“A”-22
14 Feb. 1970-14
April 1973
“A”-22 and “A”-23 were planned as complementary movements: both
are precisely 1000 lines each, begin and end with 100 line segments in 5-line
stanzas (except for the conclusion of “A”-23 which is simply set off), and use
throughout the 5-word line that was LZ’s predominate form from “A”-21 through 80
Flowers. LZ set himself a five-year reading plan, beginning in 1967 when he
finished “A”-21, to gather materials for these two movements, which he
organized chronologically covering 6000 years (Leggott 55)—for the significance
of this period of history, see note at 12.127.3.
The basic distinction between the materials used in “A”-22 and -23 appears to
be that of history in the former and literature in the latter, although LZ
often enough insisted there were no essential generic distinctions within his
own body of writing. In “A”-22, “history” must be taken in a very catholic
sense to encompass natural history, anthropology and philosophy, particularly
classical Greek philosophers. To further blur generic distinctions, the most
frequently used source of all is Herbert A. Giles, A History of Chinese
Literature (see 515.10), which itself follows traditional Chinese practice
in taking “literature” to include historical, philosophical, religious and
lexicographical writings.
508.1 AN
ERA / ANYTIME / OF YEAR: this opening block was written Valentine’s Day
1970 (Scroggins Bio 427-428) and published as a poetry postcard by
Unicorn Press in May 1970. The design, carefully dictated by LZ, had blue type
against a yellow background, as alluded to at 508.7 (Leggott 34). Leggott
reproduces some of LZ’s workbook notes on this opening block, as well as
discussing it in considerable detail and its relevance to the following
“Initial” segment (see note at 508.8; Leggott 34-52).
508.3 Others letters a sum owed / ages account
years each year…: LZ’s notebooks indicate he examined the dictionary senses
of “era” and its etymological antecedents, which account from some phrases and
lines (Leggott 36-37). “Era” derives from the Latin aera meaning: 1.
counters; in math., a given number, according to which a reckoning or
calculation is to be made; 2. Anitem of an account; 3. An era or epoch from
which time is reckoned. Aera is a plural form of aes meaning: 1.
any crude metal dug out of the earth, except gold and silver; 2. A. (esp. in
the poets) For everything made or prepared from copper, bronze, etc. (statues,
tables of laws, money), and (as the ancients had the art of hardening and
tempering copper and bronze) weapons, armor, utensils of husbandry. B. Money:
the first Roman money consisted of small rude masses of copper, called aes
rude. Aes alienum, lit. the money of another; hence, in reference to
him who has it, the sum owed, a debt, Plautus Curc. 3,1,2. D.
Wages, pay. E. In plur.: aera, counters, hence also the items of a computed sum
(Lewis & Short, A Latin Dictionary).
For
the phrase “years each year” see note at 508.6.
508.6 out
of old fields: from Geoffrey Chaucer (c.1340-1400), Parlement of Foules, line 22 (Leggott 38-39). LZ had used line 24
(third quoted below) as the epigraph to the First Movement of “Poem beginning
‘The’” (CSP 9). For other lines worked from Parlement of Foules,
see 510.16, 511.3, 511.17. 511.20-23:
For out of olde
feldes, as men seith,
Cometh
al this newe corn fro yeer to yere;
And
out of olde bokes, in good feith,
Cometh
al this newe science that men lere.
But now to purpos as of this matere—
To rede forth hit gan me so delyte,
That al the day me thoughte but a lyte.
508.8 initial:
the section of “A”-23 that immediately follows the opening block of “AN ERA,”
one hundred lines in five line stanzas that ends with an echoed “initial”
(511.10), was originally published as Initial by the Phoenix Book Shop
in NYC, Christmas 1970. This section was composed 5 July-11 Aug. 1970 (Leggott
384). It is perhaps worth noting the cluster of meanings of initial: [< L. initialis,
of the beginning, incipient, initial, < initium, beginning, < inire,
go in, enter upon, begin, < in, in, + ire, go] I. 1. Of or
pertaining to the beginning; incipient: as, the initial step in a
proceeding. 2. Placed at the beginning; standing at the head: as, the initial
letter of a word, or of a chapter in a book. II. 1. The initial or first letter
of a word; an initial letter. 2. The first letter of a book or writing, or of
any division of it, distinguished from the body of the text by larger size or
more ornamental character, or both. 3. In plain-song, a tone with which
a melody may begin (CD). Also related meanings as a verb and cognates:
initially, initiate, initiation, initiative, initiator, initiatory.
508.9 swim near and / read a weed’s
reward—grain: Leggott points out (43) that reading the initial “AN ERA”
block vertically one can anagramically find anno, L. meaning to pass or
live through a year, but also to swim to, toward, or along. The related annona
means the yearly produce, the annual income of natural products, particularly
corn or grain or the price of grain or other food (Lewis & Short, A
Latin Dictionary).
508.14 let me
live here ever, / sweet now, silence foison: from Shakespeare, The Tempest IV.i. “Foison,” meaning
plentiful harvest or abundance, appears a few lines previous to the following
passage, spoken by Ceres: “Earth’s increase, foison plenty, […]” (qtd. Bottom
38, 149, 185, 354):
Ferdinand: Let me live here ever:
So
rare a wonder’d father and a wise,
Makes
this place Paradise.
[Juno and Ceres whisper, and send Iris on employment.]
Prospero: Sweet,
now, silence!
Juno
and Ceres whisper seriously,
There’s
something else to do: hush, and be mute,
Or
else our spell is marr’d.
508.27 cannot feign / persisting for light as when
/ they began to exist…: threaded through this and the following stanza are
bits from Spinoza that appear elsewhere in LZ’s work. The bird relates to a
passage that LZ quotes and refers to a number of times: see quotation at at “A”-9.108.25, also
qtd. Bottom 287, Prep+ 56 and same passage without the chicken at
“A”-12.235.7-8. The word pairs “cannot feign” at 508.27 and “error / delirium”
at 509.2-3 can be found in another couple of passages quoted together in Bottom:
“. . . we cannot feign while we think that we think or do not think . .
. as soon as we know that nature of body we cannot feign an infinite fly, or as
soon as we know that nature of mind we cannot feign that it is square, although
anything may be expressed in words . . . the less men know of nature, the more
easily they can feign things . . .”; “But error . . . is a waking man’s
dream, and if it become too prominent it is called delirium” (Treatise
on the Correction of Understanding 57-58; as qtd. Bottom 344). The phrase
at 508.28-509.1, “as when / they began to exist,” echoes a key passage
in Bottom at 423-424, which in turn echoes a long passage from Spinoza
quoted on the preceding two pages that concludes: “Finally, by perfection in
general I shall understand, as I said . . . the essence of anything, in so far
as it exists and operates in a certain manner, without any consideration of
time. . . . the duration of things cannot be determined by their essence, since
the essence of things does not involve a . . . determined time of existing; but
everything, whether it be more or less perfect, shall persist in
existing with the same force with which it began to exist . . . in this
all things are equal” (Ethics IV, Preface; as qtd. Bottom
421-422).
509.23 steersman’s / one guess at certainty made /
with an assemblage of naught…: this as well as parts of the following
stanza and 510.1 from Norbert Wiener, Cybernetics: or Control and
Communication in the Animal and the Machine, 2nd ed. (1961). Wiener’s
classic account of cybernetics, the study of communication and control
processes, is centrally concerned with the significance of feedback (see
509.29):
509.23: “We have decided to call the entire field of control and communication
theory, whether in the machine or in the animal, by the name Cybernetics, which
we form from the Greek χυβερνήτης or steersman”
(11).
509.24-25: “Probabilities one and zero are notions which include complete certainty
and complete impossibility but include much more as well. If I shoot at a
target with a bullet of the dimensions of a point, the chance that I hit any
specific point on the target will generally be zero, although it is not
impossible that I hit it; and indeed, in each specific case I must actually hit
some specific point, which is an event of probability zero. Thus an event of
probability one, that of my hitting some point, may be made up of an
assemblage of instances of probability zero” (46).
510.1: “[Walter Pitts] was very much interested when I showed him examples of
modern vacuum tubes and explained to him that these were ideal means for
realizing in the metal the equivalents of his neuronic circuits and
systems. From that time, it became clear to us that the ultra-rapid computing
machine, depending as it does on consecutive switching devices, must represent
almost an ideal model of the problems arising in the nervous system. The
all-or-none character of the discharge of the neurons is precisely analogous to
the single choice made in determining a digit on the binary scale, which more
than one of us had already contemplated as the most satisfactory basis of
computing-machine design” (14).
509.32 an
affair with the moon / it looked as if it…: the first manned moon landing
was accomplished by Apollo 11 on 20 July 1969; LZ saved a number of clippings
of the event from the New York Times, including the entire main section
of the issue reporting the historic landing.
Leggott
(124-125) identifies these lines through 509.35 as from Laurence Sterne
(1713-1768), A Sentimental Journey through
France and Italy (1768), chapter entitled “The Monk, Calais”: “I had scarce
uttered the words, when a poor monk of the order of St. Francis came into the
room to beg something for his convent. No man cares to have his virtues the
sport of contingencies—or one man may be generous, as another is puissant; —sed non quoad hanc—or be it as it
may,—for there is no regular reasoning upon the ebbs and flows of our humours;
they may depend upon the same causes, for aught I know, which influence the
tides themselves: ’twould oft be no discredit to us, to suppose it was so: I’m
sure at least for myself, that in many a case I should be more highly
satisfied, to have it said by the world, ‘I had had an affair with the moon, in which there was neither sin nor shame,’
than have it pass altogether as my own act and deed, wherein there was so much
of both. […]
It was one of those heads which
Guido has often painted,—mild, pale—penetrating, free from all commonplace
ideas of fat contented ignorance looking downwards upon the earth; —it look’d forwards; but look’d as if it look’d at something beyond
this world.— […]
The poor Franciscan made no reply: a hectic of a moment pass’d across his
cheek, but could not tarry—Nature seemed to have done with her resentments in
him; —he showed none:—.”
510.1 until computed in the metal / tidal waves…:
through 510.4 from Norbert Wiener, Cybernetics (see 509.23 and quotation
for 510.1 for this first line):
510.2-4: “We have said that we can treat the relative movements of the sun and
the planets as the movements of rigid bodies, but this is not quite the case.
The earth, for example, is nearly surrounded by oceans. The water nearer the
moon than the center of the earth is more strongly attracted to the moon than
the solid part of the earth, and the water on the other side is less strongly
attracted. This relatively slight effect pulls the water into two hills, one
under the moon and one opposite to the moon. In a perfectly liquid sphere,
these hills could follow the moon around the earth with no great dispersal of
energy, and consequently would remain almost precisely under the moon and
opposite to the moon. […] However, the tidal wave they produce on the
earth gets tangled up and delayed on coasts and in shallow seas such as the
Bering Sea and the Irish Sea. […] These frictional forces drag the moon back in
its course about the earth and accelerate the rotation of the earth forward.
They tend to bring the lengths of the month and of the day ever closer
to one another. Indeed, the day of the moon is the month, and the moon
always presents nearly the same face to the earth” (45-46).
510.5 weightless dancing: alluding to the
first moon walk on 20 July 1969 (Leggott 114-115).
510.16 fish purl in the weir: from Chaucer, Parlement
of Foules, lines 138-140 (part of the warning on the black side of
the gate to the Garden of Love); see also 508.6, 511.3, 511.17 and 511.20-23:
This streem yow ledeth to the sorwful were,
Ther as the fish in prison is al drye;
Th’schewing is only the remedye.
510.30 killick:
(or killock) a small anchor or weight for mooring a boat, sometimes consisting
of a stone secured by pieces of wood (CD).
511.2 blue of yellow: see 508.7 and note at
508.1.
511.3 birds, harp in three trees— / now summer:
Leggott indicates (39) that this is derived from Chaucer, Parlement of
Foules, which although it is set on St. Valentine’s Day concludes with a
song welcoming summer; see also 508.6, 510.16, 511.17 and 511.20-23:
Now welcom somer, with thy sonne softe,
That hast this wintres weders over-shake,
And driven awey the longe nightes blake!
511.12 surge
sea erupts boiling molten / lava island from ice…: Leggott (58) identifies
LZ’s source as a 10 April 1969 New York
Times ad for a CBS News program on the birth of the volcanic island
Surtsey, off Iceland—the ad includes a photo and the following text: “Volcano:
Birth of an Island: Born 1963 in a cataclysmic boiling up of molten lava from
storm-blown Icelandic waters. Now primitive life is beginning to evolve. Much
as it may have billions of years ago. Perhaps this is the way our world was
formed. See it happen before your eyes as Charles Kuralt reports in a CBS
Special.” Between Nov. 1963 and June 1967, Surtsey began to appear from the
ocean floor in spectacular fashion, to finally rise 174 meters above sea level
with an area of 2.8 kilometers.
511.16 idola:
plural of idolon (idolum) an image; a false mental image or conception, a
mistaken notion, a fallacy. < Gk. idōlon,
phantom (CD).
511.17 that love well forget late: from
Geoffrey Chaucer, Parlement of Foules, translates the French title of
the final song in the poem: “Qui bien aime a tard oublie” (Leggott 59); see also 508.6, 510.16, 511.3 and 511.20-22.
511.18 History’s
best emptied of names’ / impertinence met on the ways: Cf. Ralph Waldo
Emerson, “Self-Reliance” (1841): “Whence then this worship of the past? The
centuries are conspirators against the sanity and majesty of the soul. Time and
space are but physiological colors which the eye maketh, but the soul is light:
where it is, is day; where it was, is night; and history is an impertinence
and an injury if it be any thing more than a cheerful apologue or parable of my
being and becoming” (qtd. Bottom 238). See also remarks on sounding
one’s time without using names in “It Was” (CF 183).
511.20 shows
then the little earth / at regard of the heavens: from Geoffrey Chaucer, Parlement of Foules, lines 57-63
(Leggott 53); see also 508.6, 510.16, 511.3, 511.17 and next note:
Than shewed
he him the litel erthe, that heer is,
At regard of the hevenes quantite;
And
after shewed he him the nyne speres,
And
after that the melodye herde he
That
cometh of thilke speres thryes three,
That
welle is of musyk and melodye
In
this world heer, and cause of armonye.
511.22 unfolding
tract and flying congregate / birds their hiding valentine’s day: from the
Medieval Latin colophon to Chaucer’s Parlement of Foules: “Explicit tractatus de congregacione Volucrum
die sancti Valentini” (Here finishes (unfolds) the treatise of the
congregation of birds (flying) the Day of St. Valentine) (Leggott 54).
511.32 chitin:
a tough, protective, semitransparent substance, primarily a nitrogen-containing
polysaccharide, forming the principal component of arthropod exoskeletons and
the cell walls of certain fungi (AHD).
511.33 word time a voice bridled / as order…:
through 512.2 from John Scotus Erigena (c.810-877), The Division of Nature:
“All things created by God are created in the image of God, and are therefore
trinities consisting of essence, power and operation. […] In a tree
these aspects are for it to be, to be able to grow and actually to grow.
[…] God, in His infinite activity, leads forth the primordial causes into their
effects, dividing the eternal ideas into the particular things, both
intelligible and visible, which participate in them. These effects are related
to the primordial causes as words are related to the voice which
speaks them; they are subsequent not in time but in order of
causality. […] A combination of a certain quality and a certain quantity
produces matter, which is not a new thing but a result of the combination, just
as the combination of light and an opaque body produces a shadow,
without in any way affecting either the light or the body itself” (qtd. Bottom
118, LZ’s source is Anne Fremantle, The Age of Belief).
512.3 Figured 135,000 years built
up / from 75 foot depth…: through 513.17 predominately from Sir
Charles Lyell, Geographical Evidence of the Antiquity of Man (1863), but
with interpolations from Henry Adams (see notes at 512.8). LZ uses or adapts
from throughout Lyell’s work without regard to narrative presentation. Lyell
offers many descriptions and illustrations of prehistoric findings—human, flora
and fauna—and geological sedimentation, from which LZ sometimes selects details
from different descriptions into single catalogues, so I have not reproduced
every detail, although they can almost all be found in Lyell.
512.3-5: “Professor Agassiz has described a low portion of the peninsula of
Florida as consisting of numerous reefs of coral, which have grown in
succession so as to give rise to a continual annexation of land, gained gradually from
the sea in southerly direction. This growth is
still in full activity, and assuming the rate of advance of the land to be one
foot in a century, the reefs being built up from a depth
of 75 feet, and that each reef
has in its turn added ten miles to the coast,
Professor Agassiz calculates
that it has taken 135,000 years
to form the southern half of this peninsula.”
512.6: throughout Lyell gives various evidence for the upheaval and subsidence
of the earth’s crust.
512.7: “It also seems necessary, as colder currents of
water always flow to lower latitudes,
while warmer ones are running towards polar regions, that some such
compensation should take place, and that an increase of cold in one region must
to a certain extend be balanced by a mitigation of temperature elsewhere.”
512.10: “(FIGURE 5. SKULL
ASSOCIATED WITH GROUND FLINT IMPLEMENTS, FROM A TUMULUS
AT BORREBY IN DENMARK, AFTER A CAMERA LUCIDA DRAWING BY MR. G. BUSK, F.R.S. The
thick dark line indicates so much of the skull as corresponds with the fragment
from the Neanderthal.”
512.11-15: “The deposits of peat
in Denmark, varying in depth from 10 to 30 feet, have been formed in hollows or
depressions in the northern drift or boulder formation hereafter to be
described. […] Around the borders of the bogs, and at various depths in them, lie trunks of trees, especially of the
Scotch fir (Pinus sylvestris),
often 3 feet in diameter, which must have grown on the margin of the peat-mosses, and have frequently fallen into them.
[…] It appears clear that the same Scotch fir was afterwards supplanted by the
sessile variety of the common oak,
of which many prostrate trunks occur in the peat at higher levels than the
pines; and still higher
the pedunculated variety of the same oak (Quercus robur, L.) occurs with
the alder, birch (Betula verrucosa,
Ehrh.), and hazel.
The oak has now in its turn been almost superseded in Denmark by the common beech. Other trees, such as the white birch (Betul alba), characterize the lower part of the bogs, and disappear from
the higher; while others again, like the aspen
(Populus tremula), occur at all levels,
and still flourish in Denmark.”
512.20-21: “When we reflect, therefore, on the
fractional state of the annals which are handed down
to us, and how little even these have as yet been studied, we may wonder that
so many geologists should attribute every break in the series of strata and
every gap in the past history of the organic world to catastrophes and
convulsions of the earth’s crust or to leaps made by the creational force from
species to species, or from class to class.”
