Yeats, in his A Vision quotes Empedocles speaking of the vortex (p.67) Also Heraclitus is quoted, both of which seem to be the basis or the explication of the myth that Zeus went back into time and swallowed everything thus creating a link between his godself and all else. This can be found mentioned in both the W.B. Yeats book mentioned and Roberto Calasso's The Marriage of Cadmus and Harmony, which was published by Alfred Knopf (New York) in 1993. I cannot tell the exact page. Yeats mentions in the same chapter as above that "His head, as a youth, was full of Blake..." Also, although I have yet to read the book via the index of This Difficult Individual: Ezra Pound by Eustace Mullins mentions Pound attending Yeats' salon where the walls were hung with Blake engravings. Regards, N. Scott Reynolds ----- Original Message ----- From: Antje Pfannkuchen <[log in to unmask]> To: <[log in to unmask]> Sent: Sunday, March 21, 1999 6:04 PM Subject: Plotinus from A Lume Spento > Hi, > > I'd be interested if there is any detailed reading of Pounds poem > 'Plotinus' around. He obviously wrote it in 1905 and published it in 'A > Lume Spento' and as far as I know it is the first occasionn, where he uses > the word 'vortex'. Does anyone know, what kind of literature he was reading > at the time he wrote the poem? > > Best > > Antje Pfannkuchen