Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Authors - Pound Ezra
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 2     21-40 of 110    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Pound Ezra:     more books (100)
  1. The Pisan Cantos by Ezra Pound, 2003-10
  2. The Later Cantos of Ezra Pound by James J. Wilhelm, 1977-01
  3. Ezra Pound: The Solitary Volcano by John Tytell, 2004-04-25
  4. Pound/Williams: Selected Letters of Ezra Pound and William Carlos Williams (Correspondence of Ezra Pound) by Ezra Pound, William Carlos Williams, et all 1996-10
  5. The Ezra Pound Encyclopedia
  6. "Ezra Pound Speaking": Radio Speeches of World War II (Contributions in American Studies) by Leonard W. Doob, 1978-06-30
  7. Ezra Pound among the Poets
  8. The Pound Era by Hugh Kenner, 1973-09-18
  9. The Chinese Written Character as a Medium for Poetry: A Critical Edition by Ernest Fenollosa, Ezra Pound, 2008-03-14
  10. Early Poems (Dover Thrift Editions) by Ezra Pound, 1996-02-02
  11. Modernism in the Second World War: The Later Poetry of Ezra Pound, T.S. Eliot, Basil Bunting and Hugh Macdiarmid by Keith Alldritt, 1990-06
  12. Selected Prose 1909-1965 (New Directions Paperbook) by Ezra Pound, 1975-03-01
  13. Confucius: The great digest & Unwobbling pivot by Ezra Pound, 1951
  14. Moscardino by Enrico Pea, 2005-01-01

21. Ezra Pound
work was the Cantos, which was published in ten sections between 1925 and 1969, and then as a onevolume collected edition, THE CANTOS OF ezra pound I-CXVII
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/epound.htm
Choose another writer in this calendar: by name:
A
B C D ... Z by birthday from the calendar Credits and feedback Ezra Loomis Pound (1885-1972) American poet and critic, often called "the poet's poet" because his profound influence on 20th century writing in English. Pound believed that poetry is the highest of arts. He challenged many of the common views of his time and spent 12 years in an American mental hospital. Pound major work was the Cantos , which was published in ten sections between 1925 and 1969, and then as a one-volume collected edition, THE CANTOS OF EZRA POUND I-CXVII (1970). Nancy where art thou?
Whither go all the vair and the cisclations
and the wave pattern runs in the stone
on the high parapet (Excideuil)
Mt Segur and the city of Dioce
Que tous les mois avons nouvelle lune
What the deuce has Herbiet (Christian)
done with his painting?

(from Canto LXXX, 1948) Ezra Pound was born in Hailey, Idaho. He was brought up in Wyncote, Philadelphia, where his father was assistant assayer for the US Mint. He studied languages at the University of Pennsylvania, and befriended there the young William Carlos Williams (1883-1963), who gained later fame as a poet in New York's avant-garde circles. From 1903 to 1906 Pound studied Anglo-Saxon and Romance languages at Hamilton College. In 1907 his teaching career was cut short at Wabash College in Crawfordsville, Indiana, when he had entertained an actress in his room. In 1908 he travelled widely in Europe, working as a journalist. His first book of poems, A LUME SPENTO, appeared in 1908. After its publication Pound settled in London, where he founded with Richard Aldington (1892-1962) and others the literary 'Imagism', and edited its first anthology

22. KYBERNEKYIA Ezra Pound's Canto LXXXI
if he descended) but in those days he did thumb sketches, impressions of the Velásquez in the Museo del Prado and books cost a peseta, brass candlesticks in proportion, hot wind came from the marshes
http://www.uncg.edu/eng/pound/canto.htm
KYBERNEKYIA
A Hypervortext of Ezra Pound's Canto LXXXI
Zeus lies in Ceres' bosom Taishan is attended of loves under Cythera , before sunrise and he said: (sounded catoli th ismo) and he said: "Yo creo que los reyes desaparecen" (Kings will, I think, disappear) That was in 1906 and 1917 or about 1917 and Dolores Sargent had painted her before he descended (i.e., if he descended) but in those days he did thumb sketches, impressions of the and books cost a peseta , brass candlesticks in proportion, hot wind came from the marshes and death-chill from the mountains. And later Bowers wrote: "but such hatred, I had never conceived such" and the London reds wouldn't show up his friends (i.e., friends of Franco working in London) and in forty years gone, they said: "Go back to the station to eat, you can sleep here for a peseta " goat bells tinkled all night and the hostess grinned: "Eso es luto, haw!

