adversaries.
Clay, with others, said he preferred JQA's intelligence and experience to that of a military chieftan
[ibid. , 47]. JQA said he made Clay secretary
? 502
12. I went to Clay's . . . : Benton visited Clay on Friday night and Randolph on Sat- urday noon, April 8th, the day of the duel. Pound chooses phrases from the source to give a sense of the people and the scene.
13. Georgetown: A section of NW Washing? ton one passed through "to cross the Poto~ mac into Virginia at the Little Falls bridge"
88/578-579
points up the struggle against the bank which is the main theme of Cantos 88 and 89. The bank's lies about its gold holdings, its desire to substitute its own notes in pay- ment and its readiness to back down when chall~nged by a powerful politician, repre- sents in miniature the war that Benton, Ran-
19. His (R's) stepfather: St. George Tucker, 1752-1827, revolutionary soldier, constitu- tional delegate, lawyer, and judge. The book was entitled Blackstone's Commentan'es: with Notes ofReference, to the Constitution and Laws, o f the Federal Government o f the United States; and of the Commonwealth of Virginia, 1803.
88/579-580
specie, which drained the colonies of so much of it that too little was left to carryon trade. Another act in 1763, even more strin- gent, became a primary cause of the Revolu- tion [Overholser, History ofMoney, 21. 29].
24. Lexington: A reference to a letter of John Adams to Thomas Jefferson which Pound often quotes [33:18; 50:1]: "The Revolution was in the Minds of the peo- pIe . . . IS years before a drop of blood was drawn at Lexington. " Adams made the point elsewhere in his correspondence [32: I].
2S. '64 "greatest blessing": Lincoln, in a letter to Col. Edmund Taylor, Dec. 1864, wrote about the greenbacks the government issued to help pay the Civil War debt: "Chase thought it a hazardous thing, but we finally accomplished it and gave to the peo- ple of this Republic THE GREA TEST BLESSING THEY EVER HAD-THEIR OWN PAPER TO PAY THEIR OWN DEBTS" [Overholser, History ofMoney, 44; GK, 354;SP, 159].
26. 1878: Pound discovered in 1928 that his grandfather, Thaddeus Coleman Pound, "had already in 1878 been writing about, or urging among his fellow Congressmen, the same essential of monetary and statal eco- nomics" that he was for in the 1920s" [IMP, 65]. Elsewhere Pound wrote: "In 1878 a Congressman expressed or explained his po- sition by saying that he wanted to keep at least part of the non-interest bearing nation- al debt in circulation as qurency" [IMP,
33].
27. sangue, fatica: I, "blood, fatigue. " In describing war Pound wrote: "Sangue, mer- da e fatica, was the definition given me by an officer in the last European war. Blood, dung and fatigue" [IMP, 252].
28. blood . . . surveillance: Exact source un- known, but the idea is everywhere present in Pound's writings about money and banking (usury) as causes of war: "A financial system wherein it is more profitable to sell guns than to sell farm machinery, textiles or food stuff is fundamentally vicious" [IMP, 252].
503 29. peerage: " . P. C. 377: These 12 lines
are taken from Tucker's edition of Black- stone's Commentaries, Chap. V, entitled "Public Wrongs. " Peers of the realm were once allowed to plea benefit of clergy, which resulted in lesser sentences. The distinction was abolished for a time but was "virtually restored by statute I Edward. VI, c. 12 [Book VI, caput (or chapter) 12 of the laws enacted during the reign of King Edward the First] which statute also enacts that lords of parliament and peers of the realm . . . etc" [Tucker, 365-368].
30. The books . . . villein: In Tucker's edi- tion Blackstone has a note that quotes Lord Coke [107:3]: "contenement signifieth his countenance, as the armour of a soldier in his countenance, and the like," and adds, "the wainagium [Anglo-Latin source of wainage] is the countenance of the villein, and it was great reason to save his wainage, for otherwise the miserable creature was to carry the burden on his back" [Tucker, 379].
31. the Histories: The next six lines list a number of occasions in history when kings, emperors, or other rulers understood the dis- tributive function of money and tried to use public credit for the public good.
32. T'ang: Pound wrote of T'ang [53:40]: "The emperor opened a copper mine and issued round coins with square holes and gave them to the poor. . . . That story is 3000 years old, but it helps one to under? stand what money is and what it can do. For the purpose of good government it is a ticket for the order! y distribution of WHAT IS
[ibid. , 74].
. . .
