1. Language poet Ron Silliman writes to the Buffalo poetics list: >For a weird little reading experience, >folks who want to see how badly 20th century poetry can be misinterpreted >are directed to: >www.newcriterion.com/archive/17/jun99/lyons.htm >which is the site for a very strange little article on Pound >by someone who truly hates The Cantos and everything such verse bred. >He suggests that their motivation is simply Joyce envy. > >Ron 2. I don't know the specific source of David Centrone's quotation from XC, "'From the colour the nature & by the nature the sign!" But the general provenance would be the mystical principle known as the Doctrine of Signatures: the idea that the world is a single coherent code message from God in which every phenomenon (such as color) is a signifier. That principle underlay much of western medicine right up to the nineteenth century. All those doctors in Hawthorne's works, for instance, spend their time looking for plants that look like various body organs, because it was assumed that if God had sent you a diseased liver He would also have sent you the liverwort to cure it. Hence, maybe, the expression of concord at the end of the canto: "UBI AMOR IBI OCULUS EST." At any rate, I'm learning from the _Letters in Captivity_ just how right Leon Surette has been about the general Yeatsian loopiness of Pound's metaphysics, and how literally Pound took it all. All that olibanum ignited to Apollo! Jonathan Morse Department of English, University of Hawaii