23. EPC/Ezra Pound Author Home Page
Photo © http//www.lit.kobeu.ac.jp/~hishika/ pound.htm. ezra pound
http://wings.buffalo.edu/epc/authors/pound
Ezra Pound
Online Works Send a Comment Search Home Electronic Poetry Center ( http://epc.buffalo.edu

24. Ezra Pound And The Occult
Omniformis Omnis intellectus est . There is remarkably little scholarship available analyzing the occult influence on ezra pound.
http://www.cwru.edu/artsci/engl/VSALM/mod/ballentine/
"Omniformis Omnis intellectus est" There is remarkably little scholarship available analyzing the occult influence on Ezra Pound. In many books and essays the occult is marginalized or avoided altogether. This project is attempting to bring to light the elements of the occult which affected Pound's writing. This site will also discuss the facets of the occult to which he did not subscribe. Utilizing the resources of the Internet, this project will attempt to make as much information available as possible in a user-friendly format. Throughout the paper the reader will have the option of linking to more extensive biographies on people who were in contact with and did influence Pound. Parenthetical notations will also be "anchored" to the appropriate resource on the bibliography page. In addition there is a "links" page available that offers direct access to other sites on Pound as well as the occult. Pound begins Canto 1 with an Odyssean character embarking on his journey. This begins the katabasis or the ritualistic descent that is an initiation into Pound's Cantos . Please click here to listen to Pound read the introduction to Canto 1 . Enjoy and welcome to the site.

25. Tra Prosodia E Immagine: Ezra Pound
Tra prosodia e immagine, un articolo di Nicola D'Ugo.
http://www.controluce.it/giornali/a09n03/perc_ezra_pound.htm
aggiornato il
Notizie in... Controluce
Mensile di cultura e attualità dei Castelli Romani e dintorni
Ottimizzato per risoluzione schermo 800x600 sei il visitatore n.
Versione digitale del mensile edito dall'Associazione Photo Club Controluce distribuito gratuitamente in 12.000 copie cartacee info indice giornali estratti agenda ...
Anno IX
PERCORSI NOVECENTESCHI Tra prosodia e immagine: Ezra Pound
Il celebre distico imagista di Ezra Pound «In a Station of the Metro» («In una stazione del métro») consiste di due soli versi in cui è posto un nesso analogico: «The apparition of these faces in the crowd;
Petals on a wet, black bough.»
Petali su un umido, nero ramo.»)
Per l'intero numero in formato pdf clicca su: Versione PDF
Se non disponi di acrobat Reader, puoi scaricarlo da:
info indice giornali estratti agenda ... home

26. McLuhan Studies Premiere Issue: On The Ezra Pound/Marshall McLuhan Correspondenc
At the University of Toronto.
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/mcluhan-studies/v1_iss1/1_1art11.htm
McLuhan Studies : Premiere Issue
Home Page
Next Article
Previous Article
Table of Contents
Author Index
Title Index
EDWIN J. BARTON
ON THE EZRA POUND/ MARSHALL MCLUHAN CORRESPONDENCE
The manifold appeals in The Laws of Media to literature and the structures of language, particularly the attention given to "language as a tool of investigation" in the chapter entitled "Media Poetics" (LOM 215-239), should remind us that Marshall McLuhan came to his studies of technology and media through the agency of literary and linguistic analysis. This background explains not only the accustomed recourses in his prose to certain fertile texts but also his insistence on viewing all media and/or technology as words having four-part or metaphorical structures. The question of how McLuhan arrived at this means of applying linguistic and literary analysis to the study of media is answered, in part, in his correspondence with Ezra Pound. The years during which Pound and McLuhan corresponded, 1948-57, were all but identical with the term of Pound's incarceration at St. Elizabeth's Hospital for the Criminally Insane. It is clear from his initial letter that McLuhan was primarily interested in matters of aesthetic theory and literary techniques: My friend Mr. Kenner and I are much looking forward to a visit and some talk with you about contemporary letters, and your work, in which we have long taken serious interest (31 May 1948).