512.21-22: “But Professor Owen, in a memoir lately read to the Royal Society
(November 20, 1862), has shown that it is unequivocally a bird, and that such of its characters as are
abnormal are by no means strikingly reptilian. The skeleton was lying on its
back when embedded in calcareous sediment, so that the ventral part is exposed
to view. It is about 1 foot 8 inches long, and 1 foot across, from the apex of
the right to that of the left wing. The furculum, or merry-thought [see 531.13], which is entire, marks
the fore part of the trunk; the ischium, scapula, and most of the wing and leg
bones are preserved, and there are impression of
the quill feathers and of down
on the body.”
512.23-24: “The cranium,
which Dr. Fuhlrott showed me, was covered both on its outer and inner surface,
and especially on the latter, with a profusion of dendritical
crystallisations, and some other bones of the skeleton
were ornamented in the same way. These markings, as Dr. Hermann von Meyer
observes, afford no sure criterion of antiquity,
for they have been observed on Roman bones. Nevertheless, they are more common
in bones that have been long embedded in the earth.”
512.26: “The Loess
of Central Europe includes deposits of two different ages. According to Penck
the ‘Older Loess’ was formed in the period of warm and dry climate that
intervened between the third and fourth glacial episodes, while the ‘Younger
Loess’ is post-glacial. Both divisions are for the most part aeolian deposits, formed by the redistribution
of fine glacial mud originally laid
down in water and carried
by the wind often to considerable heights.”
512.26-27: “But in some of the pits at St. Acheul there are seen in the beds
Number 4, Figure 21, not only well-rounded Tertiary pebbles, but great blocks
of hard sandstone, of the kind called in the south of England ‘greywethers,’ some of which are 3 or 4 feet and
upwards in diameter. They are usually angular, and when spherical owe their
shape generally to an original concretionary structure, and not to trituration
in a river’s bed. […] (FIGURE 22. CONTORTED
FLUVIATILE STRATA AT ST. ACHEUL (Prestwich, ‘Philosophical Transactions’ 1861,
page 299).”
512.28-30: “FIGURE 31. SECTION OF CONCENTRIC BEDS
WEST OF CROMER 1. Blue clay. 2. White
sand. 3. Yellow Sand. 4. Striped loam and clay. 5. Laminated blue
clay.)”
512.34-35: “No language seems ever to last for a thousand years, whereas many a
species seem to have endured for hundreds of thousands. A philologist,
therefore, who is contending that all living languages are derivative and not
primordial, has a great advantage over a naturalist who is endeavouring to
inculcate a similar theory in regard to species.”
512.35-36: “When we consider the complexity of every form of speech spoken by a
highly civilised nation, and discover that the grammatical rules and the
inflections which denote number, time, and equality are usually the product of
a rude state of society—that the savage and the sage, the peasant and the man
of letters, the child and the philosopher, have worked together, in the course
of many generations, to build up a fabric which has been truly described as a
wonderful instrument of thought, a machine, the several parts of which are so
well adjusted to each other as to resemble the product of one period and of a
single mind—we cannot but look upon the result as a profound mystery, and one
of which the separate builders have been almost as unconscious
as are the bees
in a hive of the architectural skill and
mathematical knowledge which is displayed in the construction of the honeycomb.”
512.37-513.1: “Professor Agassiz, […] also observes, that ‘the range of the passions
of animals is as extensive as
that of the human
mind, and I am at a loss to perceive a difference of kind between them, however
much they may differ in degree and in the manner in which they are expressed.
The gradations of the moral faculties among the higher animals and Man are,
moreover, so imperceptible, that to deny to the first a certain sense of
responsibility and consciousness would certainly be an exaggeration of the
difference between animals and Man. There exists, besides, as much individuality within their
respective capabilities among animals as among Man, as every
sportsman, or every keeper of menageries, or every farmer and shepherd can
testify, who has had a large experience with wild, or tamed, or domesticated
animals.’”
513.2-3: Lyell’s compilation of evidence and main argument is against the idea
of divine creation, “if created Once.”
“Professor Agassiz, […] observed that, ‘while human thought is consecutive,
divine thought is simultaneous’ […].”
513.3-6: “Before I pass on to another topic, it may be well to answer a
question which may have occurred to the reader: how it happened that we
remained so long ignorant of the vegetation and insects of the Upper Miocene
period in Europe? […] The rare combination of causes which seems to have led to
the faithful preservation of so many treasures of a perishable nature in so
small an area, appear to have been the following: first, a river flowing into a
lake; secondly, storms of wind, by which leaves and sometimes the boughs of
trees were torn off and floated by the stream into the lake; thirdly, mephitic
gases rising from the lake, by which insects flying over its surface were
occasionally killed: and fourthly, a constant supply of carbonate of lime in
solution from mineral springs, the calcareous matter when precipitated to the
bottom mingling with fine mud and thus forming the fossiliferous marls.”
513.4: “As to the ‘homologous insects’ of the Upper Miocene period in
Switzerland, we find among them, mingled with genera now wholly foreign to
Europe, some very familiar forms, such as the common glowworm, Lampyris noctiluca, Linn., the
dung-beetle, Geotrupes stercorarius, Linn., the ladybird, Coccinella septempunctata,
Linn., the ear-wig, Forficula auricularia, Linn., the cuckoo spittle
insect, Aphrophora spumaria, Linn., and a long catalogue of others, to
all of which Professor Heer had given new names, but which some entomologists
may regard as mere varieties until some stronger reasons are adduced for coming
to a contrary opinion.”
513.5: “I have noticed this fact when speaking of the common English butterfly,
Vanessa atalanta, or ‘red admiral,’
which I saw flying about the woods of Alabama in mid-winter.”
513.5-8: “The Swiss lake-dwellings seem first to have attracted attention
during the dry winter of 1853-54, when the lakes and rivers sank lower than had
ever been previously known, and when the inhabitants of Meilen, on the Lake of
Zürich, resolved to
raise the level of some ground and turn it into land, by throwing mud upon it
obtained by dredging in the adjoining shallow water. During these dredging operations they discovered a number of
wooden piles deeply driven into the bed of the lake, and among them a great
many hammers, axes, celts, and other instruments. All these belonged to the
stone period with two exceptions, namely, an armlet of
thin brass
wire, and a
small bronze hatchet.”
513.6-7: “One of the sites first studied by the Swiss antiquaries was the small
lake of Moosseedorf, near Berne, where implements of stone, horn, and bone,
but none of metal, were obtained. Although the flint here employed must have
come from a distance (probably from the south of France), the chippings of the
material are in such profusion as to imply that there was a manufactory of
implements on the spot. Here also, as in several other settlements, hatchets
and wedges of jade
have been observed of a kind said not to occur in Switzerland or the adjoining
parts of Europe, and which some mineralogists would fain derive from the East;
amber also, which, it is supposed, was imported from the shores of the Baltic.”
513.8-10: “At Wangen near Stein, on the Lake of Constance, another of the most
ancient of the lake-dwellings, hatchets of serpentine and greenstone, and
arrow-heads of quartz have been met with. Here also remains of a kind of cloth,
supposed to be of flax,
not woven but plaited, have been detected. […]
Carbonised apples and pears of small
size, such as still grow in the Swiss forests, stones of the wild plum, seeds
of the raspberry and blackberry, and beech-nuts, also occur in the mud,
and hazel-nuts in great plenty.”
513.10: [Brixham Cave, near Torquay, Devonshire] “The central or main entrance,
leading to what is called the ‘reindeer
gallery,’ because a perfect antler
of that animal was found sticking in the stalagmitic floor, is 95 feet above
the level of the sea, being also 78 above the bottom of the adjoining valley.”
513.11-12: “A middle-sized race of dogs continued unaltered throughout the
whole of the stone period; but the people of the bronze age possessed a larger hunting-dog, and with it a small horse, of which genus very few traces have
been detected in the earlier settlements—a single tooth, for example, at
Wangen, and only one or two bones at two or three other places.”
513.13-16: “In the gravel pits of St. Acheul, and in some others near Amiens, small round bodies, having a tubular
cavity in the centre, occur. They are well known as fossils
of the White Chalk. Dr. Rigollot suggested that they might have been strung together as beads,
and he supposed the hole in the middle to have been artificial. […] Dr.
Rigollot’s argument in favour of their having been used as necklaces or
bracelets, appears to me a sound one. He says he often found small heaps or
groups of them in one place, all perforated, just as if, when swept into the
river’s bed by a flood, the bond which
had united them together remained unbroken.”
512.8 the ganoid / or monkey
dropped from branch’s perch: from Henry Adams, The Education of
Henry Adams (1918), which is the source of intermittent lines through
512.32:
512.8-10: from Chap. 15: “Darwinism (1867-1868)”: in this chapter Adams
discusses the impact of Darwinism and his conversations with Sir Charles Lyell
during the period he worked at the American consulate in London with his
father. Pieces from the following passages of this chapter are interpolated
among those worked from Lyell (see 512.3) throughout this page: “[…] but
perhaps he liked best to ramble over the Edge on a summer
afternoon and look across the Marches to
the mountains of Wales. The
peculiar flavor of the scenery has something to do with absence of evolution;
it was better marked in Egypt: it was felt wherever time-sequences became
interchangeable. One’s instinct abhors time. [This last sentence is quoted at
the end of “1892-1941” from Anew, see CSP 91.] As one lay on the
slope of the Edge, looking sleepily through the summer haze towards Shrewsbury
or Cader Idris or Caer Caradoc or Uriconium, nothing suggested sequence. The
Roman road was twin to the railroad; Uriconium was well worth Shrewsbury;
Wenlock and Buildwas, had they approached where he lay in the grass, would have
taken him only for another and tamer variety of Welsh thief. They would have
seen little to surprise them in the modern landscape unless it were the steam
of a distant railway. One might mix up the terms of time as one liked, or stuff
the present anywhere into the past, measuring time by Falstaff’s Shrewsbury
clock, without violent sense of wrong, as one could do it on the Pacific Ocean;
but the triumph of all was to look south along the Edge to the abode of one’s
earliest ancestor and nearest relative, the
ganoid fish, whose name, according to
Professor Huxley, was Pteraspis, a cousin of the sturgeon, and whose
kingdom, according to Sir Roderick Murchison, was called Siluria. Life began
and ended there. Behind that horizon lay only the Cambrian, without vertebrates
or any other organism except a few shell-fish. On the further verge of the
Cambrian rose the crystalline rocks from which every trace of organic existence
had been erased.” […]
“Sir Charles labored only to heap up the evidences of evolution; to cumulate
them till the mass became irresistible. With that purpose, Adams gladly studied
and tried to help Sir Charles, but, behind the lesson of the day, he was
conscious that, in geology as in theology, he could prove only Evolution that
did not evolve; Uniformity that was not uniform; and Selection that did not
select. To other Darwinians—except Darwin—Natural Selection seemed a dogma to
be put in the place of the Athanasian creed; it was a form of religious hope; a
promise of ultimate perfection. Adams wished no better; he warmly sympathised
in the object; but when he came to ask himself what he truly thought, he felt
that he had no Faith; that whenever the next new hobby should be brought out,
he should surely drop off from Darwinism like a monkey from a perch; that the idea of one
Form, Law, Order, or Sequence had no more value for him than the idea of none;
that what he valued most was Motion, and that what attracted his mind was
Change.”
512.16: Summers looking across marches to / mountains an
old mind sees…: from The Education of Henry Adams,
see quotation at 512.8.
512.17: an old mind sees / more, thinking of a thought
/ not his thought, older complexities: from The
Education of Henry Adams, last paragraph of Chap. 26: “Twilight (1901)”:
“Politics and geology pointed alike to the larger synthesis of rapidly
increasing complexity;
but still an elderly man knew that the change might be only
in himself. The admission cost
nothing. Any student, of any age, thinking
only of a thought and not of his
thought, should delight in turning about and
trying the opposite motion, as he delights in the spring which brings even to a
tired and irritated statesman the larger synthesis of peach-blooms, cherry-blossoms, and dogwood, to
prove the folly of fret. Every schoolboy knows that this sum of
all knowledge never saved him from whipping; mere years help nothing; King and
Hay and Adams could neither of them escape floundering through the corridors of
chaos that opened as they passed to the end; but they could at least float with
the stream if they only knew which way the current ran. Adams would have liked
to begin afresh with the Limulus and Lepidosteus in the waters of
Braintree, side by side with Adamses and Quincys and Harvard College, all unchanged and unchangeable
since archaic time; but what purpose
would it serve? A seeker of truth—or illusion—would be none the less restless,
though a shark!” See 512.30-32.
512.25: only archaic time unchanged
unchangeable: from The Education of Henry
Adams, Chap. 26: see quotation at 512.17.
512.30: fret changes / only himself, to prove peach /
blooms, cherry blossoms, dogwood: from The
Education of Henry Adams, Chap. 26: see quotation at 512.17.
513.18 The departed celestial
radiated alive / under earth rest will not / return above to hunger:
from Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges, The Ancient City: A Study on the
Religion, Laws, and Institutions of Greece and Rome (1864), Book I, Chap.
1: “Ancient Beliefs, Notions About the Soul and Death”:
“Did they believe that the spirit ascended towards the sky, towards the region
of lights? Not at all; the thought that departed
souls entered a celestial
home is relatively recent in the West; we find it expressed for the first time
by the poet Phocylides. […] According to the oldest belief of the Italians and
Greeks, the soul did not go into a foreign world to pass its second existence;
it remained near men, and continued to live
under ground. […] It was a custom, at the close of a
funeral ceremony, to call the soul of the deceased three times by the name he
had borne. They wished that he might live happy underground. Three times they
said to him, Fare thee well. They added, May the earth rest lightly upon thee. Thus firmly did they
believe that the person would continue to live underground, and that he would
still preserve a sense of enjoyment and suffering. They wrote upon the tomb
that the man rested there—an expression which survived this belief, and which
has come down through so many centuries to our time. We still employ it, though
surely no one today thinks that an immortal being rests in a tomb. But in those
ancient days they believed so firmly that a man lived there that they never
failed to bury with him the objects of which they supposed he had
need—clothing, utensils, and arms. They poured wine upon his tomb to quench his
thirst, and placed food there to satisfy his hunger”
(trans. Willard Small). Fustel de Coulanges continues to discuss the importance
of a proper burial and funeral rites in order that the dead remain underground
and not become wandering and potentially malevolent spirits.
513.22 glowworms before stars:
from Peter Kalm, Travels in North America (see 514.9-15 and 23.561.24):
“Towards night we found some glowworms in the wood: […] It had rained
considerably all day, yet they crept in great numbers along the bushes, so that
the ground seemed as if it were sown with stars.”
513.24 north south west east
uncompassed / only sun unshifting…: through at least
513.30 from Andrew Sharp, Ancient Voyagers in the Pacific (Penguin,
1957), who discusses in some detail early navigation techniques throughout the
world and argues that the spread of Polynesian culture across much of the
Pacific was more a matter of accident and drift than deliberate migration. The
following are some of the passages LZ probably drew on, although not complete:
“Crude methods of navigation by the sun, stars, winds and currents were good
enough for voyages of no great distance between extended coast-lines, where a
landfall somewhere or other was assured even if the destination were missed.
Man originated as a land animal and presumably graduated through river craft to
coastal vessels. The early off-shore voyages were in the land-locked seas of
the Old World to extended coast-lines on the other side. When the ancient
voyagers made these traverses out of sight of land, they took their course from
the relationship of their directions to the sun and stars. The early
Phonencians, Greeks, Romans, and northern people travelled in this manner
across the Mediterranean, the Black Sea, the Baltic and the North Sea. The
Arabs and the Indians did the same across the Arabian Gulf […]. For these
journeys in the land-locked seas and gulfs, navigation by the sun, stars, winds
and currents was good enough, for when the voyagers came in sight of the coast,
which they could not miss, they could pick their way along it.”
[Andia y Varela, Spanish navigator who visited Tahiti in 1774:] “Andia’s
evidence bears out the fact that the direction of the winds and waves was
considered no less important than the sun and stars. When the latter were obscured
[Capt. John] Cook found that the Tongans depended on the points from which the
wind and waves came upon the vessel. Andia was told that similarly the
Tahitians took note of the part of the vessel that the wind and seas impinged
on, the winds and seas acted as compass needles. Since however these were not
stable in one general direction, the navigators had to keep checking their wind
directions in relation to the heavenly bodies which were the only certain
guides when the voyagers were out of sight of land. If the heavenly bodies were
obscured the navigator had no way of knowing if the wind had changed. As the
Tongans told Cook, under such circumstances they were bewildered, frequently
missed their intended port, and were never heard of more.”
“An ingenious way of recording direction of journeys when they had been fixed
by experience was to register them, as it were, by lining up two landmarks on
the home island which would thereafter give a permanent record of the
direction.”
“It is not appropriate to describe voyages arising either from storms or exile
as drift voyages. The accidental voyages of the Pacific Islanders, as the
accounts of them show, arose from their inability to re-set their courses when
blown away and lost at sea, or when committed to unfamiliar waters.”
513.34 Small wonder when they fish
/ some greet food in water…: through 514.1 from
C.M. Bowra, Primitive Song (1962); see also 23.539.8-24:
“Another powerful force in maintaining a truly primitive outlook is the nature
of primitive language. Though the languages of our peoples have very little in
common either in structure or in syntax, they tend to show certain common
methods of digesting and presenting experience. First, they lack words for
general and abstract ideas, and that is why it is often difficult for Europeans
to make themselves understood by them. The Australians have not even a general
word for ‘fish,’ but speak of ‘food in water.’
Missionaries have not always found it easy to find equivalents for ‘God,’ and
more specialized notions require great ingenuity to find a new home; in
Labrador Eskimo ‘forgiveness’
has to be translated by ‘not-being-able-to-think
about-it-any-more.’ On the other hand these
languages are extremely skilful at dealing with all kinds of impressions, whether
visible or emotional or audible, and have words which over a vastly wider range
than any civilized language can for such matters as colours or effects of light
and shade or the movements of animals and birds and fish or the relations of
bodies in space. In some branches of Eskimo a noun can have many forms, each
with its own special shade of meaning, and the aboriginal Australians of Arnhem
Land have a most apt and rich vocabulary for catching the precise impression of
natural things. This means that a very large vocabulary is in daily use, and
though Thomas Bridges, who composed a dictionary of the Yamana language, may
have treated as different some words which were in fact local, dialectal forms,
his estimate that the language contained over thirty thousand words is a
tribute to its richness. This means that though such a language is a poor
instrument for the expression of ideas, it is admirably suited for emotions and
sensations and impressions. Nor does it much matter that what we might think so
important a matter as numerals the Tasmanians, Andamanese, some Australians and
some Eskimos count ‘one, two, many’;
for in fact they can enumerate all the members of a class of company present on
a given occasion by simply naming them, and their memories are stimulated by
the lack of numbers to retain a mental picture of what happens. Secondly, on
the whole these languages lack the precision of structure familiar from
Indo-European with its different parts of speech and achieved by Chinese
through its disciplined word-order” (22). This long paragraph continues with
the discussion of the line from an Aranda (Australian aboriginal) song quoted
in the note to 23.539.19-20.