14. Could not
ask Randolph directly if he had changed his mind about not firing, as that would have been to doubt his previous word. So he decided to get at the point indirectly by mentioning his visit, the tranquillity of Mrs. Clay and the sleeping child, "and added, I could not help reflecting how different all that might be the next night. He understood me perfectly, and immediately said, with a quietude of look and expression which seemed to rebuke an unworthy doubt, 'I shall do nothing to disturb the sleep . of the child or the repose of the mother,' and went
value: Benton
could not
on with his employment. . . WhICh was, making codicils to his will, all in the way of remembrance to friends; the bequests slight in value, but invaluable in tenderness of feel~ ing and beauty of expression" [ibid. ].
IS. Macon: Nathaniel M. , 1758-1837, American statesman who served in the Revo? lution and became a political leader in N. C. , a champion of states' rights, an ardent Jef? fersonian, and an opponent of the reestab- lishment of the Bank of the United States. Macon, Ga. , bears his name, as does Ran- dolph-Macon College, along with that of his good friend John Randolph.
16. Y oung Bryan: John Randolph
his namesake, "then at school in Balti- more . . . had been sent for to see him, but sent off before the hour for going out, to save the boy from a possible shock at seeing him brought back" [ibid. ].
17. Johnny: Randolph's "faithful man," a black manservant.
18. Branch bank: The anecdote that Pound summarizes from his source [ibid. , 74-75]
21. Bellum perenne: L, "everlasting war" [86/568; 87/569].
22. 1694: The year William Paterson and others founded the Bank of England with the deliberate intention of creating great profit out of nothing [46:26].
23. 17S0: In 1751 Parliament passed an act that forbade the issue of paper money in the colonies. The act caused great misery as En- gland required payment for goods in metal
Bryan,
A V AILABLE" ["What is Money 1939; reprinted, SP, 295].
For,"
dolph, Macon,
many others conducted against the bank throughout the Jackson era. They deplored the fact that a private company was autho- rized to issue bank notes so that the "power to issue" money was transferred from the public to a private agency.
Jackson,
V an
. . .
of the
20. The place
spot where the duel took place. Benton uses the phrase "depression or basin," rather than "basis. " Pound leaves the duelists here. Two shots were fired but neither Clay nor Ran- dolph was injured. Clay insisted on the sec- ond shot, which ripped Randolph's coat. The duelists shook hands and Randolph said, "You owe me a coat, Mr. Clay. " Clay promptly replied, "I am glad the debt is no greater" [ibid. , 74]. This minor fracas was merely a symptom of the continuous war between the antibank forces represented by Randolph and the probank forces repre- sented by Clay.
: A
description
Buren and
33. the chuntze: C, chun tzu [MI715-18], "the princely man. " A gentleman, the wise man, a man of complete virtue, the beau ideal of Confucianism. " Pound wrote that such a man "stands firm in the middle of what whirls without leaning on anything ei- ther to one side or the other" [CON, 113] .
34. monopoly: Pound wrote) "The usual
? 504
88/580-581
88/581-582
505
frauds of bookkeeping, monopoly, etc. , have been known since the beginning of his~ tory . . . . Aristotle . . . relates how Thales, wishing to show that a philospher could eas- ily 'make money' if he had nothing better tu do, foreseeing a bumper crop of olives, hired by paying a small deposit, all the olive presses on the islands of Miletus and Chios. When the abundant harvest arrived, every~ body went to see Thales. Aristotle remarks that this is a common business practice"
[92:74;SP ,I72].
35. Thales: One of the seven sages. Aristotle called him the founder of physical science and attributed to him the view that every- thing comes from and returns to water, which is thus both eternal and divine. Said Thales: "All things are full of gods. "
36. Antoninus: A. Pius, Roman emperor A. D. 137-161, b. A. D. 86 near Rome. Adopted by Hadrian, he became his succes- sor. During his moderate reign he cut taxes, decreased the public debt, left a surplus in the treasury [42:4; 46:42], and lowered in- terest rates [78:56].
37. "Trying", he said: The "he" is Thad- deus Coleman Pound, who said this in 1878 [cf. 26 above]. But Pound suggests Antoni? nus had similar policies.
38. Mencius: [87:80]. Tithing every year so that the good years would prepare for the bad years was better than taxing, according to Mencius.
43. Carolus Calvus: Charles the Bald, 823- 877, holy Roman emperor, who died the same year believed to be the year of Eri- gena's death [74: 103].
44. "Captans . . . sit! ": L, "Hoggers of har- vest, cursed among the people. " So Pound translates the phrase of St. Ambrose [GK, 45, 47]. He associates him with the age-old fight against usury and monopoly.
