A Creative Friendship
By HENRY REGNERY
It may be a
source of some pride to those of us fated to live out our lives as Americans
that the three men who probably had the greatest influence on English
literature in our century were all born on this side of the Atlantic. One of
them, Wyndham Lewis, to be sure, was born on a yacht anchored in a harbor in
Nova Scotia, but his father was an American, served as an officer in the Union
Army in the Civil War, and came from a family that has been established here
for many generations. The other two were as American in background and
education as it is possible to be. Our pride at having produced men of such
high achievement should be considered against the fact that all three spent
their creative lives in Europe. For Wyndham Lewis the decision was made for him
by his mother, who hustled him off to Europe at the age of ten, but he chose to
remain in Europe, and to study in Paris rather than to accept the invitation of
his father to go to Cornell, and except for an enforced stay in Canada during
World War II, spent his life in Europe. The other two, Ezra Pound and T.S.
Eliot, went to Europe as young men out of college, and it was a part of
European, not American, cultural life that they made their contribution to
literature. Lewis was a European in training, attitude and point of view, but
Pound and Eliot were Americans, and Pound, particularly, remained aggressively
American; whether living in London or Italy his interest in American affairs never
waned.
The lives and
achievements of these three men were closely connected. They met as young
men, each was influenced and helped by the other two, and they remained
friends, in spite of occasional differences, for the rest of their lives. Many
will remember the picture in Time of Pound as a very old man
attending the memorial service in Westminster Abbey in 1965 for T.S. Eliot.
When Lewis, who had gone blind, was unable to read the proofs of his latest
book, it was his old friend, T.S. Eliot who did it for him, and when Pound was
confined in St. Elizabeth’s in Washington, Eliot and Lewis always kept
in close touch with him, and it was at least partly through Eliot’s influence
that he was finally released. The lives and association of these three men,
whose careers started almost at the same time shortly before World War I are an
integral part of the literary and cultural history of this century.
The careers of
all three may be said, in a certain way, to have been launched by the
publication of Lewis’ magazine Blast. Both Lewis and Pound had been published before and
had made something of a name for themselves in artistic and literary circles in
London, but it was the publication in June, 1914, of the first issue of Blast that
put them, so to speak, in the center of the stage. The first Blast contained
160 pages of text, was well printed on heavy paper, its format large, the typography
extravagant, and its cover purple. It contained illustrations, many by Lewis,
stories by Rebecca West and Ford Maddox Ford, poetry by Pound and others, but it is chiefly
remembered for its “Blasts” and “Blesses” and its manifestos. It was in this
first issue of Blast that “vorticism,” the new art form, was announced, the name having
been invented by Pound. Vorticism was supposed to express the idea that art
should represent the present, at rest, and at the greatest concentration of
energy, between past and future. “There is no Present – there is Past and
Future, and there is Art,” was a vorticist slogan. English humour and its
“first cousin and accomplice, sport” were blasted, as were “sentimental
hygienics,” Victorian liberalism, the Royal Academy, the Britannic aesthete;
Blesses were reserved for the seafarer, the great ports, for Shakespeare “for
his bitter Northern rhetoric of humour” and Swift “for his solemn, bleak wisdom
of laughter”; a special bless, as if in anticipation of our hairy age, was
granted the hairdresser. Its purpose, Lewis wrote many years later, was to
exalt “formality and order, at the expense of the disorderly and the unkempt.
It is merely a humorous way,” he went on to say, “of stating the classic
standpoint as against the romantic.”
The second, and
last, issue of Blast appeared in July, 1915, by which time
Lewis was serving in the British army. This issue again contained essays, notes
and editorial comments by Lewis and poetry by Pound, but displayed little of
the youthful exuberance of the first – the editors and contributors were too
much aware of the suicidal bloodletting taking place in the trenches of
Flanders and France for that. The second issue, for example, contained, as did
the first, a contribution by the gifted young sculptor Gaudier-Brzeska, together with the announcement that he had been
killed while serving in the French army.
Between the two
issues of Blast, Eliot had arrived in London via Marburg and
Oxford, where he had been studying for a degree in philosophy. He met Pound
soon after his arrival, and through Pound, Wyndham Lewis. Eliot’s meeting of
Pound, who promptly took him under his wing, had two immediate consequences –
the publication in Chicago of Prufrock in Harriet Monroe’s Poetry magazine,
and the appearance of two other poems a month or two later in Blast.
The two issues of Blast established Lewis as a major figure:
as a brilliant polemicist and a critic of the basic assumptions and
intellectual position of his time, two roles he was never to surrender. Pound
had played an important role in Blast, but Lewis was the moving
force. Eliot’s role as a contributor of two poems to the second issue was
relatively minor, but the enterprise brought them together, and established an
association and identified them with a position in the intellectual life of
their time which was undoubtedly an important factor in the development and
achievement of all three.
Lewis was born
in 1882 on a yacht, as was mentioned before, off the coast of Nova Scotia.
Pound was born in 1885 in Hailey, Idaho, and Eliot in 1888 in St. Louis. Lewis
was brought up in England by his mother, who had separated from his father, was
sent to various schools, the last one Rugby, from which he was dropped, spent several years at an
art school in London, the Slade, and then went to the
continent, spending most of the time in Paris where he studied art, philosophy
under Bergson and others, talked, painted and wrote. He returned to England to
stay in 1909. It was in the following year that he first met Ezra Pound, in the
Vienna Cafe in London. Pound, he wrote many years later, didn’t greatly appeal
to him at first – he seemed overly sure of himself and not a little
presumptuous. His first impression, he said, was of “a bombastic galleon,
palpably bound to or from, the Spanish Main,” but, he discovered, “beneath its
skull and cross-bones, intertwined with fleur de lis and
spattered with star-spangled oddities, a heart of gold.” As Lewis became better
acquainted with Pound he found, as he wrote many years later, that “this
theatrical fellow was one of the best.” And he went on to say, “I still regard
him as one of the best, even one of the best poets.”
