“A”-13
Completed
23 Sept. 1960. Partita i: July 1960; ii: 18 August 1960; iii: 12-13 Sept. 1960;
iv: 17 Sept. 1960; v: 23 Sept. 1960.
262.1 partita: a suite or
series of instrumental dances in the same or related keys. In a 25 Aug. 1960
letter to Cid Corman, LZ indicates that he thinks of the five parts of “A”-13
in terms of a classical suite, a set of pieces usually based on dance music, in
the traditional order: allemande, courante, sarabande, gigue (jig) and chaconne
(Gist of Origin 160). These dance movements
are respectively in 4/4 time, triple time, slow 3/2 time, 6/8 or 12/8 time and
slow 3-beat time. CZ denied that LZ had a particular partita in mind, only
suggesting that Bach’s Partitias for Solo
Violin (see 297.28) would have been the primary influence on LZ’s
conception of the partita (Ahearn, “Two Conversations” 114-115). However Bach’s
Partita No. 2 in D minor mentioned at 297.28 would be the most obvious model,
especially given the fact the PZ was practicing this piece during the time of
composition in preparation for his third Carnegie Hall performance in Feb. 1961
(Scroggins Bio 321).
262.3 What do you want to know / What do you want
to do…: throughout the first section or partita of “A”-13
there are numerous proverbial-like sayings, presumably addressed by a father to
his son (LZ to PZ); most or all of these undoubtedly have a source, however
much LZ may be adapting or mimicking what he finds. The major source for the
lines from 262.1-263.22 and 266.27-268.18 appears to be a curious divination
text, Napoleon’s Book of Fate, which
appeared in many editions and versions during the 19th century. The one LZ
seems to be using has a preface dated 1822, with the full title as follows: The Book of Fate formerly in the possession
of Napoleon, Late Emperor of France and now first rendered into English from a
German Translation of an Ancient Egyptian Manuscript, found in the year 1801,
by M. Sonnini, in one of the Royal Tombs, near Mount Libycus, in Upper Egypt.
By H. Kirchenhoffer. This is evidently a forged oracular work, whose main
text consists of hundreds of proverbial remarks organized into oracle tables,
none of which have any specifically Egyptian character. However, the preface
and introduction give a detailed account of where the manuscript was found,
background on the major ancient Greek and Roman oracles and finally “The
Writings of Balaspis by Command of Hermes Trismegistus [see 262.5] Unto the
Priests of the Great Temple,” which gives specific instructions on how to use
the oracle tables in response to a set of questions of a practical nature on
marriage, wealth, travel, health, etc. The proverbial sayings, which are in
fact the oracular answers, are repetitious and many are very similar to each
other. I have chosen those that appear most obviously to relate to this or that
passage in LZ as indicated, although as one might expect LZ often adapts very
freely, so some identifications are speculative:
262.7: The Islanders who have long swayed the scepter of the ocean, shall cease
to conquer, but they will become the instructors of mankind. (Quartermain notes
(97) the probable pun on sea = Celia).
262.9: Choose that for which thy genius is best adapted.
262.15: It signifieth a speedy marriage.
262.18-19: She shall have a son, who will gain much wealth and honour.
263.2-3: Matters which concern the absentee’s future happiness, prevent his
immediate return.
263.4: She shall have a daughter, who will inherit all her mother’s virtues.
263.5: No man ever was, or ever will be without enemies: —but, those who
slander thee, shall be taken in their own nets.
263.6: Sickness is not entirely absent from the mansion of those whom thou
enquirest after; they say that thy presence would be agreeable.
263.7: Be not buoyed up by hopes of inheriting property which thou hast not
earned.
The money which will be left thee, will not remunerate thy anxiety.
263.8: The recovery of thy goods will be unexpected.
263.9: The scepter of power will be wrested from the conqueror.
263.10: Play no games of hazard [there are numerous similar proverbs].
263.11: When thou hast proved thy
friend, thou mayest truly trust and value him.
263.13-14: Thou shalt have to travel both by sea and land.
263.15-16: Justice is blind, but not always deaf: for in many parts, she loveth
to listen to the sweet ringing of gold and silver.
263.17-18: The captive will speedily cease to breathe the foul air of a
dungeon; let him use his freedom wisely [many similar sayings].
263.19-20: Implore the aid of Providence, ere thou settest thy foot without the
threshold of thy house.
263.21-22: Ere thou stirrest abroad, put thine affairs in order, and when thou
returnest from thy journey, thou shalt find thy goods secure.
266.27: Some men are old even at thirty: take care of thy health, and thou wilt
see three-score and ten.
266.28-29: Be not eager to raise the monument of thine own fame.
267.1: Thy love is not disregarded.
267.1-2: When thou art cold in thy grave, thy name will be greatly honoured in
thy children.
267.3: Be a friend to thyself: —depend not on others.
267.4: Avoid laying too great a tax on the patience of thy friends: —this is
the way to preserve them.
267.7: As instruction is diffused throughout the world, men of all conditions,
of every colour, and in every clime, will become free.
267.9: Thou mayest write up, shave for a penny; cut hair for two-pence.
267.10-11: Great vicissitudes await thee, but they will not much affect thy
future fortunes.
267.12: Give not the thief the chance of again robbing thee [numerous similar
proverbs].
267.13: Whilst thou waitest for dead men’s old
shoes, thine own exertions might procure thee new ones.
267.14: Parsimony is hateful; yet, a groat saved each day, amounts to more than
six pounds a year.
267.15: Be a miller, but grind not the faces of the poor.
267.22-23: In thy journey, fancy not that from each brake a robber or a tyger
will spring upon thee, but pursue thy way steadily.
267.23-24: Write on thy door-posts,—Mangling
done here!
267.25-27: If thou art cozened out of thy upper garment, throw not thy
under one away, to recover it.
267.27-28: Kick not down the ladder which raises thee.
267.29: Thy image is ever before the eyes of thy beloved
268.1: When thou askest advice of thy friend, relate not to him thy story by
halves, lest in concealing the matter from him, thou suffer in the end.
268.2-3: If thou likest cabbage, use
the needle.
268.5-6: Blessed is he who expecteth little, for he will not be disappointed.
268.7-9: A clean corner is not the worse of being twice searched.
268.11-13: When thou art wed, insist not too much on prerogative, but let each
yield a little.
268.16: Thou shalt meet with few vicissitudes.
Few vicissitudes await thee.
268.17-18: As the parent trunk giveth up a part of its nourishment to the
tender shoots which spring from its sides, so will sons and daughters require
thy succour and protection.
Thou shalt be blessed with sons and daughters; but forget not that the tree
preserveth the fashion which hath been given to it when a sapling.
262.5 trice me the gist us: <
Trismegistus; Hermes Trismegistus or the thrice-greatest is the Greek version
of Thoth (267.9). Numerous hermetic philosophical, magical and alchemical texts
were ascribed to him during the Middle Ages and Renaissance. The Book of Fate (see note at 262.3)
gives the following note: “To Hermes Trismegistus, a sage as highly revered
among them, as Zoroaster was among the Persians, the Egyptians ascribed the
inventions of chief use to human life; and like every people who are unable to
settle the antiquity of their origin, they represented his works to have
outstood the shock even of the universal deluge. They otherwise called him
Thoth; and their priests constantly maintained that from the hieroglyphical
characters upon the pillars he erected, and the sacred books, all the philosophy
and learning of the world has been derived, and all the oracular intelligence
has been drawn.” Quartermain points out (98) that “in a trice” means “in an
instant” and that “trice” suggests, although does not strictly speaking mean,
three, which throughout the rest of “A”
will suggest the Zukofsky family. On the other hand, “tris-” in Trismegistus
does mean three.
262.11 mysteries: religion of secret rites and
knowledge revealed only to initiates.
263.29 Red pipecleaner velvet wired to / Valentine
head…: see 18.404.8.
264.28 The grace of a madhouse—courtesy, Thanks / for Passover delicacies / specially
the black bambino…: a thank you note from EP who at the time was
incarcerated at the prison asylum St. Elizabeths in Washington, D.C. (Ahearn
218).
265.4 Apartheider…: apartheid, the systematic
policy of racial segregation established in South Africa. A major resource in
South Africa was gold mined by black workers under slave-like conditions. The
phrase “free root’s old pest,” presumably refers to the historical role of
slavery in the development of Western capitalism, or more generally the
appropriation of surplus-value on which capitalism is based in Marx’s analysis
(see “A”-9). At the time “A”-13 was written, the Prime Minister of South Africa
was Hendrik Verwoerd (1901-1966), generally considered the primary architect of
apartheid and who intensified the system during his period in office
(1958-1966). The Sharpeville Massacre took place in March 1960, immediately
followed by the declaration of a state of emergency and the banning of both
main resistance groups, the African National Congress and the Pan Africanist
Congress.
265.7 Not Nick in Ike nor Ike in Niké: Nikita Khrushchev (1894-1971) (see index 815), Soviet Premier
from 1958-1964. Dwight David “Ike” Eisenhower (1890-1969), US President from
1953-1961. Niké the Greek god of victory, but also the name of a defense
missile widely deployed around many U.S. cities during the Cold War (Ahearn
225-226). Also Nick is colloquial for the Devil.
265.7 dove:
symbol of peace. The Big Four summit in Paris on 16 May 1960 ended in failure
when Khrushchev demanded an apology from Eisenhower over the U-2 spy plane
incident of 1 May 1960.
265.9 Stall in crew’s chief: < Stalin,
Khrushchev. Nikita Khrushchev succeeded Joseph Stalin (1879-1953) as First
Secretary of the Communist Party of the USSR (see 265.7).
265.12 He has nothing to ask of Him: from Voltaire, Candide, Chap. 18: “However, Candide
could not refrain from making many more inquiries of the old man; he wanted to
know in what manner they prayed to God in El Dorado. ‘We do not pray to Him at
all," said the reverend sage; "we
have nothing to ask of Him, He has given us all we want, and we give Him
thanks incessantly.’"
265.13 I won’t say that ‘the world’ / Grows more
attaching…: through 265.21 from Henry James, the essay “Is There Life After
Death?” (1910); LZ also quotes from this essay at 22.534.13-15:
”What it come to is then that our faith or our hope may to some degree
resist the fact, once accomplished, of watched and deplored death, but that
they may well break down before the avidity and consistency with
which everything insufferably continues to die. […]
It
is not that I have found in growing older any one marked or momentous line in
the life of the mind or in the play and the freedom of the imagination to be
stepped over; but that a process takes place which I can only describe as the
accumulation of the very treasure itself of consciousness. I won’t say that ‘the world,’ as we commonly refer to it, grows more attaching, but will say that
the universe increasingly does, and that this makes us present at the
enormous multiplication of our possible relations with it; relations still
vague, no doubt, as undefined as they are uplifting, as they are inspiring, to
think of, and on a scale beyond our actual use of application, yet filling us
(through the ‘law’ in question, the law that consciousness gives us immensities
and imaginabilities wherever we direct it) with the unlimited vision of being.
This mere fact that so small a part of one’s visionary and speculative and
emotional activity has even a traceably indirect bearing on one’s doings or
purposes or particular desires contributes strangely to the luxury—which is the
magnificent waste—of thought,
and strongly reminds one that even should one cease to be in love with life it
would be difficult, on such terms, not to be in love with living.
Living,
or feeling one’s exquisite curiosity about the universe fed and fed, rewarded
and rewarded—though I of course don’t say definitely answered and
answered—becomes thus the highest good I can conceive of, a million times
better than not living (however that
comfort may at bad moments have solicited us); all of which illustrates what I
mean by the consecrated ‘interest’
of consciousness. It so peoples and animates and extends and transforms itself;
it so gives me the chance to take, on behalf of my personality, these
inordinate intellectual and irresponsible liberties with the idea of things.
And, once more—speaking for myself only and keeping to the facts of my
experience—it is above all as an artist that I appreciate this beautiful and
enjoyable independence of thought and more especially this assault of the boundlessly multiplied personal relation (my own), which
carries me beyond even any ‘profoundest’ observation of this world whatever,
and any mortal adventure, and refers me to realizations I am condemned as yet
but to dream of. For the artist the sense of our luxurious ‘waste’ of
postulation and supposition is of the strongest; of him is it superlatively
true that he knows the aggression as of infinite
numbers of modes of being.”
265.25 Four thousand eight hundred solar cells /
Of four paddle wheels orbiting…: through 265.30 describes the space probe
Pioneer V launched 11 March 1960. From the New York Times for 12 March
1960: “Takes a New Path; Course of the Vehicle Is Between Orbits of Earth and
Venus 94.8-LB. Vehicle Conducts 5 Tests Experts Hope It Will Send Signals 50
Million Miles—Radiation Measured”: “The United States today shot a 94.8-pound
sphere, packed with scientific instruments, into in unending orbit around the
sun between the planetary paths of Earth and Venus. The artificial planetoid,
named Pioneer V, will
explore realms at interplanetary space not yet traversed by space vehicles. […]
4,800 solar cells, on four paddle wheels mounted
on the exterior of the sphere, will recharge the payload s nickel-cadmium
batteries. […] The closest that Pioneer V could come to the earth in the next
decade would probably be several hundred thousand miles.
And the best guess of space agency scientists was that it might be 160000
years before the planetoid approached close enough to earth to burn
up in the earth’s atmosphere.”
266.3 Wandering jew: any of various trailing
or creeping plants of the spiderwort family. Mentioned significantly in Ferdinand, see CF 244 and 267.
266.6 Bach’s partita: see 262.1.
266.10 And night is night / Day is day: from
Shakespeare, Hamlet II.ii: “Polonius:
What majesty should be, what duty is, / Why day is day, night is night, and time is time. / Were nothing but to
waste night, day, and time.”
266.12 fissile: capable of being split, cleft,
or divided into layers, as wood in the direction of the grain, or certain
minerals and rocks in the planes of cleavage or foliation (CD).
266.16 Offer
as instrument / Avoid their rules like a disease…: through 266.26 adapted
from Aristotle, Politics I.4 (1253b):
“For if every instrument could accomplish its own work, obeying or anticipating
the will of others, like the statues of Daedalus, or the tripods of Hephaestus
[see 266.19], which, says the poet [Homer], ‘of their own accord entered the
assembly of the Gods’ [Iliad
XVIII.376]; if, in like manner, the shuttle would weave and the plectrum touch
the lyre without a hand to guide them, chief workmen would not want servants,
nor masters slaves” (trans. Benjamin Jowett).