45. Ambrose: St. A. (3407-397), bishop of Milan, doctor of the church, popular with the people, known for his eloquent preach- ing. Said Pound: "St Ambrose didn't rise suddenly and without forebears. A transition from self-centered lust after eternal salvation into a sense of public order occurred some- where and sometime" [GK, 43]. Pound sees St. Ambrose as one of a number of great leaders from Antoninus Pius [cf. 36 above] on who were concerned with justice, the just
price, and the welfare of the people.
46. DeIcroix: Carlo D. A veteran, blinded in the Fascist revolution, who was admired by Mussolini. Describing a time of violence in 1925, Mussolini wrote: "Finally on June 6th Delcroix with his lyric speech, full of life and passion, broke that storm-charged ten- sion" [Auto, 228]. Later Delcroix became president of the Association of War Wounded and Invalids [92:49; 95:12; 98/690]. Pound said that De1croix thought poets should be concerned with "credit, the nature of money, monetary issue etc. " [GK, 249]. The problem, from Antoninus Pius to the present, is thus "always the same. "
47. Get . . .
the Analects, we read: "He [Confucius] said: Problems of style? Get the meaning across and then STOP" [CON, 269].
continuous, renewable resource, which is dif- ferent from nonproduc! ive gold.
SO. saecular: Derived from L, saeculum, "long period of time. " Thus, "going. an from age to age. "
51. ad majorem: L, "to the greater. "
52. Dum . . . scandet: L, "Now to Ambrosia [Ambrose? ] he ascends. " Perhaps Pound is recalling Baccin walking up the salita ("hill? side") to Sant' Ambrogio, the place above Rapallo where Pound lived with Dorothy, Olga Rudge, and his daughter Mary during
the last part of WWII.
53. sacro nemori: L, "to the sacred grove. "
54. aItro che tacita: I, "another who quiets. "
55. iY. rppf! rwp . . . : H, "Without brother- hood, lawless, hearthless. " A luminous detail of Homer's "Out of all brotherhood, out- lawed, homeless shall be that man who longs for all the horror of fighting among his own people" [Iliad IX, 63].
56. To . . . Emperor: The end of the passage Pound often cited from the Great Digest reads: "From the Emperor, Son of Heaven, down to the common man, singly and all together, this self-discipline is the root"
[CON, 27? 33].
57. Antoninus: [cf. 36 above]. In his own time Antoninus was a model for humane and reasoned action.
. . .
59. Estlin: Edward Estlin Cummings, 1894- 1963. His poem 14 of "1 xl" has these lines: "pity this busy monster, manunkind, /
intelligence that enables grass seed to grow grass; the cherry-stone to make cherries" [CON, 193]. Hence "respect the vegetal
powers" [85:167].
61. Hindoustani: The Hindu practice of nur- turing all living things, including vermin as well as the sacred cows.
62. Make . . . springs": Early Chinese gious rites for the burial of the dead involved making figures of straw to place with the corpse. In the Chou dynasty, the straw fig? ures were replaced by more and more sophis- ticated humanoid figures, a practice Kung was against for good reason. In Mencius 1,1, iv, 6, we read that Chung-ne said: "Was he not without posterity who first made wood- en images to bury with the dead? " Legge's note reads in part: "In ancient times bundles of straw were made to represent men imper- fectly . . . and carried to the grave, and bur- ied with the dead, as attendants upon them. In middle antiquity . . . for those bundles of straw, wooden figures of men were used, having springs in them, by which they could move. . . . By and by, came the practice of burying living persons with the dead, which Confucius thought was an effect of this in- vention, and therefore he branded the inven- tor as in the text" [Legge, 442]. (During the time this canto was being written, Pound was working with David Gordon on a trans- lation of B. I of Mencius. This item pro- voked lively discussion at St. Elizabeths. DG's work was copyright Harvard in 1954 and published in a limited edition copyright David Gordon in 1964. )
63. Ideogram: A composite character in- vented by Pound from elements of shih, p
[M5756], and yin, 1" [M7439]. ln a discus? sion of whether more reverence is due to a near relation or to someone who is "person- ating a dead ancestor," a conflict of rules developed. Thus, some disciples went to Mencius for the answer; he said, in effect, although more respect is ordinarily given to the elder, it would be given to one younger, or even a villager, during the season in which he is personating the dead [Mencius VI, I, v, 4]. Legge has a note: "In sacrificing to the departed, some one-a certain one of the
39. Perenne . . . everlastingly. "
: L,
"Everlastingly.
I sing
58. slavery and
actions were counterbalanced in his time by inhumane and destructive practices: "By great wisdom sodomy and usury were seen coupled together" [SP, 265]. [14:3; In! XI, 46-66].
