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Hear me. Cadmus of Golden Prows! The silver mirrors catch the bright stones and flare, Dawn, to our waking, drifts in the green cool light; Dew-haze blurs, in the grass, pale ankles moving. Beat, beat, whirr, thud, in the soft turf. under the apple trees, Choros nympharum, goat-foot, with the pale foot alternate;
The Online Companion to. The Cantos of Ezra Pound. 2014-. Three Cantos (1917) Links in categories 3. A Draft of XVI Cantos (1-16, 1925) Links in categories 15. A Draft of the Cantos 17-27 (1928) Links in categories 11. Cantos XXVIII-XXX (28-30, 1930) Links in categories 3. Eleven New Cantos (31-41, 1934) Links in categories 11.
Ezra Pound referred to The Cantos as, variously, ‘an epic including history’ and, with more muted self-praise, a ‘ragbag’. Yet although it is undeniably a ragbag, there are a number of key themes running through The Cantos. Pound has started out with Imagism, in 1912, and the idea of ‘superposition’: placing, as it were, one image ...
In 1949, while imprisoned for treason, Ezra Pound won the prestigious Bollingen Prize for Poetry for The Pisan Cantos, a sequence he began while in jail. He died, following a decade of silence, in 1972. The Cantos - "Say I take your whole bag of tricks, / Let in your quirks and tweeks, and say the thing’s an art-form, / …and that the modern ...
I Cantos (The Cantos) è un poema incompiuto del poeta statunitense Ezra Pound, considerato uno dei capolavori della letteratura modernista.. Suddiviso in 117 sezioni, ognuna delle quali costituisce un canto, e raccolto in una decina di volumi a partire dal 1925, il poema fu scritto tra il 1915 e il 1962.. La parte scritta alla fine della Seconda guerra mondiale, intitolata The Pisan Cantos ...
Going down the long ladder unguarded, I fell against the buttress, Shattered the nape-nerve, the soul sought Avernus. But thou, O King, I bid remember me, unwept, unburied, Heap up mine arms, be tomb by sea-bord, and inscribed: A man of no fortune, and with a name to come. And set my oar up, that I swung mid fellows."
Three Cantos. By Ezra Pound. Canto III appeared in the July, 1917 issue of Poetry. Originally part of what scholars call the "Ur-Cantos," this version of Canto III was later edited by Pound to become Canto I of his collected Cantos. The section that eventually became Canto I is highlighted in blue in the poem below. —THE EDITORS.