266.19 Lame God’s tripods / Themselves run to the
Gods…: Hephaestus or Vulcan, god of fire and crafts, usually depicted as
lame. In Book XVIII of Homer, Iliad,
Achilles’ mother Thetis goes to Hephaestus to request that he make armor and
shield for her son, and she finds the god making tripods, which are fitted with
wheels so that they can be easily brought before the gods (see previous note).
266.23 pinks: to pierce, puncture, stab with a
rapier or some similar weapon, make a hole or holes in; to decorate with
punctures or holes, tattoo (CD).
266.27 Not old at thirty / To rear the monument /
Of your own fame…: through 268.18 see note at 262.3.
267.9 Shave
for a penny—THOTH: see note at 262.3. Thoth (pronounced “tot”) Egyptian god of
wisdom, writing and magic—depicted as a man with the head of an ibis (see note
at 262.5).
267.24 Mangling
done here: see note at 262.3;
a mangle is a machine for smoothing fabrics or household articles of linen or
cotton, as sheets, tablecloths, napkins, and towels (CD).
268.26 Heraclitus over the kitchen fire— / “Come
in, there are Gods here too…: anecdote from Aristotle, On the Parts of Animal I.5 (645a): “Every realm of nature is
marvelous: and as Heraclitus, when the strangers who came to visit him found
him warming himself at the furnace in the kitchen and hesitated to go in, is
reported to have bidden them not to be afraid to enter, as even in that kitchen
divinities were present, so we should venture on the study of every kind of
animal without distaste; for each and all will reveal to us something natural
and something beautiful” (trans. William Ogle).
268.29 Parts
of Animals: through 271.18 mostly taken from Aristotle, On the Parts of Animals, one of his
zoological treatises, translated by William Ogle.
269.2: Theory starts with that which is
/ Nature and art with what is to be— / Things that stay, and a taking off:
“As with these productions of art, so also is it with the productions of
nature. The mode of necessity, however, and the mode of ratiocination are different in natural science from what
they are in the theoretical sciences; of which we have spoken elsewhere. For in the latter the starting-point is
that which is; in the former that which is to be. For it is that which is
yet to be—health, let us say, or a man—that, owing to its being of such and
such characters, necessitates the pre-existence or previous production of this
and that antecedent; and not this or that antecedent which, because it exists
or has been generated, makes it necessary that health or a man is in, or shall
come into, existence. Nor is it possible to track back the series of necessary
antecedents to a starting-point, of which you can say that, existing itself
from eternity, it has determined their existence as its consequent” (I.1;
639b-640a).
269.5: Breath by its passage breaks open
/ The nostrils’ outlets: “Now that with which the ancient writers, who first
philosophized about Nature, busied themselves, was the material principle and
the material cause. They inquired what this is, and what its character; how the
universe is generated out of it, and by what motor influence, whether, for
instance, by antagonism or friendship, whether by intelligence or spontaneous
action, the substratum of matter being assumed to have certain inseparable
properties; fire, for instance, to have a hot nature, earth a cold one; the
former to be light, the latter heavy. For even the genesis of the universe is
thus explained by them. After a like fashion do they deal also with the
development of plants and of animals. They say, for instance, that the water
contained in the body causes by its currents the formation of the stomach and
the other receptacles of food or of excretion; and that the breath by its passage breaks open the outlets of the nostrils;
air and water being the materials of which bodies are made; for all represent
nature as composed of such or similar substances” (I.1; 640b).
269.7: Germ of each nature: “For a
given germ does not give rise to any chance living being, nor spring from any
chance one; but each germ springs from a definite parent and gives rise to a
definite progeny. And thus it is the germ that is the ruling influence and
fabricator of the offspring. For these it is by nature, the offspring being at
any rate that which in nature will spring from it. At the same time the
offspring is anterior to the germ; for germ and perfected progeny are related
as the developmental process and the result. Anterior, however, to both germ
and product is the organism from which the germ was derived. For every germ
implies two organisms, the parent and the progeny. For germ or seed is both the
seed of the organism from which it came, of the horse, for instance, from which
it was derived, and the seed of the organism that will eventually arise from
it, of the mule, for example, which is developed from the seed of the horse.
The same seed then is the seed both of the horse and of the mule, though in
different ways as here set forth. Moreover, the seed is potentially that which
will spring from it, and the relation of potentiality to actuality we know”
(I.3; 641b).
269.8: But its soul’s end the animal’s /
Like the animal in a fable / Turned to stone: “If now this something that
constitutes the form of the living being be the soul, or part of the soul, or
something that without the soul cannot exist; as would seem to be the case,
seeing at any rate that when the soul departs, what is left is no longer a
living animal, and that none of the parts remain what they were before,
excepting in mere configuration, like
the animals that in the fable are turned into stone; if, I say, this be so,
then it will come within the province of the natural philosopher to inform
himself concerning the soul, and to treat of it, either in its entirety, or, at
any rate, of that part of it which constitutes the essential character of an
animal; and it will be his duty to say what this soul or this part of a soul
is; and to discuss the attributes that attach to this essential character,
especially as nature is spoken of in two senses, and the nature of a thing is
either its matter or its essence; nature as essence including both the motor
cause and the final cause” (I.3; 641a).
269.10: so scales / Feet, feathers /
Used alike: “Many groups, as already noticed, present common attributes,
that is to say, in some cases absolutely identical affections, and absolutely identical organs,—feet,
feathers, scales, and the like—while in other groups the affections and
organs are only so far identical as that they are analogous” (I.5; 645b).
269.11: Sponges / Virtually plants and /
Not much more…: “The Ascidians differ but slightly from
plants, and yet have more of an animal nature than the sponges, which are virtually
plants and nothing more. For nature
passes from lifeless objects to animals in such unbroken sequence, interposing between them beings which live and yet are not animals, that scarcely any
difference seems to exist between two neighbouring groups owing to their close
proximity. A sponge, then, as already said, in these respects completely
resembles a plant, that throughout its life it is attached to a rock, and that
when separated from this it dies. Slightly different from the sponges are the
so-called Holothurias [sea-cucumber or sea-slugs] and the sea-lungs, as also sundry other sea-animals that resemble them. For
these are free and unattached. Yet they have no feeling, and their life is simply that of a plant
separated from the ground. For even among land-plants there are some that
are independent of the soil, and that spring up and grow, either upon other
plants, or even entirely free” (IV.5; 681a).
269.22: A tailsting / Nature gives it /
To insects of fierce / Disposition—: “As for the insects that have a sting
behind, this weapon is given them because they are of a fierce disposition”
(IV.6; 683a).
269.27: Hind legs of grasshoppers / tho
never the front seem to remember / The two long stem oars / By which a ship
steered: “It is only the hind legs
of locusts, and not the front ones,
that resemble the steering oars of a
ship. For this requires that the joint shall be deflected inwards, and such
is never the case with the anterior limbs” (IV.6; 683a-683b).
270.1: To close their eyes / Some great
birds / Crocodiles and frogs / Raise only their lower lid / A roll of skin /
And as it contains / No flesh, like the prepuce ‘ It does not unite / When cut:
“[…] whereas the oviparous quadrupeds,
and the heavy-bodied birds as well
as some others, use only the lower lid
to close the eye; […] It is as a
still further safeguard that all these animals blink, and man most of all; this
action (which is not performed from deliberate intention but from a natural
instinct) serving to keep objects from falling into the eyes; and being more
frequent in man than in the rest of these animals, because of the greater
delicacy of his skin. These lids are made of a roll of skin; and it is because they are made of skin and contain no flesh that neither they, nor the similarly constructed
prepuce, unite again when once cut” (II.13; 657a-657b).
270.10: The elephant claps with /
Nostril as a hand, / In water as with a diver’s bell: “For the elephant uses its nostril as a hand;
this being the instrument with which it conveys food, fluid and solid alike, to
its mouth. […] Just then as divers are
sometimes provided with instruments for respiration, through which they can
draw air from above the water, and thus may remain for a long time under the
sea, so also have elephants been furnished by nature with their lengthened
nostril; and, whenever they have to traverse the water, they lift this up above
the surface and breathe through it” (II.16; 658b-659a).
270.13: A small bird has nothing fairly
called / A nose, a beak for jaws, / Head and neck / Little, breastbone /
Narrowed: “A bird at any rate has nothing which can properly be called a
nose. For its so-called beak is a
substitute for jaws. The reason for this is to be found in the natural
conformation of birds. For they are winged bipeds; and this makes it necessary
that their heads and neck shall be of
light weight; just as it makes it necessary that their breast shall be narrow” (II.16; 659b).
270.17: An ox—horns of such length—he
must / Walk backward to graze: [continuing above passage on elephants,
quoted at 270.10]: “For the elephant’s proboscis, as already said, is a
nostril. Now it would have been impossible for this nostril to have the form of
a proboscis, had it been hard and incapable of bending. For its very length
would then have prevented the animal from supplying itself with food, being as
great an impediment as the horn of
certain oxen, that are said to be
obliged to walk backwards while they are grazing” (II.16; 659a).
270.20: Brain is the cause of sleep /
Why drowsy persons / Hang the head: “It is the brain again—or, in animals that have no brain, the part analogous
to it—which is the cause of sleep.
For either by chilling the blood that streams upwards after food, or by some
other similar influences, it produces heaviness in the region in which it lies
(which is the reason why drowsy persons
hang the head), and causes the heat to escape downwards in company with the
blood” (II.7; 653a).
270.23: Flesh the organ of touch:
“Sensation, then, is confined to the simple or homogeneous parts. But, as might
reasonably be expected, the organ of
touch, though still homogeneous, is yet the least simple of all the
sense-organs. For touch more than any other sense appears to be correlated to
several distinct kinds of objects, and to recognize more than one category of
contrasts, heat and cold, for instance, solidity and fluidity, and other
similar oppositions. Accordingly, the organ which deals with these varied
objects is of all the sense-organs the most corporeal, being either the flesh, or the substance which in some
animals takes the place of flesh” (II.1; 647a).
270.24: The animal becomes a plant / Its
upper parts / Downward, its lower / Above: this analogy evidently appealed
to LZ and its primary source is from De
Anima (qtd. or mentioned in Bottom
62, 338, 345), although the same idea appears in The Parts of Animals: “But animals, with scarcely an exception, and
notably all such animals as are capable of locomotion, are provided with a
stomachal sac, which is as it were an internal substitute for the earth. They
must therefore have some instrument which shall correspond to the roots of
plants, with which they may absorb their food from this sac, so that the proper
end of the successive stages of concoction may at last be attained” (II.3;
650a). “For nature passes from lifeless objects to animals in such unbroken
sequence, interposing between them beings which live and yet are not animals,
that scarcely any difference seems to exist between two neighbouring classes
owing to their close proximity” (IV.5; 681a).
From
De Anima II.4 (qtd. Bottom 62): “For [Empedocles]
misinterprets up and down; up and down are not for all things what they are for
the whole Cosmos: if we are to distinguish and identify organs according to
their functions, the roots of plants are analogous to the head in animals.”
(trans. J.A. Smith); see also form De
Anima II.2 qtd. Bottom 338.
270.28: All blooded animals / Have
hearts / Origin and fountain: “All
animals that have blood possess
an omentum, a mesentery, intestines with their appendages, and, moreover, a
diaphragm and a heart; and all,
excepting fishes, a lung and a windpipe” (IV.1; 676b).
“For here [the heart], and here alone in all the viscera and indeed in all the
body, there is blood without blood-vessels, the blood elsewhere being always
contained within vessels. Nor is this but consistent with reason. For the blood
is conveyed into the vessels from the heart,
but none passes into the heart from without. For in itself it constitutes the origin and fountain, or primary
receptacle, of the blood” (III.4; 666a).
271.1: Cut from Parnassus sedum / Which
hung from rafters / Lives a considerable time: [continuing immediately from
quotation at 269.11]:
“Such, for example, is the plant which is found
on Parnassus, and which some call the Epipetrum. This you may hang up on a peg and it will yet live for a considerable time” (IV.5;
681a). Sedum is a genus of the polypetalous plants, of the order crassulaceae; numerous species of which
many are common in dry, barren or rocky places where little else will grow.
Many species are remarkable for persistence of life, cut stems growing and even
flowering when fastened on a wall, deriving nourishment from reserves in their
lower leaves and succulent stem, especially S.
Telephium, also called live-for-ever
and livelong, and known as Aaron’s-rod because sometimes growing
when pressed and apparently dried (CD).
271.4: Architecture—Bricks, painting,
timber etc— / But start and end: a house: “Similarly, the true object of architecture is not bricks, mortar, or timber, but the house;
and so the principal object of natural philosophy is not the material elements,
but their composition, and the totality of the form, independently of which
they have no existence” (I.5; 645a).
271.7: Man moved by his expectations / A
beating heart / Not quite explained by the lung: “For it is in the front
and centre of the body that the heart is situated, in which we say is the principle
of life and the source of all motion and sensation. (For sensation and motion
are exercised in the direction which we term forwards, and it is on this very
relation that the distinction of before and behind is founded.) But where the
heart is, there and surrounding it is the lung. Now inspiration, which occurs
for the sake of the lung and for the sake of the principle which has its seat
in the heart, is effected through the windpipe” (III.3; 665a).
271.10: his blood is water: “The
water-courses in gardens are so constructed as to distribute water from one
single source or fount into numerous channels, which divide and subdivide so as
to convey it to all parts; and, again, in house-building stones are thrown down
along the whole ground-plan of the foundation walls; because the garden-plants
in the one case grow at the expense of the water, and the foundation walls in
the other are built out of the stones. Now just after the same fashion has
nature laid down channels for the conveyance of the blood throughout the whole
body, because this blood is the material out of which the whole fabric is made”
(III.5; 668a).
271.10 His innocence his blood is water, his /
Tears salt…: through 271.13 from the nature writer Donald Culross Peattie
(1898-1964), An Almanac for Moderns (1935): “I say that it touches a man
that his blood is sea water and his tears are salt,
that the seed of his loins is scarcely different from the same cells
in a seaweed, and that of stuff like his bones is coral
made.” Cf.
Ariel’s Song from Shakespeare, The
Tempest I.ii: “Full fathom five thy father lies; / Of his bones are coral
made.”
