Classic and Contemporary Poetry
CANTO 2 (1917), by EZRA POUND Poem Explanation Poet Analysis Poet's Biography First Line: Leave casella Last Line: Take my sordello! | ||||||||
Leave Casella. Send out your thought upon the Mantuan palace -- Drear waste, great halls, Silk tatters still in the frame, Gonzaga's splendor Alight with phantoms! What have we of them, Or much or little? Where do we come upon the ancient people? "All that I know is that a certain star" -- All that I know of one, Joios, Tolosan, Is that in middle May, going along A scarce discerned path, turning aside, In level poplar lands, he found a flower, and wept. "Y a la primera flor," he wrote, "Qu'ieu trobei, tornei em plor." There's the one stave, and all the rest forgotten. I've lost the copy I had of it in Paris, Out of the blue and gilded manuscript Decked out with Couci's rabbits, And the pictures, twined with the capitals, Purporting to be Arnaut's and the authors. Joios we have. By such a margent stream, He strayed in the field, wept for a flare of color, When Coeur de Lion was before Chalus. Or there's En Arnaut's score of songs, two tunes; The rose-leaf casts her dew on the ringing glass, Dolmetsch will build our age in witching music. Viols da Gamba, tabors, tympanons: "Yin-yo laps in the reeds, my guest departs, The maple leaves blot up their shadows, The sky is full of autumn, We drink our parting in saki. Out of the night comes troubling lute music, And we cry out, asking the singer's name, And get this answer: 'Many a one Brought me rich presents; my hair was full of jade, And my slashed skirts, drenched in expensive dyes, Were dipped in crimson, sprinkled with rare wines. I was well taught my arts at Ga-ma-rio, And then one year I faded out and married.' The lute-bowl hid her face. We heard her weeping." Society, her sparrows, Venus' sparrows, and Catullus Hung on the phrase (played with it as Mallarme Played for a fan, "Reveuse pour que je plonge,"); Wrote out his crib from Sappho: "God's peer that man is in my sight -- Yea, and the very gods are under him, Who sits opposite thee, facing thee, near thee, Gazing his fill and hearing thee, And thou smilest. Woe to me, with Quenched senses, for when I look upon thee, Lesbia, There is nothing above me And my tongue is heavy, and along my veins Runs the slow fire, and resonant Thunders surge in behind my ears, And the night is thrust down upon me." That was the way of love, flamma dimanat. And in a year, "I love her as a father"; And scarce a year, "Your words are written in water"; And in ten moons, "Caelius, Lesbia illa -- That Lesbia, Caelius, our Lesbia, that Lesbia Whom Catullus once loved more Than his own soul and all his friends, Is now the drab of every lousy Roman." So much for him who puts his trust in woman. So the murk opens. Dordoigne! When I was there, There came a centaur, spying the land, And there were nymphs behind him. Or going on the road by Salisbury Procession on procession -- For that road was full of peoples, Ancient in various days, long years between them. Ply over ply of life still wraps the earth here. Catch at Dordoigne. Viscount St. Antoni In the warm damp of spring, Feeling the night air full of subtle hands, Plucks at a viol, singing: "As the rose -- Si com, si com" -- they all begin "si com." "For as the rose in trellis Winds in and through and over, So is your beauty in my heart, that is bound through and over. So lay Queen Venus in her house of glass, The pool of worth thou art, Flood-land of pleasure." But the Viscount Pena Went making war into an hostile country Where he was wounded: "The news held him dead." St. Antoni in favor, and the lady Ready to hold his hands -- This last report upset the whole convention. She rushes off to church, sets up a gross of candles, Pays masses for the soul of Viscount Pena. Thus St. Circ has the story: "That sire Raimon Jordans, of land near Caortz, Lord of St. Antoni, loved this Viscountess of Pena 'Gentle' and 'highly prized.' And he was good at arms and bos trobaire, And they were taken with love beyond all measure," And then her husband was reported dead, "And at this news she had great grief and sorrow," And gave the church such wax for his recovery, That he recovered, and "At this news she had great grief and teen," And fell to moping, dismissed St. Antoni; "Thus was there more than one in deep distress." So ends that novel. And the blue Dordoigne Stretches between white cliffs, Pale as the background of a Leonardo. "As