27. Ezra Pound, America's Perfidious Poet
The expatriate literary giant ezra pound returned home after the war, and was charged with treason. From Smithsonian Magazine, Vol 26 number 9. The strange and inscrutable case of ezra pound. The
http://www.smithsonianmag.si.edu/smithsonian/issues95/dec95/pound.html
document.write(''); The strange and inscrutable case of Ezra Pound The expatriate American poet returned home in ignominy, and the postwar world watched as a literary giant was charged with treason Fifty years ago, the Department of Justice in Washington prepared to open what was expected to be one of the most sensational trials in American history. The expatriate American poet, considered by many to be the most influential bard of the 20th century, was brought home in ignominy in the autumn of 1945. Pound had made radio broadcasts on behalf of Italy's Fascist regime throughout the war. In the end, Pound ended up being declared insane and committed to St. Elizabeths asylum for almost 13 years. Author Robert Wernick chronicles this strange and inscrutable interlude, and takes us on a compelling journey into the world of 20th-century letters. For more information on this topic, see our Additional Sources page and explore the Archives of Smithsonian Magazine: Abstract of an article by Robert Wernick. Originally published in the December 1995 issue of

28. 20.10.00 / Pankraz, Ezra Pound Und Der Geistige Faschismus
Essay in Junge Freiheit, Die Wochenzeitung f¼r Politik und Kultur aus Berlin.
http://www.jf-archiv.de/archiv00/430yy52.htm
www.jungefreiheit.de 43/00 20. Oktober 2000
Pankraz
Ezra Pound und der geistige Faschismus Sprach- und Literaturwissenschaftler, die damit beginnen, eine geistige Bilanz des vergangenen zwanzigsten Jahrhunderts zu ziehen, machen eine Entdeckung, die viele von ihnen irritiert. Die absoluten Geistes-Stars dieser Epoche, so dämmert ihnen, waren Gegner der westlichen Technik- und Massenideologie und Gegner des Sozialismus bzw. Kommunismus gleichermaßen. Sie standen jenen Richtungen nahe, die man sich angewöhnt hat, unter dem Namen "Faschismus" abzuheften. Wer war der größte Lyriker des zwanzigsten Jahrhunderts, der wortgewaltigste, der dämonischste, der tiefste? Es war Ezra Pound, den die Amerikaner jahrzehntelang in der Klapsmühle hielten, weil er ein Freund Mussolinis gewesen war, ein Verächter der Demokratie, ein "Barde des Bösen". Keiner, der sich zwischen 1900 und 2000 in Rhythmen und Versen ausgedrückt hat, reicht an Pound heran, keiner hat die Sprache in solch unerahnte Dimensionen hineingetrieben wie dieser Mann aus Idaho. Wer war der größte Romancier des zwanzigsten Jahrhunderts, der die Menschen am besten kannte und ihr Schicksal am aufwühlendsten zu erzählen verstand? Es war Knut Hamsun, den sie nach 1945 nur seines hohen Alters wegen nicht um einen Kopf kürzer machten, weil er sich mit Hitler eingelassen hatte und seinen Sohn in der Waffen-SS dienen ließ. Kein anderer Erzähler des Jahrhunderts kann Hamsun das Wasser reichen, nicht Thomas Mann und nicht Franz Kafka, von Proust und Joyce zu schweigen.

29. Wings.buffalo.edu/epc/authors/pound/pound-bib.html
Canto LXXXIA Hypervortext of ezra pound s Canto LXXXI. Zeus lies in Ceres bosom Taishan is attended of loves under Cythera, before sunrise
http://wings.buffalo.edu/epc/authors/pound/pound-bib.html
Photo credit: http://lib-www.ucr.edu/spec_coll/pound2.html
Ezra Pound Bibliography
Poetry
  • A Lume Spento (also see below), privately printed (Venice) by A. Antonini, 1908.
  • A Quinzaine for This Yule, Pollock (London), 1908.
  • Personae, Elkin Mathews (London), 1909.
  • Exultations, Elkin Mathews, 1909.
  • Provenca, Small, Maynard (Boston), 1910.
  • Canzoni, Elkin Mathews, 1911.
  • Ripostes of Ezra Pound S. Swift (London), 1912, Small, Maynard, 1913.
  • Personae and Exultations of Ezra Pound [London], 1913.
  • Canzoni and Ripostes of Ezra Pound Elkin Mathews, 1913.
  • Lustra of Ezra Pound Elkin Mathews, 1916, Knopf (New York), 1917.
  • Quia Pauper Amavi, Egoist Press (London), 1918.
  • The Fourth Canto, Ovid Press (London), 1919.
  • Umbra, Elkin Mathews, 1920. (Including translations)
  • Hugh Selwyn Mauberley, Ovid Press, 1920.
  • Poems, 1918-1921,
  • A Draft of XVI Cantos, Three Mountains Press, 1925.
  • Personae: The Collected Poems of Ezra Pound
  • Selected Poems,
  • A Draft of the Cantos 17-27, John Rodker (London), 1928.
  • A Draft of XXX Cantos,
  • Homage to Sextus Propertius, Faber, 1934.