271.16 A
half glimpse of / Your love—more pleasure than / In a bird’s-eye view of the
world: from Aristotle, On the Parts of Animals: “Of things
constituted by nature some are ungenerated, imperishable, and eternal, while
others are subject to generation and decay. The former are excellent beyond
compare and divine, but less accessible to knowledge. The evidence that might
throw light on them, and on the problems which we long to solve respecting
them, is furnished scantily by sensation; whereas respecting perishable plants
and animals we have abundant information, living as we do in their midst and
ample data may be collected concerning all their various kinds, if only we are
willing to take sufficient pains. Both departments, however, have their special
charms. The scanty conceptions to which we can attain of celestial things give
us, from their excellence, more pleasure than all our knowledge of the world in
which we live; just as a half glimpse of persons that we love is more
delightful than a leisurely view of other things, whatever their number and
dimensions” (I.5; 644b-645a).
271.19 Love’s leisure is / The prime end of all
action…: through 272.9 from Aristotle, Politics
(trans. Benjamin Jowett):
271.19: Love’s leisure is / The prime
end of all action: from Politics
VII.15 (1334a): “Since the end of
individuals and of states is the same, the end of the best man and of the best
constitution must also be the same; it is therefore evident that there ought to
exist in both of them the virtues of leisure; for peace, as has been often
repeated, is the end of war, and leisure of toil.” Cf. Nicomachean Ethics X.7 (1177b): “And this activity [the
philosophical life] alone would seem to be loved for its own sake; for nothing
arises from it apart from the contemplating, while from practical activities we
gain more or less apart from the action. And happiness is thought to depend on
leisure; for we are busy that we may have leisure, and make war that we may
live in peace” (trans. W.D. Ross).
271.21: That Pharsalian mare called
Honest: from Politics II.3
(1262a): “And some women, like the females of other animals–for example, mares
and cows–have a strong tendency to produce offspring resembling their parents,
as was the case with the Pharsalian mare
called Honest.”
271.22: Man should not work / At the
same time / With his mind and his body: from Politics VIII.4 (1339a): “When boyhood is over, three years should
be spent in other studies; the period of life which follows may then be devoted
to hard exercise and strict diet. Men
ought not to labor at the same time with their minds and with their bodies;
for the two kinds of labor are opposed to one another; the labor of the body
impedes the mind, and the labor of the mind the body.”
271.25: Two rites burn for affection /
It is your own / And you love it: / Touching community / Let this / Be the
conclusion: from Politics II.4
(1262b): “For friendship we believe to be the greatest good of states and the
preservative of them against revolutions; neither is there anything which
Socrates so greatly lauds as the unity of the state which he and all the world
declare to be created by friendship. But the unity which he commends would be like
that of the lovers in the Symposium,
who, as Aristophanes says, desire to grow together in the excess of their
affection, and from being two to become one, in which case one or both would
certainly perish. Whereas in a state having women and children common, love
will be watery; and the father will certainly not say 'my son,' or the son 'my
father.' As a little sweet wine mingled with a great deal of water is
imperceptible in the mixture, so, in this sort of community, the idea of
relationship which is based upon these names will be lost; there is no reason
why the so-called father should care about the son, or the son about the
father, or brothers about one another. Of the two qualities which chiefly inspire regard and affection—that a thing is
your own and that it is your only one—neither can exist in such a state as
this.
Again,
the transfer of children as soon as they are born from the rank of husbandmen
or of artisans to that of guardians, and from the rank of guardians into a
lower rank, will be very difficult to arrange; the givers or transferrers
cannot but know whom they are giving and transferring, and to whom. And the
previously mentioned evils, such as assaults, unlawful loves, homicides, will
happen more often amongst those who are transferred to the lower classes, or
who have a place assigned to them among the guardians; for they will no longer
call the members of the class they have left brothers, and children, and
fathers, and mothers, and will not, therefore, be afraid of committing any
crimes by reason of consanguinity. Touching
the community of wives and children,
let this be our conclusion.”
272.1: Further if politics be an art, /
Most know nothing of peace / Supposing goods they contend for / Mean more than
love: from Politics II.9
(1271b): “The
charge which Plato brings, in the Laws,
against the intention of the legislator, is likewise justified; the whole
constitution [of Sparta] has regard to one part of virtue only—the virtue of
the soldier, which gives victory in war. So long as they were at war,
therefore, their power was preserved, but when they had attained empire they
fell, for of the arts of peace they knew nothing, and had never engaged in any
employment higher than war. There is another error, equally great, into which they
have fallen. Although they truly think that the goods for which men contend are
to be acquired by virtue rather than by vice, they err in supposing that these
goods are to be preferred to the virtue which gains them.”
272.5: They regarded in making / Works / To occupy
people / And keep them / Poor: from Politics
V.11 (1313b): “Also [the tyrant] should impoverish his subjects; he thus
provides against the maintenance of a guard by the citizen and the people,
having to keep hard at work, are prevented from conspiring. The Pyramids of
Egypt afford an example of this policy; also the offerings of the family of
Cypselus, and the building of the temple of Olympian Zeus by the
Peisistratidae, and the great Polycratean monuments at Samos; all these works were alike intended to occupy the people and keep them poor.”
272.16 What knowledge forbids the tree— / That is
not naked…: alluding to the parable of the Garden of Eden and the Tree of
Knowledge in Genesis, Chap. 2 & 3.
272.20 On the touchstone / Gold is proved / And in
the fire: possibly suggested by Henry Greene, Shakespeare and the Emblem Writers (1870), which LZ uses and
recommends in Bottom (433-435).
Greene examines the influence of emblems throughout Shakespeare’s works,
including the mottos for the various knights contending at the birthday
celebrations for Thasia in Pericles
II.ii: “The same metaphor of attesting characters, as gold is proved by the
touchstone or by the furnace, is of frequent occurrence in Shakespeare’s
undoubted plays […]” (180).
272.28: Preserve you / —And you, to outlive
long…: through 273.2 from Shakespeare, Pericles V.i:
Lysimachus: Hail, reverend sir! the gods preserve
you!
Helicanus: And you, sir, to outlive the age I am,
And die as I would do.
Lysimachus: You wish me well.
Being on shore, honouring of Neptune's triumphs,
Seeing this goodly vessel ride before us,
I made to it, to know of whence you are.
273.7 What
time the Pleiades…: through
272.16 from Hesiod, Works and Days;
LZ’s source is Hesiod: The Poems and
Fragments, translated by A.W. Mair:
273.7: What time
the Pleiades: “What time the Pleiades, daughters of Atlas, rise, begin thy
harvest, thy plowing when they set” (383).
273.8-9: Bay or elm poles / Freest of worms: “Freest of worms are poles
of bay or elm.” (435).
273.9-10: The cranes’ / Cry of the year: “Take heed what time thou
hearest the voice of the crane from the high clouds uttering her yearly cry,
which bringeth the sign for plowing and showeth forth the season of rainy
winter, and biteth the heart of him that hath no oxen” (448-449).
273.10-11: the soil / Light to be sowed: “Sow the fallow field while yet
the soil is light” (463).
273.12: Hope is a poor companion: “Hope is a poor companion for a man in
need, who sitteth in a place of dalliance, when he hath no livelihood secured”
(500).
273.13-16: Better a cap of felt / For dry ears in / Sleet winters blustering
frost / Warmth for three: “And when the frost cometh in its season sew thou
together with thread of oxgut the skins of firstling kids to put about thy back
as a shield against the rain. And on thy head wear thou a cap of wrought felt,
that thou mayst not have thine ears wetted. For chill is the dawn at the onset
of Boreas. And in the dawn a fruitful mist is stretched over the earth from
starry heaven above the fields of happy men: a mist which drawing from the
everflowing rivers is lifted high above the earth by the blowing of the wind,
and anon turneth to rain toward eventide, and otherwhiles to wind, when
Thracian Boreas driveth the thronging clouds. Forestalling that wind, finish
thy work and get thee home betimes, lest the darkening cloud in Heaven cover
thee and make thy body dank and wet thy raiment” (545-547).
The phrase at 273.16 may refer to the Zukofsky family, or may indicate a typo,
three for thee, in which case it plausibly is from the above Hesiod passage.
273.19 Tibia the animal’s legbone / Or old flute
fleet of foot…: tibia = the inner, larger lower leg bone or shin-bone;
ancient variety of flageolet or direct flute; < L. tibia the shin-bone, the shin, hence pipe, flute (orig. of bone)
(CD). Also a technical term in organ music.
273.23 ‘The blood of Christ, the blood of Christ…:
through 273.27 from Walt Whitman, “Notes (Such as They Are) Founded on Elias
Hicks” collected in November Boughs
(1892): “The division vulgarly call’d between Orthodox and Hicksites in the
Society of Friends took place in 1827, ’8 and ’9. Probably it had been
preparing some time. One who was present has since described to me the climax,
at a meeting of Friends in Philadelphia crowded by a great attendance of both
sexes, with Elias as principal speaker. In the course of his utterance or
argument he made use of these words: ‘The
blood of Christ—the blood of Christ—why, my friends, the actual blood of Christ in itself was no more effectual than the blood of
bulls and goats—not a bit more—not a bit.’ At these words, after a
momentary hush, commenced a great tumult.”
274.3 Flail’s swipple or swingle…: a flail is
an implement for “Threshing grain by hand” (274.7). An instrument for threshing
or beating grain from the ear, consisting of the hand-staff, which is held in
the hand, the swingle or swiple [or swipple], which strikes the grain, and the
middle band, which connects the hand-staff and the swingle, and may be a thong
of leather or a rope of hemp or straw (CD).
274.8 Bacchus: Greek God of wine.
274.28 Why hop ye so, ye little, little hills?:
through 275.9 a humorous hymn, which according to Quartermain (208), Hugh
Kenner informed him was found in an anthology of Anglican Humor among the
Clergy. Cf. Psalms 68.16: “Why hop ye so, ye high hills? This is God’s
hill, in the which it pleaseth him to dwell; yea, the Lord will abide in it for
ever.” This is the Anglican Prayer Book Version of the Psalms (Coverdale
Psalter) rather than the King James version, which uses the verb “leap.”
275.10 For 17 years and for 27…: the Zukofskys
moved to Columbia Heights near the Brooklyn Bridge and the Promenade (see
275.13) in late 1942, roughly 17 years prior to the composition of “A”-13, and
for the most part lived in the same neighborhood throughout that period. Also
PZ would turn 17 in Oct. 1960. Ten years previous, LZ also moved from Manhattan
to Columbia Heights, although he moved back in 1934.
275.13 promenade: the Brooklyn Promenade Park
runs along the East River just south of the Brooklyn Bridge, offering excellent
views of downtown Manhattan and New York harbor.
275.39 Brooklyn Bridge / Inclined towards Edward
Hopper’s angular search of shadows: Hopper (1882-1967) American realist
painter, in whose works sharply etched shadows are often prominent, although he
never actually painted the Brooklyn Bridge.
276.8 —Yes, he was thrown in a heap / Out of
Carnegie Hall for yelling / Thru the great pianist’s performance…:
the protagonist of this anecdote is the American proto-modernist Sadakichi
Hartmann (1867-1944) responding to pianist Moriz Rosenthal (1862-1946), a
student of Franz Liszt, adding flourishes to the master’s Hungarian Rhapsody.
276.34 The First Quarto of Pericles / With a preface by Mr. P. Z. Round: a facsimile
publication of the 1609 First Quarto edition (London: C. Praetorious, 1886).
Aside from including PZ’s initials, the name is an acronym of Ezra Pound. LZ
reproduces the title-page of the First Quarto edition in Bottom (321), followed by extensive discussion of textual questions
of Pericles in particular and
Shakespeare in general, although the edition he used was the facsimile edited
by Sidney Lee (1905).
276.39 Another owned about 1750 / By Charles
Jennes the / Virtuoso, Handel’s friend: Jennes adapted from the Bible the
libretto for the oratorio Messiah by
Georg Händel (1685-1759).
277.2 Another of the 1619 edition / Presented to
the U. of Virginia / By Col. Thomas Mann Randolf…: the Fourth Quarto
edition of Pericles. Randolf, or
Randolph (1768-1828) was a Congressman and governor of Virginia; since
Jefferson founded the University of Virginia, it makes sense that Randolf would
make such a donation.
277.15 Order rains—Lucretius did not quite say
that: aside from the pun on rains/reigns (see Bottom 327, also 22.516.1 where LZ “translates” reigns as rain),
this refers to the section in Book II of De
Rerum Natura on the motion of atoms, where atoms are described as
constantly raining, but it is their swerving (clinamen) that begins the actual formation of the physical
universe.
277.19 lightning
before one can say it, lightning: from Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet II.ii (I have not
identified any textual variant that precisely matches LZ’s version):
Juliet:
Well, do not swear: although I joy in thee,
I have no joy of this contract to-night:
It is too rash, too unadvised, too sudden;
Too like the lightning, which doth
cease to be
Ere one can say it lightens. Sweet,
good night!
This bud of love, by summer's ripening breath,
May prove a beauteous flower when next we meet.
Good night, good night! as sweet repose and rest
Come to thy heart as that within my breast!
277.25 Tuppence, Brumous: tuppence = two
pence, former UK silver coin; brumous = pertaining or relating to winter;
hence, foggy, misty, dull and sunless (CD).
277.27 —You said siphonate / For hypenate: LZ
notes this “slip” by PZ dated 9/18/54 (HRC 3.13).
277.38 Godey’s:
Godey’s Lady Book was a popular and
pioneering woman’s magazine from 1850-1898, which included literature, fashion
and articles on all manner of topics deemed of interest to women.
278.3 –That kid, banderlog singing…: through
278.30 mostly various passages from Logan Pearsall Smith (1865-1946), Unforgotten Years (1939), an
autobiographical account of his early development as a writer. In the passage
through 278.6, William James is the speaker (Ahearn quotes the relevant passage
148); Bandar-logs are chattering monkey people in Rudyard Kipling’s two Jungle Books:
278.3-6: That kid, banderlog singing…:
“[William James] had gone, he told me, by tram that afternoon to Boston; and as
he sat and meditated in the Cambridge horsecar two strains of thought had
occupied his mind. One of these was the notion, which Mrs. James had recently
derived from the perusal of Kipling’s writings, that our social order, that all
the graces and amenities of our social life, had for their ultimate sanction
nothing but force, however much we might disguise it—the naked fist, in fact,
the blow of the sword, the crack of the pistol, or the smoke and roar of guns.
Superimposed upon this meditation began to recur, with greater and greater
persistence, the memory of certain remarks of his brother Henry, who, on a
recent visit to America, had indignantly protested against the outrageous pertness
of the American child and the meek pusillanimity with which the older
generation suffered the behavior of their children without protests.
