I just realized that I made another error. As stated, I recall Pound saying sometime, probably 1957, that he had decided on a policy of not accepting any new regular visitors at St. Elizabeths unless they had read two of the slim volumes published by the Square Dollar Press. In fact, the books in question were the one by Del Mar and Fenellosa's famous memoir on the Chinese written character as a medium for poetry. I was incorrect in saying that the second volume was the ANALECTS of Confucious. Incidentally, this choice is a further indication of the fact that, as far as I knew anyway, the regular visitors at St. Elizabeths were not divided into two camps, a political one and a literary one. All visitors were expected to acquire some knowledge of the things Pound considered politically important (mostly consisting of books written at least fifty years previously) and also expected to have at least some interest in literature. Pound's conversation often contained anti-semitic remarks, but I can't remember his ever recommending any anti-semitic literature. I think that he would have been more likely to recommend that people read Leo Frobenius. --Lee Lady <Http://www2.Hawaii.Edu/~lady/>