514.5 Warming, blue ridge tore
down— / rocks avulsed…: through 514.8 from Thomas Jefferson, Notes
on the State of Virginia (1784):
“Query
IV: Mountains: The passage of the Potomac through the Blue Ridge is, perhaps,
one of the most stupendous scenes in nature. […] The first glance of this scene
hurries our senses into the opinion, that this earth has been created in time,
that the mountains were formed first, that the rivers began to flow afterwards,
that in this place, particularly, they have been dammed up by the Blue Ridge of mountains, and have formed an ocean
which filled the whole valley; that continuing to rise they have at length
broken over at this spot, and have torn
the mountain down
from its summit to its base. The piles of rock
on each hand, but particularly on the Shenandoah, the evident marks of their
disrupture and avulsion from their beds
by the most powerful agents of nature, corroborate the impression.”
“Query
V: Its Cascades and Caverns?: [on Madison’s Cave] The vault of this cave is of
solid lime-stone, from twenty to forty or fifty feet high; through which water is continually percolating. This, trickling down the sides of the cave, has incrusted
them over in the form of elegant drapery;
and dripping from the top of the
vault generates on that and on the base below, stalactites of a conical form,
some of which have met and formed massive columns.”
514.9 Where stone pillars leaned
together / a smaller stone topped…: through 514.15 from
Peter (Pehr) Kalm (1716-1779), Swedish-Finnish explorer and botanist, student
of Linneaus, Travels in North American (1753-1761); see also 513.22 and
23.561.24:
“[Kalm records earlier explorations as reported to him by Pierre de la Vérendrye:] When they
came far to the west, where to the best of their knowledge, no Frenchmen or
European had ever been, they found in one place in the woods, and again on a
large plain, great pillars of stone, leaning
upon each other. The pillars consisted of one single
stone each, and the Frenchmen could not but suppose that they had been erected
by human hands. […] At last, they met with a large stone like a pillar, and in
it a small stone was fixed,
which was covered on both sides with unknown characters.”
“[Aug. 1749] All those who had made long journeys in Canada to the south, but
chiefly westward, agreed that there were many great plains destitute of trees,
where the land was furrowed, as if it had been plowed. In what manner this happened no one
knew, for the grain fields of a great village or town of the Indians are scarce
above four or five of our acres in extent: whereas those furrowed plains
sometimes continue for several days journey, except now and then a small smooth
spot, and here and there some rising grounds.”
Elsewhere Kalm wonders that the Native Americans did not make iron tools
despite the ready availability of iron.
“An old Indian said that when God had created the world and its people, he took
a stick, cast it on the ground, and
spoke unto man, saying, ‘Here
thou shall have an animal
which will be of great service to thee, and which will follow thee wherever thou goest,’ and in that
moment the stick turned into a dog.”
514.16 Faithful vivacity, pigmy
and mammoth— / the difference of increment…: through 514.18 from
Thomas Jefferson, Notes on the State of Virginia (see 514.5). In the Notes,
Jefferson was in part refuting the arguments for the natural inferiority of the
New World propagated by the Comte de Buffon in his Histoire naturelle
(1749-1788):
[from
a long catalog of the virtues of Native Americans:] “[…] that his friendships
are strong and faithful
to the uttermost extremity: that his sensibility is keen, even the warriors
weeping most bitterly on the loss of their children, though in general they
endeavor to appear superior to human events; that his vivacity and activity of mind is equal to ours
in the same situation; hence his eagerness for hunting, and for games of
chance.”
“‘La
nature vivante est beaucoup moins agissante, beaucoup moins forte’ [Buffon,
xviii. 122 edit. Paris, 1764]: that nature is less active, less energetic on
one side of the globe than she is on the other. As if both sides were not
warmed by the same genial sun;
as if a soil of the same chemical
composition was less capable of elaboration into animal nutriment; as if the
fruits and grains from that soil and sun, yielded a less rich chyle, gave less extension to the solids and
fluids of the body, or produced sooner in the cartilages, membranes, and
fibres, that rigidity which restrains all further extension, and terminates
animal growth. The truth is, that Pigmy and
a Patagonian, a mouse and a mammoth,
derive their dimensions from the same nutritive juices. The difference of increment depends on
circumstances unsearchable
to beings with our capacities. Every race of animals seems to have received
from their Maker certain laws of extension at the time of their formation.
Their elaborative organs were formed to produce this, while proper obstacles
were opposed to its further progress. Below these limits they cannot fall, nor
rise above them. What intermediate station they shall take may depend on soil,
on climate, on food, on a careful choice of breeders. But all the manna of
heaven would never raise the mouse to the bulk of the mammoth.”
514.20 dog’s letter:
or canine letter, is the letter or sound r because it sounds like a
dog’s growl.
514.29 work / is by day; night’s:
probably from the ancient Chinese work song used by EP in Canto 49.245; see Prep
+ 165.
515.10 four
eyes agreed birdprint wrote…: through 515.13 from Herbert
A. Giles, A History of Chinese Literature
(1901), a major source throughout “A”-22 and used in “A”-23 as well: “China has
her Cadmus in the person of a prehistoric individual named Ts‛ang Chieh, who is said to have had four eyes, and to have taken
the idea of a written language from the markings of birds’ claws upon the sand.
Upon this achievement of his task the sky rained grain and evil spirits mourned
by night” (6).
515.12: metal say chase, wood say / carve…:
from Giles quoting the Erh Ya
(Nearing the Standard), a guide on the correct use of terms: “For metal we say lou (to chase); for wood k‛o (to carve); for bone ch‛ieh (to cut), etc., etc.” (45).
515.13: sun, weather extol: possibly from Giles on Liu Ling (3rd
century): “His bias was towards the Tao of Lao Tzŭ, and he was actually
plucked for his degree in consequence of an essay extolling the
heterodox doctrine of Inaction.” Giles then quotes a skit in which Liu Ling
portrays himself: “An old gentle man, a friend of mind (that is, himself),
regards eternity as but a single day, and the whole centuries as but an instant
of time. The sun and moon are the windows of his house; the cardinal
points are the boundaries of his domain. […Drinking himself into intermittent
unconsciousness…] His ears were beyond the reach of thunder; he could not have
seen a mountain. Heat and cold existed for him no more. He not even the
workings of his own mind” (125-126).
515.13 from / one place rayed or as rainbow
dispersed…: through 515.16 suggested by an article on medieval stained
glass by Jane Hayward, “Painted Windows,” Metropolitan Museum of Art
Bulletin, new series 30.3 (Dec. 1971-Jan. 1972): 98-101, which describes
such windows as “like the faceted surface of a jewel refracting the light,
scattering its beams, so that the window shimmers and glows, constantly
changing with the position of the sun’s rays.”
515.17: As to flood, but for / You we’d all be
fishes…: through 515.32 from
Herbert Giles, A History of Chinese Literature (see 515.10):
515.17-18: quoting the Tso Chuan [a
commentary on the Spring and Autumn
Annuals] on the legendary Emperor Yü who successfully dealt with great
flooding: “How grand was the achievement of Yü, how far-reaching his glorious
energy! But for Yü we should all have been fishes” (8).
515.19: As to drought, why burn / a
witch if she were / cause might make things worse: from Giles quoting from
the Tso Chuan (see preceding): “In
consequence of the drought the Duke wished to burn a witch. One of his
officers, however, said to him, ‘That will not affect the drought. Rather
repair your city walls and ramparts; eat less, and curtail your expenditure;
practice strict economy, and urge the people to help one another. That is the
essential; what have witches to do in the matter? If God wishes her to be
slain, it would have been better not to allow her to be born. If she can cause
a drought, burning her will only make things worse.’ The Duke took this advice,
and during that year, although there was famine, it was not very severe” (27).
515.22: Annals moon’s summer midnight
aerolite: from Giles quoting the Ch‛un Ch‛iu (Spring and Autumn
Annals), one of the Confucian Five Classics: “In the 7th year of Duke
Chuang (B.C. 685), in summer, in the 4th moon, at midnight, there was a shower
of stars like rain” (25).
515.23: 64 guesses at order…: from
Giles describing and quoting the I Ching
(Book of Changes): “[Fu Hsi] subsequently increased the above simple
combinations [of hexagrams] to sixty-four double ones, on the permutations of
which are based the philosophical speculations of the Book of Changes. Each diagram represents some power in nature,
either active or passive, such as fire, water, thunder, earth, and so on. The
text consists of sixty-four short essays, enigmatically and symbolically
expressed, on important themes, mostly of a moral, social, and political
character. […] The following is a specimen (Legge’s translation):—“Text [hexagram] This suggests the idea
of one treading on the tail of a tiger, which does not bite him. There will be
progress and success […]” (21-22).
515.29: Stuck in a rut? try / a
flagstaff pry the wheel / then horses may travel light: from Giles
quoting from the Tso Chuan (see
515.17): “In the rout which followed, a war-chariot of the Chin State stuck in
a deep rut and could not get on. Thereupon a man of the Ch‛u State advised the charioteer to take out the stand for arms.
This eased it a little, but again the horses turned round. The man then advised
that the flagstaff should be taken out and used as a lever, and at last the
chariot was extricated. ‘Ah,’ said the charioteer to the man of Ch‛u, ‘we don’t know so much about running away as the people of your
worthy State’” (27-28).
516.1 leader rains why be led— / he will take
your sons / for war…: through 516.4 from 1 Samuel 8:10-18: “And Samuel told
all the words of the Lord unto the people that asked of him a king. And he
said, This will be the manner of the king that shall reign over
you: He will take your sons, and appoint them for himself,
for his chariots, and to be his horsemen; and some shall run before his
chariots. And he will appoint him captains over thousands, and captains over
fifties; and will set them to ear his ground, and to reap his harvest, and to
make his instruments of war, and instruments of his chariots. And he
will take your daughters to be confectionaries, and to be cooks, and to be
bakers. And he will take your fields, and your vineyards, and your
oliveyards, even the best of them, and give them to his servants. And he will
take the tenth of your seed, and of your vineyards, and give to his officers,
and to his servants. And he will take your menservants, and your maidservants,
and your goodliest young men, and your asses, and put them to his work. He will
take the tenth of your sheep and ye shall be his servants. And ye shall cry out
in that day because of your king which ye shall have chosen you; and the Lord
will not hear you in that day.”
516.7: Seventy plants, thirty / trees cite: describing the Shih Ching (Book of Odes), Giles
spends a paragraph enumerating the number of different plants, trees, animals,
birds, fishes and insects to be found in the odes (19).
516.8 the way why / argue it, those wise don’t
/ inflict your living…: through 516.19 from Lao Tzu. However, in this case
LZ is not using Giles, who translates only a limited number of individual lines
and gives more extensive treatment to Chuangzi (Zhangzi). LZ’s precise source
is uncertain, but the translations below are those of Lin Yutang from the large
compilation he edited, The Wisdom of China and India (1942), which was
in the Zukofsky library:
from Chap. 71: “True words are not fine-sounding; / Fine sounding words are not
true. / A good man does not argue; / He who argues is not a good man.”
from Chap. 8: “In his relations with others, he loves kindness; / In his words,
he loves sincerity; / In government, he loves peace; / In business affairs, he
loves ability; / In his actions, he loves choosing the right time. / It is
because he does not contend / That he is without reproach.”
from Chap. 41: “When the highest type of man hear the Tao (truth), / They
practice it diligently. / When the
mediocre type hear the Tao, / They seem to be aware and yet unaware of it. /
When the lowest type hear the Tao, / They break into loud laughter— / If it
were not laughed at, it would not be Tao.”
from Chap. 19: “Banish ‘love,’ discard ‘justice,’ / And the people shall
recover love of their kin” (Lin Yutang notes that the terms “love” and “justice”
refer to Confucianism).
from Chap. 55: “[The child’s] bones are soft, his sinews tender, yet his grip
is strong.”
from Chap. 15: on the virtues of the “wise ones of old”: “Self-effacing, like
ice beginning to melt. / Genuine, like a piece of undressed wood.”
516.30 At the most / truths dig caverns—pure water
/ drips, honey’s yellow glosses figs / less sweet—calls bird-cherry mulberry:
from Xenophanes (c.570-c.475 BC), fragments in Elegy and Iambus, trans.
J.M. Edmonds (Loeb Classical Library):
“In certain caverns pure water drips.”
“Had not God made honey yellow, they had said that figs were far sweeter.”
[Edmonds’ note:] “κερασός is really the bird-cherry; mulberries and
blackberries seem to have been confused.”
516.35 hero dotes on: < Herodotus, 5th
century BC Greek historian. This segment from 516.34-517.2 appears to be worked
from Herodotus’ Histories,
in which he attempts to sort out a large body of legend and stories he gathered
in his travels around the Mediterranean and the Black Sea. He famously
mentions, skeptically, an account of the Phoenicians rounding the African
continent: “[Necôs,
the Egyptian king] sent to sea a number of ships manned by Phoenicians, with
orders to make for the Pillars of Hercules, and return to Egypt through them,
and by the Mediterranean. The Phoenicians took their departure from Egypt by
way of the Erythraen Sea [Red Sea, but including the Indian Ocean and Persian
Sea], and so sailed into the southern ocean. When autumn came, they went
ashore, wherever they might happen to be, and having sown a tract of land with
corn, waited until the grain was fit to cut. Having reaped it, they again set sail;
and thus it came to pass that two whole years went by, and it was not till the
third year that they doubled the Pillars of Hercules, and made good their
voyage home. On their return, they declared—I for my part do not believe them,
but perhaps others may—that in sailing round Libya they had the sun upon their
right hand. In this way was the extent of Libya first discovered” (IV.42).
516.36-517.2: a tale of honesty […] of black and / white, gold stack
for wares: “The Carthaginians also relate the following:—There is a country
in Libya, and a nation, beyond the Pillars of Hercules, which they are wont to
visit, where they no sooner arrive but forthwith they unlade their wares, and,
having disposed them after an orderly fashion along the beach, leave them, and,
returning aboard their ships, raise a great smoke. The natives, when they see
the smoke, come down to the shore, and, laying out to view so much gold as they
think the worth of the wares, withdraw to a distance. The Carthaginians upon
this come ashore and look. […] Neither party deals unfairly by the other: for
they themselves never touch the gold till it comes up to the worth of their
goods, nor do the natives ever carry off the goods till the gold is taken away”
(IV.196; trans. George Rawlinson).
517.7 the spitting / seas redeem:
apparently refers to an anecdote concerning the Greek philosopher Aristippus
(see next)), which LZ alludes to at 14.316.27-29 and found in Diogenes Laertius
(see 14.316.7). LZ seems to have
had an early interest in Aristippus, and a poem survives dated 19 Sept. 1923
entitled “(The Master Aristippus)” (see “Discarded Poems” 146-148).
517.8
No knowledge but / intimate
pleasure, tho a trained / horse’s no stone…: through
at least 519.3 primarily from Diogenes Laertius, Lives of Eminent Philosophers—a work (probably 3rd century AD) that
uncritically compiles surviving information on the Greek philosophers and is
strong on biographical anecdote and weak on comprehensive accounts of philosophy.
LZ uses the Loeb Classical Library edition, 2 vols., translated by R.D. Hicks.
517.8-10: No knowledge but / intimate pleasure, tho a trained / horse’s no
stone, takes trouble—: from Diogenes Laertius on Aristippus of Cyrne, 4th
century BC Greek philosopher, founder of the Cyrenaic school which taught that
the purpose of life was to seek pleasure: “They also held that there is a
difference between ‘end’ and ‘happiness.’ Our end is particular pleasure,
whereas happiness is the sum total of all particular pleasures, in which are
included both past and future pleasures.”
“To the question how the educated differ from the uneducated, [Aristippus]
replied, ‘Exactly as horses that have been trained differ from untrained
horses.’”
“He was asked by someone in what way his son would be better for being
educated. He replied, ‘If nothing more than this, at all events, when in the
theatre he will not sit down like a stone upon stone.’”
517.13 owns laws’
spiderweb surfeit’s outrage, / wound from acting in tragedies: from
Diogenes Laertius on Solon, 6th century BC Athenian lawmaker:
“He compared laws to spiders’ webs, which stand firm when any light and
yielding object falls upon them, while a larger thing breaks through them and
makes off.”
“Asked how crime could most effectually be diminished, he replied, ‘If it
caused as much resentment in those who are not its victims as in those who
are,’ adding, ‘Wealth breeds satiety, satiety outrage.’ […] He prohibited
Thespis from performing tragedies on the ground that fiction was pernicious.
When therefore Pisistratus appeared with self-inflicted wounds, Solon said,
‘This comes from acting tragedies’” (I.59).
517.15 Pith or gore has 4 / seasons…: < Pythagoras, 6th century BC
pre-Socratic philosopher (see 15.368.31,
19.419.7,
19.419.30). Through 517.26 from Diogenes Laertius on Pythagoras (Quartermain,
“Only Is Order Othered” 960-961):
517.15-17:
has 4 / seasons, 20 yet boy, 40 / young 60 ripe, 80 aged: “He divides
man’s life into four quarters thus: ‘Twenty years a boy, twenty years a youth,
twenty years a young man, twenty years an old man; and these four periods
correspond to the four seasons, the boy to spring, the youth to summer, the
young man to autumn, and the old man to winter’” (VIII.10).
517.18: pursued pi beyond stratus: “We are told by Apollodorus the
calculator that he offered a sacrifice of oxen on finding that in a
right-angled triangle the square of the hypotenuse is equal to the squares on
the sides containing the right angle” (VIII.11). However, LZ’s “pursued pi
beyond stratus” does not seem to refer primarily to the Pythagorean theorem,
but to the Pythagorean numerical philosophy in which mathematics is extended to
the cosmos. The mathematical pi (π) is a symbol used in
geometry for the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter (CD).
517.18-19: weights / and measures: “He too, according to Aristoxenus the
musician, was the first to introduce weights and measures into Greece”
(VIII.14).
517.19-20:
the eyes doors / to sun: “As it is, in certain [lines] he calls the eyes
the portals of the sun” (VIII.29).
517.20-23:
air thronged with / souls exacting heroes’ crumbs, salt / from seas men with
their / livestock dream: “The whole air is full of souls which are called
genii or heroes; these are they who send men dreams and signs of future disease
and health, and not to men alone, but to sheep also and cattle as well; and it
is to them that purifications and lustrations, all divination, omens and the
like, have reference” (VIII.32).