40. Dai Gaku: J, "The Great Digest. " Japa? nese name for the Confucian text Ta Hsio. In "Date Line" Pound said: "as to what I believe: 1 believe the Ta Hio" [LE,86].
41. Belascio: 1, "balascio. " A kind of ruby [36:8]. A leitmotif linking the paradisal theme of love in Canto 36 and the major theme of thrones as justice in Cantos 96-109
[104: 116].
42. Erigena: Johannes Scotus Erigena, or Eriugina, 815? -877? , medieval theologian
[36:9].
quit: In
Pound's translation
of
[79:40; HK, Era, 13]. 48. Baccin: [87:90].
49. Under the olives
"Happy the man born to rich acres, a saecu- lar vine bearing good grapes, olive trees spreading with years" [GK, 243]. Such a man's wealth is based (as with the grasslands of the Sienese Bank [42, 43:passim]) on a
. . . :
not. Progress is a comfortable
[Collected Poems, 397].
clisease:
. . .
"
Pound
wrote:
bhoogery:
Antoninus's
60. ching . . . : [MI138]. "To reverence; to respect; to honour. " In the Analects Pound defines chinr as "respect for the kind of
reli-
? 506
88/582
88/583
507
descendants, if possible,-was made the j J , or 'corpse,' into whose body the spirit of the other was supposed to descend to receive the worship" [Legge, 858].
64. Pere Henri Jacques: A ]esuit missionary [4:35].
65. Sennin: J, "genies or spirits" [4:36]. ["Sennin Poem," P, 139-140].
66. Rokku: J, "a mountain" [4:37]. Not a translation but a phonetic transcription.
67. Mr Tcheou: An Oriental Poond once knew. In "A Visiting Card" he wrote: "The Counsellor Tehau said to me 'These peoples (the Chinese and Japanese) should be like brothers. They read the same books"
[SP ,313].
68. Marse Adams: President John Adams [31:15].
69. The Major: C. H. Douglas, the author of Economic Democracy (1920) and Social Credit (1932) [38:49].
70. First Folio (Shx): Prob. Shakespeare. Perhaps Major Douglas had such a valuable item, but no evidence of it has been found.
71. "Every . . . corruption": JA wrote to Benjamin Rush [65:56], "every bank of dis- count, every bank by which interest is to be paid or profit of any kind made by the deponent, is downright corruption" [SP, 313].
. . .
[SP, 176; see also Hollis, The Two Nations, 213-216].
73. Anatole: A. France, 1844-1924. A satiri- cal portrait of industrial nations controlled by financial syndicates was the subject of his
L'ile des Pengouins in which Professor Obnubile is amazed to find that prosperous nations do not promote peace. After listen- ing to a parliamentary debate about wars that had been promoted, he asked, "Have I heard aright? . . . you an industrial people engaged in all these wars! )' His interpreter explained that they were industrial wars: "Peoples who have neither commerce nor industry are not obliged to make war, but a business people is forced to adopt a policy of conquest. The number of wars necessarily increases with our productive activity" [Pen- guin Island, 145? 149; See Pound's comment, IMP, 196]. For rhyming refrains, "done tal' 'em," see e. e. Cummings, poem 13 of "1 x
1," Collected Poems, 396.
74. Perry: Matthew C. Perry, 1794? 1858, who as a naval captain ~'opened" Japan. His squadron entered Yedda Bay July 8, 1853: "Terror reigned on shore. The people of Yedda prepared for defense. " Eventually, "the Shogun fell. . . . The immediate effect was war" [Brooks Adams, The New Empire, 186-189]. Adams shows in his early chapters that the need to export to new markets led to this result.
75. foreign coin: Benton, in describing the efforts to create a U. S. coinage, traces the history of attempts to exclude foreign coin- age [89:68]. He wrote: "which brought the period for the actual and final cessation of the circulation of foreign coins, to the month of November, 1819. . . . An excep-
be kept in use. "Yet that currency is sup- pressed; a currency of intrinsic value, for which they paid interest to nobody, is sup- pressed; and a currency without intrinsic val- ue, a currency of paper subject to every fluctuation, and for the supply of which corporate bodies receive interest, is substi- tuted in its place" [ibid. ].
79. this country: "Since that law took ef- fect, the United States had only been a thor- oughfare for foreign coins to pass through"
[ibid. ].
80. Benton: Thomas Hart B. , 1782-1858, American statesman who entered the U. S. Senate from Missouri in 1821, where he served five terms to 1851. He became a powerful force in the Jackson-Van Buren war against the Bank of the United States. His Thirty Years' View, written 1854-1856, is one of the major historical documents of the period.