30. Ezra Pound - The Academy Of American Poets
ezra pound The Academy of American Poets presents biographies, photographs, selected poems, and links as part of its online poetry exhibits. Some pages also include RealAudio clips of the poet
http://www.poets.org/LIT/poet/epounfst.htm
poetry awards poetry month poetry exhibits poetry map ... about the academy Search Larger Type Find a Poet Find a Poem Listening Booth ... Add to a Notebook Ezra Pound Ezra Pound is generally considered the poet most responsible for defining and promoting a modernist aesthetic in poetry. In the early teens of the twentieth century, he opened a seminal exchange of work and ideas between British and American writers, and was famous for the generosity with which he advanced the work of such major contemporaries as W. B. Yeats Robert Frost William Carlos Williams Marianne Moore ... H. D. , James Joyce, Ernest Hemingway, and especially T. S. Eliot . His own significant contributions to poetry begin with his promulgation of Imagism , a movement in poetry which derived its technique from classical Chinese and Japanese poetrystressing clarity, precision, and economy of language, and foregoing traditional rhyme and meter in order to, in Pound's words, "compose in the sequence of the musical phrase, not in the sequence of the metronome." His later work, for nearly fifty years, focused on the encyclopedic epic poem he entitled The Cantos Ezra Pound was born in Hailey, Idaho, in 1885. He completed two years of college at the University of Pennsylvania and earned a degree from Hamilton College in 1905. After teaching at Wabash College for two years, he travelled abroad to Spain, Italy and London, where, as the literary executor of the scholar Ernest Fenellosa, he became interested in Japanese and Chinese poetry. He married Dorothy Shakespear in 1914 and became London editor of the

31. National Poetry Foundation 1
An organization dedicated scholarly studies of ezra pound. Site provides information about the society's publications and conferences.
http://www.ume.maine.edu/~npf/
THE NATIONAL POETRY FOUNDATION
UNIVERSITY OF MAINE
5752 NEVILLE HALL
ORONO, MAINE 04469-5752
POETRIES OF THE 1940s, AMERICAN AND INTERNATIONAL A NATIONAL POETRY FOUNDATION CONFERENCE UNIVERSITY OF MAINE ORONO, MAINE JUNE 23-27, 2004 91,361visitors since 30 October 1996.

32. Li Po
English translations, including some by ezra pound.
http://www.santafe.edu/~shalizi/Poetry/Li_Po/
Poetry
Li Po
701762 A.D. Also Romanised Li Pai, Li T'ai-po, Li Bai, et cetera. Versions by Ezra Pound , which are (to put it as politely as possible) questionable translations but vintage Pound:

33. Ezra Pound And The Occult: Bibliography
New Directions, 1971). pound, ezra. The Cantos of ezra pound (New York New Directions, 1934). pound, ezra. Selected Prose 1909
http://www.cwru.edu/artsci/engl/VSALM/mod/ballentine/resources/bib1.html
Bibliographic sources for Ezra Pound and the Occult Ackroyd, Peter. Ezra Pound and His World The Autobiography of William Butler Yeats (New York: Macmillan, 1965). Baumann, Walter. "Secretary of Nature, J. Heydon" New Approaches to Ezra Pound
(Berkeley: Univ. of California Press, 1969) 303-318. (1925), ed. George Mills Harper and Walter Kelly Hood (London: Macmillan, 1978). The Collected Early Poems of Ezra Pound, ed. Michael John King (New York: New
Directions, 1976). Davie, Donald. "The Poet as Sculptor," New Approaches to Ezra Pound (Berkeley: Univ. of California Press, 1969) 198-214. Ezra Pound and Dorothy Shakespear: Their Letters 1909-1914, ed. Omar Pound and A.
Walton Litz (New York: New Directions, 1984). Godwin, Joscelyn. The Theosophical Enlightenment (New York: State Univ. of New
York Press, 1994). Jourdain, Eleanor and Anne Moberly. An Adventure (1911; rpt. New York: Coward
McCann, 1935). The Letters of W. B. Yeats, ed. Allan Wade (New York: Macmillan, 1955). Literary Essays of Ezra Pound, ed. T. S. Eliot (New York: New Directions, 1968).