“He
bade his disciples not to pick up fallen crumbs, either in order to accustom
them not to eat immoderately, or because connected with a person’s death; nay,
even, according to Aristophanes, crumbs belong to the heroes […]” (VIII.34).
“Of
salt he said it should be brought to table to remind us of what is right; for
salt preserves whatever it finds, and it arises from the purest sources, sun
and sea” (VIII.35).
517.23-24: warned not to / pray, unsure where help comes: “He forbids us
to pray for ourselves, because we do not know what will help us” (VIII.9).
517.25-26:
when Evening Star lowers to / Morning Star: “It was he who first
declared that the Evening and Morning Stars are the same, as Parmenides maintains”
(VIII.14). Diogenes Laertius notes this contested attribution in his Life of
Parmenides as well (IX.23); see following.
517.26 How can
you, / opinion’s throbbing ear aimless eye…: through 517.36 from Parmenides
(6th century BC). Diogenes Laertius’ Life of Parmenides is very short and
cannot account for most of this section. A possible source is Nahm’s Selections from Early Greek Philosophy, which according to Leggott LZ owned and
used elsewhere (389); Nahm’s volume incorporates various translations. The
following quotes and references from Parmenides’ fragments are from Nahm in
Richmond Lattimore’s translation.
517.26-27: How can you, / opinion’s throbbing ear aimless eye: “But do
you keep your mind away from this way of inquiry [the way of opinion], nor let
the habit of long experience force you to direct along it an aimless eye, a
shrill ear and tongue; but examine by reason this much-contested refutation
that comes from me” (92). See Bottom 358 where this is partially quoted
in a different translation.
517.30-33: For now it is: not / is the same and can / be
thought and thought is / now: “It must be that that, which may be
spoken of and thought of, is what is;
for it is possible for it to be, but it is impossible for nothing to be. […]
And the decision of the matter rests herein: either it is or it is not:
and so it is decided, of necessity, to give up one way as inconceivable and
unnamable—for it is no true way—and to admit that the other is actual and a
true way. How then could that which is
be about to be? How could it come into being? For if it has come to pass or is
about to be, then it is not. So becoming is put out of the question, and
destruction is inconceivable” (93). See Bottom 358 where this is quoted
in a different translation and correlated with Hamlet.
517.33-35: Truth’s way all one / where it begins and shall come back again:
“It is no matter to me whence I take my beginning; for to that point I shall
return once more” (92).
517.36: now the moving body’s sphere: “For thought comes to men
with just that mixture of variable organs which it happens to have at the time;
for that which has power of thought is for all men in any case the same thing,
namely, the substance of their bodies; and this thought is that which is
preponderant” (95). This last fragment comes from the “Way of Opinion” as
opposed to the previous fragments from the “Way of Truth.”
517.37 Pride
drenched faster than fire…: through 518.4 from Diogenes Laertius on
Heraclitus (fl. 500 BC).
517.37-518.1: Pride drenched faster than fire, / good laws uphold good walls:
“Again he would say: ‘there is more need to extinguish insolence than an
outbreak of fire,’ and ‘The people must fight for the law as for city-walls’”
(IX.2). Possibly a wink at Robert Frost, “Mending Wall,” in this last line.
518.2-3: a breath up from the / sea—home, light upward: “He reduces
nearly everything to exhalation from the sea. This process is the upward path.
Exhalations arise from earth as well as from sea; those from sea are bright and
pure, those from earth dark. Fire is fed by the bright exhalations, the moist
element by the others” (IX.9). An unattributed epigramic verse: “Do not be in
too great a hurry to get to the end of Heraclitus the Ephesian’s book: the path
is hard to travel. Gloom is there and darkness devoid of light. But if an
initiate be your guide, the path shines brighter than sunlight” (IX.16).
518.3-4: silent / path to let others chatter: “We are told that, when
asked why he kept silence, he replied, ‘Why, to let you chatter’” (IX.12).
518.5 Love
and hate—souls of / animals and plants,
where a / nest is tears may flow / no key to the tangle: through
518.8 from Diogenes Laertius on Empedocles (5th century BC): “His doctrines
were as follows, that there are four elements, fire, water, earth and air,
besides friendship by which these are united, and strife by which they are
separated. These are his words: ‘Shining Zeus and life-bringing Hera, Aidoneus
and Nestis, who lets flow from her tears the source of mortal
life,’ where by Zeus he means fire, by Hera earth, by Aidoneus air, and by
Nestis water. ‘And their continuous change,’ he says, ‘never ceases,’ as if
this ordering of things were eternal. At all events he goes on: ‘At one time
all things uniting in one through Love, at another each carried in a different
direction through the hatred born of strife.’ […] The soul, again,
assumes all the various forms of animals and plants” (VIII.76-77). On
the phrase “Love and hate” (518.5) also see the famous opening phrase of
Catullus 85: “Odi et amo.”
518.9 Mind
would not defend itself…: through 518.18 from Diogenes Laertius on
Anaxagoras (c.500-428 BC):
518.9: Mind would not defend itself: “He was a pupil of Anaximenes, and
was the first who set mind above matter, for at the beginning of his treatise,
which is composed in attractive and dignified language, he says, ‘All things
were together; then came Mind and set them in order.’ This earned for
Anaxagoras himself the nickname of Nous or Mind […]” (II.6). Anaxagoras was
tried by Athens for impiety, for declaring “the sun to be a mass of red-hot
metal,” and condemned to death. “When news was brought him that he was
condemned […], his comment on the sentence was, ‘Long ago nature condemned both
my judges and myself to death’” (II.13).
518.10-11: believing bone’s of smaller bone / particle accreted elements:
Anaxagoras’ concept of the homoeomeria appears in Diogenes Laertius (II.8), but
the image of bone here indicates LZ turned in this case to Lucretius’ De Rerum Natura (see 12.164.19): “Now
let us also examine the homoeomeria
of Anaxagoras as the Greeks call it, which cannot be named in our language
because of the poverty of our mother speech, but yet it is easy to explain the
thing itself in words. First, when he speaks of the homoeomeria in things, he clearly holds that bones are made of very
small and minute bones, flesh of very small and minute particles of flesh, and
blood is composed by many drops of blood coming together into union, and he
thinks gold may consist of grains of gold, and earth to be a concretion of
small earths, fire or fires, water of waters; he fancies and imagines the rest
in the same way” (I.830-840; trans. W.H.D. Rouse).
518.11-13: mind humble / before molten sun reflecting moon’s / low fosses
and far ranges: “He declared the sun to be a mass of red-hot metal and to
be larger than the Peloponnesus, though others ascribe this view to Tantalus;
he declared that there were swellings on the moon, and moreover hills and
ravines” (II.8).
518.14-16: a heaven of stones whose / swiftness made their separate orbits /
one, that slackening would fall: “Silenus […] says that Anaxagoras declared
the whole firmament to be made of stones; that the rapidity of rotation caused
it to cohere; and that if this were relaxed it would fall” (II.12).
518.17-18: not justice nor virtue the / singer knew: “Favorinus in his Miscellaneous History says Anaxagoras
was the first to maintain that Homer in his poems treats of virtue and justice
[…]” (II.11).
518.18-19: life retraced / in annual holidays for boys: “At length he
retired to Lampsacus and there died. And when the magistrates of the city asked
if there was anything he would like done for him, he replied that he would like
them to grant an annual holiday to the boys in the month in which he died; and
the custom is kept up to this day” (II.14).
518.20 A
porter’s neat wood bundle / talked wish, question, answer, command: from
Diogenes Laertius on Protagoras, 5th century BC Sophist:
518.20: “He too invented the shoulder-pad on which
porters carry their burdens, so we are told by Aristotle in his treatise On Education; for he himself had been a
porter, says Epicurus somewhere. This was how he was taken up by Democritus,
who saw how skillfully his bundles of wood were tied. He was the first to mark
off the parts of discourse into four, namely, wish, question, answer, command
[…] these he called the basic forms of speech” (IX.53-54).
518.22 Our
call’s nature, sound is / shocked air,
human virtue convention—: probably from Diogenes Laertius on
Archelaus, student of Anaxagoras and teacher of Socrates: “He was called the
physicist inasmuch as with him natural philosophy came to an end, as soon as
Socrates had introduced ethics. It would seem that Archelaus himself also
treated of ethics, for he has discussed laws and goodness and justice; Socrates
took the subject from him and, having improved it to the utmost, was regarded
as its inventor. Archelaus laid down that there were two causes of growth or
becoming, heat and cold; that living things were produced from slime; and that
what is just and what is base depends not upon nature but upon convention”
(II.16). “Living things, he holds, are generated from the earth when it is
heated and throws off slime of the consistency of milk to serve as a sort of
nourishment, and in this same way the earth produced man. He was the first who
explained the production of sound as being the concussion of air, and the
formation of the sea in hollow places as due to its filtering through the
earth” (II.17).
518.24 to which a pupil shrugged, / so crater
fuses is that all?: probably referring to Archelaus (see preceding) and
Socrates (see following) from Diogenes Laertius: “Archelaus was the teacher of
Socrates. He was called the physicist inasmuch as with him natural philosophy
came to an end, as soon as Socrates had introduced ethics. It would seem that
Archelaus himself also treated of ethics, for he has discussed laws and
goodness and justice; Socrates took the subject from him and, having improved
it to the utmost, was regarded as its inventor. […] [Archelaus’] theory is to
this effect. Water is melted by heat and produces on the one hand earth in so
far as by the action of fire it sinks and coheres, while on the other hand it
generates air in so far as it overflows on all sides. Hence the earth is
confined by the air, and the air by the circumambient fire” (II).
518.26 most
gorge to eat / I eat to live: from Diogenes Laertius on Socrates: “He would
say that the rest of the world lived to eat, while he himself ate to live”
(II.34).
518.27 Science:
/ a well—empty yet something / uncut:
from Diogenes Laertius quoting Democritus, (460?-357 BC) Greek Atomist, although the following is
found in the Life of Pyrrho: “‘Opinion says hot or cold, but the reality is
atoms and empty space,’ and again, ‘Of a truth we know nothing, for truth is in
a well” (IX.72).
518.29 Shadow
speaking irks action: from Diogenes Laertius on Democritus: “From him we
have the saying, ‘Speech is the shadow of action’” (IX.37).
518.30 Man featherless two-legs, at which / the
cosmopolite plucked a fowl’s / ‘Here’s your man—’…:
through 519.3 from Diogenes Laertius on Diogenes of Sinope (404-323 BC), one of
the founders of the Cynic school of philosophy:
518.30-32: “Plato had defined Man as an animal, biped and
featherless, and was applauded. Diogenes plucked a fowl and brought it into the
lecture-room with the words, ‘Here is Plato’s man.’ In consequence of which
there was added to the definition, ‘having broad nails’” (VI.40).
518.31: “Asked where he came from, he said, ‘I am a citizen of the world (kosmopolites)’ [editor’s note: If this
answer is authentic, it apparently shows that the famous term ‘cosmopolitan’
originated with Diogenes]” (VI.63).
518.32-33: My teacher / gone mad: “On being asked by somebody,
‘What sort of a man do you consider Diogenes to be?’ ‘A Socrates gone mad,’
said [Plato]” (VI.54).
518.33-34: ‘loveliest—free speech’: “Being asked what was the most
beautiful thing in the world, he replied, ‘Freedom of speech’” (VI.69).
518.34-35: ‘true polity wide / as the universe: “‘The only true
commonwealth was that which is as wide as the universe’” (VI.72).
518.35-37:
but the great thieves lead the little away’: “Once he saw the officials
of a temple leading away some one who had stolen a bowl belonging to the
treasurers, and said, ‘The great thieves are leading away the little thief’”
(VI.45).
518.37-519.2: Your eyes see—prating— / not to my mind—expose / pride:
“And one day when Plato had invited to his house friends coming from Dionysius,
Diogenes trampled upon his carpets and said, ‘I trample upon Plato’s
vainglory.’ Plato’s reply was, ‘How much pride you expose to view, Diogenes, by
seeming not to be proud’” (VI.26). “As Plato was conversing about Ideas and
using the nouns ‘tablehood’ and ‘cuphood,’ he said, ‘Table and cup I see; but
your tablehood and cuphood, Plato, I can nowise see.’ ‘That’s readily accounted
for,’ said Plato, ‘for you have the eyes to see the visible table and cup; but
not the understanding by which ideal tablehood and cuphood are discerned’”
(VI.53).
519.3:
died holding his breath: “Diogenes is said to have been nearly ninety
years old when he died. Regarding his death there are several different
accounts. One is that he was seized with colic after eating an octopus raw and
so met his end. Another is that he died voluntarily by holding his breath”
(VI.76).
519.2 Dog
Star: Sirius, associated with the hottest part of the year and thus
madness. Diogenes of Sinope (see 518.30) is frequently associated with dogs:
called a dog (by Plato among others), calling himself a dog (Cynic means
literally Hound according to a footnote at VI.60 in Hicks’ edition of Diogenes
Laertius’ Lives) and on occasion
acting like and living with dogs. Cf. the dog imagery associated with
Shakespeare’s version of Diogenes, Apemantus, in Timon of Athens.
519.5 Trivial uttered, hard to stand / under:
from Hesiod, Fragment 22: “And if I said this, it would seem a poor thing and
hard to understand” (trans. Hugh Evelyn-White). Its appearance here is
apparently due to the fact that this fragment survives as a quotation in Plato,
Epistle XI, and LZ will repeat the line in the Hesiod passage at 23.544.18. In
both cases LZ hears an echo of a favorite line from Shakespeare, The Two
Gentlemen of Verona II.5: (spoken by Launce the clown) “Why, stand-under
and under-stand is all one” (see note at 13.313.13).
519.6 polity’s impossible without friends…:
through at least 519.10 appears to be from Plato, Epistles; the
following from the Loeb Classical Library edition of Plato, vol. 9, Timaeus,
Critias, Cleitophon, Menaxenus, Epistles, trans. Robert G. Bury:
519.6: from Epistle VII: “When, therefore, I considered all this, and the type
of men who were administering the affairs of State, with their laws too and
their customs, the more I considered them and the more I advanced in years
myself, the more difficult appeared to me the task of managing affairs of
State rightly. For it was impossible to take action without
friends and trusty companions; and these it was not easy to find ready to
hand, since our state was no longer managed according to the principles and
institutions of our forefathers; while to acquire other new friends with any
facility was a thing impossible.”
519.8-9: from Epistle VII: “For by nature none of us is immortal, and if
any man should come to be so he would not be happy, as the vulgar believe; for
no evil nor good worthy of account belongs to what is soulless, but they befall
the should whether it be united with a body or separated therefrom.”
519.9-10: from Epistle VI: “If, then, all of us—both we and you—practice this
philosophy, as each is able, to the utmost of our power, the prophecy I have
now made will come true; but if we fail to do this, I keep silence as to the
consequence; for the prophecy I am making is one of good omen, and I
declare that we shall, God willing, do all these things well.”
519.15 Air of early dawn, how / shun jee
and ch’…: through 519.18 from Mencius (372-289 BC), Confucian
philosopher (see also 519.31-520.1). LZ appears to be drawing from The
Wisdom of China and India (1942), ed. Lin Yutang, who uses the translation
of James Legge with revisions indicated in parentheses:
519.15-16: from Lin Yutang’s introduction to Mencius: “[…] there was a certain
high idealism in Mencius, when he spoke of the haojan chih ch’i, the
‘expansive spirit’ in us, which he beautifully pinned down in a phrase, ‘the air
of the early dawn,’ which every early riser is familiar with. How to
save and keep that air, or spirit, of the early dawn through the day, or how to
guard the warm and good heart of the child through our life is the moral
problem” (744). LZ is phonically retranscribing the Chinese phrase, which Lin
gives in the Wade-Giles romanization: hao = how, chih = jee, ch’i = ch’ (but
more accurately pronounced: chee), but why shun for jan, which properly
is pronounced closer to “ran,” is curious.
519.17-18: “In the Declaration of T‘ang it is said, ‘O sun, when wilt thou expire?
We will die together with thee’” (748).
519.19 ‘if
your house were burning / what would you save from / it?’ ‘The fire’:
this response is attributed to Jean Cocteau in an interview.
519.21 To see / small beginnings clear…:
through 519.25 from Herbert Giles, A History of Chinese Literature (see 515.10), remark
attributed to Lao Tzu by Han Fei Tzü (d. 233 BC): “‘To see
small beginnings is clearness of sight,’ by drawing attention to a man who
foresaw, when the tyrant Chou Hsin (who died B.B. 1122) took to ivory
chopsticks, that the tide of luxury had set in, to bring licentiousness and
cruelty in its train, and to end in downfall and death.”
“Lao
Tzǔ said, ‘Leave all things to take their natural course.’ To this Han Fei Tzǔ
adds, ‘A man spent three years in carving a leaf out of ivory, of such elegant
and detailed workmanship that it would lie undetected among a heap of real
leaves. But Lieh Tzǔ said, “If God Almighty were to spend three years over
every leaf, the trees would be badly off for foliage”’” (71).
519.26 rejoic’d no men but dogs:
from Robert Burns (1759-1796), “The Twa Dogs”:
When up they gat an’ shook their lugs,
Rejoic’d they were na men but dogs;
An’ each took off his several way,
Resolv’d to meet some ither day.
519.31 White snow, white feather, white / horse,
is man white…: through 520.1 from Mencius (see 519.15-18). Although the
first passage below is also found in Herbert Giles (38), the following are all
taken from Lin Yutang, The Wisdom of China and India (1942):
519.31-32: Mencius is debating with Kaotse about human nature: “Kaotse said,
‘(The phenomena of) life is what I call nature.’ Mencius replied, ‘Do you say
that life is nature just as you say that white is white?’ ‘Yes,’ was the reply.
(Mencius asked again), ‘Is the whiteness of a white feather like the
whiteness of white snow, and the whiteness of white snow like that of
white jade?’ ‘Yes,’ returned (the other). Mencius retorted, ‘Very well. Is the
nature of a dog like the nature of an ox, and the nature of an ox like the
nature of a man?’ Kaotse said, ‘(To delight in) food and in sexual pleasure is
nature. Benevolence is from within, and not from without; righteousness is from
without and not from within.’ Mencius said, ‘What is the ground of your saying
that benevolence is from within, and righteousness from without?’ (The other)
replied, ‘There is a man older than I, and I give honour to his age;—it is not
that there is in me a principle of reverence for age. It is just as when there
is a white man, and I consider him white;—according as he is so externally to
me. It is on this account that I say (of righteousness) that it is from
without.’ (Mencius) said, ‘There is no difference to us between the whiteness
of a white horse, and the whiteness of a white man, but I do not
know that there is no difference between the regard with which we acknowledge
the age of an old horse, and that with which we acknowledge the age of a man
older (than ourselves)? And what is it which we call righteousness? The fact of
a man’s being older (than we)? or the fact of our giving honour to his age?’”