By the time of
this meeting, Lewis was making a name for himself, not only as a writer, but
also an artist. He had exhibited in London with some success, and shortly
before his meeting with Pound, Ford Maddox Ford had accepted a group of stories
for publication in the English Review, stories he had written while still in France
in which some of the ideas appeared which he was to develop in the more than
forty books that were to follow.
But how did Ezra
Pound, this young American poet who was born in Hailey, Idaho, and looked,
according to Lewis, like an “acclimatized Buffalo Bill,” happen to be in the
Vienna Cafe in London in 1910, and what was he doing there? The influence of
Idaho, it must be said at once, was slight, since Pound’s family had taken him
at an early age to Philadelphia, where his father was employed as an assayer in
the U.S. mint. The family lived first in West Philadelphia, then in Jenkintown,
and when Ezra was about six bought a comfortable house in Wyncote, where he
grew up. He received good training in private schools, and a considerable proficiency
in Latin, which enabled him to enter the University of Pennsylvania shortly
before reaching the age of sixteen. It was at this time, he was to write some
twenty years later, that he made up his mind to become a poet. He decided at
that early age that by the time he was thirty he would know more about poetry
than any man living. The poetic “impulse”, he said, came from the gods, but
technique was man’s responsibility, and he was determined to master it. After
two years at Pennsylvania, he transferred to Hamilton, from which he graduated
with a Ph.B. two years later. His college years, in spite of his assertions to
the contrary, must have been stimulating and developing – he received excellent
training in languages, read widely and well, made some friends, including William Carlos Williams, and wrote poetry. After
Hamilton he went back to Pennsylvania to do graduate work, where he studied
Spanish literature, Old French, Provencal, and Italian. He was granted an M.A.
by Pennsylvania in 1906 and a Fellowship in Romantics, which gave him enough
money for a summer in Europe, part of which he spent studying in the British
museum and part in Spain. The Prado made an especially strong impression on him
– thirty years later he could still describe the pictures in the main gallery
and recall the exact order in which they were hung. He left the University of
Pennsylvania in 1907, gave up the idea of a doctorate, and after one semester
teaching at Wabash College in Crawfordsville, Indiana, went to Europe, to
return to his native land only for longer or shorter visits, except for the
thirteen years he was confined in St. Elizabeth’s in Washington.
Pound’s short
stay at Wabash College was something of a disaster – he found
Crawfordsville, Indiana, confining and dull, and Crawfordsville, in 1907, found
it difficult to adjust itself to a Professor of Romance Languages who wore a
black velvet jacket, a soft-collared shirt, flowing bow tie, patent leather
pumps, carried a malacca cane, and drank rum in his tea. The crisis came when
he allowed a stranded chorus girl he had found in a snow storm to sleep in his
room. It was all quite innocent, he insisted, but Wabash didn’t care for his
“bohemian ways,” as the President put it, and was glad for the excuse to be rid
of him. He wrote some good poetry while at Wabash and made some friends, but
was not sorry to leave, and was soon on his way to Europe, arriving in Venice,
which he had visited before, with just eighty dollars.
While in Venice
he arranged to have a group of his poems printed under the title A Lume
Spento. This was in his preparation for his assault on London, since he
believed, quite correctly, that a poet would make more of an impression with a
printed book of his poetry under his arm than some pages of an unpublished
manuscript. He stayed long enough in Venice to recover from the disaster of
Wabash and to gather strength and inspiration for the next step, London, where
he arrived with nothing more than confidence in himself, three pounds, and the
copies of his book of poems. He soon arranged to give a series of lectures at
the Polytechnic on the Literature of Southern Europe, which gave him a little
money, and to have the Evening Standard review his book of
poetry, the review ending with the sentence, “The unseizable magic of poetry is
in this queer paper volume, and words are no good in describing it.” He managed
to induce Elkin Mathews to publish another small collection, the first
printing of which was one hundred copies and soon sold out, then a larger
collection, Personae, the Polytechnic engaged him for a more
ambitious series of lectures, and he began to meet people in literary circles,
including T.E. Hulme, John Butler Yeats, and Ford Maddox Ford, who published his
“Ballad of the Goodley Fere” in the English Review. His book on
medieval Latin poetry, The Spirit of Romance, which is still in
print, was published by Dent in 1910. The Introduction to this book contains
the characteristic line, “The history of an art is the history of masterworks,
not of failures or of mediocrity.” By the time the first meeting with Wyndham Lewis
took place in the Vienna Cafe, then, which was only two years after Pound’s
rather inauspicious arrival in London, he was, at the age of 26, known to some
as a poet and had become a man of some standing.
It was Pound,
the discoverer of talent, the literary impresario, as I have said, who brought
Eliot and Lewis together. Eliot’s path to London was as circuitous as Pound’s,
but, as one might expect, less dramatic. Instead of Crawfordsville, Indiana,
Eliot had spent a year at the Sorbonne after a year of graduate work at
Harvard, and was studying philosophy at the University of Marburg with the
intention of obtaining a Harvard Ph.D. and becoming a professor, as one of his
teachers at Harvard, Josiah Royce, had encouraged him to do, but the war intervened,
and he went to Oxford. Conrad Aiken, one of his closest friends at Harvard, had tried
earlier, unsuccessfully, to place several of Eliot’s poems with an English
publisher, had met Pound, and had given Eliot a latter of introduction to him.