8!
[ibid. , 47]. JQA said he made Clay secretary
? 502
12. I went to Clay's . . . : Benton visited Clay on Friday night and Randolph on Sat- urday noon, April 8th, the day of the duel. Pound chooses phrases from the source to give a sense of the people and the scene.
13. Georgetown: A section of NW Washing? ton one passed through "to cross the Poto~ mac into Virginia at the Little Falls bridge"
88/578-579
points up the struggle against the bank which is the main theme of Cantos 88 and 89. The bank's lies about its gold holdings, its desire to substitute its own notes in pay- ment and its readiness to back down when chall~nged by a powerful politician, repre- sents in miniature the war that Benton, Ran-
19. His (R's) stepfather: St. George Tucker, 1752-1827, revolutionary soldier, constitu- tional delegate, lawyer, and judge. The book was entitled Blackstone's Commentan'es: with Notes ofReference, to the Constitution and Laws, o f the Federal Government o f the United States; and of the Commonwealth of Virginia, 1803.
88/579-580
specie, which drained the colonies of so much of it that too little was left to carryon trade. Another act in 1763, even more strin- gent, became a primary cause of the Revolu- tion [Overholser, History ofMoney, 21. 29].
24. Lexington: A reference to a letter of John Adams to Thomas Jefferson which Pound often quotes [33:18; 50:1]: "The Revolution was in the Minds of the peo- pIe . . . IS years before a drop of blood was drawn at Lexington. " Adams made the point elsewhere in his correspondence [32: I].
2S. '64 "greatest blessing": Lincoln, in a letter to Col. Edmund Taylor, Dec. 1864, wrote about the greenbacks the government issued to help pay the Civil War debt: "Chase thought it a hazardous thing, but we finally accomplished it and gave to the peo- ple of this Republic THE GREA TEST BLESSING THEY EVER HAD-THEIR OWN PAPER TO PAY THEIR OWN DEBTS" [Overholser, History ofMoney, 44; GK, 354;SP, 159].
26. 1878: Pound discovered in 1928 that his grandfather, Thaddeus Coleman Pound, "had already in 1878 been writing about, or urging among his fellow Congressmen, the same essential of monetary and statal eco- nomics" that he was for in the 1920s" [IMP, 65]. Elsewhere Pound wrote: "In 1878 a Congressman expressed or explained his po- sition by saying that he wanted to keep at least part of the non-interest bearing nation- al debt in circulation as qurency" [IMP,
33].
27. sangue, fatica: I, "blood, fatigue. " In describing war Pound wrote: "Sangue, mer- da e fatica, was the definition given me by an officer in the last European war. Blood, dung and fatigue" [IMP, 252].
28. blood . . . surveillance: Exact source un- known, but the idea is everywhere present in Pound's writings about money and banking (usury) as causes of war: "A financial system wherein it is more profitable to sell guns than to sell farm machinery, textiles or food stuff is fundamentally vicious" [IMP, 252].
503 29. peerage: " . P. C. 377: These 12 lines
are taken from Tucker's edition of Black- stone's Commentaries, Chap. V, entitled "Public Wrongs. " Peers of the realm were once allowed to plea benefit of clergy, which resulted in lesser sentences. The distinction was abolished for a time but was "virtually restored by statute I Edward. VI, c. 12 [Book VI, caput (or chapter) 12 of the laws enacted during the reign of King Edward the First] which statute also enacts that lords of parliament and peers of the realm . . . etc" [Tucker, 365-368].
30. The books . . . villein: In Tucker's edi- tion Blackstone has a note that quotes Lord Coke [107:3]: "contenement signifieth his countenance, as the armour of a soldier in his countenance, and the like," and adds, "the wainagium [Anglo-Latin source of wainage] is the countenance of the villein, and it was great reason to save his wainage, for otherwise the miserable creature was to carry the burden on his back" [Tucker, 379].
31. the Histories: The next six lines list a number of occasions in history when kings, emperors, or other rulers understood the dis- tributive function of money and tried to use public credit for the public good.
32. T'ang: Pound wrote of T'ang [53:40]: "The emperor opened a copper mine and issued round coins with square holes and gave them to the poor. . . . That story is 3000 years old, but it helps one to under? stand what money is and what it can do. For the purpose of good government it is a ticket for the order! y distribution of WHAT IS
[ibid. , 74].
. . .