It was not long, William James
said, before he became aware of what had aroused this second line of thought;
it was the droning sound which filled the horsecar—the voice, in fact, of an
American child, who was squeaking over and over again an endless, shrill,
monotonous sing-song. Growing more and more irritated by this squeaking,
William James resolved that he at least would not suffer it without protest;
so, addressing the mother of the vocal infant, he said politely, ‘I think, madam you can hardly be aware
that your child’s song is a cause of annoyance to the rest of us in this
car.’ The lady thus addressed paid no attention; but a gallant American, who
heard it, turned on him and said with great indignation, ‘How dare you, sir,
address a lady in this ungentlemanly fashion!’” (118-119).
278.8-10: ‘Let me impress upon you…:
Henry James’ advise to the young Logan Pearsall Smith on declaring his interest
in becoming a writer: “About the profession of letters in general, the desire
to do the best one could with one’s pen,—and this I confessed was my ambition,
—he made one remark which I have never forgotten. ‘My young friend,’ he said,
‘and I call you young, —you are disgustingly and, if I may be allowed to say
so, nauseatingly young, —there is one thing that, if you really intend to
follow the course you indicate, I cannot too emphatically insist on. There is one word—let me impress upon you—which you
must inscribe upon your banner, and that,’ he added after an impressive
pause, ‘that word is Loneliness’” (219-220).
278.14-21: We venerate our young…:
“[The Greeks’] adoration of the youthful human form, in contrast to the Eastern
idealization of venerable age, has put a kind of blight on human life; our
progress, as we grow older, in wisdom and humanity is thought of in terms of
the physical decay which accompanies that luminous advance. We feel ashamed, instead of feeling proud like the Chinese, of our accumulated years; we are always
trying in vain to seem younger than we really are; in our Western world it is
by no means a compliment, as it is in the wise East, to attribute to others a
greater age than their appearance might suggest. When I think of that brother
and sister [Smith is speaking of himself] fifty years ago at Harvard, —endowed,
it may be, with the grace of youth, but full otherwise of ignorance and folly,
—I cannot but prize more highly our present state. Our bones are ripening, it is true, for their ultimate repose, but how
small a price, after all, is that to
pay for the knowledge we have acquired of the world and men, for the
splendid panorama of literature and the arts which years of travel and study
have unrolled before us, and above all for
those adequate conceptions in whose possession, according to Spinoza’s wisdom,
true felicity consists” (129-130).
Adequate conceptions or ideas,
according to Spinoza, are those which are motivated by reason rather than
passions. These lines, a central tenet of Spinoza’s philosophy, do not
necessarily have a specific source, but Ethics
Part IV, Appendix, No. 4 is a possibility: “It is therefore extremely useful in
life to perfect as much as we can the intellect or reason, and of this alone
does the happiness or blessedness of man consist: for blessedness (beatitude)
is nothing else than satisfaction of mind which arises from the intuitive
knowledge of God. But to perfect the intellect is nothing else than to
understand God and his attributes and actions which follow from the necessity
of his nature. Wherefore the ultimate aim of a man who is guided by reason,
that is, his greatest desire by which he endeavours to moderate all the others,
is that whereby an adequate conception is brought to him of all things which
can come within the scope of his intelligence” (trans. Andrew Boyle).
278.26-28: These blossoms nourished by
something / As ugly as manure…: “Thus the sense of malease grew, and has
indeed remained with me so vividly that I never meet a rich, successful
business American without some slight speculation about the bones he has
crushed and the wretches he has eaten. These experiences have given me a
certain dislike for the whole iron economic system upon which our civilization
is founded—a dislike, however, which I must admit is by no means strong enough
to make me forgo any of the pecuniary advantages which I derive from it. And
anyhow I quiet my conscience—how honestly or dishonestly it would be difficult
for me to say—by the reflection that I cannot think out any other economic
scheme of things that would allow the human spirit to put forth fairer
blossoms. The only alternative to it seem to be Fascism and Communism, and of
the prospects these offer it would be difficult to say which is the more
ghastly. But that these blossoms of
capitalism are nourished by something as
ugly as manure seems plain enough to me when I think (as I try not to
think) of our present social system, and
the questionable gold which the world keeps on putting into my pockets” (151-152).
278.29-30: His Quaker mother…:
Smith’s mother was a prominent figure in the Quaker community, and he describes
a visit by a group of schoolgirls: “The spectacle of all these good young
girls, being prepared, as my mother knew, for lives of self-sacrifice as
daughters, or as wives of American business husbands—somehow this spectacle
banished from the old lady’s mind the admonition she had intended for them, and
when she opened her lips I was considerably surprised to hear her say, ‘Girls, don’t be too unselfish’” (157).
278.22 two tallest Manhattan skyscrapers: the
Chrysler Building and the Empire State Building, completed in 1930 and 1931
respectively, were the two tallest skyscrapers in the world until the late 1960s.
278.24 They are cut of white cardboard / On the
blue: Ahearn suggests (159) that LZ may have in mind Henri Matisse’s late
paper cut-outs of white on blue.
278.32 Savoyards: those involved in or fans of
Gilbert and Sullivan operas; from the Savoy Theatre in London.
278.34 ‘Dear
Mr. Gilbert, what is Mr. Bach composing now?’…: this well-known joke is
attributed to W.S. Gilbert (1836-1911) in response to a fulsome admirer; LZ
apparently got this from a Niedecker letter received 12 July 1953 (Penberthy 215).
278.36 Gainsborough boy…: English painter
Thomas Gainsborough (1727-1788); “The Blue Boy,” a portrait of a boy in a blue
suit is perhaps his best-known work (in the Huntington Library, California).
278.38 “Sharp” Cathedral for Chartres: the
famous gothic cathedral in France, the proper pronunciation of Chartres poses a
challenge for Americans unfamiliar with French.
279.2 Milch: giving milk; milky, said of
plants; yielding liquid, distilling drops (namely, tears) (CD); from Ger.
meaning milk.
279.5 If with light head . . / From my poor love
of anything…: from Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862), “Inspiration”:
If with light head erect I sing
Though all the Muses
lend their force,
From my poor love of anything,
The verse is weak and
shallow as its source.
But if with bended neck I grope
Listening behind me for my wit,
With faith superior
to hope,
More anxious to keep
back than forward it,—
Making my soul accomplice there
Unto the flame my
heart hath lit,
Then will the verse
forever wear,—
Time cannot bend the
line which God has writ.
I hearing get, who had but ears,
And sight, who had
but eyes before;
I moments live, who
lived but years,
And truth discern,
who knew but learning’s lore.
279.10 Ooçah: ? Ahearn notes that this is the
only cedilla in “A” and that cedilla
(from Spanish) means “little z” (153); or more precisely indicates the
pronunciation “cz.”
279.12 Fiftieth star for Hawaii: Hawai’i
became the fiftieth state in Aug. 1959.
279.16 The
Stronger…: a short play by August Strindberg (1849-1912) about the
rivalry between two women over a man, which takes place in a café. The
continuation of the sentence is taken from the play, and the following sentence
is LZ’s rewriting.
279.27 Chief of State for latrines or the Nations
run by / a Doctrine:
279.32 the Herald in Agamemnon: in the tragedy by Aeschylus (c.525-456 BC), the
Herald precedes Agamemnon’s arrival back home from the Trojan War, and
expresses a love of country, the glory of Agamemnon and recounts the sufferings
of war.
279.40 Emerson’s
noble chemistry / Poured out /
Sunshine from cucumbers…: from Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882), a journal
entry on the Persian poet Hafiz that LZ found in the notes to the essay
“Persian Poetry” (1976) in the Centennial edition of Letters and Social Aims
(1903-1904). The reference to “sunshine from cucumbers” alludes to the absurd
experiments of the Academy of Lagado
from Jonathan Swift, Gulliver’s Travels,
Book III, Chap. 5:
“In
the journal of 1846 is a translation of Hafiz, followed by this paragraph,
called " The Noblest Chemistry ": — Sunshine from
cucumbers. Here was a man who has occupied himself in a noble
chemistry of extracting honor from scamps, temperance from sots, energy
from beggars, justice from thieves, benevolence from misers. He knew there was
sunshine under those moping churlish brows, elegance of manners hidden in the
peasant, heart-warming expansion, grand surprises of sentiment, in these
unchallenged, uncultivated men, and he persevered against all repulses until he
drew it forth: now his orphans are educated, his boors are polished, his
palaces built, his pictures, statues, conservatories, chapels adorn them; he
stands there prince among his peers, prince of prince, —the sunshine is out,
all flowing abroad over the world.”
280.8 Charlie befriending the kid / ‘There can’t
always be the orange…: Charlie Chaplin (1889-1977), the initial allusion is
probably to The Kid (1921), his first
great feature length film, in which Chaplin as the Tramp adopts an abandoned
child. The quoted remark was made to Bosley Crowther
and reported in the New York Times for 28 Sept. 1952 “Under Suspicion:
The Dilemma of Charlie Chaplin and Some Other Artists in Hollywood”: “The great stories today are the things that
are happening inside people. The things with which we have to compete are the
startling physical and scientific developments and discoveries that are
crowding upon us day by day. But all this external materialistic world has its
counterpart, which is the spiritual. That's my theme. Against these great external
forces, internal spiritual forces must grow. Nature always compensates with
balance. There can't always be the
orange outweighing the pea. So I am not afraid of all this atom business
because I know that out of it will come the greatest expression of spirituality
that man has ever known” (reported to Bosley Crowther in a 4 Oct. 1964 article
in the The New York Times, but LZ
must have found this elsewhere).
280.12 For Saadi sat in the sun…: through
280.16 from Ralph Waldo Emerson, remarks concerning the great Persian poet
Saadi (1184-1291?) found in the notes to “Persian Poetry” in Letters and Social Aims (Rieke 97).
First, from Emerson’s poem “Saadi”:
Yet Saadi loved the race of men,—
No churl immured in
cave or den,—
In bower and hall
He wants them all,
Nor can dispense
With Persia for his
audience; (lines 23-28)
And yet it seemeth
not to me
That the high gods
love tragedy;
For Saadi sat in the sun,
And thanks was his contrition […] (lines 70-73).
280.14-16: said / It was rumored I was
penitent…: from Emerson, “Shakespeare; or the Poet” in Representative Men (1850), but again in this case found in the
notes to “Persian Poetry”: remark attributed to Saadi: “‘It was rumored abroad
that I was penitent; but what had I to do with repentance?’”
280.21 ‘In-laws are outlaws’: quip by PZ (HRC
3.13).
280.29 The midge wing cycle of 1000 flaps per
second: from the New York Times for 31 July 1960: “Scientist Depicts
Midge Wing Cycle; 1,000 flaps a Second Cited by Britain as a Product of
Elasticity in Body.”
280.37 12 Street home: in 1940, the Zukofskys
lived on 11th Street in lower Manhattan (?).
280.40 Old Fire House Museum on Duane Street:
Duane Street on the lower East Side was the former location of the NYC Fire
Dept. exhibitions of historical equipment. This and the following mentioned
streets are all within easy walking distance of where LZ grew up on Chrystie
Street.
281.7 C
Street: presumably Chrystie Street; although Avenue C is on the lower East
Side.
281.10 Greene Street: in Greenwich Village,
NYC. “Rat lofts” also mentioned at 5.18.10.
281.16 French conductor…:
281.20 I remember another language…: that is,
Yiddish, LZ’s first language; “shwenk de
wesh” would more usually be Romanized, “shvenk
de vesh.”
281.23 ‘A broch zu dir Semmele hust shayn a colt’:
Yiddish; LZ translates this at 281.25. “ A
broch zu dir” (a brokh tsu dir)
usually would be a bit stronger: Damn you!
281.24 a’s
Latin tho, the tone’s sneeze Prospero’s: a Latin “a” is pronounced short
(roughly ah). Prospero is the
scholarly magician in Shakespeare’s The
Tempest.
281.28 Translating Latin sentences— /
‘The sword will be hidden in the man, / And the javelin in the bad boy’: a
made-up Latin sentence by PZ (HRC 3.13).
281.31 Admiral Kickover…:
281.37 pseudepigrapha: spurious writings,
specifically, those writings which profess to be Biblical in character and
inspired in authorship, but are not adjudged genuine by the general consent of
scholars; those professedly Biblical books which are regarded as neither
canonical nor inspired, and from their character are not worthy of use in
religious worship. Biblical literature is divided into three classes: (a) The
canonical and inspired; (b) the non-canonical and uninspired, but on account of
their character worthy of use in the services of the church; (c) those which,
though Biblical in form, so vary from the Biblical writings in spirit that they
are not deemed worthy of any place in religious use. The second constitute the
apocrypha, the third the pseudepigrapha (CD).
281.40 Isorhythm: a musical form in which a
given rhythm cyclically repeats, although the corresponding melody notes may
change.
281.41: Dominations
and angelic orders: probably allusion to George Santayana, Dominations and Powers (1951), which LZ
reviewed in “The Effacement of Philosophy” (Prep+
54-56). Dominations and powers are orders of angels.
282.2 editor / Who started as a shipping clerk…:
282.11 Satori: sudden enlightenment in Zen
Buddhism.
282.12 muzjik: or muzhik = Russian peasant.
282.32 The Triangle fire: infamous fire in the
Triangle Waist Factory, located at 23-29 Washington Place, on 25 March 1911
that killed 146 poor immigrant workers.
282.37 arcades of Richardson’s spacious windows…:
refers to the architect Henry Hobson Richardson (1838-1886), a good friend of
Henry Adams, who although he began in NYC in fact designed very few buildings
there. However, he was highly influential in developing a Romanesque style, in
contrast to the then popular Gothic revival style, known as the Richardson
Romanesque.
282.39 Lower Broadway: major north-south
boulevard of Manhattan that ends at Battery Park at the southern tip of the
island.
282.40 Melville (at the foot of Gansevoort) walked
under them: Gansevoort Street on the Lower West Side down to the piers
where Melville would have gone as deputy inspector of customs (1866-1886);
named after Melville’s grandfather, the Revolutionary hero Peter Gansevoort.
282.40 Lanier / Lectured or played his flute at
the Broadway Central: the American poet, Sidney Lanier (1842-1881), was a
professional flutist and visited NYC city on a number of occasions. The Grand
Central Hotel at Broadway and West 3rd Street, later renamed the Broadway
Central Hotel, was built in 1869 on the site of a former famous theatre.
