Thursday, January 11, 2018

Poetry and madness …

… What Life in Confinement Meant for Ezra Pound’s Work - The New York Times. (Hat tip, Rus Bowden.)

… Pound was a sort of Antaeus. As long as his feet were on the ground that fed him with images and experiences, he was a giant. In the air, as a seer, a social theorist and a philosopher, he was notoriously vulnerable. He worshiped strong leaders; he indulged in a virulent anti-Semitism; and only slyly, belatedly, offhandedly did he take responsibility for mistaken actions and for detestable opinions that he expressed in writing. His life resists posterity’s best efforts to make it resemble a morality play. 

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