14. Could not
ask Randolph directly if he had changed his mind about not firing, as that would have been to doubt his previous word. So he decided to get at the point indirectly by mentioning his visit, the tranquillity of Mrs. Clay and the sleeping child, "and added, I could not help reflecting how different all that might be the next night. He understood me perfectly, and immediately said, with a quietude of look and expression which seemed to rebuke an unworthy doubt, 'I shall do nothing to disturb the sleep . of the child or the repose of the mother,' and went
value: Benton
could not
on with his employment. . . WhICh was, making codicils to his will, all in the way of remembrance to friends; the bequests slight in value, but invaluable in tenderness of feel~ ing and beauty of expression" [ibid. ].
IS. Macon: Nathaniel M. , 1758-1837, American statesman who served in the Revo? lution and became a political leader in N. C. , a champion of states' rights, an ardent Jef? fersonian, and an opponent of the reestab- lishment of the Bank of the United States. Macon, Ga. , bears his name, as does Ran- dolph-Macon College, along with that of his good friend John Randolph.
16. Y oung Bryan: John Randolph
his namesake, "then at school in Balti- more . . . had been sent for to see him, but sent off before the hour for going out, to save the boy from a possible shock at seeing him brought back" [ibid. ].
17. Johnny: Randolph's "faithful man," a black manservant.
18. Branch bank: The anecdote that Pound summarizes from his source [ibid. , 74-75]
21. Bellum perenne: L, "everlasting war" [86/568; 87/569].
22. 1694: The year William Paterson and others founded the Bank of England with the deliberate intention of creating great profit out of nothing [46:26].
23. 17S0: In 1751 Parliament passed an act that forbade the issue of paper money in the colonies. The act caused great misery as En- gland required payment for goods in metal
Bryan,
A V AILABLE" ["What is Money 1939; reprinted, SP, 295].
For,"
dolph, Macon,
many others conducted against the bank throughout the Jackson era. They deplored the fact that a private company was autho- rized to issue bank notes so that the "power to issue" money was transferred from the public to a private agency.
Jackson,
V an
. . .
of the
20. The place
spot where the duel took place. Benton uses the phrase "depression or basin," rather than "basis. " Pound leaves the duelists here. Two shots were fired but neither Clay nor Ran- dolph was injured. Clay insisted on the sec- ond shot, which ripped Randolph's coat. The duelists shook hands and Randolph said, "You owe me a coat, Mr. Clay. " Clay promptly replied, "I am glad the debt is no greater" [ibid. , 74]. This minor fracas was merely a symptom of the continuous war between the antibank forces represented by Randolph and the probank forces repre- sented by Clay.
: A
description
Buren and
33. the chuntze: C, chun tzu [MI715-18], "the princely man. " A gentleman, the wise man, a man of complete virtue, the beau ideal of Confucianism. " Pound wrote that such a man "stands firm in the middle of what whirls without leaning on anything ei- ther to one side or the other" [CON, 113] .
34. monopoly: Pound wrote) "The usual
? 504
88/580-581
88/581-582
505
frauds of bookkeeping, monopoly, etc. , have been known since the beginning of his~ tory . . . . Aristotle . . . relates how Thales, wishing to show that a philospher could eas- ily 'make money' if he had nothing better tu do, foreseeing a bumper crop of olives, hired by paying a small deposit, all the olive presses on the islands of Miletus and Chios. When the abundant harvest arrived, every~ body went to see Thales. Aristotle remarks that this is a common business practice"
[92:74;SP ,I72].
35. Thales: One of the seven sages. Aristotle called him the founder of physical science and attributed to him the view that every- thing comes from and returns to water, which is thus both eternal and divine. Said Thales: "All things are full of gods. "
36. Antoninus: A. Pius, Roman emperor A. D. 137-161, b. A. D. 86 near Rome. Adopted by Hadrian, he became his succes- sor. During his moderate reign he cut taxes, decreased the public debt, left a surplus in the treasury [42:4; 46:42], and lowered in- terest rates [78:56].
37. "Trying", he said: The "he" is Thad- deus Coleman Pound, who said this in 1878 [cf. 26 above]. But Pound suggests Antoni? nus had similar policies.
38. Mencius: [87:80]. Tithing every year so that the good years would prepare for the bad years was better than taxing, according to Mencius.
43. Carolus Calvus: Charles the Bald, 823- 877, holy Roman emperor, who died the same year believed to be the year of Eri- gena's death [74: 103].
44. "Captans . . . sit! ": L, "Hoggers of har- vest, cursed among the people. " So Pound translates the phrase of St. Ambrose [GK, 45, 47]. He associates him with the age-old fight against usury and monopoly.
