|
This is an abbreviated profile of Ezra Pound from World
Authors 1900-1950. The first paragraph was written by Pound in 1939 especially for
Twentieth Century Authors:
POUND, EZRA LOOMIS (October 30,
1885--November 1, 1972)
American poet and critic, wrote from Rapallo, Italy, on May 12,
1939: "Arriving at the University of Pennsylvania in 1901, I acknowledge debts to
Professors McDaniel and Child for Latin and English, and to Ames for doing his best when
no professor of American history had got down to bedrock. Overholser had not made his
admirable compendium of the real causes of the Revolution and of the great and dastardly
betrayal of the American people and the American system, by the trick clause, and the Bank
Act of February 25, 1863.
He was born at Hailey, Ohio, an only child. His placid
father, Homer Loomis Pound, a civil servant who ran the government land office at Hailey,
went to work, as an assistant assayer, at the United States Mint when the family moved to
Philadelphia when Ezra was four--he retired forty years later. His mother, who had hated
Hailey, was the former Isabel Weston of Washington, DC. In 1921 he wrote, hyperbolically
but with a grain of truth, to Thomas Hardy: "I come from an American suburb--where I
was not born--where both parents are really foreigners." He would later say that his
father was overly naive but easy to live with, and that his mother was a "prude"
who rarely agreed with him on any matter.
At twelve Pound entered Cheltenham, a military college two
miles from home. A neighbour recollected that "he was all books" and that the
other boys made fun of him. He had already written his first poem; significantly, it was
about William Jennings Bryan, and his populist "Free Silver" campaign-Bryan,
like the older Pound, had the fruitless ambition of defeating bankers. The boy showed
promise at Cheltenham, and was able to enlist at the University of Pennsylvania at the age
of only fifteen. Once there (1901) he did his best to attract attention to
himself--something he needed until he reached old age--with his long flaming-red hair and
a gold-topped cane, and fought the authorities at every point. He was over-emotional and
became unpopular with his more conventional classmates. A "sort of screwball,"
one called him. But he did form one friendship: with a medical student of Puerto-Rican
descent called William Carlos Williams. Williams himself liked him; but wrote home to his
mother that "not one person in a thousand likes him and a great many people detest
him"; he was "full of conceits and affectation." One day he was frightened
when Pound, who was a keen fencer--he even based his early poetical style on
fencing-almost put his eye out with one of Homer Pound's walking sticks. Pound also met,
and had an adolescent romance with, the fifteen-year-old poet Hilda Doolittle
("HD"); she wrote about it in End to Torment.
His parents, or his mother, became worried about the company
he was keeping, particularly about that of William Brook Smith, a Philadelphia aesthete
who introduced him to such writers as Oscar Wilde; Pound's A Lume Spento (1908),
his first collection of verse, is dedicated to Smith as "Dreamer of Dreams." So
he was sent to Hamilton College, in upstate New York, as a special student. There, too, he
was eccentric and unpopular; but he did discover Dante and the troubadours. By now he had
acquired a curiosity about foreign languages--it is clear that this was never a
"proficiency," and Arthur Waley later noted that he read Chinese, learnedly,
upside down--which enabled him to make rough, invented, excited translations from them. He
graduated from Hamilton (1905) and returned to the University of Pennsylvania to work on
English Literature and Romance Poetry. He gained an M.A. in 1906, and then visited Spain
on a fellowship (summer, 1906). He had been to Europe once before, on a trip with an aunt.
Pound's studies were, as they always were, disordered; but in
his keen excitement he managed to pick up a genuinely vast amount of knowledge of
culture--and was able to retain much of it. In 1907, while he was simultaneously courting
both Hilda Doolittle and a girl called Mary Moore (whose father was president of a
railroad company), he was appointed instructor in French and Spanish at Wabash College, a
small Presbyterian school in Crawfordsville, western Indiana. At this establishment
cigarettes were forbidden, and absentees from chapel were noted in the town newspaper.
Pound, who later (before World War I) had a portrait-sculpture made depicting himself as a
phallus, set out to challenge their ways; he poured rum into his tea and dressed himself
up like Whistler, smoking flamboyantly. "I do not teach," he announced, "I
awake." Then he started an affair with a woman who was a male impersonator (she was
not a prostitute, as has been asserted), and, as he put it (with some of the type of
spelling he would increasingly employ) to a college friend in a letter of October 1907:
"Two stewdents found me sharing my meager repast with the lady-gent impersonator in
my privut apartments/keep it dark and find me a soft immoral place to light in when the
she-faculty-wives git hold of that jewcy morsel. Don't wrote home to me folks."
In January 1908 the same girl was discovered in his rooms,
this time by spinster college ladies, on a snowy night; he was dismissed in disgrace, but
with pay until the end of the semester. In the following month he left for London, via
Italy, with a grievance against all universities that would last for the whole of his
life--and with a somewhat falsified portrait of himself as a learned, courtly gentleman
what I was talking about?" But the insanity defence eventually succeeded--although
Pound's publisher James Laughlin complained to T. S. Eliot--who
shared many of Pound's views, but was far more circumspect about it--that "I think
you and I both realise that Ezra is sane and the world is insane.'"