34. Charlotte Mary Mew
esteemed by Siegfried Sassoon and ezra pound, was born in London on November 15, 1869. She took her own life on March 24, 1928. Haunted by unrequited passion and tormented by fears of madness she, nevertheless, produced poems of unique beauty and passion. A website, including a selection of poems, devoted to this littleremembered author.
http://www.execpc.com/~jon/mewpage.html

35. Reader's Companion To American History - -POUND, EZRA
The Reader s Companion to American History. pound, ezra. (18851972), poet. Until age twenty-two pound lived and attended schools in New York and Pennsylvania.
http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/rcah/html/ah_070800_poundezra.htm
Entries Publication Data Advisory Board Contributors ... World Civilizations The Reader's Companion to American History
POUND, EZRA
His major works include, in poetry: A lume spento Cathay Lustra Quia pauper amavi (1919), and The Cantos (1917-1961); in prose: The Spirit of Romance Noh Instigations ABC of Reading Guide to Kulchur (1938), and The Classic Anthology Defined by Confucius (1954). Concurrently, he translated volumes of poetry, prose, and drama from Greek, Latin, Provençal, Japanese, and Chinese. Tirelessly, he fought Western provincialism and celebrated the great art of China, Japan, and Africa. From Rapallo, Italy, where he lived after 1924, he conducted a worldwide correspondence with all who sought his help. But he became increasingly controversial, partly because his critics didn't know what he meant by words such as illumination. That word, which he said he used "in a technical sense," is the key to his life and his work and marks him as a visionary and a mystic in the Neoplatonic-Blake-Whitman tradition. Pound's major work

36. O Poema
Biografia e obra dos grandes poetas do mundo inteiro. Wallace Stevens, ezra pound, Mayakovski, Eugenio Montale, T.S. Eliot, Ferreira Gullar, Sylvia Plath, e.e. cummings, Marina Tsvetaeva, Garcia Lorca, Carlos Drmmond de Andrade.
http://www.opoema.libnet.com.br
hosted by s="na";c="na";j="na";f=""+escape(document.referrer)

37. Great American History Fact-Finder - -Pound, Ezra
The Great American History FactFinder. pound, ezra. (1885-1972), poet, critic, and editor. An influential and controversial literary
http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/gahff/html/ff_148400_poundezra.htm
Entries Publication Data Dedication Advisory Board ... World Civilizations The Great American History Fact-Finder
Pound, Ezra
, poet, critic, and editor. An influential and controversial literary figure, Pound left the United States in 1908 to live in Venice and London. In 1912 he founded imagism, advocating a tight, clear, unsentimental style of poetry. With painter and writer Wyndham Lewis, Pound founded vorticism, which was concerned with the form rather than the content of art. Pound exerted significant influence on the careers of T. S. Eliot Ernest Hemingway , and James Joyce, helping them edit and promote their works. His lifelong effort, the epic Cantos , deals with corruption in American life. Other works include Homage to Sextus Propertius and Hugh Selwyn Mauberley . As an admirer of Mussolini, Pound broadcast fascist and anti-Semitic propaganda during World War II. Arrested by the United States in 1945 for treason, he was judged insane and unfit to stand trial, and spent thirteen years in a mental hospital. He returned to Italy following his release in 1958.
Site Map
I Partners I Press Releases I Company Home I Contact Us
Terms and Conditions of Use
Privacy Statement , and Trademark Information