45. Ambrose: St. A. (3407-397), bishop of Milan, doctor of the church, popular with the people, known for his eloquent preach- ing. Said Pound: "St Ambrose didn't rise suddenly and without forebears. A transition from self-centered lust after eternal salvation into a sense of public order occurred some- where and sometime" [GK, 43]. Pound sees St. Ambrose as one of a number of great leaders from Antoninus Pius [cf. 36 above] on who were concerned with justice, the just
price, and the welfare of the people.
46. DeIcroix: Carlo D. A veteran, blinded in the Fascist revolution, who was admired by Mussolini. Describing a time of violence in 1925, Mussolini wrote: "Finally on June 6th Delcroix with his lyric speech, full of life and passion, broke that storm-charged ten- sion" [Auto, 228]. Later Delcroix became president of the Association of War Wounded and Invalids [92:49; 95:12; 98/690]. Pound said that De1croix thought poets should be concerned with "credit, the nature of money, monetary issue etc. " [GK, 249]. The problem, from Antoninus Pius to the present, is thus "always the same. "
47. Get . . .
the Analects, we read: "He [Confucius] said: Problems of style? Get the meaning across and then STOP" [CON, 269].
continuous, renewable resource, which is dif- ferent from nonproduc! ive gold.
SO. saecular: Derived from L, saeculum, "long period of time. " Thus, "going. an from age to age. "
51. ad majorem: L, "to the greater. "
52. Dum . . . scandet: L, "Now to Ambrosia [Ambrose? ] he ascends. " Perhaps Pound is recalling Baccin walking up the salita ("hill? side") to Sant' Ambrogio, the place above Rapallo where Pound lived with Dorothy, Olga Rudge, and his daughter Mary during
the last part of WWII.
53. sacro nemori: L, "to the sacred grove. "
54. aItro che tacita: I, "another who quiets. "
55. iY. rppf! rwp . . . : H, "Without brother- hood, lawless, hearthless. " A luminous detail of Homer's "Out of all brotherhood, out- lawed, homeless shall be that man who longs for all the horror of fighting among his own people" [Iliad IX, 63].
56. To . . . Emperor: The end of the passage Pound often cited from the Great Digest reads: "From the Emperor, Son of Heaven, down to the common man, singly and all together, this self-discipline is the root"
[CON, 27? 33].
57. Antoninus: [cf. 36 above]. In his own time Antoninus was a model for humane and reasoned action.
. . .
59. Estlin: Edward Estlin Cummings, 1894- 1963. His poem 14 of "1 xl" has these lines: "pity this busy monster, manunkind, /
intelligence that enables grass seed to grow grass; the cherry-stone to make cherries" [CON, 193]. Hence "respect the vegetal
powers" [85:167].
61. Hindoustani: The Hindu practice of nur- turing all living things, including vermin as well as the sacred cows.
62. Make . . . springs": Early Chinese gious rites for the burial of the dead involved making figures of straw to place with the corpse. In the Chou dynasty, the straw fig? ures were replaced by more and more sophis- ticated humanoid figures, a practice Kung was against for good reason. In Mencius 1,1, iv, 6, we read that Chung-ne said: "Was he not without posterity who first made wood- en images to bury with the dead? " Legge's note reads in part: "In ancient times bundles of straw were made to represent men imper- fectly . . . and carried to the grave, and bur- ied with the dead, as attendants upon them. In middle antiquity . . . for those bundles of straw, wooden figures of men were used, having springs in them, by which they could move. . . . By and by, came the practice of burying living persons with the dead, which Confucius thought was an effect of this in- vention, and therefore he branded the inven- tor as in the text" [Legge, 442]. (During the time this canto was being written, Pound was working with David Gordon on a trans- lation of B. I of Mencius. This item pro- voked lively discussion at St. Elizabeths. DG's work was copyright Harvard in 1954 and published in a limited edition copyright David Gordon in 1964. )
63. Ideogram: A composite character in- vented by Pound from elements of shih, p
[M5756], and yin, 1" [M7439]. ln a discus? sion of whether more reverence is due to a near relation or to someone who is "person- ating a dead ancestor," a conflict of rules developed. Thus, some disciples went to Mencius for the answer; he said, in effect, although more respect is ordinarily given to the elder, it would be given to one younger, or even a villager, during the season in which he is personating the dead [Mencius VI, I, v, 4]. Legge has a note: "In sacrificing to the departed, some one-a certain one of the
39. Perenne . . . everlastingly. "
: L,
"Everlastingly.
I sing
58. slavery and
actions were counterbalanced in his time by inhumane and destructive practices: "By great wisdom sodomy and usury were seen coupled together" [SP, 265]. [14:3; In! XI, 46-66].