The result of that first meeting with Pound are well known – Pound wrote
instantly to Harriet Monroe in Chicago, for whose new magazine, Poetry,
he had more or less been made European editor, as follows: “An American called
Eliot called this P.M. I think he has some sense tho’ he has not yet sent me
any verse.” A few weeks later Eliot, while still at Oxford, sent him the
manuscript of The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock. Pound was
ecstatic, and immediately transmitted his enthusiasm to Miss Monroe. It was he
said, “the best poem I have yet had or seen from an American. Pray God
it be not a single and unique success.” Eliot, Pound went on to say, was
“the only American I know of who has made an adequate preparation for writing.
He has actually trained himself and modernized himself on
his own.” Pound sent Prufrock to Miss Monroe in October,
1914, with the words, “The most interesting contribution I’ve had from an
American. P.S. Hope you’ll get it in soon.” Miss Monroe had
her own ideas – Prufrock was not the sort of poetry she thought
young Americans should be writing; she much preferred Vachel Lindsey, whose The Firemen’s
Ball she had published in the June issue. Pound, however, was not to
be put off; letter followed importuning letter, until she finally surrendered
and in the June, 1915, issue of Poetry, now a collector’s item of
considerable value, the poem appeared which begins:
Let us go then,
you and I,
When the evening
is spread out against the sky
Like a patient
etherized upon a table …
It was not,
needless to say, to be the “single and unique success” Pound had feared, but
the beginning of one of the great literary careers of this century. The
following month the two poems appeared in Blast. Eliot had written
little or nothing for almost three years. The warm approval and stimulation of
Pound plus, no doubt, the prospect of publication, encouraged him to go on. In
October Poetry published three more new poems, and later in
the year Pound arranged to have Elkin Matthews, who had published his two books
of poetry to bring out a collection which he edited and called The Catholic Anthology which contained the
poems that had appeared in Poetry and one of the two from Blast.
The principal reason for the whole anthology, Pound remarked, “was to get
sixteen pages of Eliot printed in England.”
If all had gone
according to plan and his family’s wishes, Eliot would have returned to
Harvard, obtained his Ph.D., and become a professor. He did finish his thesis –
“To please his parents,” according to his second wife, Valerie Eliot, but dreaded the prospect of
a return to Harvard. It didn’t require much encouragement from Pound,
therefore, to induce him to stay in England – it was Pound, according to his
biographer Noel Stock“who saved Eliot for poetry.”
Eliot left Oxford at the end of the term in June, 1915, having in the meantime
married Vivien Haigh-Wood. That Fall he took a job as a teacher in a
boy’s school at a salary of £140 a year, with dinner. He supplemented his
salary by book reviewing and occasional lectures, but it was an unproductive,
difficult period for him, his financial problems increased by the illness of
his wife. After two years of teaching he took a position in a branch of Lloyd’s
bank in London, hoping that this would give him sufficient income to live on,
some leisure for poetry, and a pension for his wife should she outlive him.
Pound at this period fared better than Eliot – he wrote music criticism for a
magazine, had some income from other writing and editorial projects, which was
supplemented by the small income of his wife, Dorothy Shakespear and occasional checks from his father. He also
enjoyed a more robust constitution that Eliot, who eventually broke down under
the strain and was forced, in 1921, to take a rest cure in Switzerland. It was
during this three-month stay in Switzerland that he finished the first draft of The
Waste Land, which he immediately brought to Pound. Two years before, Pound
had taken Eliot on a walking tour in France to restore his health, and besides
getting Eliot published, was trying to raise a fund to give him a regular
source of income, a project he called “Bel Esprit.” In a latter to John Quinn, the New York lawyer who used his money, perceptive
critical judgment and influence to help writers and artists, Pound, referring
to Eliot, wrote, “It is a crime against literature to let him waste eight hours
vitality per diem in that bank.” Quinn agreed to subscribe to the fund, but it
became a source of embarrassment to Eliot who put a stop to it.
The Waste Land marked the high point of
Eliot’s literary collaboration with Pound. By the time Eliot had brought him
the first draft of the poem, Pound was living in Paris, having left London, he
said, because “the decay of the British Empire was too depressing a spectacle
to witness at close range.” Pound made numerous suggestions for changes,
consisting largely of cuts and rearrangements. In a latter to Eliot explaining
one deletion he wrote, “That is 19 pages, and let us say the longest poem in
the English langwidge. Don’t try to bust all records by prolonging it three
pages further.” A recent critic described the processes as one of pulling “a
masterpiece out of a grabbag of brilliant material”; Pound himself described
his participation as a “Caesarian operation.” However described, Eliot was
profoundly grateful, and made no secret of Pound’s help. In his
characteristically generous way, Eliot gave the original manuscript to Quinn,
both as a token for the encouragement Quinn had given to him, and for the
further reason, as he put it in a letter to Quinn, “that this manuscript is
worth preserving in its present form solely for the reason that it is the only
evidence of the difference which his [Pound’s] criticism has made to the poem.”
For years the manuscript was thought to have been lost, but it was recently
found among Quinn’s papers which the New York Public Library acquired some
years after his death, and now available in a facsimile edition.
The first
publication of The Waste Land was in the first issue of
Eliot’s magazine Criterion, October, 1922. The following
month it appeared in New York in The Dial. Quinn arranged for its
publication in book form by Boni and Liveright, who brought it out in November. The first
printing of one thousand was soon sold out, and Eliot was given the Dial award
of the two thousand dollars. Many were puzzled by The Waste Land,
one reviewer even thought that Mr. Eliot might be putting over a hoax, but
Pound was not alone in recognizing that in his ability to capture the essence
of the human condition in the circumstances of the time, Eliot had shown
himself, in The Waste Land, to be a poet. To say that the poem is
merely a reflection of Eliot’s unhappy first marriage, his financial worries
and nervous breakdown is far too superficial. The poem is a reflection, not of
Eliot, but of the aimlessness, disjointedness, sordidness of contemporary life.