283.3 Irving’s low town house…: probably
refers to Irving House on the corner of Irving Place and East 17th Street,
across from the Washington Irving High School; although there is a plaque
claiming Washington Irving (1783-1859) lived at this address, apparently this
is not the case, but the developer of Irving Place was a friend who named the
street after him in 1831.
283.3 Twain / Smoking nearby…: One of Mark
Twain’s NYC homes was at 14 West 10th Street.
283.4 Henry James returned…: Henry James
visited NYC in 1904, the year of LZ’s birth, and describes visiting both the
Lower East Side and Washington Square in The
American Scene (1907); see note at 12.148.21 and 18.397.18-19. A few
phrases at 283.6 are taken from the Preface to The American Scene: “My visit to America had been the first possible
to me for nearly a quarter of a century, and I had before my last previous one,
brief and distant to memory, spent other years in continuous absence; so that I
was to return with much of the freshness of eye, outward and inward, which,
with the further contribution of a state
of desire, is commonly held a precious agent of perception. I felt no
doubt, I confess, of my great advantage on that score; since if I had had time
to become almost as ‘fresh’ as an inquiring stranger, I had not on the other
hand had enough to cease to be, or at least to feel, as acute as an initiated
native. I made no scruple of my conviction that I should understand and should care better and more than the most
earnest of visitors, and yet that I should vibrate with more curiosity—on the
extent of ground, that is, on which I might aspire to intimate intelligence at
all—than the pilgrim with the longest list of questions, the sharpest appetite
for explanations and the largest exposure to mistakes.”
283.7 the Mews: Washington Mews just north of
Washington Square, still used to house horse stables during LZ’s youth.
283.8 American
Classical of Washington Square: square in the heart of Greenwich
Village in NYC; along the north side in particular are 19th century row houses
built in Greek revival style. Henry James lived on Washington Square as a boy
and of course used it as the title of one of his novels.
283.9 the University: New York University
campus is located around Washington Square.
283.16 Worth Street: runs east-west across
lower Manhattan.
283.19 O Pompeian florals:
283.20 W. C. Fields…: (1880-1946), American
comic and actor.
283.25 our Cyrus:
283.30 Sputnik: probably Sputnik 4 launched on
15 May 1960 and stayed up for over two years, or perhaps Sputnik 5 launched 19
August 1960 carrying two dogs plus mice, rats and plants.
283.33 Polaris: ballistic missile capable of
carrying a nuclear warhead and launched from submarines; first test launched in
1960.
283.34 Dear Whilom friend champing with the bad
teeth of Rudaki: Basil Bunting, who translated the poem by the Persian poet
Rudaki (859-c.941) about his bad teeth (see Collected
Poems 133-134); an abbreviated version is quoted in Bottom 120-121. Bunting seems to have sent LZ his translation in
Dec. 1948, and he had in fact lost several teeth to scurvy in 1942 (Keith
Alldritt, The Poet as Spy: The Life and
Wild Times of Basil Bunting. London: Aurum P, 1998. 99, 114-115). Whilom is
archaic meaning having once been, former (AHD).
283.36 The Hoe, Plymouth, England: the
Plymouth Hoe is a large grassy park area on Plymouth Sound.
283.37 seadog: veteran sailor.
284.3 love
trouthe and . . wed thy folk: from Geoffrey Chaucer (1340-1400), the
balade “Lak of Stedfastnesse,” the envoy addressed to King Richard (as quoted
in TP 16):
O prince, desyre to be honourable
Cherish thy folk and
hate extorcioun!
Suffre no thyng, that
may be reprevable
To thyn estat, don in
thy regioun.
Shew forth thy swerd
of castigacioun,
Dred God, do law, love trouthe and worthynesse
And wed thy folk ageyn to stedfastnesse.
284.6 ‘A time for government to step aside…:
Dwight David Eisenhower (see 265.7)
famously remarked: "I like to believe that people in the long run are
going to do more to promote peace than our governments. Indeed, I think that
people want peace so much that one of these days governments had better get out
of their way and let them have it" (from TV Talk with British Prime
Minister Harold Macmillan, 31 August 1959).
284.10 ‘By pooling intelligence nets (laughing)…:
through 284.32 LZ quotes various, often colorful remarks by Nikita Khrushchev
(1894-1971), Premier of the Soviet Union from 1953-1964. The majority of the
quotations come from Khrushchev’s first visit to the U.S. for almost two weeks
in Sept. 1959, in which virtually his every move and remark was reported in the
media. Probably, but not certainly, LZ is mainly quoting from the New York
Times.
284.10 ‘By pooling intelligence nets
(laughing) / So we don’t have to pay twice / For spying the same information:
reported in New York Times for 17 Sept. 1959: “Visitor, Cameramen Up
Early; Khrushchev Twits Allen Dulles; He Says They Read the Same Reports, and
Suggests They Merge Their Spy Services—His Talk Is Pungent.”
284.13 . . a hog under a sonar test
/ Wants to keep his fat sickness a secret, / Ashamed of it?: from the New
York Times for 17 Sept. 1959: “Khrushchev Sees U.S. Model Farm; Trades
Quips With Benson and Examines Livestock at Research Center.”
284.16 As to my saying we will bury
you / Here is one city / Of Americans, literally to bury / Only this city one
life would not be enough: from a report on “Khrushchev Speech at National
Press Club and Questions and Answers” in the New York Times for 17 Sept.
1959. In Nov. 1956 Khrushchev famously made the remark, “Whether you like it or
not, history is on our side. We will bury you,” to a group of Western
ambassadors, and on various occasions over the subsequent years he would
attempt to qualify his statement.
284.20 My face . . the wen is there
/ Nothing I can do about it, / I was born with it’: New York Times
for 17 Sept. 1959: “Premier Uses Face To Illustrate a Point”: “Discussing the
question of noninterference before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Mr. Khrushchev pointed to a blemish on
his face. "The wen is
there and there is nothing I can do about it," he told the
Senators, “I was born with it.”
284.23 After lunch: ‘Even an animal
/ If you feed him becomes kind / Tho a Russian full of vodka / Could never
reach the moon: remarks in meeting with the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee reported in the New York Times for 17 Sept. 1959.
284.27 You are a nightingale . . /
Singing it closes its eyes and hears nothing / And no one except itself: New
York Times for 25 Sept. 1959: “Reuther Scored by Soviet Press; Moscow Says
Labor Leader Distorted Account of Khrushchev Dinner”: in an exchange with
Walter P. Reuther, President of the United Auto Workers: “’You are like a nightingale,’ Khrushchev said, smiling, 'When
singing it closes its eyes, sees and hears nothing and no one except itself.’”
284.31 spit in their / Eyes and they
say God’s dew’: this appears to be a proverbial remark Khrushchev used on a
number of occasions, including a New York Times report for 13 May 1960
on “Queries on U-2 Incident and Khrushchev's Replies.”
284.32 Nikita / second name?: Sergei (or
Sergeyevich) is usually given as Khrushchev’s middle name but sometimes treated
as his first.
284.34 G.:
284.36 Pullets, pewlitzers, dull bright fellows:
< Pulitzer Prizes, Fulbright Fellows.
285.14 Cuba’s cane: probably alluding to the
Cuban Revolution; Fidel Castro’s forces triumphed in Jan. 1959, and in Aug.
1960 his government nationalized all foreign property in response to the U.S.
embargo. Sugarcane is a major Cuban crop.
285.14 snake dance / twining down on Kishi:
Nobusuke Kishi (1896-1987) was forced to resign as Prime Minister of Japan in
July 1960, primarily due to large, often violent demonstrations in opposition
to his extention of the U.S.-Japan Mutual Security Treaty.
285.16 Mau Mau: native resistance movement in
Kenya during the mid-1950s; began as a bloody campaign against Europeans in
1952 and largely put down by 1956, although the state of emergency in Kenya was
officially lifted only in Jan. 1960.
285.18 Or as the Queen of British barmaids…:
the New York Times for 11 June 1960: “Philip Opens British Fair; Nixon
and Governor Meet; Fair Opened Here by Prince Philip”: “Prince Philip opened
the $200,000,000 British Exhibition at the New York Coliseum yesterday, with
Vice President Nixon and Governor Rockefeller taking part in the ceremony.” As
part of the ceremony, “Joan (Hebe) Morton, queen of English barmaids,” escorted the dignitaries;
“’I told them to call me Hebe.
That means goddess of youth, dears.’”
285.26 —Keep
up your bright swords, for the dew will rust them…: from Shakespeare, Othello I.ii:
Othello: Keep up your bright swords,
for the dew will rust them.—
Good signior, you
shall more command with years
Than with your
weapons.
285.27 God’s
my life—snoring—no man can tell what:
from Shakespeare, A Midsummer Night’s
Dream IV.i: [Bottom on waking up:] “God’s my life, stolen hence, and left
me asleep! I have had a most rare vision. I have had a dream, past the wit of
man to say what dream it was: man is but an ass, if he go about to expound this
dream. Methought I was—there is no man can tell what. Methought I was, —and
methought I had, —but man is but a patched fool, if he will offer to say what
methought I had. The eye of man hath not heard, the ear of man hath not seen,
man’s hand is not able to taste, his tongue to conceive, nor his heart to
report, what my dream was. I will get Peter Quince to write a ballad of this
dream: it shall be called Bottom’s Dream, because it hath no bottom; and I will
sing it in the latter end of a play, before the duke: peradventure, to make it
the more gracious, I shall sing it at her death” (qtd. Bottom 9).
285.28 —Look,
if my gentle love be not rais’d up!:
from Shakespeare, Othello II.iii;
Othello speaking on Desdemona’s entrance.
285.29 Times:
New York Times newspaper.
285.31 —Protesting a tax on horsetails for bows…:
from the New York Times for 3 Feb. 1960: “M.P. Perceives Discord In
Ill-Attuned Taxation”: “London, Feb. 2 (AP)—A member of Parliament complained
that the British Treasury was fiddling around with its taxes on fiddling.
Gerald Nabarro, a Conservative, told the House of Commons that a hank of
horsetail hairs suitable for repairing one violin bow was subject to a retail purchase
tax of twenty-five percent. But there is no tax on a whole horsetail of hair. ‘Will the
Chancellor of the Exchequer remove all for violins from the purchase tax
schedules?’ he demanded. Chancellor Derick Heathcoat Amory said no, ‘A tail of
horsehair is mere raw material,’ he explained. ‘A hank of such hair, selected
and prepared for repair of a violin bow, is an accessory to a musical
instrument.’ When Mr. Nabarro accused him of ‘adding confusion to confusion,’
Mr. Heathcoat brought the house down by commenting:
‘I am glad to know that Mr. Nabarro has an interest in violins. I thought he belonged to the wind rather than to
the strings.’"
286.6 As the little old lady said…: this and
the following refer to Wanda Landowska (1879-1959) Polish-French
harpsichordist, who moved to the U.S. in 1940. Leo Tolstoy was a great fan, and
on a number of occasions early in her career Landowaka visited and performed at
his home, once during a storm. See 286.17.
286.14 hurdy-gurdies: a barrel organ or
similar instrument played by turning a crank, often used by street muscians.
286.17 Landowska’s nose, that’s Bach’s Goldberg /
Sounding off…: see 286.6; an influential teacher, Landowska was largely
responsible for the revival of the harpsichord and was the first to play Bach’s
Goldberg Variations on that instrument in the 20th century. She had a prominent
nose.
286.20 No,
let us not flatter ourselves…: these two lines, as well at those at
286.28-287.17 from Wanda Landowska (see 286.6), Musique ancienne (1909), an important book on early music
translated as Music of the Past (1924) by William Aspenwell Bradley: “Nero,
going to Greece to complete for the music prize, took with
him five thousand persons who, trained to applaud, mingled with the
crowd to stimulate it. The applause of a hundred thousand spectators
encouraged by several thousand Roman athletes…no, let us not flatter
ourselves—it is not we who have invented loud noise” (41).
286.22 her Music of the Past: see preceding
note.
286.24 —They all have their radios and phonographs
on…: through 286.27 a remark by PZ dated Dec 28/52 (HRC 3.13).
286.34 Children are fond of stories /
Which frighten them…: see note at 286.20: “[C.M.F.E. von] Weber also rails
at the emphatic language which was becoming the fashion in his time: ‘Do you by
any chance believe that in our progressive age, when so many things happen, a
composer should for your sake cease to suppress his divine, gigantic ideas? God
forbid! It is now no longer possible to talk of clearness, of neatness as in
the time of Gluck, of Handel and of Mozart.’ But the children sated with
the amiable, sprightly tales which had lulled them too long, seemed not to
reject these stories which frighten them” (31).
“At
the monster concert given in 1615 at Dresden by the
command of the Elector of Saxony, one of my compatriots, a certain Raposki,
of Cracow, had brought from the Low Countries, on a wagon drawn by
eight mules, a counter-bass more than eight yards tall. To it had been fitted
a little ladder which made it possible to reach the neck of
the instrument; and, across the strings of this giant counter-bass, was drawn
by many arms an enormous bow. This machine however seemed not
to suffice. The grandiose idea was then conceived of improvising a
counter-bass by means of a wind-mill stretched with heavy cables
which four men were employed to vibrate by means of a heavy piece
of notched wood. On one side of the orchestra was a great organ on
which Father Serapion worked hands and feet with might and main. A
battery of mortars replaced the kettledrums. The execution was worthy of
this fine preparation. The prima donna Bigozzi, of Milan, sang so well and so
long that she died of it three days later.”
287.2 (Breughel’s spaces): see 8.66.15, 17.377.19.
287.18 Golden Mean’s / Calculus: for
Aristotle’s ethical “golden mean,” see 12.236.13. Also “golden section,” a
ratio, represented by the Greek letter phi,
that is seen to have mysterious, even mystical significance and has been
applied in mathematics and art, including music.
287.22 Stands for First Things / The Great Mother…:
through 287.35 quoted and paraphrased from Lucretius, De Rerum Natura Bk. II:
“Wherefore earth alone has been called the
Great Mother of the gods [Cybele], and the mother of the wild beast, and
the parent of our body. Of her in
days of old the learned poets of the Greeks sang that <borne on from her
sacred> shrine in her car she drove a yoke of lions, teaching thereby that the
great earth hangs in the space
of air nor can earth rest on earth.