(772-773). Cf. Aristotle on whiteness at Nicomachean Ethics I.6; see
quotation at 12.237.25.
519.32-35: “Mencius said, ‘The trees of Niu hill were once beautiful.
Being situated, however, in the suburbs of (the capital of) a large State, they
were hewn down with axes and bills; and could they retain their beauty?
Still through the growth from the vegetative life day and night, and the
nourishing influence of the rain and dew, they were not without buds and
sprouts springing out. […] The way in which a man loses the proper goodness of
his mind is like the way in which (those) trees were denuded by axes and bills.
Hewn down day after day, can it retain its excellence? But there is some growth
of its life day and night, and in the (calm) air of the morning,
just between night and day, the mind feels in a degree those desires and aversions
which are proper to humanity; but the feeling is not strong; and then it is
fettered and destroyed by what the man does during the day. This fettering
takes place again and again; the restorative influence of the night is not
sufficient to preserve (the proper goodness); and when this proves insufficient
for that purpose, the (nature) becomes not much different from (that of) the
irrational animals; and when people see this, they think that it never had
those endowments (which I assert). But does this condition represent the
feelings proper to humanity? Therefore if it receive its proper nourishment,
there is nothing which will not grow; if it lose its proper nourishment, there
is nothing which will not decay away’” (776-777).
519.36-520.1: “Mencius said, ‘Anybody who wishes to cultivate a t’ung tree,
or a tse, which may be grasped with the two hand, (perhaps) with
one, knows by what means to nourish it; but in the case of their own persons
men do not know by what means to nourish them. Is it to be supposed that [/]
their regard for their own persons is inferior to their regard for a t’ung
or a tse? Their want of reflection is extreme’” (779-780). The slash
mark indicates the page break where there are two footnotes by Lin at the
bottom of the page, although they refer to a preceding section: “[First note:]
The Chinese word hsin means both ‘heart’ and mind.’ Here the heart of
original goodness is meant. [Second note:] ‘The lost heart of a child.’”
The latter note refers to the concluding phrase of a sentence that may have
suggested 520.1: “The object of learning is nothing else but to seek for the
lost mind.”
520.5 not small for the greatest / not great
for the smallest…: through 520.13 is predominantly from Chuang Tzu
(Zhuangzi), the 4th century BC Chinese Taoist philosopher; however, there is
also some Aristotle spliced in. In this case, LZ appears to be using several
different versions of Chuang Tzu that were in the family library: Herbert
Giles, A History of Chinese Literature (see 515.10), Thomas Merton, The Way of Chuang Tzu
(1965) which Merton sent to LZ, and possibly Lin Yutang, The Wisdom of China
and India (1942).
520.5-6: from Giles: “Tao is not too small for the greatest, not
too great for the smallest” (61).
520.7: from Merton: “In the age when life on earth was full, no one paid any
special attention to worthy men, nor did they single out the men of abilities.
Rulers were simply the highest branches on the tree, and the people were
like deer in the woods.”
520.8: from Lin Yutang: “‘May I ask what is your method?’ asked Tsekung.
‘Fishes live their full life in water. Men live their full life in Tao,’
replied Confucius. ‘Those that live their full life in water thrive in ponds.
Those that live their full life in Tao achieve realization of their nature in
inaction. Hence the saying “Fish lose themselves (are happy) in
water; man loses himself (is happy) in Tao.”’” Merton’s version: “Fish are
born in water / Man is born in Tao […] Moral: ‘All the fish needs / Is to get
lost in water. / All man needs is to get lost / In Tao”; and elsewhere: “Chuang
said: / ‘See how free / The fishes leap and dart: That is their happiness.’”
520.8-10: from Aristotle, De Anima (On the Soul): “Since we can
distinguish between a spatial magnitude and what it is to be such, and between water
and what it is to be water, and so in many other cases (though not in all;
for in certain cases the thing and its form are identical), flesh and what it
is to be flesh are discriminated either by different faculties, or by the same
faculty in two different states: for flesh necessarily involves matter and is
like what is snub-nosed, a this in a this” (III.4; 429b). Qtd. Bottom
43, 52. On “a this” see 12.163.22 and Prep+ 51.
520.10: from Chuang Tzu’s famous parable of
dreaming he was a butterfly and on awakening observing, “Now I do not know
whether I was then a man dreaming I was a butterfly, or whether I am now a
butterfly dreaming I am a man” (Giles 63).
520.11: from Merton: “To know when to stop / To know when you can get no
further / By your own action, / This is the right beginning.”
520.12: from Merton’s introductory essay: “When the right moment
arrives, even one who seems incapable of any instruction whatever will become
mysteriously aware of Tao.”
520.13: from Merton: “He can stand in the highest of high places and see
meaning. He is in contact with all beings. That which is not, goes his way.
That which moves is what he stands on. Great is small for him, long is short
for him, and all his distances are near.”
520.15 would / you have them suffer justly:
from Diogenes Laertius, Lives of Eminent Philosophers (see note at
517.15), Life of Socrates: “When his wife said, ‘You suffer unjustly,’
[Socrates] retorted, ‘Why, would you have me suffer justly?’” (trans. R.D.
Hicks).
520.23 Annual
in all parts annual— / mere regard won’t carp…: through 521.15 from
Theophrastus (see 14.319.3), 3rd century BC Aristotelian philosopher, Enquiry into Plants, which meticulously
catalogs the types and characteristics of plants and trees (Leggott 101-102,
390). Not surprisingly, LZ later used this work extensively in 80 Flowers.
LZ uses the Loeb Classical Library edition, 2 vols., trans. Sir Arthur Hort:
520.23-25: “In the case of trees we may thus distinguish the annual parts,
while it is plain that in annual plants all the parts are annual:
for the end of their being is attained when the fruit is produced”
(I.ii.2). Leggott points out that 520.24-25—“mere regard won’t carp, own /
fruit sees”—is a homophonically suggested by the Gk. μέχρι γάρ των καρπων η
φύσις (měchri gar tŏn karŏn e physis) meaning: “when the fruit is produced.”
520.26:
Theophrastus frequently comments on the difficulty of definitions in the early
sections of Enquiry and that he will use a comparative method to establish
differences and analogies: e.g. “However, since it is by the help of the better
known that we must pursue the unknown, and better known are the things which
are larger and plainer to our senses, it is clear that it is right to speak of
these things in the way indicated: for then in dealing with the less known
things we shall be making these better known things our standard, and shall ask
how far and in what manner comparison is possible in each case. And when we
have taken the parts, we must next take the differences which they exhibit, for
thus will their essential nature become plain, and at the same time the general
differences between one kind of plant and another” (I.ii.3).
520.27-28:
“Now in using the terms ‘cultivated’ and ‘wild’ we must make these on
the one hand our standard, and on the other that which is in the truest sense
‘cultivated.’ Now Man, if he is not the only thing to which the name is
strictly appropriate, is at least that to which it most applies” (I.iii.6).
520.29:
“For these reasons then, as we are saying, one must not make a too precise
definition; we should make our definitions typical” (I.iii.4).
520.30: “Some have, as it were, spinous leaves, as fir Aleppo pine prickly
cedar; some, as it were, fleshy leaves; and this is because their leaves are of
fleshy substance, as cypress tamarisk apple, among under-shrubs kneoros
and stoibe, and among herbaceous plants house-leek and hulwort. This
plant is good against moth in clothes” (I.x.4). The obscure “hulwort”
translates the Gk. πόλιον (L. polium) from
which LZ gets “poley.”
520.31: “For there are some plants which cannot live except in wet; and
again these are distinguished from one another by their fondness for different
kinds of wetness; so that some grow in marshes, others in lakes, others in
rivers, others even in the sea, smaller ones in our own sea, larger ones in the
Red Sea. Some again, one may say, are lovers of very wet places,
or plants of the marshes, such as the willow and the plane.” (I.iv.2).
520.31-32: “The flower of no other cultivated trees is gay nor of two colours,
though it may be so with some uncultivated trees, as with the flower of
silver-fir, for its flower is of saffron colour; and so with the flowers of
those trees by the ocean which have they say, the colour of
roses” (I.xiii.1).
520.32-34:
“However all plants when young have smoother bark, which gets rougher
as they get older; and some have cracked bark, as the vine;
and in some cases it readily drops off, as in andrachne apple and
arbutus” (I.v.2).
520.35: “Most peculiar are the knots of the apple, for they are like the
faces of wild animals; there is one large knot, and a number of
small ones round it” (I.vii.4).
520.35 Rooted: felt / depth,
density, core…: these are descriptive categories Theophrastus uses to
distinguish types of roots (I.vi.3-6).
520.36-521.1: “The character and function of the roots of the ‘Indian fig’ (banyan)
are peculiar, for this plant sends out roots from the shoots till
it has a hold on the ground and roots again; and so there comes
to be a continuous circle of roots round the tree, not connected with the main
stem but at a distance from it” (I.vii.3).
521.1-3:
“But no root goes down further than the sun reaches, since it is
the heat which induces growth” (I.vii.1).
521.3-5: “So again a white fig may change into a black
one, and conversely; and similar changes occur in the vine” (II.iii.1).
521.5-7:
“Further we are told that the plants chosen should be the best possible, and
should be taken from soil resembling that in which you are going to plant
them, or else inferior [editor’s note: i.e.
the shift should be into better soil, if possible]; also the holes should be
dug as long as possible beforehand, and should always be deeper than the
original holes, even for those whose roots do not run very deep” (II.v.1).
521.7-8:
“All those trees which are propagated by pieces cut from the stem should be
planted with the cut part downwards, and the pieces cut off should not
be less than a handsbreadth in length, as was said, and the bark should be left
on” (II.v.5).
521.8: “Among other trees there is none that we know which has spines for
leaves altogether, but it is so with other woody plants, as akorna drypis pine-thistle and almost
all the plants which belong to that class. For in all these spines, as
it were, take the place of leaves, and, if one is not to reckon these as
leaves, they would be entirely leafless, and some would have spines but no
leaves at all, as asparagus” (I.x.6).
521.9-15: “There is a peculiarity special to the olive lime elm and abele [white
poplar]: their leaves appear to invert the upper surface after the summer
solstice, and by this men know that the solstice is past. Now all leaves
differ as to their upper and under surfaces; and in most trees the upper
surfaces are greener and smoother, as they have the fibers and veins in the
under surfaces, even as the human hand has its ‘lines,’ but even the upper
surface of the leaf of the olive is sometimes whiter and less smooth. So all or
most leaves display their upper surfaces, and it is these surfaces which are
exposed to the light. Again most leaves turn towards the sun; wherefore
also it is not easy to say which surface is next to the twig; for, while
the way in which the upper surface is presented seems rather to make the under
surface closer to it, yet nature desires equally that the upper surface should
be the nearer, and this is specially seen in the turning back of the leaf
towards the sun” (I.x.2).
521.15 Engaged / paroled of fate, we determine / nothing…: through 521.30 from Diogenes Laertius, Lives of Eminent Philosophers on Pyrrho of Elis (c.360-270 B.C.) in the Loeb Classical Library edition translated by R.D. Hicks. Pyrrho was a philosopher of “agnosticism and suspension of judgement” (IX.61), the founder of the Sceptic school, and although he himself wrote nothing, Diogenes includes in his Life an extensive summary of the school generally.
521.15-22: “The Sceptics, then, were constantly engaged in overthrowing the dogmas of all schools, but enunciated none themselves; […] they themselves laid down nothing definitely, not even the laying down of nothing. So much so that they even refuted their laying down of nothing, saying, for instance, ‘We determine nothing,’ since otherwise they would have been betrayed into determining; but we put forward, say they, all the theories for the purpose of indicating our unprecipitate attitude, precisely as we might have done if we had actually assented to them. Thus by the expression ‘We determine nothing’ is indicated their state of even balance; which is similarly indicated by the other expression, ‘Not more (one thing than another),’ ‘Every saying has its corresponding opposite,’ and the like.” (IX.74-75).
“The other statement, ‘Every saying, etc.,’ equally compels suspension of judgement; when facts disagree, but the contradictory statements have exactly the same weight, ignorance of the truth is the necessary consequence. But even this statement has its corresponding antithesis, so that after destroying others it turns round and destroys itself, like a purge which drives the substance out and then in its turn is itself eliminated and destroyed” (IX.76).
“The end to be realized they hold to be suspension of judgement, which brings with it tranquility like its shadow; so Timon and Aenesidemus [students of Pyrrho] declare. […] According to some authorities the end proposed by the Sceptics is insensibility; according to others, gentleness [the editor glosses: ‘i.e. a calm, the opposite of an excitable, temperament’]” (IX. 107, 108).
521.22-29: “He would withdraw himself from the world and live in solitude, rarely showing himself to his relatives; this he did because he had heard an Indian reproach Anaxarchus, telling him that he would never be able to teach others what is good while he himself danced attendance on kings in their courts” (IX.63).
“He lived in fraternal piety with his sister, a midwife, so says Eratosthenes in his essay On Wealth and Poverty, now and then even taking things for sale to market, poultry perchance of pigs, and he would dust the things in the house, quite indifferent as to what he did. They say he showed his indifference by washing a porker. Once he got enraged in his sister’s cause (her name was Philista), and he told the man who blamed him that it was not over a weak woman that one should display indifference. When a cur rushed at him and terrified him, he answered his critic that it was not easy entirely to strip oneself of human weakness; but one should strive with all one’s might against facts, by deeds if possible, and if not, in word” (IX.66).
521.29-30: “When his fellow-passengers on board a ship were all unnerved by a storm, he kept calm and confident, pointing to a little pig in the ship that went on eating, and telling them that such was the unperturbed state in which the wise man should keep himself” (IX.68).
521.31 ‘Why then study these things?’ / 3 pennies for you…: from Euclid in Greek Mathematics, vol. 1, Loeb Classical Library edition, trans. Ivor Thomas: “Someone, who had begun to read geometry with Euclid, when he had learnt the first theorem asked Euclid, ‘But what advantage shall I get by learning these things?’ Euclid called his slave and said, ‘Give him threepence, since he must needs make profit out of what he learns’” (437).
522.1 Time vague gods intervals worlds / everlastingly…: through 522.21 from Diogenes Laertius, Lives of Eminent Philosophers predominately on Epicurus (341-271 B.C.), whose life occupies the entire last book of Diogenes’ work. LZ’s text is the Loeb Classical Library edition trans. by R.D. Hicks (see 517.15). It is Epicurus’ philosophy that Lucretius expounds in On the Nature of Things, which figures significantly elsewhere in LZ’s work, particularly “A”-12.164.17-167.31 and Bottom 112-113, 138, 398-401:
522.2: intellect garden: “Friends indeed came to him from all parts and lived with him in his garden” (X.10). There are various other mentions of Epicurus’ garden.
522.3: reading an old epic, cure: perhaps referring to the claim that Epicurus “turned to philosophy in disgust at the schoolmasters who could not tell him the meaning of ‘chaos’ in Hesiod” (X.2). But note also the pun on “epic, cure” < Epicurus.
522.4: vacancy fills: presumably refers to Epicurus’ atomism developed from Democritus, explained in some detail by Diogenes, in which atoms constantly move within and fill the universal void.
522.5: the sum total of things / does not vary: “‘Moreover, the sum total of things was always such as it is now, and such it will ever remain. For there is nothing into which it can change. For outside the sum of things there is nothing which could enter into it and bring about the change” (X.39).
522.6-8: blest nature’s / no backwater on life, free / as the need quicks thought: “Nor will [the wise man] take part in politics, as is stated in the first book On Life; nor will he make himself a tyrant; nor will he turn Cynic (so the second book On Life tells us); nor will he be a mendicant. But even when he has lost his sight, he will not withdraw himself from life: this is stated in the same book” (X.119).
“‘And of the necessary desires some are necessary if we are to be happy, some if the body is to be rid of uneasiness, some if we are even to live. He who has a clear and certain understanding of these things will direct every preference and aversion toward securing health of body and tranquility of mind, seeing that this is the sum and end of a blessed life. For the end of all our actions is to be free from pain and fear, and, when once we have attained all this, the tempest of the soul is laid […]. Wherefore we call pleasure the alpha and omega of a blessed life. Pleasure is our first and kindred good. It is the starting-point of every choice and of every aversion, and to it we come back, inasmuch as we make feeling the rule by which to judge of every good thing’” (X.127-129).
[The designation “blest” for LZ always evokes Spinoza, whose given name Baruch or Benedict means “blessed,” and among LZ’s notebook notes (HRC 37.1) on Epicurus appears Spinoza’s definition of what it means to be free: “That thing is said to be free which exists by the mere necessity of its own nature and is determined in its actions by itself alone” (Ethics I.Def.7; qtd. Bottom 20).
552.9: fact apprehending main heads: “Those who have made some advance in the survey of the entire system ought to fix in their minds under the principal headings an elementary outline of the whole treatment of the subject. For a comprehensive view is often required, the details but seldom. To the former, then—the main heads—we must continually return, and must memorize them so far as to get a valid conception of the facts, as well as the means of discovering all the details exactly when once the general outlines are rightly understood and remembered; since it is the privilege of the mature student to make a ready use of his conceptions by referring every one of them to elementary facts and simple terms” (X.35-36).
522.9: duration / a knowledge that verifies: “We must not investigate time as we do the other accidents which we investigate in a subject, namely, by referring them to the preconceptions envisaged in our minds; but we must take into account the plain fact itself, in virtue of which we speak of time as long or short, linking to it in intimate connexion this attribute of duration. We need not adopt any fresh terms as preferable, but should employ the usual expressions about it. Nor need we predicate anything else of time, as if this something else contained the same essence as is contained in the proper meaning of the word ‘time’ (for this also is done by some). We must chiefly reflect upon that to which we attach this peculiar character of time, and by which we measure it. No further proof is required […]” (X.72-73).
522.11: wisdom most sensitive / to emotion can slow to / least hurt deepest pleasure: “There are three motives to injurious acts among men—hatred, envy and contempt; and these the wise man overcomes by reason. Moreover, he who has once become wise never more assumes the opposite habit, not even in semblance, if he can help it. He will be more susceptible of emotion than other men: that will be no hindrance to his wisdom” (X.117).
522.13: age / young in good things, and / young grow up without fear: “Therefore, both old and young ought to seek wisdom, the former in order that, as age comes over him, he may be young in good things because of the grace of what has been, and the latter in order that, while he is young, he may at the same time be old, because he has no fear of the things which are to come” (X.122).