In itself, it is in no way sick or decadent; it is a wonderfully evocative
picture of the situation of man in the world as it is. Another poet, Kathleen Raine, writing many years after the
first publication of The Waste Land on the meaning of Eliot’s
early poetry to her generation, said it
…enabled us to
know our generation imaginatively. All those who have lived in the Waste Land
of London can, I suppose, remember the particular occasion on which, reading
T.S. Eliot’s poems for the first time, an experience of the contemporary world
that had been nameless and formless received its apotheosis.
Eliot sent one
of the first copies he received of the Boni and Liveright edition to Ezra Pound
with the inscription “for E.P. miglior fabbro from T.S.E. Jan. 1923.” His first
volume of collected poetry was dedicated to Pound with the same inscription,
which came from Dante and means, “the better marker.” Explaining this dedication
Eliot wrote in 1938:
I wished at that
moment to honour the technical mastery and critical ability manifest in
[Pound’s] . . . work, which had also done so much to turn The Waste
Land from a jumble of good and bad passages into a poem.
Pound and Eliot
remained in touch with each other – Pound contributed frequently to the Criterion, and
Eliot, through his position at Faber and Faber, saw many of Pounds’ books
through publication and himself selected and edited a collection of Pound’s
poetry, but there was never again that close collaboration which had
characterized their association from their first meeting in London in 1914 to
the publication of The Waste Land in the form given it by
Pound in 1922.
As has already
been mentioned, Pound left London in 1920 to go to Paris, where he stayed on
until about 1924 – long enough for him to meet many people and for the force of
his personality to make itself felt. He and his wife were frequent visitors to
the famous bookshop, Shakespeare and Co. run by the young American Sylvia Beach, where Pound, among other
things, made shelves, mended chairs, etc.; he also was active gathering
subscriptions for James Joyces’ Ulysses when Miss Beach took
over its publication. The following description by Wyndham Lewis of an
encounter with Pound during the latter’s Paris days is worth repeating. Getting
no answer after ringing the bell of Pound’s flat, Lewis walked in and
discovered the following scene:
A splendidly
built young man, stripped to the waist, and with a torso of dazzling white, was
standing not far from me. He was tall, handsome and serene, and was repelling
with his boxing gloves – I thought without undue exertion – a hectic assault of
Ezra’s. After a final swing at the dazzling solar plexus (parried effortlessly
by the trousered statue) Pound fell back upon the settee. The young man was
Hemingway.
Pound, as is
well known, took Hemingway in hand, went over his manuscripts, cut out
superfluous words as was custom, and helped him find a publisher, a service he
had performed while still in London for another young American, Robert Frost.
In a letter to Pound, written in 1933, Hemingway acknowledged the help Pound
had given him by saying that he had learned more about “how to write and how
not to write” from him “than from any son of a bitch alive, and he always said
so.”
When we last saw
Lewis, except for his brief encounter with Pound and Hemingway wearing boxing
gloves, he had just brought out the second issues of Blast and
gone off to the war to end all war. He served for a time at the front in an
artillery unit, and was then transferred to a group of artists who were
supposed to devote their time to painting and drawing “the scene of war,” as
Lewis put it, a scheme which had been devised by Lord Beaverbrook, through
whose intervention Lewis received the assignment. He hurriedly finished a
novel, Tarr, which was published during the war, largely as a
result of Pound’s intervention, in Harriet Shaw Weaver’s magazine The Egoist, and in book
form after the war had ended. It attracted wide attention; Rebecca West, for
example, called it “A beautiful and serious work of art that reminds one of
Dostoevsky.” By the early twenties, Lewis, as the editor of Blast,
the author of Tarr and a recognized artist was an established
personality, but he was not then, and never became a part of the literary and
artistic establishment, nor did he wish to be.
For the first
four years following his return from the war and recovery from a serious
illness that followed it little was heard from Lewis. He did bring out two
issues of a new magazine, The Tyro, which contained contributions
from T.S. Eliot, Herbert Read and himself, and contributed occasionally to the Criterion,
but it was a period, for him, of semi-retirement from the scene of battle,
which he devoted to perfecting his style as a painter and to study. It was
followed by a torrent of creative activity – two important books on
politics, The Art of Being Ruled (1926) and The Lion
and the Fox (1927), a major philosophical work, Time and
Western Man (1927), followed by a collection of stories, The
Wild Body (1927) and the first part of a long novel, Childermass (1928).
In 1928, he brought out a completely revised edition of his wartime novel Tarr,
and if all this were not enough, he contributed occasionally to the Criterion,
engaged in numerous controversies, painted and drew. In 1927 he founded another
magazine, The Enemy, of which only three issues appeared, the last
in 1929. Lewis, of course, was “the Enemy.” He wrote in the first issue:
The names we
remember in European literature are those of men who satirised and attacked,
rather than petted and fawned upon, their contemporaries. Only this time
exacts an uncritical hypnotic sleep of all within it.
One of Lewis’
best and most characteristic books is Time and Western Man; it
is in this book that he declared war, so to speak, on what he considered the
dominant intellectual position of the twentieth century – the philosophy of
time, the school of philosophy, as he described it, for which “time and change
are the ultimate realities.” It is the position which regards everything as
relative, all reality a function of time. “The Darwinian theory and all the
background of nineteenth century thought was already behind it,” Lewis wrote,
and further “scientific” confirmation was provided by Einstein’s theory of
relativity. It is a position, in Lewis’ opinion, which is essentially romantic,
“with all that word conveys in its most florid, unreal, inflated,
self-deceiving connotation.”
The ultimate
consequence of the time philosophy, Lewis argued, is the degradation of man.