[…] On her the diverse nations in the ancient rite of worship call as the
Mother of Ida, and they give her Phrygian bands to bear her company, because
from those lands first they say corn began to be produced throughout the whole
world. […] Taut timbrels [like a tambourine; same etymological root as timpani]
thunder in their hands, and hollow cymbals
all around, and horns menace with
harsh-sounding bray, and the hollow pipe goads their minds in the Phrygian mode, and they carry weapons before them, the
symbols of their dangerous frenzy, that they may be able to fill with fear of
the goddess’s power the thankless minds and unhallowed hearts of the multitude.
[…] Then comes an armed band, whom the Greeks call by name the Curetes of Phrygia, and because now and
again they join in mock conflict of arms and leap in rhythmic movement,
gladdened at the sight of blood and shaking as they nod the awesome crests upon
their heads, they recall the Curetes of Dicte, who are said once in Crete to
have drowned the wailing of the infant Jove, while, a band of boys around the
baby boy, in hurrying dance all armed, they beat in measured rhythm brass upon
brass, that Saturn might not seize and commit him to his jaws, and plant an
everlasting wound deep in the Mother’s heart. […] Yet all this, albeit well and
nobly set forth and told, is nevertheless far removed from true reasoning. For
it must needs be that all the nature of the gods enjoys life everlasting in
perfect peace, sundered and separated far away from our world” (86-87; trans.
Cyril Bailey).
287.30 Curetes: attendants of Rhea, mother of
the gods, often depicted performing a sacred dance to accompanying music; see
above quotation from Lucretius.
287.34 Tibiae stimulate: tibiae < L. pl. of
tibia = shinebone, type of ancient flute;
see 273.19. Presumably this is LZ’s interpretation of the “hollow pipe” in the
above quotation from Lucretius.
287.36 Let’s go upstairs!: CZ notes that at
the time of writing the Zukofskys lived in a tenth floor apartment at 135
Willow Street in Brooklyn Heights (Ahearn, “Two Conversations” 116).
287.37 What your Ludwig probably means…:
through 288.3 is a remark by PZ dated 6/30/55 (HRC 3.13), referring to Ludwig
Wittgenstein (1889-1951) and a remark that particularly intrigued LZ from the Tractatus
Logico-Philosophicus (1921):
“2.013 Everything is, as it were, in a space of possible atomic facts. I can
think of this space as empty, but not of the thing without the space. 2.0131 A
spatial object must lie in infinite space. (A point in space is a place for an
argument.)” (qtd. Bottom 46, 47). LZ used the first English translation
by C.K. Ogden and F.P. Ramsey (1922), which included the original German.
288.13 Picasso’s jeering horse’s head in / His
“Guernica”: a horse’s head with the mouth shown
“tilted” figures prominently at the center of this painting by Picasso.
Although it is unlikely most would describe the horse as “jeering,” LZ
evidently emphasizes the defiant aspect of the work. On Picasso’s “Guernica”,
see 12.205.34;
and the Guernica bombing, see 10.118.20.
288.21 old composer / Who teaches in his studio…:
Wallingford Riegger (1885-1961), American composer and teacher who lived and
worked most of his life in NYC. An advocate of modernist music, Riegger was
well-known for adaptations of twelve-tone or duodecuple techniques.
288.31 “Duodecuple”: technical term for
twelve-tone music; see 288.21.
288.32 Et
bonum quo antiquius, eo melius…:
LZ immediately translates the Latin in the following line, but makes it
self-questioning; from Shakespeare, Pericles
I.Prologue (qtd. Bottom 145, 330):
Gower: To sing a song that old was
sung,
From ashes ancient
Gower is come;
Assuming man’s
infirmities,
To glad your ear, and
please your eyes.
It hath been sung at
festivals,
On ember-eves and
holy-ales;
And lords and ladies
in their lives
Have read it for
restoratives:
The purchase is to
make men glorious;
Et bonum quo antiquius, eo melius.
288.35 —Thanks
fer / Passover provender…: a thank you note from EP dated
3/30/56 (HRC 3.13), when he was
imprisoned at St. Elizabeths from 1945-1958 (EP/LZ xviii).
289.5 Lunik
Three: the USSR Lunik or Luna 3, launched 4 Oct. 1959 and sent back the
first pictures of dark side a few days later.
289.10 Choctaw oke
or hoke equals yes: a common folk etymology for “okay” is that it derives from
the Native American Choctaw word oke or hoke, an affirmative
response meaning roughly “it is so.”
289.18 helden soprano: helden =
Ger. heroes or epics, here means a heroic soprano such as Wagner’s Brunhilde
(see 289.21), a Valkyrie or female Norse divinities who accompany the dead to
Valhalla, who is the central female character in Richard Wagner’s opera cycle, Der
Ring der Nibelungen (1869-1876). This anecdote was related by PZ dated
2/24/60 (HRC 3.13).
289.21 Brunhilde: a Valkyrie (female Norse
divinities who accompany the dead to Valhalla) who is the central female
character in Richard Wagner’s opera cycle, Der
Ring der Nibelungen (1869-1876).
289.23 Man in the moon stand and stride…: to
the end of this section quotes a modernized spelling version of “The Man in the
Moon,” an anonymous medieval lyric from the 14th century manuscript called the
Harley Lyrics, which is the largest single collection of early Middle English lyrics.
290.24 The
human son fathered by man and the sun: from Aristotle, Physics II.2 (194b): “Again, matter is a
relative term: to each form there corresponds a special matter. How far then
must the physicist know the form or essence? Up to a point, perhaps, as the
doctor must know sinew or the smith bronze (i.e. until he understands the
purpose of each): and the physicist is concerned only with things whose forms
are separable indeed, but do not exist apart from matter. Man is begotten by man and by the sun as well. The mode of
existence and essence of the separable it is the business of the primary type
of philosophy to define” (trans R.P. Hardie & R.K. Gaye) (qtd. Bottom 76, 86; see 300.10, 303.5-6 and
12.236.11-13). Cf. “Poem beginning ‘The’” (lines 313-314), where LZ uses the
same pun adapting II Samuel 8:33.
290.29 Korean King who / In the first half century…:
see Bottom 423 where it is a Korean
poet rather than king; these same two passages are quoted and related in Prep + 171-172. It is probable that this
tale refers to the Korean kayagum, a 12-string zither that is believed to be
related to the Chinese k’in (see 300.23).
290.32 paulownia
wood: particularly prized in East Asia because it is easy to carve and
often used for musical instruments.
290.38 my Shakespeare theme—‘Love see?’—…: as
elaborated in Bottom:
“love: reason :: eyes: mind
Love needs no tongue
of reason if love and the eyes are 1—an identity. The good reasons of the
mind’s right judgment are but superfluities for saying: Love sees—if it needs saying at all in a text which is always
hovering towards The rest is silence”
(39).
291.3 spinet: small upright piano. Along with
the “blessed” of the preceding line, also suggests Spinoza, a major source for
the articulation of LZ’s “Shakespeare theme.”
291.5 four seasons: Antonio Vivaldi’s “The
Four Seasons”; see 12.136.26.
291.12 Only in Shakespeare is there / Such
reconcilement…: see 290.38.
291.18 outpost Harry: scene of a fierce
eight-day battle in June 1953 during the Korean War between a small contingent
of U.S. troops fending off vastly superior Chinese communist troops. During
lulls in the fighting the dead were recovered.
291.30 —Your
idea of novelizing / The pernicious being / Of the little girl…: Cf. notes
for a novel at 12.254.28f.
292.6 ‘An older sister an English beauty / Called
Violet…:
292.12 —He used to talk about / His art and his
God and his fiddle…: through 292.21 is a quoted anecdote by James C.
Petrillo, head of the American Federation of Musicians, A.F.L., concerning the
violinist Yehuda Menuhin. The New York Times for 10 June 1953 has a
report, “Oscar Levant Swallows Pride and Squirms as Petrillo Calls tune on
Pianist’s Future,” in which Petrillo makes an example of Levant for trying to
resist the union and recounts this earlier incident with Menuhin.
292.22 Two hundred years ago / His alma mater…:
Columbia University, which LZ attended from 1920-1922, was chartered by King
George II as King’s College in 1754, and its first location was at the Trinity
Church schoolhouse on what is now lower Broadway. In 1857 the college moved to
a site at 49th Street and Madison Avenue bought from the Deaf and Dumb Asylum.
Moved to its current Morningside Heights location in 1897, previously the site
of the Bloomingdale Insane Asylum.
293.3 ‘Barrel E, Barrel A, Barrel D, Barrel G’:
Ahearn’s suggestion that this is PZ hearing musical notes in the banging of the
garbage men (156) is supported by CZ (“Commemorative Evening” 25).
293.9 . . the commodity wages not with the danger
/ . . so live quietly and so give over: from Shakespeare, Pericles IV.ii:
Pander: Three or four thousand
chequins were as pretty proportion to
live quietly, and so give over.
Bawd:
Why to give over, I pray you? Is it a shame to get when we are old?
Pander:
O, our credit comes not in like the commodity, nor the commodity wages not with the danger; therefore, if in our
youths we could pick up some pretty estate, ’twere not amiss to keep our door
hatch’d. Besides, the sore terms we stand upon with the gods will be strong
with us for giving o’er.
293.11 . . sung, and made the night bed mute: from Shakespeare, Pericles
IV.Prologue (this line is from the 1609 First Quarto: all modern texts accept the
emendation of “night bed” to “night-bird” = nightingale, first suggested by the
18th century scholar Lewis Theobald; qtd. Bottom 38):
Gower: Or when she would with sharpe
needle wound,
The Cambricke which
she made more sound
By hurting it or when
too’th Lute
She sung, and made the night bed mute,
That still records
with mone […]
293.11 and / the lonely listener, / prose clothes the poem:
293.14 . . world-without-end bargain in: from
Shakespeare, Love’s Labour’s Lost
V.ii: “Princess: A time, methinks,
too short / To make a world-without-end
bargain in.”
293.15 And take upon’s . . / Who loses and who
wins…: from Shakespeare, King Lear
V.iii (qtd. Bottom 312, Prep+ 22 and TP 141):
Lear: No, no, no, no! Come, let’s
away to prison:
We two alone will
sing like birds I’ the cage:
When thou dost ask me
blessing, I’ll kneel down,
And ask of thee
forgiveness: so we’ll live,
And pray, and sing,
and tell old tales, and laugh
At gilded
butterflies, and hear poor rogues
Talk of court news;
and we’ll talk with them too,
Who loses and who wins; who’s in, who’s out;
And take upon’s the mystery of things,
As if we were God’s spies: and we’ll wear out,
In a wall’d prison,
packs and sects of great ones,
That ebb and flow by
the moon.
293.31 M. said…: Max Beerbohm (1872-1956) in The Works of Max Beerbohm (1898): “To
give an accurate and exhaustive account of that period would need a far less
brilliant pen than mine.”
293.36 No one in history or legend / Died of
laughter…: from Max Beerbohm in “Laughter” (1920): “Strange, when you come
to think of it, that of all the countless folk who have lived before our time
on this planet not one is known in
history or in legend as having died
of laughter.”
294.2 You can’t win affection / By wishing your
opponent to drop dead…: Cf. concluding scene of Little (CF 175; also
131); also Spinoza’s remarks on the transformation of hate through love (see
11.124.19, 12.233.26).
294.6 Pill-and-Envy / Mud’s Son:
294.8 All he has to do is to sit down / And he
looks like Michelangelo’s Moses…: a remark by CZ (dated July 22/58,
HRC 3.13) referring to the poet Ebbe Borregaard (b. 1933), who attended LZ’s
workshop at San Francisco College during the summer of 1958. The comparison is
with the main figure in
Michelangelo’s elaborate tomb for Pope Julian II in St. Peter’s Cathedral, the
Vatican; the statue depicts Moses with a strikingly long flowing beard. The
suggestion is plausible: see photo of Borregaard around this
time in Lewis Ellingham and Kevin Killian, Poet Be Like God: Jack Spicer and
the San Francisco Renaissance (Wesleyan UP, 1998): 194. See Robert Duncan’s
9 July 1958 letter to Denise Levertov for some remarks about LZ’s negative
reaction to Borregaard’s poetry in The Letters of Robert Duncan and Denise
Levertov, eds. Robert J. Bertholf and Albert Gelpi. Stanford University
Press, 2003. 125-126.
294.13 The great know how to wait: remark by
the cellist, Pablo Cassels: "Only the mediocre are impatient; the great know how to wait” (HRC
3.13).
294.23 against
nature…:
294.29 crèche: Fr. crib. A public nursery
where the children of women who go out to work are cared for during the day; an
asylum for foundlings and infants which have been abandoned (CD).
294.35 Or as the architect / —You can get culture…:
LZ’s notebook (HRC 3.13) indicates this refers to Frank Lloyd Wright.
295.3 Admitted, my modest philosophers—
/ No, common sense is not / What we find in the world…: through 295.6 LZ is
apparently responding to a remark by Jacob Bronowski, The Common Sense of
Science (1953): “The world makes sense all right; it makes common sense.
[…] But common sense is not what we put into the world. It is what we find
there” (HRC 3.13).
295.9 One swallow does not summer our nights:
proverbial, but found in Aristotle, Nicomachean
Ethics I.6 (1098a): “For one swallow does not make a summer, nor does one
day; and so too one day, or a short time, does not make a man blessed and
happy” (trans. W.D. Ross). See 12.138.20 and Bottom 112.
295.16 Vico’s intellegere
from legere to collect greens: LZ
apparently is putting together two passages from The New Science of Giambattista Vico (1688-1744):
“This was the order of human
institutions: first the forests, after that the huts, then the villages, next
the cities, and finally the academies. This axiom is a great principle of
etymology, for this sequence of human institutions sets the pattern for the
histories of words in the various native languages. Thus we observe the Latin
language that almost the whole corpus of its words had sylvan or rustic
origins. For example, lex. First it
must have meant a collection of acorns. Thence we believe is derived ilex, as it were lex, the oak (as certainly aquilex
means collector of waters); for the oak produces acorns by which the swine are
drawn together. Lex was next a
collection of vegetables, from which the latter were called legumina. Later on, at a time when
vulgar letters had not yet been invented for writing down the laws, lex by a necessity of civil nature must
have meant a collection of citizens, or the public parliament; so that the
presence of the people was the lex,
or ‘law,’ that solemnized the wills that were made calatis comitiis, in the presence of the assembled comitia. Finally, collecting letters,
and making, as it were, a sheaf of them for each word, was called legere, reading” (Paras. 239-240).