522.16-18: lampooned in off time by / a stage dancer restoring song / under scholia—‘a schoolmaster physicist’: Timon (c.320-230 B.C.), the Sceptic, remarked of Epicurus: “Again there is the latest and most shameless of the physicists, the schoolmaster’s son from Samos, himself the most uneducated of mortals” (X.3). In Diogenes Laertius’ Life of Timon, immediately preceding that of Epicurus, we are told of Timon: “Losing his parents when young, he became a stage-dancer […]” (IX.109). “He was, according to Antigonus, fond of wine, and in the time that he could spare from philosophy he used to write poems. These included epics, tragedies, satyric dramas, silli (lampoons) and obscene poems. […] There are three silli in which, from his point of view as a Sceptic, he abuses every one and lampoons the dogmatic philosophers, using the form of parody” [presumably including the derogatory lines on Epicurus above] (IX.110-111).
522.19: attracting philosophers by fleeing them: from the Life of Timon: “[…] there is a story that Hieronymus the Peripatetic said of [Timon], ‘Just as with the Scythians those who are in flight shoot as well as those who pursue, so, among philosophers, some catch their disciples by pursuing them, some by fleeing from them, as for instance Timon” (IX.112).
522.33 the sum / of things does not vary: see 522.5.
522.36 shepherd / jailer, let the flogged escape…: through 523.2 from Herbert Giles, A History of Chinese Literature (see 515.10), from Lu Wên-shu (1st century BC), whose father, a village goaler, sent him to tend sheep as a boy and he in turn later became an assistant at a prison. He wrote a famous memorial to the Emperor on the corruption of the justice system that was included as a model essay in the school primer San Tzŭ Ching: “[In times past] ‘Rather than slay an innocent man, it were better that the guilty escape.’ […] Beneath the scourge what is there that cannot be wrung from the lips of the sufferer? […] Where you let the kite rear its young undisturbed, there will the phoenix come and build its nest” (90-92).
523.2 the date palm / bent: perhaps from Herbert Giles, A History of Chinese Literature; line from a song for a play by the Emperor Ch’ien Lung (1711-1799): “See how the feathered snow weighs down the palm-tree leaves” (389).
523.3 the law, water, shaped / to the container it’s in…: through 523.10 from the Talmud, although not all sources have been precisely identified. LZ’s notebooks (HRC 37.4) appear to indicate that these first two lines are from the Pirke Avot (Sayings of the Fathers), although there is no clear source there. Most likely is a well-known passage: “Rabbi Hanina bar Idi said: ‘Why are the words of the Torah likened unto water (Isaiah 55:1)? The answer is, as follows, Just as water forsakes a high place and travels to a low one, just so do the words of Torah find a resting place only in a man of lowly spirit’. Rabbi Oshaya said: ‘Why are the words of the Torah likened to water, wine and milk: The answer is, as follows: Just as these liquids are kept only in the simplest vessels, so the words are preserved only in the man of humble spirit’” (Taanit 7a).
523.8 The amiable spares both: “For many years the schools of Hillel and Shammai maintained a dispute over a matter of law, finally a Voice descended in Javneh and cried out: ‘The words of both are the words of the Living God, but the decision should follow the School of Hillel.’ It was asked, why, if the words of both are the words of the Living God, was the decision granted to Hillel’s school? The reply was: ‘Because the members of the school of Hillel are amiable of manner and courteous; they teach the opinions of both schools; and furthermore, they always give the opinion of their opponents first’” (Babylonian Talmud 13b).
523.9 the laughing and weeping: from a remark of Hillel: “Among those who stand, do not sit, and among those who sit, do not stand. Among those who laugh, do not weep; and among those who weep, do not laugh” (Tosefta Berakot 2).
523.10 His integrity drinks is / sober…: through 523.13 from Philo of Alexandria (20BC-50), Hellenic Jewish philosopher: “But do you adopt a moderate course without being compelled thereto, and if ever you are constrained to indulge yourself in things beyond moderation, still make reason the governor of the necessity, and never go so far as to change pleasure into unpleasantness, but, if we may speak in such a manner, be drunk in a sober manner.”
“Truth will properly blame those who without discrimination shun all concern with the life of the State, and say that they despise the acquisition of good repute and pleasure. They are only making grand pretensions, and they do not really despise these things.”
“God judges by the fruit of the tree, not by the root; and in the Divine judgment the proselyte will be raised on high. And he will have a double distinction, because on earth he ‘deserted’ to God, and later he receives as his reward a place in Heaven.”
523.15 traveler
recorded / city shape of a chlamys, / street for men on horse, / library, harbor beacon: from Greek
geographer, historian and philosopher Strabo (c.63 BC-c.21 AD), The Geography, describing Alexandria,
Egypt in Book XVII.1.8: “The shape of
the area of the city is like a chlamys [a short military cloak]; the
long sides of it are those that are washed by the two waters, having a diameter
of about thirty stadia, and the short sides are the isthmuses, each being seven
or eight stadia wide and pinched in on one side by the sea and on the other by
the lake. The city as a whole is intersected by streets practicable for horse-riding and chariot-driving, and by
two that are very broad, extending to more than a plethrum in breadth, which
cut one another into two sections and at right angles” (trans. H.L. Jones).
Strabo also describes the inhabited world as “chlamys-shaped” at II.5.6. Strabo
describes Pharos, the renowned harbor lighthouse in some detail, although he
does not explicitly mention the famous library.
523.20 stripped to the meditated object / eyes,
lights…: through 523.24 from “The Yoga Aphorisms of Patanjali,” trans.
Swami Vivekananda in The Wisdom of India and China, ed. Lin Yutang.
523.20-23: from a section on “Forms of Meditation and Samādhi”: “Samādhi called ‘without-question’
(comes) when the memory is purified, or devoid of qualities, expressing
only the meaning (of the meditated object). By this process (the
concentrations) with discrimination and without discrimination, whose objects
are finer, are (also) explained. […] These concentrations are with seed. The
concentration ‘without discrimination’ being purified, the Chitta
[=mind] becomes firmly fixed. […] The knowledge that is gained from testimony
and inference is about common objects. That from the Samādhi just mentioned is of a much higher order, being able to penetrate
where inference and testimony cannot go. The resulting impression from this Samādhi obstructs all other impressions. By the restraint of even this
(impression, which obstructs all other impressions), all being restrained,
comes the ‘seedless’ Samādhi.”
523.24-25: as Lin Yutang points out in his introduction to Patanjali’s
aphorisms, yoga means yoke since it “represents a form of personal
discipline, with the object of ‘yoking’ the body to the soul, and the
individual soul to the universal soul. From a practical aspect, its aim is to
help cultivate emotional stability.”
Under a section entitled “Five Observances (Niyamo)”: “By the
establishment of truthfulness the Yogi gets the power of attaining for
himself and others the fruits of work without the works.”
In a section entitled “Desires and Objects of the Mind”: “Good and bad deeds
are not the direct causes in the transformations of nature, but they act as
breakers of obstacles to the evolutions of nature: as a farmer breaks
the obstacles to the course of water, which then runs
down by its own nature.”
523.25 Temple altar light unextinguished: from
Josephus, Against Apion (see 523.28), quoting Hecatacus of Abdera
describing the Temple at Jerusalem: “Within this enclosure is a square altar,
built of heaped up stones, unhewn and unwrought; each side is twenty cubits
long and the height ten cubits. Beside it stands a great edifice, containing an
altar and a lampstand, both made of gold, and weighing two talents; upon these
is a light which is never extinguished by day or night” (I.199).
523.27 in a fire of coals— / bread: from John
21:9 (see 524.2). The disciples have been fishing when Jesus appears to them,
and when they return to shore: “As soon then as they were come to land, they
saw a fire of coals there, and fish laid thereon, and bread.”
523.28 their past 5000 years / not duped by
studied words…: through 524.1 from Josephus (37-c.100), Against Apion,
a defense of Judaism that emphasized its antiquity as compared with Greek
culture. LZ uses the Loeb Classical Library edition trans.H. St. J. Thackeray.
“In my history of our [Jewish] Antiquities, most excellent
Epaphroditus, I have, I think, made sufficiently clear to those who may read
that work that extreme antiquity of our Jewish nation, the uniqueness of its
original foundation, and the manner in which it established itself in the
country which we occupy today. That history embraces a period of five
thousand years and was written by me in Greek on the basis of our sacred
books. Since, however, I observe that a considerable number of persons,
influenced by the malicious calumnies of certain individuals, disbelieve the
statements in my history concerning our antiquity, and adduce as proof of the
recent origin of our people the fact that it has not been thought worthy of
mention by the best known Greek historians, I consider it my duty to devote a
brief treatise to all these points; in order at once to convict our detractors
of malignity and deliberate falsehood, to correct the ignorance of others, and
to instruct all who desire to know the truth concerning our antiquity” (I.1).
“Upon the laws it was unnecessary to expatiate. A glance at them showed that
they teach not impiety but the most genuine piety; that they invite them not to
hate their fellows, but to share their possessions; that they are the foes of
injustice and scrupulous of justice, banish sloth and extravagance, and teach
men to be self-dependant and to work with a will; that they deter them from war
for the sake of conquest, but render them valiant defenders of the laws
themselves; inexorable in punishment, not to be duped by studied
words, always supported by actions. For actions are our invariable
testimonials, plainer than any documents. I would therefore boldly maintain
that we have introduced to the rest of the world a very large number of very
beautiful ideas. What greater beauty than inviolable piety? What higher
justice than obedience to the always? What more beneficial than to be in
harmony with one another, to be a prey neither to disunion in adversity,
nor to arrogance and faction in prosperity; in war to despise death, in peace
to devote oneself to crafts or agriculture; and to be convinced that everything
in the whole universe is under the eye and direction of God?” (II.42).
Josephus recounts an incident concerning Ptolemy Physeon’s attempt to become
pharaoh of Egypt on the death of his brother: “Moreover, the justice of his
[the Jewish general Onias] action was signally attested by God. For Ptolemy
Physeon, though [not] daring to face the army of Onias, had arrested all the
Jews in the city with their wives and children, and exposed them, naked and in
chains, to be trampled to death by elephants, the beasts being actually
made drunk for the purpose. However, the outcome was the reverse of his
intentions. The elephants, without touching the Jews at their feet, rushed at
Physeon’s friends, and killed a large number of them” (II.53-54).
“Our sacrifices are not occasions for drunken self-indulgence—such practices
are abhorrent to God—but for sobriety. At these sacrifices prayers for the
welfare of the community must take precedence of those for ourselves; for we
are born for fellowship, and he who sets its claim above his private
interests is specially acceptable to God” (II.24).
“The consideration given by our legislator to the equitable treatment of aliens
also merits attention. It will be seen that he took the best of all possible
measures at once to secure our own customs from corruption, and to throw them
open ungrudgingly to any who elect to share them. To all who desire to come and
live under the same laws with us, he gives a gracious welcome, holding that it
is not family ties alone which constitute relationship, but agreement in the
principles of conduct. On the other hand, it was not his pleasure that casual
visitors should be admitted to the intimacies of our daily life” (II. 209-210).
“My first thought is one of intense astonishment at the current opinion that,
in the study of primeval history, the Greeks alone deserve serious attention,
that the truth should be sought from them, and that neither we nor any others
in the world are to be trusted. In my view the very reverse of this is the
case, if, that is to say, we are not to take idle prejudices as our guide, but
to extract truth from the facts themselves. For in the Greek world everything
will be found to be modern, and dating, so to speak, from yesterday or
the day before: I refer to the foundation of their cities, the invention of the
arts, and the compilation of a code of laws; but the most recent, or nearly the
most recent, of all their attainments is care in historical composition. On the
contrary, as is admitted even by themselves, the Egyptians, the Chaldeans, and
the Phoenicians […] possess a very ancient and permanent record of the past.
[…] The land of Greece, on the other hand, has experienced countless
catastrophes, which have obliterated the memory of the past; and as one
civilization succeeded another, the men of each epoch believed that the world
began with them. They were late in learning the alphabet
and found the lesson difficult; for those who would assign the earliest date to
its use pride themselves on having learnt it from the Phoenicians and Cadmus.
Even of that date no record, preserved either in temples or on public
monuments, could now be produced; seeing that it is a highly controversial and
disputed question whether even those who took part in the Trojan campaign so
many years later made use of letters, and the true and prevalent view is rather
that they were ignorant of the present-day mode of writing” (I.2).
524.2 153 fish: from John 21:11 (see
523.27): “Simon Peter went up, and drew the net to land full of great fishes,
an hundred and fifty and three: and for all there were so many, yet was not the
net broken.”
524.3 Where
they make a desert / call’t peace: a famous remark from Cornelius Tacitus
(1st century AD), Agricola in his
account of the battle of Mons Graupius (84 AD), in which the Romans decisively
defeated the Caledonians. In a speech to his army, the Caledonian Chief
Galgacus says: “We, the most distant dwellers upon the earth, the last of the
free, have been shielded until now by our remoteness and by the obscurity which
has shrouded our name. Now, the farthest bounds of Britain lie open to our
enemies. There are no more nations beyond us only waves, and rocks, and the Romans. Pillagers
of the world, they have exhausted the land by their indiscriminate plunder.
East and west alike have failed to satisfy them. To robbery, butchery and
rapine, they give the lying name ‘government.’ They create a desert and call it peace. Which will you choose to follow me into battle,
or to submit to taxation, labour in the mines and all the other tribulations of
slavery? Whether you are to endure these forever or take a quick revenge, this
battle must decide.”
524.4 East penned stag’s / more memorial for who’s
who / than a moneyed subscriber: from Herbert Giles, A History of
Chinese Literature (see 515.10) on Yang Hsiung (53 BC-18): “On compilation
of [‘a philosophical treatise known as the Fa Yen’], his most
famous work, a wealthy merchant of the province was so struck by its excellence
that he offered to give 100,000 cash if his name should merely be mentioned in
it. But Yang answered with scorn that a stag in a pen or an ox in a cage would
not be more out of place than the name of a man with nothing but money to
recommend him in the sacred pages of a book” (93).
524.11 2000 years old: West-East dictionaries:
probably referring to Herbert Giles, A History of Chinese Literature
(109), who mentions the Shuo Wên by Hsü Shên (d. 120), considered the first Chinese
dictionary.
524.12 As tea guides this hour / keep…:
through 524.30 from Philostratus (c.172-c.250), Life of Apollonius of
Tyana as well as some of the epistles of Apollonius, the peripatetic 1st
century Neo-Pythagorean philosopher; LZ is using the Loeb Classical Library
edition of Philostraus, 2 vols., trans. F.C. Conybeare. LZ is primary working
by homophonic suggestion from the Greek text.
524.12-14: As tea guides this hour / keep, pear—her root’s in / wrinkles:
from Life VIII.29: έστι
γάρ τις ώρα και περι ρυτίσιν […]
“For there is a certain beauty even in wrinkles, which was especially conspicuous
in his case, as is clear from the likenesses of him which are preserved in the
temple at Tyana, and from accounts which praise the old age of Apollonius more
than was once praised the youth of Alcidiades.”
524.14-15: come now to practice / pressing me on: from Epistle LXXXIX:
Ου κάμνει τα πράγματα πρασσόμενα.
“A task once begun never wearies.”
524.15-16: horse hear us home, dismount is marathon: from Life
VIII.31; Apollonius appears after death to a disbeliever and through him
communicates a final poem on the immorality of the soul:
η μετα σωμα μαρανθέν, άτ εκ δεσμων θοος ίππος […]
“The soul is immortal, and ’tis no possession of thine own, but of Providence,
And after the body is wasted away, like a swift horse freed from its traces,
It lightly leaps forward and mingles itself with the light air […]”
524.17: May day assay the eyes’: from Life IV.44:
“και τίς,” ειπεν, “εγγυήσεται σωμα, ô μηδεις δήσει.”
[Tigellinus, Nero’s minister, has Apollonius arrested and interviews him:]
“‘And what do you think,’ said [Tigellinus], ‘about Nero?’ And Apollonius
answered: ‘Much better than you do; for you think it dignified for him to sing,
but I think it dignified in him to keep silent.’ Tigellinus was astonished at
this and said: ‘You may go, but you must give sureties for your person.’ And
Apollonius answered: ‘And who can go surety for a body that no one can bind?’
This answer struck Tigellinus as inspired and above the wit of man; and as he
was careful not to fight with a god, he said: ‘You may go wherever you choose,
for you are too powerful to be controlled by me.’”
524.18: chronicle light photos, chromatic fire: from two Epistles:
Epistle XX (To [the Roman Emperor] Domitian):
[…] ώσπερ όψις φωτος και φως όψεως.
“If you have power, and you have it, then it would be well if you also acquired
prudence. For supposing you to have prudence, but to lack power, you would have
been equally in need of power; for the one of these ever stands in need of the
other, just as the eye needs light and light the eye.”
Epistle LVII: “Light is the presence of fire, without which it could not
be. Now fire is itself an affection, and that whereunto it comes, is of course
burnt up. But light can only supply its own radiance to our eyes, on condition
of using not force to them, but persuasion. Speech therefore in its turn,
resembles in its one aspect, fire which is the affection, and in its other, the
radiance which is light” (in his notebooks (HRC 37.4) LZ writes out all of the
above).
chromatic may be picked up from another noted passage in the Life
VII.30:
“νη Δί, έφη, “ω Δάμι, αυτοσχεδίω γαρ αυτω χρωμαι.”
“‘Yes, by Heaven, [Damis],’ he replied, ‘for it is an extempore life that I
have always led.’”
524.19: salt consumes animate: from Life VII.34:
“χρόνος,” έφη, “και θεων πνεϋμα και σοφίας έρως, η ξύνειμι.”
“‘And who,’ asked the Emperor, ‘is going to plead your cause?’ ‘Time,’ replied
Apollonius, ‘and the spirit of the gods, and the passion for wisdom which animates
me.’”
LZ apparently looks up the last word and finds a seemingly related word,
ξυνέωνα, meaning “salt on the common table” (HRC 37.4).
524.19: Enigma: tongue / gone scaling down see apace: from Life
VI.11 (Ivry 220-221):
ει δ’ αινιγμάτων άπτομαι, σοφία Πυθαγόρου ξυγχωρεϊ ταϋτα, παρέδωκε
γαρ και το αινίττειν, διδάσκαλον ευρων σιωπης λόγον
[…]
“You will say that I have taken to riddles, but the wisdom of Pythagoras allows
of this; for he taught us to speak in riddles, when he discovered that the word
is the teacher of silence.”
524.21-23: clods deafmute let springs pray: from Life I.16:
[Apollonius visits the Temple of the Apollo of Daphne in Antioch:] “Apollonius,
when he beheld a Temple so graceful and yet the home of no serious studies, but
only of men half-barbarous and uncultivated, remarked: ‘O Apollo, change these dumb
dogs into trees, so that at least as cypresses they may become vocal.’ And
when he had inspected the springs, and noted how calm and quiet they were, and
how not one of them made the least babble, he remarked: ‘The prevailing
dumbness of this place does not permit even the springs to speak.’”
