Bob,
Interesting challenges. Granted, the modernists were interested in the
individual; I won't concede that this interest in the self as lens was a
"blight". The_ego scriptor_ of the Pisan Cantos saw himself in the great
tradition of 'merkan egoism' . He believed in luminaries.
"Negative capability" and "directed will" are divergent paths. Keats sought
a quietness of being. Pound celebrated the noise of doing. Beauty for
Keats consisted in sublime Arrest; beauty, for Pound, was to be found in
mundane Function and in the aptness of the design.
Tim
---- Original Message -----
From: "bob scheetz" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Sunday, September 03, 2000 9:31 PM
Subject: Re: More on Ants & Centaurs
> tim,
> sadly, i think you are finally right about the
> narcissism/exhibitionism (vanity) as the pound-ian arch-trope.
> there is an relentlessly idiotic (original gk sense) structure
> which he clearly cultivated...and which is impenetrable
> ...a specific lack of negative capability, a middle-class merkan egoism,
> posing as "authenticity", the logical
> culmination of romanticism, which has blighted
> most of modernism, no?
>
> thanks,
> bob
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Tim Romano <[log in to unmask]>
> To: <[log in to unmask]>
> Sent: Friday, September 01, 2000 8:51 AM
> Subject: Re: More on Ants & Centaurs
>
>
> > Bob,
> > An autobiographical thread runs throughout the Cantos - beginning in
> Canto
> > 1 with the lines "Line quiet Divus. I mean that is Andreas Divus/In
> officina
> > Wecheli, 1538, out of Homer". The poet takes off his mask in these
lines.
> > Of course, an unmasking is itself a symbolic gesture ... and so the face
> > behind the mask is yet another persona. Even so, "frankness" and
"candor"
> > are ideals highly prized by Pound, even though perfect candor -- the
self
> > unmasked -- is unattainable. This realization takes one into the world
of
> > Action and directed will, or leaves one looking at the mirror in the
> mirror.
> > Recall Robert Graves' box-- "children, don't untie that string!".
> >
> > As the self is merely a jumble of broken mirrors, so the direction of
the
> > will must be external in its origin. In Pound, the external direction is
> > twofold: the heavenly, in the form of Right Reason, and the chthonic, in
> the
> > form of the animal nature. The centaur can be read as a symbol of this
> dual
> > beast, moved by reason and passion. A beast of great learning but also
> of
> > great heart, its hooves planted firmly in the loam. This is a common
> > understanding of the symbolic aspects of that man-beast. Yet the
symbolic
> > meaning seems to fall shy of the mark, in the context of the homiletic
> "pull
> > down thy vanity" passage. The symbolic meanings do not point at the
Vanity
> > of human endeavor.
> >
> > You are right, I think, to look outside this symbolic meaning, as you
have
> > done. The equestrian statues, man-horse units, do signify military
> > intelligence and bravery. Such associations work well with Dan
Pearlman's
> > "myrmidon" reading. But it also behooves us to bring in complementary
> > associations from Pound's other writings of the period. In Women of
> Trachis,
> > the centaurs are called "arrogant, lawless", traits which fit in quite
> > tightly with the themes of Vanity and "self-mastery".
> >
> > Certainly there are elegiac aspects to the poems in the Pisan Cantos,
and
> > Canto 81 is no exception. Europe is wreckage. And there is also
> "pastoral"
> > elements to be found in "the green world." Even political conflict is
> > transposed into a naturalistic key:
> >
> > hot wind came from the marshes
> > and death chill from the mountains
> >
> > And yet Elegy tends toward fade-out and drift-off, whereas Canto 81 ends
> on
> > an assertive even defiant note vis-a-vis the activist role the poet has
> > played. So I wouldn't want to put any sort of label on the poem.
> >
> > Tim
>
>
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