A revival in Pound's work began in 1947, largely promoted by
James Laughlin's New Directions. Poets from all over the world pleaded for his
release, and The Pisan Cantos received the prestigious Bollingen Award. This opened
a bitter controversy which was eventually summed up by Allen Tate, who argued that even if
Pound had been convicted of treason, he had in his revitalization of language performed an
"indispensable duty to society." And, at least as a critic and as the poet of
Mauberley, Pound had. He had been a central figure in modernism, and had--although not
single-handedly--revived poetry in England. He had invented a kind of creative translation
which, whatever it may be as translation, certainly led to the writing of much poetry. The
fullest biography is by Humphrey Carpenter, but this has been bitterly criticized; that by
John Tytell is useful on facts but weaker on the literary side. Many of his papers are in
the Beinecke Library at Yale University.
Principal Works: Poetry--A Lume
Spento, 1908;
Personae, 1909 rev. 1926, 1968, Personae: Collected Poems, 1971 (omits The Cantos);
Exultations, 1909; Provenca, 1910; Canzoni, 1910; Ripostes, 1912; Cathay, 1915;
Lustra,
1916; Homage to Sextus Propertius, 1917; Quia Pauper Amavi, 1919; Umbra, 1920; Hugh Selwyn
Mauberley, 1920; Poems 1918-1921, 1921; Cantos I-XVI, 1925; Selected Poems, 1928 rev.
1949, 1952; Cantos XVII-XXVII, 191928; A Draft of XXX Cantos, 1930; Eleven New Cantos
XXXI-XLI, 1934; The Fifth Decad of Cantos XLII-LI, 1937; Cantos LII-LXXI, 1940; The Pisan
Cantos LXXIV-LXXXIV, 1948; The Cantos of Ezra Pound 1-84, 1049; Section: Rock Drill de los
Cantares LXXXV-XCV, 1956; Thrones de los Cantares XCVI-CIX, 1959; Selected Cantos, 1967;
Drafts and Fragments of Cantos CX-CXVII, 1969; The Cantos of Ezra Pound (1-117), 1970; M.
J. King (ed.) Collected Early Poems, 1982. Criticism and Essays--The Spirit of
Romance, 1912; Gaudier-Brzeska, 1916. Translations and Adaptations--The Sonnets and
Ballate of Guido Cavalcanti, 1913; Certain Noble Plays of Japan, 1916; Noh, Or
Accomplishment, 1917; Twelve Dialogues of Fontanelle, 1917; To Hio, 1928; Remy de
Gourmont's Natural History of Love, 1932; Cavalcanti Complete, 1932; Confucius: The
Unwobbling Pivot, and the Great Digest, 1947; The Translations of Ezra Pound, 1954;
Sophocles's Women of Trachis, 1957; Sophocles's Electra, 1989. As Editor--Catholic
Anthology, 1915; The Letters of John Butler Yeats, 1917; Active Anthology, 1933; Confucius
to Cummings: An Anthology of Poetry, 1964. Correspondence--D. D. Paige (ed.) The
Letters of Ezra Pound, 1951; A, J. Robbins (ed.) EP to LU: Nine Letters to Louis
Untermeyer, 1963; read, F. (ed.) Pound/Joyce: The Letters of Ezra Pound to James Joyce, 1967;
Lindberg-Seyersted, B. (ed.) Pound/Ford, The
Story of a Literary Friendship, 1982; O.S. Pound and A. W. Litz (eds.) Ezra Pound and
Dorothy Shakespeare, 1984; D. Pearce and H. N. Schneidau (eds.) Ezra Pound and John
Richmond Theobald, 1983; T. Materer (ed.) The Correspondence of Ezra Pound and Wyndham
Lewis, 1985; Ahearn, B. (ed.) Pound/Zukofsky, 1987; Kodama, S. (ed.) Pound and Japan:
Letters and Essays, 1987; (O. S. Pound and R. E. Spoo (eds.) Ezra Pound and Margaret
Cravens: A Tragic Friendship, 1988; T. L. Scott and M. J. Freidmann (eds.) Pound/The
Little Review, 1988; T. Materer (ed.) Selected Letters of Ezra Pound to John Quinn, 1991.
About: The autobiographical material quoted above was
written for Twentieth Century Authors, 1942. Baumann, W. The Rose in the Steel Dust: An
Examination of the Cantos of Ezra Pound, 1967; Beach C. ABC of Influence: Ezra Pound and
the Remaking of American Poetic Tradition, 1992; Bell, I. F. A. Critic as Scientist: The
Modernist Poetic of Ezra Pound, 1981, Ezra Pound: Tactics for Reading, 1982; Bloom, H.
(ed.) Ezra Pound, 1987; Bush, R. The Genesis of Pound's Cantos, 1976; Carpenter, H. A
Serious Character: A Life of Ezra Pound, 1988; Davie, D. Ezra Pound: Poet as Sculptor,
1964, Pound, 1975, Studies in Ezra Pound, 1991; Dekker, G. The Cantos of Ezra Pound, 1963;
Ellmann, M. The Poetics of Impersonality: T.S. Eliot and Ezra Pound, 1987; Hamilton, S.
Ezra Pound and the Symbolist Inheritance, 1992; Hesse, E. (ed.) New Approaches to Ezra
Pound, 1969; Homberger, E. (ed.) Ezra Pound: The Critical Heritage, 1972; Kenner, H. The
Poetry of Ezra Pound, 1951, The Pound Era, 1972; Laughlin, J. Pound as Wuz, 1987;
Longenbach, J. Stone Cottage: Pound, Yeats and Modernism, 1988; Meachman, H.M. The Caged
Panther: Pound at St Elizabeths, 1968; Nichols, P. Ezra Pound: Politics, Economic and
Writing, 1984; Tytell, J. Ezra Pound: The Solitary Volcano, 1987; Woodward, A. Ezra Pound
and the Pisan Cantos, 1980.
|