With its emphasis on change, man, the man of the present, living man for the
philosophy of time ends up as little more than a minute link in the endless
process of progressive evolution –lies not in what he is, but in what
he as a species, not an individual, may become. As Lewis put it:
You, in
imagination, are already cancelled by those who will perfect you in the
mechanical time-scale that stretches out, always ascending, before us. What do
you do and how you live has no worth in itself. You are an inferior,
fatally, to all the future.
Against this
rather depressing point of view, which deprives man of all individual worth,
Lewis offers the sense of personality, “the most vivid and fundamental sense we
possess,” as he describes it. It is this sense that makes man unique; it alone
makes creative achievement possible. But the sense of personality, Lewis points
out, is essentially one of separation, and to maintain such separation from
others requires, he believes, a personal God. As he expressed it: “In our
approaches to God, in consequence, we do not need to “magnify” a human body,
but only to intensify that consciousness of a separated and transcendent life.
So God becomes the supreme symbol of our separation and our limited
transcendence….It is, then, because the sense of personality is posited as our
greatest “real”, that we require a “God”, a something that is nothing but a person,
secure in its absolute egoism, to be the rationale of this sense.”
It is exactly
“our separation and our limited transcendence” that the time philosophy denies
us; its God is not, in Lewis’ words “a perfection already existing, eternally
there, of which we are humble shadows,” but a constantly emerging God, the
perfection toward which man is thought to be constantly striving. Appealing as
such a conception may on its surface appear to be, this God we supposedly
attain by our strenuous efforts turns out to be a mocking God; “brought out
into the daylight,” Lewis said, “it would no longer be anything more than a
somewhat less idiotic you.”
In Time
and Western Man Lewis publicly disassociated himself from Pound, Lewis
having gained the erroneous impression, apparently, that Pound had become
involved in a literary project of some kind with Gertrude Stein, whom Lewis hated with all
the considerable passion of which he was capable. To Lewis, Gertrude Stein,
with her “stuttering style” as he called it, was the epitomy of “time
philosophy” in action. The following is quoted by Lewis is in another of his
books, The Diabolical Principle, and comes from a magazine
published in Paris in 1925 by the group around Gertrude Stein; it is quoted
here to give the reader some idea of the reasons for Lewis’ strong feelings on
the subject of Miss Stein:
If we have a
warm feeling for both (the Superrealists) and the Communists, it is because the
movements which they represent are aimed at the destruction of a thoroughly
rotten structure … We are entertained intellectually, if not physically, with
the idea of (the) destruction (of contemporary society). But … our interests
are confined to literature and life … It is our purpose purely and
simply to amuse ourselves.
The thought that
Pound would have associated himself with a group expounding ideas on this level
of irresponsibility would be enough to cause Lewis to write him off forever,
but it wasn’t true; Pound had met Gertrude Stein once or twice during his stay
in Paris, but didn’t get on with her, which isn’t at all surprising. Pound also
didn’t particularly like Paris, and in 1924 moved to Rapallo, a small town on
the Mediterranean a few miles south of Genoa, where he lived until his arrest
by the American authorities at the end of World War II.
In an essay
written for Eliot’s sixtieth birthday, Lewis had the following to say about the
relationship between Pound and Eliot:
It is not secret
that Ezra Pound exercised a very powerful influence upon Mr. Eliot. I do not
have to define the nature of this influence, of course. Mr. Eliot was lifted
out of his lunar alley-ways and fin de siecle nocturnes, into
a massive region of verbal creation in contact with that astonishing didactic
intelligence, that is all.
Lewis’ own
relationship with Pound was of quite a different sort, but during the period
from about 1910 to 1920, when Pound left London, was close, friendly, and
doubtless stimulating to both. During Lewis’ service in the army, Pound looked
after Lewis’ interests, arranged for the publication of his articles, tried to
sell his drawings, they even collaborated in a series of essays, written in the
form of letters, but Lewis, who in any case was inordinately suspicious, was
quick to resent Pound’s propensity to literary management. After Pound settled
in Rapallo they corresponded only occasionally, but in 1938, when Pound was in
London, Lewis made a fine portrait of him, which hangs in the Tate Gallery. In
spite of their occasional differences and the rather sharp attack on Pound in Time
and Western Man, they remained friends, and Lewis’ essay for Eliot’s
sixtieth birthday, which was written while Pound was still confined in St.
Elizabeth’s, is devoted largely to Pound, to whom Lewis pays the following
tribute:
So, for all his
queerness at times–ham publicity of self, misreading of part of poet in
society–in spite of anything that may be said Ezra is not only himself a
great poet, but has been of the most amazing use to other people. Let it not be
forgotten for instance that it was he who was responsible for the
all-important contact for James Joyce–namely Miss
Weaver. It was his critical understanding, his generosity, involved in the
detection and appreciation of the literary genius of James Joyce. It was
through him that a very considerable sum of money was put at Joyce’s
disposal at the critical moment.
Lewis concludes
his comments on Pound with the following:
He was a man of
letters, in the marrow of his bones and down to the red rooted follicles of his
hair. He breathed Letters, ate Letters, dreamt Letters. A very rare kind of
man.
Two other
encounters during his London period had a lasting influence on Pound’s thought
and career–the Oriental scholar Ernest Fenollosa and Major Douglas, the founder of Social Credit. Pound met Douglas in
1918 in the office of The New Age, a magazine edited by Alfred H. Orage, and became an almost instant convert. From
that point on usury became an obsession with him, and the word
“usurocracy,” which he used to denote a social system based on money and
credit, an indispensable part of his vocabulary. Social Credit was doubtless
not the panacea Pound considered it to be, but that Major Douglas was
entirely a fool seems doubtful too, if the following quotation from him is
indicative of the quality of his thought:
I would .. make
the suggestion … that the first requisite of a satisfactory governmental
system is that it shall divest itself of the idea that it has a
mission to improve the morals or direct the philosophy of any
of its constituent citizens.