524.22-23: gay not drugged, sun raise / rarer air—unarmed little want:
from Life III.15: the “gay” is from Gk. γη = earth; from part of
a long passage describing the powers of the Indian sages or Brahmins Apollonius
met: “Apollonius himself describes the character of these sages and of their
settlement upon the hill; for in one of his addresses to the Egyptians he says,
‘I saw Indian Brahmans living upon the earth and yet not on it, and fortified
without fortifications, and possessing nothing, yet having the riches of
all men.’ […] Moreover, they neither burn upon an altar nor keep in stoves the
fire which they extract from the sun’s rays, although it is a material
fire; but like the rays of sunlight when they are refracted in water, so this
fire is seen raised aloft in the air and dancing in the ether.
[…] Such then was the meaning of the phrase of Apollonius that ‘the Brahmins
are upon the earth and yet not upon earth’ [εν τη γη τε είναι τους
βραχμανας και ουκ εν τη γη]. And his phrase ‘fortified
without fortifications or walls,’ refers to the air or vapour under
which they bivouac, for though they seem to live in the open air, yet they
raise up a shadow and veil themselves in it, so that they are not made wet when
it rains and they enjoy the sunlight whenever they choose. […] Apollonius
therefore was right in saying that people provided as they are with all they want
offhand and without having prepared anything, possess what they do not
possess.”
524.24-25: wrist high unwearying bent, […] / fingers order trope to
trope: from Life V.21: [A discussion on flute-playing in Rhodes:]
“And facility with the lips consists in their taking in the reed of the flute
and playing without blowing out the cheeks; and manual skill I consider very
important, for the wrist must not weary from being bent,
nor must the fingers be slow in fluttering over the notes, and manual
skill is especially shown in the swift transition from mode to mode [εκ
τρόπου ες τρόπον].”
524.24: cosmos: from Life VI.11:
[…] κόσμου γαρ επιμελήσεται τέχνη πασα, ότι και αυτο το εϊναι τεχνας
υπερ κοσμου εύρηται.
“For every art is interested to adorn,
and the very existence of the arts was a discovery made in behalf of ornament.”
See 544.5 and note for another instance of LZ’s interest in the Gk. meanings of
“cosmos.”
524.26: Choice by lot’s no insight: from Life III.30:
[Apollonius speaking with Indian sages:] “Now we, O Apollonius, have heard from
the Egyptians of the custom of the Elians, and that the Hellanodicae, who
preside over the Olympic games, are ten in number; but we do not approve of the
rule imposed in the case of these men; for they leave the choice of them
to the lot, and the lot has no discernment, for a worse man might be as
easily chosen by lot as a better one.”
524.27: grass where his mother lay: from Life I.5: “For just as
the hour of his birth was approaching, his mother was warned in a dream
to walk out into the meadow and pluck the flowers; and in due course she came
there and her maids attended to the flowers, scattering themselves over the
meadow, while she fell asleep lying on the grass. Thereupon the swans
who fed in the meadow set up a dance around her as she slept […]. She then
leaped up at the sound of their song and bore her child, for any sudden fright
is apt to bring on a premature delivery.”
524.28: can T any philosophical rambler: T any < Tyana (see 524.19).
As Ivry points out (220-221) this refers to Apollonius’ wandering life in
search of truth, which famously included a journey to India. Also may echo a
famous remark that LZ noted in Life I.21: when challenged at the border
of Babylonian territory, “Apollonius said, ‘All the earth is mine, and I have a
right to go all over it and through it.’”
524.29-30: to a fist free of / theories: from Life VII.8:
[…] αφιστη τους άνδρας και υπερ της απάντων ελευθερίας ερρώννυ.
“But he did his best to alienate them from
Domitian, on account of his cruelty, and encouraged them to espouse the
cause of the freedom of all.”
524.30: dotterel’s last ties peridot: from Life VII.10:
”ά γε,” έφη, “προειδως ήκεις ει γαρ τον σον αγνοω νοϋν, ουδε
τον εμαυτοϋ οϊδα.”
“Thereupon Demetrius embraced [Apollonius] and after sundry pious ejaculations
said: ‘O ye gods, what will come upon philosophy, if she risks the loss of such
a man as yourself?’ ‘And what risks does she run?’ asked he. ‘Those surely,
a foreknowledge of which brought you here,’ said the other; ‘for if I do
not know what is in your mind, then I do not know what is in my own.’”
LZ’s notes appear to have mis-transcribed λκεις for ήκεις. He
also looked up peridot, which is a deep yellowish-green transparent
variety of olivine used as a gem, the same as chrysolite (WD).
524.35 law—salt, water; restored / talk, story…:
through 525.16 primarily from the Talmud.
524.35-36: “The Torah is likened to salt, the Mishna to peppers,
but the Gemara to spices. The Torah is likened to water, the
Mishna to wine, but the Gemara to spiced wine” (Soferim 14a).
Torah means “law” and LZ regularly refers to it as such in his notes; strictly
speaking it is the first five books of the Hebrew Bible. Mishna (literally
“repetition”) is the first redaction or collection of commentary on the Torah,
while the Gemara (“study”) is commentary on the Mishna; these latter two
together comprise the Talmud.
524.26-525.1: “Elisha ben Abuya said: ‘If one learns as a child,
to what is that comparable? To writing on clean paper. And if one learns
as an old man, to what is that comparable? To writing on
blotted paper” (Tractate Avot 4:25).
525.2-3: “When people are dejected we make them laugh. When people
quarrel we find a way to help them make peace”(Ta’anit 22a).
525.3: “He who gives, but does not want others to do so” (Pirke Avot
5:5).
525.5-7: “That which belongs to all, belongs to each” (Baba Kamma
50b). “All men are equally God’s creatures; and the honest toil of the humblest
menial is a contribution to the social order. In the words of the Rabbis of
Yavneh: ‘I am a creature of God, and my neighbour is also His creature; my work
is in the city, and his in the field; I rise early to my work, and he rises
early to his. As he cannot excel in my work, so I cannot excel in his
work” (Berakot 17a).
525.8: “The gait of the ass is according to the amount of barley
he receives” (Sabbath 51b).
525.9-12: “Because of the Roman oppression, Rabbi Simeon ben Yohai and his son
hid in a cave, and there for many years spent all their days in study and
contemplation. One day they came out of the cave and observed people tilling
the soil. Turning to his pupils, Rabbi Simeon remarked: ‘These men neglect
eternal life and busy themselves with momentary needs.’ Whatever they looked at
was immediately destroyed by fire. After which a Heavenly Voice was heard to
say to them: ‘Did you come out to destroy My world? Return to your cave!’”
(Sabbath 33b). As Jonathan Ivry points out (221), LZ interpolates here
from Psalms 24:1: “The earth is the Lord’s, and the fulness
therefo; the world, and they that dwell therein.”
525.12: “The years of him are shortened who runs after leadership”
(Berakot 63a).
525.13-16: “Resh Lakish said, What is meant by the verse, and there shall be
faith in thy times, strength, salvation, wisdom and knowledge? ‘Faith’
refers to the Order of Seeds; thy times, the Order of Festivals; strength,
the Order of Women; salvation, the Order of Nezikin; wisdom, the
Order of Sacrifices; and knowledge, to the Order of Purity. Yet
even so the fear of the Lord is his treasure” (Sabbath 31a).
525.14-15: your girl’s / summer her second time: one of LZ notebooks for
“A”-22 (HRC 37.1) indicates that probably this phrase, which most deviates from
the Talmud passage, was suggested by a 19 Nov. 1972 letter from Kenneth Cox in
which he remarks that in England they were experiencing a prolonged Indian
summer, which the Russians call Women’s Summer.
525.7 Should wasp torture caterpillar: from
Herbert Giles, A History of Chinese Literature (see 515.10), from an
autobiographical skit by Liu Ling (3rd century), a member of the Seven Sages of
the Bamboo Grove who extolled a life of drinking and inaction: “‘To him, the
affairs of this world appeared but as so much duckweed on a river; while the
two philanthropists [who attempt to dissuade him from drinking] at his side
looked like two wasps trying to convert a caterpillar’ (into a
wasp, as the Chinese believe is done)’” (126).
525.17 How to
write history, policy / an unteachable gift…: through 525.29 from Lucian of
Samosata (c.120-200), primarily from “How to Write History,” a satiric and
didactic essay in the form of a letter. LZ is using the Loeb Classical Library
edition, vol. 6, trans. K. Kilburn.
525.17-18: “I maintain then that the best writer of history comes ready
equipped with these two supreme qualities: political understanding and power of
expression; the former is an unteachable gift of nature, while power of
expression may come through a deal of practice, continual toil, and imitation
of the ancients” (¶ 34).
525.19: from “A Conversation with Hesiod” commenting on Hesiod’s Works and
Days: “But this is not the prophecy we expected from you [Hesiod] and the
Muses. In that sort of thing the farmers are much better prophets
than you poets. They can foretell such things excellently to us:
that after rain the crops will flourish, while in the time of drought when the
fields are thirsty, you can do nothing to prevent famine following their
thirst; that you must not plough in the middle of summer […]” (¶ 7).
525.21-22: from “Hermotinus or Concerning the Sects”: “I will tell you—it is not
mine, it comes from one of the sages: ‘Keep sober, and remember
to disbelieve’” (¶ 47).
525.22-23: “That, then, is the sort of man the historian should be: fearless,
incorruptible, free, a friend of free expression and the truth, intent, as the
comic poet [Aristophanes] says, on calling a fig a fig and
a trough a trough, giving nothing to hatred or to friendship, sparing no one, showing
neither pity nor shame nor obsequiousness, an impartial judge, well
disposed to all men up to the point of not giving one side more than its due,
in his books a stranger and a man without country, independent, subject to no
sovereign, not reckoning what this or that one will think, but stating the
facts (¶ 41). See 18.391.9 for a fig quotation from Aristophanes.
525.24-26: “Let [the historian’s] diction nevertheless keep its feet on the
ground, rising with the beauty and greatness of his subjects and as far as
possible resembling them, but without becoming more unfamiliar or carried away
than the occasion warrants. For then its greatest risk is that of going mad and
being swept down into poetry’s wild enthusiasm, so that at such times above all
he must obey the curb and show prudence, in the knowledge that a stallion’s
pride in literature as in life is no trifling ailment. It is better, then, that
when his mind is on horseback his exposition should go on foot,
running alongside and holding the saddle-cloth, so as not to be left behind” (¶
45).
525.27-29: “Do you know what the Cnidian architect did? He built the tower on Pharos,
the mightiest and most beautiful work of all, that a beacon-light might shine
from it for sailors far over the sea and that they might not be driven on to
Paraetonia, said to be a very difficult coast with no escape if you hit the
reefs. After he had built the work he wrote his name on the masonry inside, covered
it with gypsum, and having hidden it inscribed the name of the reigning
king. He knew, as actually happened, that in a very short time the letters
would fall away with the plaster and there would be revealed:
‘Sostratus of Cnidos, the son of Dexiphanes, to the Divine Saviours, for the
sake of them that sail at sea.’ Thus, not even he had regard for the
immediate moment or his own brief life-time: he looked to our day and eternity,
as long as the tower shall stand and his skill abide” (¶ 62).
525.30 Or 6 nine’s of material / light and fire
from long…: through 526.3 from Plotinus, 3rd century Neoplatonic
philosopher, using the Loeb Classical Library edition of Vol. 1 edited and
translated by A.H. Armstrong, which includes the introduction by the original editor
of Plotinus, Porphyry, “On the Life of Plotinus and the Order of His Books.”
Porphyry describes his arrangement of Plotinus’ works: “So I, as I had
fifty-four treatises of Plotinus, divided them into six sets of nine (Enneads)—it
gave me pleasure to find the perfection of the number six along with the nine”
(73).
525.31: material light and fire […] / […] a / diffusion of
warmth cold from / snow or flowers conceived scented: from Armstrong’s
introduction: “Plotinus’s thought at this point is certainly a late Stoic
doctrine of the emanation of intellect from a divinity conceived as material
light or fire, and his favourite metaphor to describe the process is
that of the radiation of light or heat from sun or fire (he also uses others of
the same sort, the diffusion of cold from snow of perfume from something
scented)” (xviii).
525.31: from long / habit of greeting everyone: from Porphyry, “On the
Life of Plotinus”: “So, since his friends avoided meeting him because he had
the habit of greeting everyone by word of mouth, he left the city and went to
Campania […]” (5).
525.35: intimate in a whorl of / soul: Cf. Armstrong’s introduction:
“Soul in Plotinus is very much what it is in Plato, the great intermediary
between the worlds of intellect and sense and the representative of the former
in the latter. It proceeds from Nous and returns upon it and is formed
by it in contemplation as Nous proceeds from and returns upon the One:
but the relationship of Soul to Nous is a much more intimate one. Soul
at its highest belongs to the world of Nous: and Plotinus hesitates a
good deal over the question of whether its going out from that world to form
and order the material universe is a fall, an act of illegitimate self-will and
self-assertion, or a good and necessary part of the universal order” (xxii).
526.2: what change and chance bring—: from Plotinus, Ennead I: “A
good man’s activities will not be hindered by changes of fortune, but will vary
according to what change and chance brings, but they will all be equally
fine, and, perhaps finer, for being adapted to circumstances” (203).
526.3: unfaced and seeing all faces: from Plotinus: “So one might
compare it to a living sphere of varied colour and pattern or something all
faces, shining with living faces, or imagine all the pure souls gathered
together, with no defect but complete in all their parts, and universal Nous
set at their highest point, illuminating the region with intellectual light. If
one imagined it like this one would be seeing it from outside, as something
different from oneself. But we have to become it ourselves and make ourselves
that which we contemplate” (VI.7).
526.4 With
two pupils to one / eye…: through 526.8 from Herbert Giles, A History of Chinese Literature (see 515.10), on the
scholar Shên Yo (A.D. 441-513): “Personally, he was remarkable for having two
pupils to his left eye. He was a strict teetotaler, and lived most
austerely. He had a library of twenty thousand volumes. He was the
author of the histories of the Chin, Liu Sung, and Ch‛i dynasties. He is said to have been the first to classify the four
tones. In his autobiography he writes, ‘The poets of old, during the past
thousand years, never hit upon this plan. I alone discovered its advantages.’
The Emperor Wu Ti of the Liang dynasty one day said to him, ‘Come, tell me,
what are these famous four tones?’ ‘They are whatever your Majesty pleases to
make them,’ replied Shên Yo, skillfully selecting for his answer four
characters which illustrated, and in the usual order, the four tones in
question” (138-139). See also 526.18-19 and 532.8.
526.10 —a sacrifice of dough—: from Giles, A
History of Chinese Literature on the first Emperor of the Liang dynasty,
Hsiao Yen (see 526.12-15): “Interpreting the Buddhist commandment ‘Thou shalt
not kill’ in its strictest sense, he caused the sacrificial victims to be made
of dough” (133).
526.12 Different trees, different birds, different
/ songs, fish leap, float, mountains / rise, water dries, what for / who knows:
from Herbert Giles, A History of Chinese Literature, a poem by the 6th
century Emperor Hsiao Yen of the Liang dynasty, (see 526.10):
Trees grow, not alike,
by the mound and the moat;
Birds sing in the forest
with varying note;
Of the fish in the river
some dive and some float.
The mountains rise high
and the waters sink low,
But the why and the wherefore
we never can know. (133)
526.18 Too full for talk. 4 / tones: see
11.125.14, where the former phrase is preceded by “four notes first”; also
526.7.
526.20 dark, light, / no more than a sound
/ can be painted, or wind / in the
hollow of hand: from Jacob Boehme (1575-1624), Signaturea
Rerum: The Signature of All Things (Everyman Library edition), the
“Preface to the Reader”: “And thus parable have a double and different respect
and use; for as they conceal and hide secrets from the rude and vulgar sort,
who are not able or patient to bear anything but what suits with their common
conceits and opinions, so likewise they sweetly lead the mind of the true
searcher into the depths of wisdom’s council. They are as the cloudy pillar of
Moses; they have a dark part, and they have a light part; they are dark to the
Egyptians, the pharisaical sons of sophistry, but light to the true Israel, the
children of the mystery. […] I will now endeavour briefly to hint to the reader
what this book contains, though in it the spirit of wisdom cannot be delineated
with pen and ink, no more than a sound can be painted, or the wind
grasped in the hollow of the hand: But know, that in it he
deciphers and represents in a lively manner the Signature of all Things, and
gives you the contents of eternity and time, and glances at all mysteries.” The
latter phrase LZ uses echoes Proverbs 30:4.
526.31 Escaped
conceptions clouds darken hang / without violence…: through 527.3 from
Herbert Giles, A History of Chinese
Literature. 526.31-34 is from the late Tang poet Ssŭ-K‛ung T‛u (Sikong Tu, 834-908), a
sequence of twenty-four 12-line poems by Ssŭ-K‛ung T‛u known as the “24 Modes (or Categories)”
(179-188), an important Taoist inspired work of poetics, from which LZ picks up
phrases here and there:
From Poem i: Energy—Absolute.
Freighted
with eternal principles,
Athwart
the mighty void,
Where cloud-masses darken,
And
the wind blows ceaseless around,
Beyond the range of conceptions,
Let us
gain the Centre,
And
there hold fast without violence,
Fed
from an inexhaustible supply.
From Poem iii: Slim—Stout.
With
green leaves the peach-trees are loaded,
The
breeze blows gently along the stream,
Willows
shade the winding path,
Darting orioles collect in groups.
From Poem xiii—Animal Spirits.
That
they might come back unceasingly,
That
they might be ever with us!—
The
bright river, unfathomable,
The rare flower just opening,
The
parrot of the verdant spring,
The
willow-trees, the terrace,
The
stranger from the dark hills,
The
cup overflowing with clear wine…
From Poem xiv—Close Woven.
So
words should not shock,
Nor
thought be inept.
But be
like the green of spring,
Like snow beneath the moon.
526.35 Wistaria plight flute song unbroken…:
through 527.2 primarily from Su Shih (Su Dongpo, 1036-1101), the preeminent
poet of the Sung dynasty (Leggott 404). “Wisteria” at 526.35 is mentioned in Ssŭ-k‘ung T‘u’s “Poem xxiii—Illumined” (see 526.31), but the
rest is from two works by Su Shih. First from a travel journal: “My friend
accompanied these words upon his flageolet
[a small flute], delicately adjusting its notes to express the varied emotions of pity and regret, without the slightest break in the thread
of sound which seemed to wind around us like a silken skein. […] ‘Now you
and I have fished and gathered fuel together on the river eyots [small
islands]. We have fraternized with the crayfish; we have made friends with the
deer. We have embarked together in our frail canoe; we have drawn inspiration
together from the wine-flask—a couple of ephemerides
launched on the ocean in a rice-husk!