38. Ezra Pound And Fenollosa
Manuscripts at Yale's Beinecke Library.
http://www.library.yale.edu/beinecke/orient/mod3.htm
EZRA POUND AND FENOLLOSA
Perhaps inspired by Pound's public engagement with Japanese themes, Ernest Fenollosa's newly-widowed wife made arrangements in late 1913 to send the orientalist's unpublished scholarly papers to Pound. Ernest Fenollosa. "Translation of Chinese classics including poetry," v. 1 of 2. A. MS. line-by-line translation of poems by Rihaku (Li Po) transliterated by his Japanese teachers Mori and Ariga. Tokyo, ca. 1900. Ezra Pound. Cathay: For the Most Part from the Chinese of Rihaku, from the notes of the late Ernest Fenollosa, and the Decipherings of the Professors Mori and Ariga . London: Elkin Mathews, 1915. Upon receiving Fenollosa's scholarly papers, Pound poeticized a number of Fenollosa's line-by-line translations of the works of Chinese poet Li Po (Rihaku in Japanese), publishing the result as the much-noted volume Cathay James Legge, translator. The Book of Poetry Shih Ching ). Copy owned and annotated by Ezra Pound. Shanghai: Chinese Book Co., 1903. Pound began to teach himself Chinese and by 1940 Chinese characters and ideas took a central place in the text of his Cantos Ezra Pound. "Canto LXXIV," part of

39. Pound's Quest For The Paradiso
A Benjaminian Reading of ezra pound's Quest for the Paradiso . Shows the overlappings of Right and Left in the interwar period, but with an emphasis on resignation.
http://webdoc.sub.gwdg.de/edoc/ia/eese/artic96/northcut/9_96.html
EESE 9/1996
William M. Northcutt (Bayreuth)
What the Architecture Said: A Benjaminian Reading of Ezra Pound's Quest for the Paradiso
Walter Benjamin describes the "destructive character" as one who "knows only one watchword: make room; only one activity: clearing away" (1978: 301). Benjamin's destructive character "sees nothing permanent. But for this reason he sees ways everywhere.... What exists he reduces to rubble, not for the sake of rubble, but for that of the way leading through it" (1978: 302-303). At the same time, Benjamin says, the "destructive character obliterates even the traces of destruction" (302). Benjamin-the-destroyer saw the world as a text of ruins in which the past and present, fragmented though intertwined, offered themselves materially as capable of both lulling the masses into a dream state or awakening them into awareness and control of their own surroundings. Benjamin, according to Susan Buck-Morss in The Dialectics of Seeing , "was committed to a graphic, concrete representation of truth, in which historical images made visible...[his] philosophical ideas. In them, history cut through the core of truth without providing a totalizing frame" (55). The works we have by Benjamin demonstrate his desire to read historically our text of ruins in order to "blast" historical details out of the continuum, so that we may become aware of the ideological backdrop in front of which we act out our lives. Paradoxically, his own work, the

40. Poetry Directory: Pound, Ezra
Poetry Directory pound, ezra, including reviews, works, biography Poet.biz. pound, ezra. HomesTop Arts Literature Poetry With bibliography and some texts. ezra pound http//www.kirjasto.sci.fi/epound.htm
http://poet.biz/directory/Top/Arts/Literature/Poetry/Poets/P/Pound, Ezra/56145

Poetry Directory

Poet.biz

Pound, Ezra Homes Top Arts Literature ... P Pound, Ezra CATEGORIES Biography
Reviews

Works

LINKS
Petals On A Wet Black Bough
http://www.library.yale.edu/beinecke/orient/intro.htm
American Modernist Writers and the Orient - an exhibition at Yale that took place in 1996.
The Academy Of American Poets
http://www.poets.org/lit/POET/epounfst.htm
With bibliography and some texts. Ezra Pound http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/epound.htm Brief essay from a Finnish calendar of authors. On The Ezra Pound/Marshall McLuhan Correspondence http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/mcluhan-studies/v1_iss1/1_1art11.htm At the University of Toronto. Ezra Pound In The University Of Idaho Library http://www.lib.uidaho.edu/special-collections/pound.html A collection located in EP's home state. World War I According To Ezra Pound http://www.rjgeib.com/thoughts/fight/fight.html With a quotation from 'These Fought in Any Case'. Ezra Pound Center http://www.uno.edu/~acse/catalog/text/Metro/ezra.html At the University of New Orleans.

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 2     21-40 of 110    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20

free hit counter