[From the Prolegomena to Book Two on
“Poetic Wisdom”:] “Throughout this book it will be shown that as much as the
poets had first sensed in the way of vulgar wisdom, the philosophers later
understood in the way of esoteric wisdom; so that the former may be said to
have been the sense and the latter the intellect of the human race. What
Aristotle said of the individual man is therefore true of the race in general: Nihil est in intellectu quin prius fuerit in
sensu [On the Soul 432a 7-8].
That is, the human mind does not understand anything of which it has had no
previous impression (which our modern metaphysicians call ‘occasion’) from the
senses. Now the mind uses the intellect when, from something it senses, it
gathers something which does not fall under the senses; and this is the proper
meaning of the Latin verb intelligere”
(Para. 363; trans. Thomas Goddard Bergin and Max Harold Fisch).
295.19 Disserere
to discuss to scatter seed: discuss < L. discussus, pp. of discutere,
strike or shake apart, break up, scatter (CD). In the Art of Rhetoric, Vico mentions as an example of concrete words that
have come to designate activities of the human mind: dissero (> disserere, present indicative), to scatter seed,
discuss.
295.38 Dian’s argentine: from Shakespeare, Pericles V.i; Pericles on awakening from
his dream vision of Diana: “Celestial Dian, goddess argentine, / I will obey
thee.” This first line is quoted in CD for the definition of “argentine,”
meaning silvery.
295.39 night’s mute: see 293.11.
296.11 H.J.: Henry James.
296.15 As the great numbers to resignation / In
every strike unfed, unclothed and unread...: through 296.21 from Alice
James (1848-1892), Journals (or Diaries):
Responding
to May Day demonstrations in London 1890: “Those who have every opportunity for
acquiring wisdom, and of inheriting noble, human, and generous instincts, have
found no more inspired means of allaying their mutual rapacities than shooting
down vast hordes of innocent men, as helpless as sheep; whilst these creatures,
the disinherited, with savage instincts all unsubdued, have divined that
brotherly help is the path to Victory! What one of us, with his sentimental,
emotional sympathy, ever stood by his fellow starving, and watching his
swindling wife and children for weeks? And yet at every strike thousands
of the unfed, the unclothed, and the unread stand or fall
together and make no boast. Could anything exhibit more beautifully the
solidarity of the race than that by combining to walk through the streets on
the same day, these starvelings should make emperors, kings, presidents, and
millionaires tremble the world over? […]”
“Some
year ago, when Harry [Henry James] was five or thereabouts, William [James]
undertook to explain to him the nature of God, and hearing that he was
everywhere, asked whether he was the chair, or the table. ‘Oh,
no! God isn’t a thing; He is everywhere about us; He pervades.’ ‘Oh,
then, he is a skunk.’”
“One
day, talking about some good reviews of William [James’ Principles of] Psychology,
which reprobate his mental pirouettes and squirm at his daring to go lightly
among the solemnities, H. said, ‘Yes, they can’t understand intellectual
larking.’”
296.26 It is
not night when I do see your face: from Shakespeare, A Midsummer Night’s Dream II.i:
Helena: Your virtue is my
privilege: for that
It is not night when I do
see your face,
Therefore I think I am not in the night;
Nor doth this wood lack worlds of company,
For you in my respect are all the world:
Then how can it be said I am alone,
When all the world is here to look on me?
296.39 “cellar
door” (1926), / (1956) “Neither/nor,
nor and/or”: “Cellar Door”
appeared in line 172 of “Poem Beginning ‘The’” (1926), apparently referring
there to a student hangout at Columbia University (?), and rhyming with the
preceding line’s “galore.” For “Neither/nor…”
see the poem, “The Laws Can Say” (1955), published in Some Time (see CSP 155).
297.1 Attesting
an exchange between an intellective portion / Of head…: see Bottom 432: “The syllables of Pericles are brought together like
notes. And if that intellective portion of mind that is music can make poetry
and prose interchangeable, because there is a note always to come back to a
second time—sung to the scale the ‘subjects’ of speech are so few and words
only ring changes one on another, the differences perceived by their fictions are so slight music makes them
few.”
297.7 Honor a word gone out of English:
see 11.124.7.
297.8 Bottom the weaver: the character from A Midsummer Night’s Dream; see
12.133.20.
297.9 Richard Flecknoe on Pericles: / “Ars longa, vita
brevis…: Richard Flecknoe (c.1600-1678), English dramatist and poet. Ars longa, vita brevis: L. art is long,
life is short; attributed to Hippocrates. LZ found this remark in a note to
Sidney Lee’s facsimile edition of Shakespeares
Pericles (1905), which he refers to quite often in Bottom, although he does not mention this particular comment: “In
1656 Richard Flecknoe, in his Diarium,
p. 96, has the epigram:— ‘On the play of the life and death of Pyrocles’ / Ars
longa, via brevis, as they say, / But who inverts that saying made this
play.”
297.14 The lines of the song Pericles that end so many times: life: throughout Shakespeare’s
Pericles, 15 lines end with the word
“life.”
297.15 Our thoughts . . our . . their ends not our
own…: from Shakespeare, Hamlet
III.ii; spoken by the Player King in the inner play:
But, orderly to end where I begun,
Our wills and fates
do so contrary run
That our devices
still are overthrown;
Our thoughts
are ours, their ends none of our own:
So think thou wilt no
second husband wed;
But die thy thoughts
when thy first lord is dead.
297.18 Memphis—not Egypt—Tennessee: Memphis
was a major city and capital of ancient Egypt. Memphis, Tennessee is best known
for its associations with country music.
297.26 Michelangelo’s hordes of the Judgment / in
the Sistine Chapel: refers to Michelangelo’s crowded fresco of contorted
bodies rising to the Last Judgment on the altar wall of the Sistine Chapel in
the Vatican, painted 1535-1541.
297.28 saraband
of / Bach’s Second Partita for Violin: see 262.1.
297.31 Taine said…: Hippolyte Taine
(1828-1893), French historian; quote unidentified.
297.36 The King is a thing, says Hamlet / shocking
only the fox: from Shakespeare, Hamlet
IV.ii:
Hamlet: The body is with the king,
but the king is not with the body.
The king is a thing,—
Guildenstern:
A thing, my lord!
Hamlet:
Of nothing: bring me to him. Hide fox,
and all after.
298.9 Attar of roses banked as collateral…:
through 298.19 from an
23 Aug. 1960 New York Times article: “Bulgaria Deposits Attar of Roses
In Place of Gold in London Bank; Sofia Delivers 1,100 Pounds of Essence
as Collateral—Value of Perfume Base Put at $800 a Pound.” LZ is more or less quoting from the
background information provided in the article: “Attar of roses is an essential oil
distilled from rose petals, mainly those of the bloom called Rosa damascena.
For centuries attar has been used by Bulgaria in financial dealings […] which
was brought there in the seventeenth century by the conquering Turks
[.…] The word attar, sometimes corrupted to ‘otto,’ comes from the Persian.
[…] ‘The Bulgarian rose
growers always hope for a damp season, not only because the rain intensifies
the fragrance of the flowers, but also because too much sun
makes the roses grow faster than they can be handled. […] The harvest
takes place during most of May and early June, lasting for only about twenty-five
days. […] After the flowers are picked they are loaded into carts
and taken to the distilleries by drivers who are practically embedded
in blossoms. […] It takes about 4000 pounds of
Bulgarian roses to produce one pound of rose oil,
so you can imagine the profusion of the rose harvest.’"
298.21 stereoscope: an optical instrument with
two eyepieces used to create a three-dimensional effect with two photographs of
the same scene taken at slightly different angles (AHD). Mentioned also at
300.7, LZ was intrigued by the image of the stereoscope, which appears at least
twice elsewhere in his writings: in a passage of “Thanks to the Dictionary”
that apparently describes the double-focus experience of watching a film (CF 274) and in the story, “It Was”: “I
wanted our time to be the story, but like the thought of a place passed by once
and recalled altogether: seen again a through a stereoscope blending views a
little way apart into a solid—defying touch” (CF 183).
298.27 Jefferson’s slave quarters in his natural
air-conditioned / cellar at Monticello: Thomas Jefferson Monticello home
includes an extensive cellar, from which food and wine were sent above into the
main house. The “gadgeteer” of 298.30 is undoubtedly Jefferson, who was a
well-known and voracious adapter of new practical inventions, many of which he
incorporated into Monticello.
298.29 Mt. Vernon: George Washington’s
Virginia estate.
298.32 Collections’ Amati they let him try out in
the Library of / Congress: Amati was a 17th century family of violin makers
from Cremona, Italy. The “Collection” here is no doubt the Cremonese Collection
of musical instruments at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C., which
includes a violin by Niccolò Amati (1596-1684) called the “Brookings,” acquired
in 1938, which apparently PZ was allowed to “try out.”
298.34 Arcangelo / Corelli: Arcangelo Corelli
(1653-1713), Italian composer and preeminent violinist of his day.
298.35 The mad kept way out there in a circle as
he played / Corelli, Jannequin’s song: the Zukofskys
visited EP at St. Elizabeths (see 264.28, 288.35) on 11 July 1954, where PZ
played Bach’s Partita for Solo Violin No. 3 in E Major and, at EP’s request, Le Chant des Oiseaux (Song of the Birds)
by Clement Jannequin (c.1475-c.1560), a favorite piece whose score as arranged
by Gerhart Münch EP used for Canto 75. LZ briefly describes this visit in Little (CF 121) and mentions Jannequin in relation to EP in “Nor did the
prophet’” (CSP 146). See also CZ’s
description in Terrell, “Two Conversations” 585-587 and Gordon, “Zuk and Ez at
St. Liz.”
298.39 deodar: a tall cedar (Cedrus deodara) native to the Himalaya
Mountains and having drooping branches and dark bluish-green leaves, often with
white, light green, or yellow new growth in cultivars (AHD).
299.5 Gilbert Stuart’s / Portrait of Washington:
(1775-1828) American artist who painted a number of portraits of President
Washington, including the one used on the one dollar bill. Here perhaps
referring to the huge carving of Washington’s face on Mount Rushmore, South
Dakota.
299.7 Crater Lake: National Park in southern
Oregon, the lake is famous for its intense blue color. This and following
details are from a trip West the Zukofskys took in the summer of 1958,
returning through parts of Canada.
299.12 Sages of sheaves of analects…: Cf. The Analects of Confucius. Ancient
Chinese texts were written on pieces of split bamboo that were tied together
and could be rolled up into bundles. EP’s translation of Confucius’ main works,
including the Analects, was published
in 1951.
299.14 misnamed temples / Of Grand
Canyon’s absurd sunsets…: buttes and tower-like formations left due to
erosion of the canyon walls by the Colorado River are frequently called
temples, and given exotic mythological and religious names, such as the Brahma,
Vishnu, Manu, Zoroaster, Thor, Isis or Buddha Temples. LZ’s notebook entry
suggests that he objects to the suggestion of human sacrifice implies by many
of these names (HRC 3.13).
299.18 Lake Louise: in southern Alberta,
Canada.
299.21 kadota figs: a light-green, tear-drop
shaped fig.
299.27 poor
man’s flowers: purple lilacs (syringe
vulgaris), supposedly so-called because they are so easy to cultivate.
299.32 Winnipeg: capital of Manitoba, Canada.
299.33 Canmore: in Alberta in the Canadian
Rockies.
300.10 The human son and the suns sleep…: see 290.24 and 303.5-6;
also 12.236.11-13, Bottom 76, 86.
300.13 You intended a small boy to light a masquerade / As a Chinese sage…: a slightly
more detailed description of this Confucius outfit that PZ wore to a costume
party appears in one of Lorine Niedecker’s For
Paul poems, “Now go to the party” (Collected
Works 152), no doubt from LZ’s description in a letter. The “you” of this
passage is obviously CZ.
300.18 when the Chinese / Adopt the Latin alphabet…:
Mao Zedong officially adopted a policy of romanizing written Chinese in the 1950s;
the pinyin system of romanization was developed toward this purpose, although
the complete transfer to an alphabetic writing system was abandoned after the
end of the Cultural Revolution in the 1970s.
300.23 K’in: or qin (pronounced “chin”), also known as guqin or ancient qin, a plucked zither
or dulcimer, was the preferred instrument of the classical Chinese literati.
The modern k’in has seven strings but
ancient versions had five or ten strings, which were made from twisted silk
treated with glue. They also have 13 studs along the side to guide finger
placement. Ancient texts describe the cosmological proportions of the k’in: the top is rounded representing
the heavens, the bottom flat with four corners like the earth; the length has a
measurement of 3.66. The k’in was
believed to have special powers of creating harmony within both the player and
the listener (see following note). LZ’s specific source is as yet unidentified.
300.31 Yü—North’s
black winter water…: the five Chinese words in these lines designate the
tones, notes or pitches of the classical Chinese music scale, which correspond
to the traditional five elements—water, wood, earth, metal and fire; thus five
is the most fundamental number in ancient Chinese numerology, which pervades innumerable
cultural and cosmological correspondences. LZ indicates the correspondences
with specific planets, directions, colors and seasons. Yellow is the color
associated with the emperor, always perceived as the center, as is China in
general (Middle Kingdom is the literal translation of the characters for China
in Mandarin). LZ may or may not have known how to properly pronounce Chinese
romanization, but in the names of the notes Ch- = unaspirated j, K- =
unaspirated g.
301.16 We talk after the fishermen in Pericles / Who banter their verse…:
three fishermen appear in Shakespeare, Pericles
II.i, who help out the shipwrecked prince. Pericles remarks admiringly on their
good humored verbal wit and social critique: “How from the fenny subiect of the
Sea, / These Fishers tell the infirmities of men, / And from their watry empire
recollect. / All that may men approue, or men detect”; see the Fishermen’s
remarks quoted at 21.456.34
and 21.457.2.
301.18 Droll roll and gambol of a playful / fish
of the playful sea: see 21.507.10.
301.20 Shakespeare skeptical of most music…:
301.24 “He that doth ill hateth the night”:
from Thomas Nashe (1567-1601), The
Terrors of the Night, Or a Discourse of Apparitions (1594): “It is not to
be gainsaid but the devil can transform himself into an angel of light, appear
in the day as well as in the night, but not in this subtle world of
Christianity so usual as before. If he do, it is when men’s minds are extraordinarily
thrown down with discontent, or inly terrified with some horrible concealed
murder, or other heinous crime close smothered in secret. In the day he may
smoothly in some mild shape insinuate, but in the night he takes upon him like
a tyrant. There is no thief that is half so hardy in the day as in the night;
no more the devil. A general principle it is, he that doth ill hateth the light.”
