I think this query deserves a better response. Being familiar with the writer's native culture and language, let me restate what I understand of the query. Then I'll try to respond, and I hope others will join me. >I am now reading Ashbery's poems, which puzzle me a lot. Did Pound >appreciate Ashbery or recognize him as a young poet from whom important work could be expected? Or was >he outside of Pound's interest? The answer to your first quest, I believe, is no. I think that by the time Ashbery's poetry began to appear in print, Pound had little interest in young poets. He thought he had done enough to recognize and encourage young talent during the three decades before WWII. During and after the war, he believed he had more important things to do. Nor do i think Pound would have appreciated Ashbery's work if he had seen it. In his early years in London and Paris, he appreciated surrealism as an avant-garde movement, but by the thirties he felt that surrealist art was "stale creampuffs" and anyone still doing it was merely recycling the contents of some ancestral trunk in the attic. That's all that comes to mind right now. Perhaps someone else could comment? Wayne Pounds Tim Romano wrote: > Yes, to a "wide, tepidly meandering" stream. > Tim Romano > > At 11/25/03 10:23 AM +0900, =?iso-2022-jp?B?GyRCRU9KVT8uRnMbKEI=?= wrote: > >-Please give me some hints: > >I am now reading Ashbery's poems which puzzle me a lot. Did Pound > >appreciate, or expect, him? Or was he out of Pound's interest? Does > >he bring, or keep, American poetry and the English Poetry to some > >stream? > >