Ernest Fenollosa
was a distinguished Oriental scholar of American origin who had
spent many years in Japan, studying both Japanese and Chinese literature,
and had died in 1908. Pound met his widow in London in 1913, with the
result that she entrusted her husband’s papers to him, with her
authorization to edit and publish them as he thought best. Pound threw
himself into the study of the Fenollosa material with his usual energy,
becoming, as a result, an authority on the Japanese Noh drama and a lifelong
student of Chinese. He came to feel that the Chinese ideogram, because it was
never entirely removed from its origin in the concrete, had certain advantages
over the Western alphabet. Two years after receiving the Fenollosa
manuscripts, Pound published a translation of Chinese poetry under the
title Cathay. The Times Literary Supplement spoke
of the language of Pound’s translation as “simple, sharp, precise.” Ford
Maddox Ford, in a moment of enthusiasm, called Cathay “the most beautiful
book in the language.”
Pound made
other translations, from Provencal, Italian, Greek, and besides the book
of Chinese poetry, translated Confucius, from which the following is a
striking example, and represents a conception of the relationship between
the individual and society to which Pound attached great importance, and
frequently referred to in his other writing:
The men of old
wanting to clarify and diffuse throughout the empire that light which comes
from looking straight into the heart and then acting, first set up good
government in their own states; wanting good government in their states, they
first established order in their own families; wanting order in the home,
they first disciplined themselves; desiring self-discipline, they
rectified their own hearts; and wanting to rectify their hearts; they sought
precise verbal definitions of their inarticulate thoughts; wishing to attain
precise verbal definitions, they sought to extend their knowledge to the
utmost. This completion of knowledge is rooted in sorting things into organic
categories.
When things had
been classified in organic categories, knowledge moved toward fulfillment;
given the extreme knowable points, the inarticulate thoughts were defined
with precision. Having attained this precise verbal definition, they then
stabilized their hearts, they disciplined themselves; having attained
self-discipline, they set their own houses in order; having order in their own
homes, they brought good government to their own states; and when their
states were well governed, the empire was brought into equilibrium.
Pound’s major
poetic work is, of course, The Cantos, which he worked on over a
period of more than thirty years. One section, The Pisan Cantos,
comprising 120 pages and eleven cantos, was written while Pound was confined in
a U.S. Army detention camp near Pisa, for part of the time in a cage. Pound’s
biographer, Noel Stock, himself a poet and a competent critic, speaks of
the Pisan Cantos as follows:
They are
confused and often fragmentary; and they bear no relation structurally to the
seventy earlier cantos; but shot through by a rare sad light they tell of
things gone which somehow seem to live on, and are probably his best poetry.
In those few desperate months he was forced to return to that point within
himself where the human person meets the outside world of real things, and to
speak of what he found there. If at times the verse is silly, it is because in
himself Pound was often silly; if at times it is firm, dignified and
intelligent, it is because in himself Pound was often firm, dignified and
intelligent; if it is fragmentary and confused, it is because Pound was
never able to think out his position and did not know how the matters
with which he dealt were related; and if often lines and passages have a
beauty seldom equaled in the poetry of the twentieth century it is because
Pound had a true lyric gift.
As for the Cantos as
a whole, I am not competent to make even a comment, much less to pass
judgment. Instead I will quote the distinguished English critic Sir Herbert
Read on the subject:
I am not going
to deny that for the most part the Cantos present insuperable
difficulties for the impatient reader, but, as Pound says somewhere, “You
can’t get through hell in a hurry.” They are of varying length, but they
already amount to more than five hundred pages of verse and constitute the
longest, and without hesitation I would say the greatest, poetic achievement of
our time.
When The
Waste Land was published in 1922 Eliot was still working as a clerk in
a London bank and had just launched his magazine, The Criterion.
He left the bank in 1925 to join the newly organized publishing firm of Faber
and Gwyer, later to becomeFaber and Faber, which gave him the income he needed, leisure
for his literary pursuits and work that was congenial and appropriate.
One of his tasks at Fabers, it used to be said, was writing jacket
blurbs. His patience and helpfulness to young authors was well known–from personal
experience I can bear witness to his kindness to inexperienced publishers; his
friends, in fact, thought that the time he devoted to young authors he felt had
promise might have been better spent on his own work. In spite of the
demands on his time and energy, he continued to edit the Criterion,
the publication of which was eventually taken over by Faber. He attached
the greatest importance to the Criterion, as is evidenced by the
following from a letter to Lewis dated January 31, 1925 which is devoted
entirely to the Criterion and his wish for Lewis to
continue to write regularly for it, “Furthermore I am not an individual
but an instrument, and anything I do is in the interest of art and literature
and civilization, and is not a matter for personal compensation.” As it
worked out, Lewis wrote only occasionally for the Criterion,
not at all for every issue as Eliot had proposed in the letter referred to
above. The closeness of their association, however, in spite of occasional
differences, may be judged not only from Eliot’s wish to have something from
Lewis in every issue, but from the following from a letter to Eliot from
Lewis:
As I understand
with your paper that you are almost in the position I was in with Tyro and Blast I
will give you anything I have for nothing, as you did me, and am anxious to be
of use to you: for I know that every failure of an exceptional
attempt like yours with the Criterion means that the
chance of establishing some sort of critical standard here is diminished.
