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Date: | Sat, 6 Nov 1999 17:08:47 -0500 |
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In a discussion on the Wallace Stevens list about Auroras of Autumn and Like
Decorations in a Nigger Cemetery, someone raised a possible association
between Stevens' use of Ananke in the latter and Pound's use of it in Hugh
Selwyn Mauberley. One thing led to another, and I now have the below
inquiry about Pound's use of the word, deal (as in cheap wooden furniture),
in a poem. Can anyone recall in which (if any) of his poems Pound used this
word?
Thanks.
Joe Finnerty
-----Original Message-----
From: William T. Ford [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
Sent: Saturday, November 06, 1999 5:18 PM
To: wallace_stevens list
Cc: Joseph M. Finnerty
Subject: An intolerable deal of Pound
Joseph M. Finnerty wrote:
> What's Stevens up to in this context--if you even accept this as an
accurate
> context--that would prompt him to allude to , of all people, Pound?
>
The recent mention of Pound recalls (dimly):
the line from Stevens' Ice Cream:
Take from the dresser of deal,
Somewhere, Pound also uses the term 'deal' to refer
to deal-wood (a cheapish veneer)--I don't know the poem
but I also don't recall ever seeing this usage (in poetry)
by anyone else (my OED on CD-ROM is at the office)---
Joe Finnerty, tell me if you know, what poem of Pound's
has the 'deal' reference?
(If someone tells me there is a Pound online concordance,
I'll cringe.)
Bill Ford
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