301.26 Gagaku: ancient form of Japanese court
music, including dance. LZ apparently went to a performance of Gagaku music and
dance in early June 1959, and there exists a copy of Playbill (1 June 1959) among LZ’s papers offering information
particularly on two of the performances, a Mimic Dance and a Monkey-God Dance
(Rieke, “Quotation and Originality” 93).
301.34 Monkey Dance…: LZ wrote Cid Corman 30
Sept. 1960 that, although he had been reading Monkey (see 302.4), he discounts its significance in “A”-13,
adding: “Just as I’m my own Gagaku (as I say in iii)—I mean don’t take my dance
to be a literal report of the dances
I ‘saw’ performed—if I haven’t said this before. As a matter of fact I take off
from two dances I saw & mix ‘em
up […]” (“In the Event of Words” 326); see 301.26.
301.35 (Able
the sensible rhesus…: Able, along with his co-pilot Baker, were monkeys
sent up in a U.S. Jupiter rocket on 28 May 1959 and were the first living
beings to survive space travel. Able was a rhesus monkey, Baker a squirrel
monkey.
302.4 Monkey God…: according to CZ (Ahearn,
“Two Conversations” 118-119), this is indebted to Arthur Waley’s Monkey, a highly abridged translation of
the great Chinese novel, Journey to the
West by Wu Ch’eng-en. However, LZ’s description has little in common with
the rambunctious antics of Monkey and appears to be based on his memory or
imagining of a monkey dance (see remarks at 301.34 and note at 301.26). The
more formal or original name for Noh is Sarugaku Noh with saru meaning monkey. Mary Oppen in Meaning a Life (Santa Barbara: Black Sparrow P, 1978) mentions that
LZ “saw the Noh plays with a famous Chinese actor who toured the United States
several times, and he delighted us with imitations of this actor” (94);
although this account seems to mixup Japanese and Chinese, it probably refers
to the great Chinese opera performer Mei Lan-Fang (1893-1961), who both LZ and
WCW saw and enthused over in 1930 (WCW/LZ
60-62).
303.5 So the sun warms your bodies as one. / You
human son sleeps and does not care: see 290.24 and 300.10.
303.18 [partita iv]: this section of “A”-13
primarily catalogs the contents of the small pocket notes LZ was in the habit
of carrying.
304.5 my resource / es / for / my son…: these
lines appear to refer to the origins of “Poetry / For My Son When He Can Read,”
which begins: “When you were 19 months old your ability to say ‘Go billy go
billy go billy go ba,’ much faster than I could ever say it, made me take some
almost illegible notes on poetry out of my wallet” (Prep+ 3).
304.14 your
/ own / eyes, by strength…: through 305.13, phrases
from various passages of Shakespeare, Two
Noble Kinsmen (in Bottom, the
chapter “Forgotten” (349-351) primarily consists of various quotations from
this play, including almost all of the following):
III.vi (qtd. Bottom 350)
Emilia:
By that you would have trembled to deny
A blushing maid—
Hippolyta:
—By your own eyes, by strength—
In which you swore I
went beyond all women,
Almost all men – and
yet I yielded, Theseus—
III.i (qtd. Bottom 350)
Arcite:
—Plainly spoken,
Yet—pardon me—hard
language: when I spur [Wind horns within.]
My horse I
chide him not. Content and anger
In me have but one face. Hark, sir, they call
The scattered to the banquet. You must guess...
I have an office there.
V.i (qtd. Bottom 350):
Palamon: O thou that from eleven to ninety reign’st
In mortal bosoms, whose chase is this
world
And we in herds thy game, I give thee thanks
For this fair token, which, being laid unto
Mine innocent true heart, arms in assurance
My body to this business. Let us
rise
And bow before the goddess.
V.iv:
Pirithous: […] on
this horse is Arcite
Trotting the stones of Athens, which the calkins
Did rather tell than trample; for the
horse
Would make his length a mile, if’t pleased his rider
To put pride in him. As he thus went counting
The flinty pavement, dancing, as ’twere, to
th’ music
His own hooves made—for, as they say, from iron...
Came music’s origin—what envious flint,
Cold as old Saturn and like him possessed
With fire malevolent, darted a spark,
Or what fierce sulfur else, to this end made,
I comment not—the hot horse, hot as fire,
Took toy at this and fell to what disorder
His power could give his will, bounds; comes on end […]
III.i (qtd. Bottom 350):
Arcite: But if
Thou knew’st my mistress breathed on me, and that
I eared her language, lived in her eye—O,
coz,...
hat passion would enclose thee!
II.vi (qtd. Bottom 349)
Jailor’s Daughter: My father
Durst better have endured cold iron than done it....
I love him beyond love and beyond reason
Or wit or safety. I have made him know it—
I care not, I am desperate.
305.28 the year / he was born: PZ born 22 Oct.
1943.
306.1 “Jakobus / Stain- /er / in Absam…:
Jacobus Stainer (c.1617-1683) a great violin maker from Absam (near Innsbruck),
Austria. The quotation is the hand-written label inside PZ’s violin; prope Oenipontam is L. meaning near
Innsbruck; see 12.157.10
and 18.405.7.
307.8 life
into / dust: from Shakespeare, Two
Noble Kinsmen V.ii (qtd. Bottom
350):
Palamon: I knew a man
Of eighty winters, this I told them, who...
A lass of fourteen brided—’twas thy power
To put life into dust.
307.9 (who
can- / not / feel / nor see the…: from Shakespeare, Two Noble Kinsmen I.i (qtd. Bottom 349):
Emilia: Pray you, say nothing, pray
you.
Who cannot feel nor see the rain, being
in’t,
Knows neither wet nor dry.
308.4 Go,
fresh / horses: from
Shakespeare, Winter’s Tale III.i
(qtd. Bottom 431): “Dion: Go: fresh horses! / And gracious
be the issue!”
308.5 the / bar- / ber’s / last haircut / Thoth
the price…: see 267.9.
308.16 Chinese
/ whips stage sym- / bols / for / horses: referring to the convention in
traditional Chinese drama or opera of using a minimal prop, a whip or stick, to
represent a horse.
308.24 Hop o’my / thumb lady- / bug…: “Hop o’
my Thumb” is a children’s fairytale by Charles Perreult (1628-1703).
308.30 by /
my / short life / body to / this / thanks / tender her—: combines
two snippets from Shakespeare, Two Noble
Kinsmen V.i (see quotation at 304.14) and V.iv (qtd. Bottom 351):
Palamon: By my short life,
I am most glad on’t; Tis the latest thing
I shall be glad of; pre’thee tell her so:
Commend me to her, and to peece her portion,
Tender her this. [Gives purse.]
First Knight: Nay lets be offerers all.
309.7 tandaradei:
a famous onomatopoetic voicing of the nightingale from “Under the Lindens” by
Walter von der Vogelweide (13th century):
Under the lindens of the heather,
There was our double resting-place,
Side by side and close together
Garnered blossoms, crushed, and grass
Nigh a shaw in such a vale:
Tandaradei,
Sweetly sang the nightingale. (trans. Ford Madox Ford)
309.11 [musical staff and clef]: a notation
fixing the location of a particular note on the staff, and therefore the
location of the other notes; in this case a treble clef, the G or violin-clef.
Here the suggestion is that the clef looks like a cat.
309.23 five contiguous windows of a tenth floor: in an interview, CZ notes that this entire subsection of
“A”-13 is set as if LZ is looking out the 10th floor window of their Brooklyn
apartment at 135 Willow Street, which they moved into in 1957. She points out
that at the time it was one of the few high buildings in the area of mostly
low-rise apartments, so they looked down upon many surrounding roofs and their
ornamentations, as well as across the East River toward Manhattan (Ahearn, “Two
Conversations” 116-117). These five windows are also mentioned at 21.495.27 and
Little (CF 176-177).
309.26 from
eleven to ninety: from Shakespeare, Two
Noble Kinsmen V.i; see quote at 304.14 (qtd. Bottom
350).
310.2 children
in some kind: from Shakespeare, Two
Noble Kinsmen V.iv: the final passage of the play excluding the epilogue
(qtd. Bottom 349):
Theseus: O you heavenly charmers,—
What things you make of us! For what we
lack
We laugh, for what we have, are sorry; still
Are children in some kind. Let us be
thankful
For that which is, and with you leave dispute
That are above our question. Let’s go off
And bear us like the time.
310.6 corbie gable: a gable having
corbie-steps, a series of steps or step-like projections on the top of a gable
wall; also called crow-steps.
310.21 Surcingle—Sir Single: a surcingle is a
girth for a horse; esp. a girth separate from the saddle and passing around the
body of the horse, retaining in place a blanket, a sheet, or the like, by
passing over it (CD).
310.35 Quoins, stringcourses, / Rustications, /
Ogee arch, spandrel…: various external architectural features. A quoin is an external solid angle of a
building; a stringcourse is a narrow
molding or a projecting course continued horizontally along the face of a
building, frequently under windows; rustication
in masonry is stonework of which the face is hacked or picked in holes, or of
which the courses and the separate blocks are marked by rectangular grooves; an
ogee arch is formed with doubly
curved sides, the lower part of each side being concave and the part toward the
apex convex; a spandrel is the
triangular space comprehended between the outer curve of an arch, a horizontal
line drawn through its apex, and a vertical line through its springing, or the
wall-space between the outer moldings of two arches and the framework
surrounding it; a lanthern is an
upright skylight in the roof of a building (CD).
311.3 (For
what we lack we laugh): from Shakespeare, Two Noble Kinsmen V.iv: see 310.2.
311.11 world’s largest hotel:
311.13 tourelles: Fr. turrets.
311.17 . . your
sweet music . . last night..:
from Shakespeare, Pericles II.v (qtd.
Bottom 36):
Simonides: I am beholding to you
For your sweet music this last night: I do
Protest my ears were never better fed
With such delightful pleasing harmony.
311.26 fantastic island / To the north…:
Manhattan viewed from Brooklyn Heights.
311.39 Empire State: the Empire State
Building, at the time the tallest in the world; but also the nickname for New
York state.
312.14 Pompons, ferns, petiole: a pompon is a
form of small, globe-shaped flower head that characterizes a type of flowering
plant, esp. chrysanthemums and dahlias. A petiole is a leafstalk.
312.17 The Egyptian queen: / —age cannot wither:
from Shakespeare, Anthony and Cleopatra
II.ii:
Enobarbas [speaking of Cleopatra]:
Age cannot wither her, nor custom stale
Her infinite variety:
other women cloy
The appetites they
feed: but she makes hungry
Where most she
satisfies; for vilest things
Become themselves in
her: that the holy priests
Bless her when she is
riggish.
312.19 So brief is not brief…:
312.32 Eight definitions / Seven axioms…: in
his Ethics Baruch Spinoza deploys a
method of “geometrical demonstration” to elaborate his philosophical system out
of eight initial definitions and seven axioms. The following list LZ gives
chooses a key term from each of these initial 15 definitions and axioms,
although in a few cases LZ comes with his own term to summarize the given
definition or axiom. Given the importance of the Ethics for LZ generally, the following reproduces these first two
pages of the work in the Andrew Boyle translation LZ used:
First Part: Concerning God
Definitions
I. I understand that to be Cause of
Itself (causa sui) whose
essence involves existence and whose nature cannot be conceived unless
existing.
II. That thing is said to be Finite in
its Kind (in suo genere finita)
which can be limited by another thing of the same kind. E.g., a body is said to be finite because we can conceive another
larger than it. Thus a thought is limited by another thought. But a body cannot
be limited by a thought, nor a thought by a body.
III. I understand Substance (substantia) to be that which is in
itself and is conceived through itself: I mean that, the conception of which
does not depend on the conception of another thing from which it must be
formed.
IV. An Attribute (attributum) I understand to be that
which the intellect perceives as constituting the essence of a substance.
V. By Mode (modus) I understand the Modifications (affectiones) of a substance or that which is in something else
through which it may be conceived.
VI. God (Deus) I understand to be a being absolutely infinite, that is, a
substance consisting of infinite attributes, each of which expresses eternal
and infinite essence.
Explanation.—I say absolutely infinite,
but not in its kind. For of whatever is infinite only in its kind, we may deny
the attributes to be infinite; but what is absolutely infinite appertains to
the essence of whatever expresses essence and involves no denial.
VII. That thing is said to be Free
(libera) which exists by the mere
necessity of its own nature and is determined in its actions by itself alone.
That thing is said to be Necessary
(necessaria), or rather Compelled (coacta), when it is determined in its existence and actions by
something else in a certain fixed ratio.
VIII. I understand Eternity (aeternitas) to be existence itself, in
so far as it is conceived to follow necessarily from the definition of an
eternal thing.
Explanation.—For the existence of a
thing, as an eternal truth, is conceived to be the same as its essence, and therefore
cannot be explained by duration or time, although duration can be conceived as
wanting beginning and end.
Axioms
I. All things which are, are in themselves or in other things.
II. That which cannot be conceived through another thing must be conceived
through itself.
III. From a given determined cause an effect follows of necessity, and on the
other hand, if no determined cause is granted, it is impossible that an effect
should follow.
IV. The knowledge of effect depends on the knowledge of the cause, and involves
the same.
V. Things which have nothing in common reciprocally cannot be comprehended
reciprocally through each other, or, the conception of the one does not involve
the conception of the other.
VI. A true idea should agree with its ideal (ideatum), i.e. what it
conceives.
VII. The essence of that which can be conceived as not existing does not
involve existence.
313.13 (Launce) / To / Stand-under . . / Under-stand . . / all one: from Shakespeare, The Two
Gentlemen of Verona II.5 (qtd. Bottom
50-51 and frequently referred to thereafter; also see 22.519.5-6, 23.544.19):
Speed: What an ass art thou! I
understand thee not.
Launce: What a block art thou, that
thou canst not! My staff understands me.
Speed: What thou sayest?
Launce: Ay, and what I do too: look
thee, I'll but lean, and my staff understands me.
Speed: It stands under thee, indeed.
Launce: Why, stand-under and under-stand
is all one.
313.20 the image of a voice: this phrase
appears in Bottom 36 quoted from II
Esdras V:35 from the Apocrypha, which LZ quotes at 92 and also indexes.
313.21 Love
you: from Shakespeare, The
Winter’s Tale II.i:
Mamillius [to Hermione]: “You’ll kiss me hard, and speak to me, as if I were a
baby still. I love you better” (Rieke, “Quotation and Originality” 97).