Pound also
contributed frequently to the Criterion, but at least pretended not
to think much of it–“… a magnificent piece of editing, i.e. for the
purpose of getting in to the Athenaeum Club, and becoming permanent,” he remarked on one
occasion. He, by the way, accepted some of the blame for what he
considered to be Eliot’s unduly cautious approach to criticism. In a letter to
the Secretary of the Guggenheim Foundation, written in 1925 to urge them
to extend financial assistance to Eliot and Lewis, he made the following
comment:
I may in some
measure be to blame for the extreme caution of his [Eliot’s] criticism. I
pointed out to him in the beginning that there was no use of two of us butting
a stone wall; that he’d never be as hefty a battering ram as I was, nor
as explosive as Lewis, and that he’d better try a more oceanic and fluid
method of sapping the foundations. He is now respected by the Times Lit.
Sup. But his criticism no longer arouses my interest.
What Pound, of
course, wished to “sap” was not the “foundations”of an ordered society,
but of established stupidity and mediocrity. The primary aim of all three,
Pound, Eliot and Lewis, each in his own way, was to defend civilized
values. For Eliot, the means to restore the health of Western
civilization was Christianity. In his essay The Idea of A Christian
Society he pointed out the dangers of the dominant liberalism of the
time, which he thought “must either proceed into a gradual decline of which we
can see no end, or reform itself into a positive shape which is likely to be
effectively secular.” To attain, or recover, the Christian society which
he thought was the only alternative to a purely secular society, he
recommended, among other things, a Christian education. The purpose of
such an education would not be merely to make people pious Christians, but
primarily, as he put it, “to train people to be able to think in Christian
categories.” The great mass of any population, Eliot thought, necessarily
occupied in the everyday cares and demands of life, could not be expected to
devote much time or effort to “thinking about the objects of faith,” their
Christianity must be almost wholly realized in behavior. For Christian
values, and the faith which supports them to survive there must be, he
thought, a “Community of Christians,” of people who would lead a
“Christian life on its highest social level.”
Eliot thought of
“the Community of Christians” not as “an organization, but a body of
indefinite outline, composed of both clergy and laity, of the more conscious,
more spiritually and intellectually developed of both.” It will be their
“identity of belief and aspiration, their background of a common culture,
which will enable them to influence and be influenced by each other, and
collectively to form the conscious mind and the conscience of the nation.” Like William Penn, Eliot didn’t think that the
actual form of government was as important as the moral level of the
people, for it is the general ethos of the people they have to govern, not
their own piety, that determines the behaviour of politicians.” For this
reason, he thought, “A nation’s system of education is much more
important than its system of government.”
When we consider
the very different personalities of these three men, all enormously
gifted, but quite different in their individual characteristics–Pound,
flamboyant, extravagant; Eliot, restrained, cautious; Lewis, suspicious,
belligerent–we can’t help but wonder how it was possible for three such men to
remain close friends from the time they met as young men until the ends of
their lives. Their common American background no doubt played some part in
bringing Pound and Eliot together, and they both shared certain characteristics
we like to think of as American: generosity, openness to others, a fresher,
more unencumbered attitude toward the past than is usual for a European, who,
as Goethe remarked, carries the burden of the quarrels of a long history. But
their close association, mutual respect and friendship were based on more than
their common origin on this side of the Atlantic. In their basic attitude
toward the spirit of their time, all three were outsiders; it was a time
dominated by a facile, shallow liberalism, which, as Eliot once remarked,
had “re- placed belief in Divine Grace” with “the myth of human
goodness.” Above all they were serious men, they were far more interested
in finding and expressing the truth than in success as the world understands
it. The English critic E. W. F. Tomlin remarked that a
characteristic of these three “was that they had mastered their subjects,
and were aware of what lay beyond them. The reading that went into Time
and Western Man alone exceeded the life-time capacity of many
so-called ‘scholars.’” The royalties Lewis earned from this book, one of the
most important of our time, which represented an immense amount of work and
thought of the highest order, didn’t amount to a pittance, but Lewis’ concern,
as he put it toward the end of his life, was for “the threat of extinction to
the cultural tradition of the West.” It was this mutual concern, on a
very high level, and an utterly serious attitude toward creative work
that brought them and held them together.
Why did Pound
and Eliot stay in Europe, and what might have happened to them if they had come
back to this country, as both were many times urged to do, or to Lewis if he
had gone to Cornell and stayed over here? In Pound’s case, the answer is
rather simple, and was given in essence by his experience in
Crawfordsville, Indiana, as a young man, and the treatment he received
following the war. There is no doubt that in making broadcasts on the Italian
radio during wartime he was technically guilty of treason; against this, it
seems to me, must be weighed the effect of the broadcasts, which was
zero, and his achievement as a poet and critic, which is immense. One can’t
expect magnanimity from any government, and especially not in the intoxication
of victory in a great war and overwhelming world power, but one might have
expected the academic and literary community to have protested the brutal
treatment meted out to Pound. It didn’t, nor was there any protest of his long
confinement in a mental institution except on the part of a few individuals;
his release was brought about largely as a result of protests from Europe, in
which Eliot played a substantial part. When, however, during his confinement in
St. Elizabeth’s, the Bollingen prize for poetry was given him for thePisan Cantos,
the liberal establishment reacted with the sort of roar one might have
expected had the Nobel Peace Prize been awarded to Adolf Hitler.
Lewis spent some
five years in Toronto during World War II, which, incidentally, provided him
with the background for one of his greatest novels, Self Condemned.
He was desperately hard up, and tried to get lecture engagements from a number
of universities, including the University of Chicago. A small Canadian
Catholic college was the only representative of the academic institutions
of North America to offer this really great, creative intelligence something
more substantial than an occasional lecture. Since his death, Cornell and the
University of Buffalo have spent large sums accumulating Lewis
material-manuscripts, letters, first editions, drawings, etc. When they could
have done something for Lewis himself, to their own glory and profit,
they ignored him.