40. Dai Gaku: J, "The Great Digest. " Japa? nese name for the Confucian text Ta Hsio. In "Date Line" Pound said: "as to what I believe: 1 believe the Ta Hio" [LE,86].
41. Belascio: 1, "balascio. " A kind of ruby [36:8]. A leitmotif linking the paradisal theme of love in Canto 36 and the major theme of thrones as justice in Cantos 96-109
[104: 116].
42. Erigena: Johannes Scotus Erigena, or Eriugina, 815? -877? , medieval theologian
[36:9].
quit: In
Pound's translation
of
[79:40; HK, Era, 13]. 48. Baccin: [87:90].
49. Under the olives
"Happy the man born to rich acres, a saecu- lar vine bearing good grapes, olive trees spreading with years" [GK, 243]. Such a man's wealth is based (as with the grasslands of the Sienese Bank [42, 43:passim]) on a
. . . :
not. Progress is a comfortable
[Collected Poems, 397].
clisease:
. . .
"
Pound
wrote:
bhoogery:
Antoninus's
60. ching . . . : [MI138]. "To reverence; to respect; to honour. " In the Analects Pound defines chinr as "respect for the kind of
reli-
? 506
88/582
88/583
507
descendants, if possible,-was made the j J , or 'corpse,' into whose body the spirit of the other was supposed to descend to receive the worship" [Legge, 858].
64. Pere Henri Jacques: A ]esuit missionary [4:35].
65. Sennin: J, "genies or spirits" [4:36]. ["Sennin Poem," P, 139-140].
66. Rokku: J, "a mountain" [4:37]. Not a translation but a phonetic transcription.
67. Mr Tcheou: An Oriental Poond once knew. In "A Visiting Card" he wrote: "The Counsellor Tehau said to me 'These peoples (the Chinese and Japanese) should be like brothers. They read the same books"
[SP ,313].
68. Marse Adams: President John Adams [31:15].
69. The Major: C. H. Douglas, the author of Economic Democracy (1920) and Social Credit (1932) [38:49].
70. First Folio (Shx): Prob. Shakespeare. Perhaps Major Douglas had such a valuable item, but no evidence of it has been found.
71. "Every . . . corruption": JA wrote to Benjamin Rush [65:56], "every bank of dis- count, every bank by which interest is to be paid or profit of any kind made by the deponent, is downright corruption" [SP, 313].
. . .
[SP, 176; see also Hollis, The Two Nations, 213-216].
73. Anatole: A. France, 1844-1924. A satiri- cal portrait of industrial nations controlled by financial syndicates was the subject of his
L'ile des Pengouins in which Professor Obnubile is amazed to find that prosperous nations do not promote peace. After listen- ing to a parliamentary debate about wars that had been promoted, he asked, "Have I heard aright? . . . you an industrial people engaged in all these wars! )' His interpreter explained that they were industrial wars: "Peoples who have neither commerce nor industry are not obliged to make war, but a business people is forced to adopt a policy of conquest. The number of wars necessarily increases with our productive activity" [Pen- guin Island, 145? 149; See Pound's comment, IMP, 196]. For rhyming refrains, "done tal' 'em," see e. e. Cummings, poem 13 of "1 x
1," Collected Poems, 396.
74. Perry: Matthew C. Perry, 1794? 1858, who as a naval captain ~'opened" Japan. His squadron entered Yedda Bay July 8, 1853: "Terror reigned on shore. The people of Yedda prepared for defense. " Eventually, "the Shogun fell. . . . The immediate effect was war" [Brooks Adams, The New Empire, 186-189]. Adams shows in his early chapters that the need to export to new markets led to this result.
75. foreign coin: Benton, in describing the efforts to create a U. S. coinage, traces the history of attempts to exclude foreign coin- age [89:68]. He wrote: "which brought the period for the actual and final cessation of the circulation of foreign coins, to the month of November, 1819. . . . An excep-
be kept in use. "Yet that currency is sup- pressed; a currency of intrinsic value, for which they paid interest to nobody, is sup- pressed; and a currency without intrinsic val- ue, a currency of paper subject to every fluctuation, and for the supply of which corporate bodies receive interest, is substi- tuted in its place" [ibid. ].
79. this country: "Since that law took ef- fect, the United States had only been a thor- oughfare for foreign coins to pass through"
[ibid. ].
80. Benton: Thomas Hart B. , 1782-1858, American statesman who entered the U. S. Senate from Missouri in 1821, where he served five terms to 1851. He became a powerful force in the Jackson-Van Buren war against the Bank of the United States. His Thirty Years' View, written 1854-1856, is one of the major historical documents of the period.
8!