rose in trellis, that is bound over and over," A wasted song? No Elis, Lady of Montfort, Wife of William a Gordon, heard of the song, Sent him her mild advances. Gordon? Or Gourdon Juts into the sky Like a thin spire, Blue night's pulled down around it Like tent flaps, or sails close hauled. When I was there, La noche de San Juan, a score of players Were walking about the streets in masquerade, With pikes and paper helmets, and the booths, Were scattered align, the rag ends of the fair. False arms! True arms? You think a tale of lances . . . A flood of people storming about Spain! My cid rode up to Burgos, Up to the studded gate between two towers, Beat with his lance butt. A girl child of nine, Comes to a little shrine-like platform in the wall, Lisps out the words, a-whisper, the King's writ: "Let no man speak to Diaz or give him help or food On pain of death, his eyes torn out, His heart upon a pike, his goods sequestered." He from Bivar, cleaned out, From empty perches of dispersed hawks, From empty presses, Came riding with his company up the great hill -- "Afe Minaya!" -- to Burgos in the spring, And thence to fighting, to down-throw of Moors, And to Valencia rode he, by the beard! -- Muy velida. Of onrush of lances, Of splintered staves, riven and broken casques, Dismantled castles, of painted shields split up, Blazons hacked off, piled men and bloody rivers; Then "sombre light upon reflecting armor" And portents in the wind, when De las Nieblas Set out to sea-fight, "Y dar neuva lumbre las armas y hierros." Full many a fathomed sea-change in the eyes That sought with him the salt sea victories. Another gate? And Kumasaka's ghost come back to tell The honor of the youth who'd slain him. Another gate. The kernelled walls of Toro, las almenas; Afield, a king come in an unjust cause. Atween the chinks aloft flashes the armored figure, Muy linda, a woman, Helen, a star, Lights the king's features . . . "No use, my liege -- She is your highness' sister," breaks in Ancures; "Mal fuego s'enciende!" Such are the gestes of war "told over and over." And Ignez? Was a queen's tire-woman, Court sinecure, the court of Portugal; And the young prince loved her -- Pedro, Later called the cruel. And other courtiers were jealous. Two of them stabbed her with the king's connivance, And he, the prince, kept quiet a space of years -- Uncommon the quiet. And he came to reign, and had his will upon the dagger-players, And held his court, a wedding ceremonial -- He and her dug-up corpse in cerements Crowned with the crown and splendor of Portugal. A quiet evening and a decorous procession; Who winked at murder kisses the dead hand, Does leal homage, "Que depois de ser morta foy Rainha." Dig up Camoens, hear out his resonant bombast: "That among the flowers, As once was Proserpine, Gatheredst thy soul's light fruit and every blindness, Thy Enna the flary mead-land of Mondego, Long art thou sung by maidens in Mondego." What have we now of her, his "linda Ignez"? Houtmans in jail for debt in Lisbon -- how long after? -- Contrives a company, the Dutch eat Portugal, Follow her ship's tracks, Roemer Vischer's daughters, Talking some Greek, dally with glass engraving; Vondel, the Eglantine, Dutch Renaissance -- The old tale out of fashion, daggers gone; And Gaby wears Braganza on her throat -- Commuted, say, another public pearl Tied to a public gullet. Ah, mon reve, It happened; and now go think -- Another crown, thrown to another dancer, brings you to modern times? I knew a man, but where 'twas is no matter: Born on a farm, he hankered after painting; His father kept him at work; No luck -- he married and got four sons; Three died, the fourth he sent to Paris -- Ten years of Julian's and the ateliers, Ten years of life, his pictures in the salons, Name coming in the press. And when I knew him, Back once again, in middle Indiana, Acting as usher in the theatre, Painting the local drug-shop and soda bars, The local doctor's fancy for the mantel-piece; Sheep -- jabbing the wool upon their flea-bit backs -- The local doctor's ewe-ish pastoral; Adoring Puvis, giving his family back What they had spent for him, talking Italian cities, Local excellence at Perugia, dreaming his renaissance, Take my Sordello! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...ABU SALAMMAMM - A SONG OF EMPIRE by EZRA POUND HOMAGE TO SEXTUS PROPERTIUS: 10 by EZRA POUND HOMAGE TO SEXTUS PROPERTIUS: 11 by EZRA POUND |
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