The American
intellectual establishment, on the other hand, did not ignore the
Communist-apologist Harold Laski, who was afforded all the honors and respect at
its command, the Harold Laski who, in 1934, at the height of
Stalinism–mass arrests, millions in slave labor camps and all the rest–had
lectured at the Soviet Institute of Law.
Following his
return to England the Labour government gave Lewis, “the Enemy” of socialism,
as he called himself, a civil pension, and the BBC invited him to lecture
regularly on modern art and to write for its publication, The Listener.
He was even awarded an honorary degree by the University of Leeds. Can
anyone imagine CBS, for example, offering a position of any kind to a man
with Lewis’ unorthodox views, uncompromising intelligence, and ability to see
the world for what it is, the Ford Foundation offering him a grant, or
Harvard or Yale granting him an honorary degree? Harold Laski indeed yes, but
Wyndham Lewis? It is inconceivable.
The following
taken from letters from Ezra Pound, the first written in 1926 to Harriet
Monroe, and the second in 1934 to his old professor at the University of
Pennsylvania, Felix Schelling, puts the problem of the poet in America as he
saw it very graphically:
Poverty here is
decent and honourable. In America it lays one open to continuous insult on all
sides. . . Re your question is it any better abroad for authors: England
gives small pensions; France provides jobs. . . Italy is full of ancient
libraries; the jobs are quite comfortable, not very highly paid, but
are respectable, and can’t much interfere with the librarians’ time.
As for
“expatriated”? You know damn well the country wouldn’t feed me. The
simple economic fact that if I had returned to America I shd. have
starved, and that to maintain anything like the standard of living, or indeed
to live, in America from 1918 onwards I shd. have had to quadruple my
earnings, i.e. it wd. have been impossible for me to devote any time to my REAL
work.
Eliot, of
course, fared much better than Pound at the hands of the academy. As early
as 1932 he was invited to give the Charles Eliot Norton lectures at
Harvard, many universities honored themselves by awarding him honorary degrees,
he was given the Nobel Prize, etc. One can’t help but wonder, however, if
his achievement would have been possible if he had completed his Ph.D.
and become a Harvard professor. He wrote some of his greatest poetry and
founded the Criterion while still a bank clerk in London. One
can say with considerable justification that as a clerk in Lloyd’s Bank in
London Eliot had more opportunity for creative work and got more done than
would have been possible had he been a Harvard professor. It was done, of
course, at the cost of intensely hard work–in a letter to Quinn in the
early twenties he remarks that he was working such long hours that he
didn’t have time either for the barber or the dentist. But he had something to show for it.
It is
impossible, of course, to sum up the achievement of these three men. They were
very much a part of the time in which they lived, however much they rejected
its basic assumptions and point of view. Both Lewis and Eliot described
themselves as classicists, among other reasons, no doubt, because of the
importance they attached to order; Lewis at one time called Pound a
“revolutionary simpleton,” which in certain ways was probably justified, but in
his emphasis on “precise verbal definitions,” on the proper use of
language, Pound was a classicist too. All three, each in his own way, were
concerned with the health of society; Eliot founded the Criterion to
restore values; in such books as Time and Western Man, Paleface, The
Art of Being Ruled, Lewis was fighting for an intelligent understanding of
the nature of our civilization and of the forces he thought were undermining
it. The political books Lewis wrote in the thirties, for which he was violently
and unfairly condemned, were written not to promote fascism, as some
simple-minded critics have contended, but to point out that a repetition of
World War I would be even more catastrophic for civilization than the
first. In many of his political judgments Pound was undoubtedly completely
mistaken and irresponsible, but he would deserve an honored place in
literature only for his unerring critical judgment, for his ability to discern
quality, and for his encouragement at a critical point in the career of each of
such men as Joyce, Hemingway, Eliot, Frost, and then there are his
letters–letters of encouragement and criticism to aspiring poets, to
students, letters opening doors or asking for help for a promising writer, the
dozens of letters to Harriet Monroe. “Keep on remindin’ ’em that we ain’t
bolsheviks, but only the terrifyin’ voice of civilization, kultchuh,
refinement, aesthetic perception,” he wrote in one to Miss Monroe, and when she
wanted to retire, he wrote to her, “The intelligence of the nation [is] more
important than the comfort of any one individual or the bodily life of a whole
generation.” In a letter to H. L. Mencken thanking him for a copy of the latter’s In
Defense of Women, Pound remarked, almost as an afterthought, “What is wrong
with it, and with your work in general is that you have drifted into
writing for your inferiors.” Could anyone have put it more precisely? Whoever
wants to know what went on in the period from about 1910 to 1940, whatever he
may think of his politics or economics, or even his poetry, will have to
consult the letters of Ezra Pound–the proper function of the artist
in society, he thought, was to be “not only its intelligence, but its ‘nostrils
and antennae.’” And this, as his letters clearly show, Pound made a
strenuous and, more often than not, successful effort to be.
How much
of Lewis’ qualities were a result of his American heritage it would be
hard to say, but there can be no doubt that much in both Pound and Eliot came
from their American background. We may not have been able to give them what
they needed to realize their talents and special qualities, they may even have
been more resented than appreciated by many Americans, but that they did
have qualities and characteristics which were distinctly American there can be
no doubt. To this extent, at least, we can consider them an American
gift to the Old World. In one of Eliot’s most beautiful works, The
Rock, a “Pageant Play written on behalf of the forty-five churches
Fund of the Diocese of London,” as it says on the title page, there are the
lines, “I have said, take no thought of the harvest, but only of perfect
sowing.” In taking upon themselves the difficult, thankless task of being the
“terrifying voices of civilization” Eliot and his two friends, I am sure,
didn’t give much thought of the possible consequences to themselves, of
what there “might be in it for them,” but what better can one say of anyone’s
life than “He sowed better than he reaped?’’
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