Alas! Life is but an instant of Time’” (Giles 223-224). Ephemeridae =
May-flies, day-flies or ephemerids, so called from the shortness of their lives
after reaching the perfect winged state, in which they have no jaws, take no
food, but propagate and speedily die (CD). Cf. the striking bug image LZ
includes in the Gilgamesh passage at 23.543.22-23, also concerning the
ephemerality of mortal existence.
526.37-527.3
adapted from a dedicatory poem by Su Shih:
Should Heaven rain pearls, the cold cannot wear them as
clothes;
Should
Heaven rain jade, the hungry cannot use it as food.
It has
rained without cease for three days—
Whose
was the influence at work?
Should
you say it was that of your Governor,
The
Governor himself refers it to the Son of Heaven [i.e. the Emperor].
But
the Son of Heaven says “No! it was God,”
And
God says “No! it was Nature.”
And as
Nature lies beyond the ken of man,
I
christen this arbour instead. (Giles
225-226)
527.4 Sun rule / over star sea moon…:
through 527.13 from John Collier, The Indians of the Americas: The Long Hope
(1948), primarily from Chap. 3: “The Empire of the Incas” (< ink a):
527.4-8: “Basic to the civilization of the Incas, and informing it in all its
aspects was the Inca religion—the Religion of the Sun. There were and still
remain huacas, or place-shrines, many of which used to be temples with
priests and priestesses. Above these were the Earth Mother and the Mother Seas,
Sun, Moon and Stars. The Inca himself represented the Sun on
Earth—more strictly, he was the Sun, for Inca means Sun. […] Beyond all other
gods—within them and without them—was the Uncreated Creator-God, Viracocha,
‘ancient foundation, lord, instructor of the world.’ The Viracocha
concept goes back in ancient Indian society to a time beyond memory. The great
chroniclers tell how the ninth Inca came to restore Viracocha to his rightful
place, even above the Sun—even above the Inca. […] Belief in immortality
was explicit and even dominant in Inca life, and carried with it a belief in
the on-reaching effects of moral actions. When an Inca died, he was led into
the world beyond by his dog, who was slain that he might be there
to lead his master.” Veery is
a type of small thrush.
527.9-13: Collier describes the elaborate system of recording using knots (the quipu
or knot record) developed by the Incas, their extensive and sophisticated
system of roads and communications using couriers throughout their empire.
Elsewhere he mentions that the Maya had no concept of the wheel and no concept
of a “money economy.”
527.14 A goblet of prase, gems / shade
light of a shrine…: from descriptions of Gothic churches, probably found in
A Documentary History of Art, Vol. 1, ed. Elizabeth Holt. The first
phrase from a document by the Abbot Suger (1081-1151) of the Church of St.
Denis, just north of Paris, which he completely reconstructed as the first and
one of the finest examples of a completely gothic building. Abbot Suger wrote
detailed descriptions of the reconstruction and of the numerous treasures
gathered there, which included a “most precious vessel of prase, carved
into the form of a boat, […].” Prase is a light green or light grayish-green
variety of translucent chalcedony. Suger also details the numerous gems he
acquired for the church, but another document by St. Bernard of Clairvaux
(1090-1153) remarks: “Hence the church is adorned with gemmed crowns of
light—nay, with lustres like cart wheels, girt all round with lamps, but no
less brilliant with the precious stones that stud them. […] I grant it, then,
let us suffer even this to be done in the church; for, though it be harmful to
vain and covetous folk, yet not so to the simple and devout.”
527.24 if she’s / beautiful they’ll see: action’s
end / is to finish. A beast in a dream…: through 528.5 from Harold Lamb, Genghis
Khan: The Emperor of All Men (1928); Genghis Khan (1162-1227), the Mongol
emperor and conqueror:
“[Genghis Khan] could appreciate beauty in women [….] Once the attractive face
and bearing of a girl in a captured province were described to him by a Mongol
who did not know just where she might be found. ‘If she is really beautiful,’
the Khan answered impatiently, ‘I will find her’” (80).
“‘The merit of an action,’ [the Khan] told his sons, ‘is in finishing
it to the end’” (47).
“There is a legend that in the defiles of the lower Himalayas Genghis Khan saw
in his path a marvellous-appearing animal, shaped like a deer, but green
in colour and with only a single horn. He called Ye Liu Chutsai [Chinese
scholar and favorite of the Khan] for an explanation of the phenomenon, and the
Cathayan made answer gravely: ‘This strange animal is called Kio-tuan. He knows
every language of the earth, and he loves living men, and has a horror
of slaying, His appearance is undoubtedly a warning to thee, O my Khan,
to turn back from this path’” (185).
When Ye Liu Chutsai died, “some Mongol officers searched his residence. They
found no other treasure than a regular museum of musical instruments,
manuscripts, maps, tablets and stones on which inscriptions had
been carved” (186).
From an account of a visit to the Mongol capitol by the French monk, Fra
Rubruquis: “On Palm Sunday we were near Karakorum and at dawn of day we blessed
the willow boughs on which there were as yet no buds” (197).
”The Scourge of God” was one of the designations given Genghis Khan by the
Muslims (1, 132). Although white-nosed horses are mentioned, Lamb does not
mention that the Khan specifically rode such a horse.
[The Khan addressing the Muslim population of the city of Bokhara:] “First he
questioned them closely about their religion, and commented gravely that it was
a mistake to make the pilgrimage to Mecca. ‘For the power of Heaven
is not in one place alone, but in every corner of the earth’” (109).
“Snow covered everything, even the and dunes of the wastes. Withered grey
tamarisk danced under the wind gust, like the ghosts of old men. […] Here
they were buffeted by winds and chilled by a cold so great that whole herds
might be frozen if caught in the pass during a buran, a black wind
storm. By now most of the cattle had died off and had been eaten. The last
stores of hay had vanished; the carts, perforce, had been left behind, and only
the hardiest of the camels survived” (95).
[On Genghis Khan’s death:] “The conqueror was brought home, not to Karakorum,
but to the valleys where he had struggled for life as a boy, to the heritage
that he would not desert. […] No one knows the exact burial place. The grave
was dug under a great tree. The Mongols say that a certain clan was exempted
from military duty and charged to watch the site, and that incense was burned
unceasingly in the grove until the surrounding forest grew so thick that
the tall tree was lost among its fellows and all trace of the
grave vanished” (152).
“The Mongols of Juchi [the Khan’s eldest son and key general]—the detached left
wing of the horde—were riding through one of the garden spots of high [central]
Asia, where every stream had its white walled village and watch-tower. Here
grew melons and strange fruits; the slender towers of minarets uprose in
growths of willows and poplars. To the right and left were mellow foothills,
with cattle grazing on the slopes. Behind them, the white summits of
the higher ranges reared against the sky. ‘Kudjan (Kholand) abounds in pomegranates,’
the observant Ye Liu Chatsai noted down in his geography of the journey. ‘They
are as large as two fists and of a sour-sweet taste. People take the fruit and
press out the juice into a vessel—a delicious beverage for slaking thirst’”
(101).
“[…] the Mongol army marched against [the Persian city] Merv—the jewel of the
sands, the pleasure city of the Shahs. It stood on the River of Birds,
the Murgh Ab, and sheltered in its libraries many thousand volumes of
manuscripts” (125).
“[Of his grandsons] the youthful Kubilai was a favourite of the Khan, who
evinced toward him all the pride of a grandfather. ‘Mark well the words of the
boy Kubilai; they are full of wisdom’” (81).
528.8 a single sunbeam enough to / drive away
many shadows: attributed to St. Francis of Assisi.
528.12 Brightness: in Bottom (110,
342), LZ points out that Zohar, the essential work of Jewish Kabbalah, means
“brightness,” so this may anticipate the appearance of the great Kabbalist
Abulafia at 528.16.
528.12 Discriminates minutely, / […] the
Letter…: through 528.15 from William Blake (1757-1827), “A Vision of the
Last Judgement,” except for the interpolated 528.13 (see next note); the text is
that of the Complete Writings, ed. Geoffrey Keynes:
“Every Man has Eyes Nose & Mouth this Every Idiot knows but he who enters
into & discriminates most minutely the Manners &
Intentions the [Expression] Characters in all their branches is the alone Wise
or Sensible Man & on this discrimination All Art is founded. I intreat then
that the Spectator will attend to the Hands & Feet to the Lineaments of the
Countenances they are all descriptive of Character & not a line is drawn
without intention & that most discriminate & particular <as Poetry
admits not a Letter that is Insignificant so Painting admits not a Grain
of Sand or a Blade of Grass <Insignificant> much less an Insignificant
Blur or Mark.”
“A Last Judgment is Necessary because Fools flourish. Nations Flourish under
Wise Rulers & are depress’d under foolish Rulers; it is the same with
Individuals as Nations; works of Art can only be produc’d in Perfection where
the Man is either in Affluence or is Above the Care of it. Poverty is the
Fool’s Rod, which at last is turn’d on his own back; this is A Last
Judgment—when Men of Real Art Govern & Pretenders Fall.”
528.13 eye looks to arch: from Henry Adams, Mont-Saint-Michel
and Chartres: “The architects of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries took
the Church and the universe of truths, and tried to express them in a structure
which should be final. Knowing by an enormous experience precisely where the
strains were to come, they enlarged their scale to the utmost point of material
endurance, lightening the load and distributing the burden until the gutters
and gargoyles that seem mere ornament, and the grotesques that seem rude
absurdities, all do work whether for the arch or for the eye; and every
inch of material, up and down, from crypt to vault, from man to God, from
universe to the atom, had its task, giving support where support was needed, or
weight where concentration was felt, but always with the condition of showing
conspicuously to the eye the great lines which led to unity and the curves
which controlled divergence; so that […] one idea controlled every line; and
this is true of Saint Thomas’s church as it is of Amiens Cathedral.” Cf. Dante,
Purgatorio XIX.40-42: “I was bearing my brow like one that hath it burdened
with thought, who makes of himself half an arch of bridge”; used in
“A”-12.136.18-19.
528.16 why deny what you’ve not tried…: through 528.18 directly or indirectly from the 13th century
Kabbalist Abraham ben Samuel Abulafia (1240-1291). LZ’s probable source is the
poetry journal Tree 1 (Winter 1970), ed. David Meltzer. This journal focused
on the Kabbala and contemporary poetry, with a particular interest in Abulafia.
The first issue included a selection of materials by and about Abulafia, as
well as reprinting a brief excerpt from LZ’s Bottom (155) that quotes
from and briefly comments on the Zohar. The Abulafia materials were
translated by various hands; the first quotation below is from Gershom G.
Scholem, Major Trends in Jewish Mysticism (1941), and the second by the
poet Jack Hirschman:
One of Abulafia’s disciples reported him as saying: “My son, why do you deny
something you have not tried? Much rather would it befit you to make a
trial of it. If you then should find that it is nothing to you—and if you are
not perfect enough to find the fault with yourself—then you may say that there
is nothing to it.” From Abulafia’s Book of the Letter (Sefer-ha-Ot):
“The letter is desire. […] If it be night, kindle many lights, until
all be bright.”
528.19 Called angelic instantly to resume / its
humanity…: through 528.34 predominantly from the Arabic historican Ibn
Khaldûn (1332-1406), The Muqaddimah: An
Introduction to History, trans. Franz Rosenthal:
528.19-20: [On the knowledge of the prophets:] “Above the human world, there is
a spiritual world. […] The essences of that spiritual world are pure perception
and absolute intellection. It is the world of the angels. It follows from all
this that the human soul must be prepared to exchange humanity for angelicality,
in order actually to become part of the angelic species at any time, in a
single instant. It will afterwards resume its humanity. But in the
world of angelicality, it has meanwhile accepted (ideas) that it is charged to
transmit to its fellow human beings. That is the meaning of revelation and
being addressed by the angels” (339).
528.21-23: “In the desert sands, camels can find places to give birth to their
young ones. Of all animals, camels have the hardest delivery and the
greatest need for warmth in connection with it. (Camel nomads) are
therefore forced to make excursions deep (into the desert). […] The camels are
the cause of the Bedouins’ savage life in the desert, since they feed on desert
shrubs and give birth in the desert sands” (92, 99).
528.24-25: “Therefore, an old merchant said to a person who wanted to find out
the truth about commerce: ‘I shall give it to you in two words: Buy cheap
and sell dear. There is commerce for you’” (310).
528.25: possibly refers to details of Ibn Khaldûn’s biography: while on the way
to Mecca, he remained a number of years in Cairo at the behest of the ruler who
appointed him to several important positions, including the Grand Cadi of the
Mâlikite Rite for Cairo (ix).
528.25-27: “Those who claim to have made gold with the help of alchemy are like
those who might claim the artificial creation of man from semen. If we grant to
someone an all-comprehensive knowledge of the parts of man, his proportions,
the stages of his (development), the way he is created in the womb, if he could
know all this in every detail, so that nothing escapes his knowledge, then we
would grant him the (ability to) create a human being. But where does anyone
possess such knowledge?” (410).
528.27-28: “Now, poetry exists by nature among the speakers of every language,
since metres of a certain harmonious arrangement, with the alternation of
(fixed) numbers of consonants, with and without vowels,
exist in the nature of all human beings” (457). “It should be known that the
letters (sounds) of speech are modification of sounds that come from the larynx.
These modifications result from the fact that the sounds are broken up in
contact with the uvula and the sides of the tongue in the throat, against the
palate or the teeth, and also through contact with the lips. The sound is
modified by the different ways in which such contact takes place. As a result,
the sounds become distinct. Their combination constitutes the word that
expresses what is in the mind” (31).
528.31-32: “Muhammad said: ‘War is trickery’” (229). Ibn Khaldûn frequently refers
to Muhammad as the “Messenger of God.”
528.32: “One of the greatest injustices and one contributing most to the
destruction of civilization is the unjustified imposition of tasks and the use
of the subjects for forced labour. This is so because labour belongs to
the things that constitute capital. […] Now, if [subjects] are obliged to work
outside their own field and are used for forced labour unrelated to their
(ordinary ways of) making a living, they no longer have any profit and are thus
deprived of the price of their labour, which is their capital (asset). […] If
this occurs repeatedly, all incentive to cultural enterprise is destroyed, and
they cease utterly to make an effort. This leads to the destruction and ruin
of civilization” (241).
528.33: “[…] profit is the value realized from labour. When there
is more labour, the value realized from it increases among the (people). Thus,
their profit of necessity increases. The prosperity and wealth they enjoy leads
them to luxury and the things that go with it, such as splendid houses and
clothes, fine vessels and utensils, and the use of servants and mounts” (273).
There are several passages on the error of considering gold and silver as the
basis of wealth (see 279, 298, 303).
528.20 it is not / enough
to be happy: from the Greek Neoplatonist, Gemistus Pletho (c.1355-1450), as
quoted by E.M. Forester in “Gemistus Pletho” from Abinger Harvest
(1936); see also 528.23: “It is not enough to be happy, fools can be that. We
must know what happiness is, and how it come.”
528.23 few defiled names
/ resound again: from Gemistus Pletho as quoted by E.M. Forester (see
previous note): “A great name may be defiled by bad usage; yet once used
rightly, it again becomes pure.”
528.34 Red-maple
leaves a rush / of rich robes…:
through 528.37 from Herbert Giles, A History of Chinese Literature
(see 515.10), creatively grafting two separate passages. The first quotes a
prose work by Liu Chi (1311-1375) in which “a certain noble who had lost all by
the fall of the Ch’in dynasty, B.C. 206, and was forced to grow melons for a
living, had recourse to divination, and went to consult a famous augur on his
prospects. ‘Alas!’ cried the auger, ‘what is there that Heaven can bestow save
that which virtue can obtain? […] Besides, sir, why not reflect upon the
past—that past which gave birth to the present? […] Your endive and
watercresses are but the complement of the elephant-sinews and camel’s hump of
days bygone; the maple-leaf and the rush, of your once rich
robes and fine attire. Do not repine that those who had not such luxuries
then enjoy them now. Do not be dissatisfied that you, who enjoyed them then,
have them now no more. […] these things you know; what more can
divination teach you?’” (253-254).
The
second quotes a commentator on a work by Hsü Hsieh (17th century): “It is completed
[…] with the breath of a yawn (with a single effort), and is like a
heavenly robe, without seam” (305).
529.10 hurtless snail
horn, painting / […] cleaning ports, / troubled sea…: through 530.10
predominately concerns Italian Renaissance painters, especially Leonardo da
Vinci, but also Michelangelo and Raphael. The major source is Giorgio Vasari
(1511-1574), Lives of the Painters, Sculptors and Architects, 4 vols.,
trans. A.B. Hinds (Everyman Library), although particularly in the case of
Leonardo other sources from which LZ is using extracts from his Notebooks.
529.10: perhaps from an anecdote found in Vasari (vol. 2 of the Hinds trans.):
“On a curious lizard found by the vine-dresser of Belvedere [Leonardo] fastened
scales taken from other lizards, dipped in quicksilver, which trembled as it
moved, and after giving it eyes, a horn and a beard, he tamed it and
kept it in a box. All the friends to whom he showed it ran away terrified.”
529.11: “Every day [Leonardo] made models and designs for the removal of
mountains with ease and to pierce them to pass from one place to another, and
by means of levers, cranes and winches to raise and draw heavy weights; he
devised a method for cleansing ports, and to raise water from great
depths, schemes which his brain never ceased to evolve.”
529.11-12: “For his good friend Antonio Segni he drew a Neptune on paper, with
so much design and care that he seemed alive. The sea is troubled
and his car is drawn by sea-horses, with the sprites, monsters,
and south winds and other fine marine creatures.”
529.20-21: when the King of France visited Milan, Leonardo was asked “to do
something curious, he made a lion whose chest opened after he had
walked a few steps, discovering himself to be full of lilies.”
529.14-16: presumably from a famous passage in Leonardo’s Notebooks on
an exercise for young artists: “[…] when you look at a wall spotted with
stains, or with a mixture of stones, if you have to devise some scene,
you may discover a resemblance to various landscapes, beautified with
mountains, rivers, rocks, trees, plains, wide valleys and hills in varied
arrangement; […] and an endless variety of objects, which you could reduce to
complete and well drawn forms. And these appear on such walls confusedly, like
the sound of bells in whose jangle you may find any name or word you choose to
imagine.”
529.17-20: see note below for 529.17.
529.23-30: partially from Leonardo’s Paragone, a treatise comparing
painting with the other arts, using the selections in Elizabeth G. Holt, ed. A
Documentary History of Art, Vol. 1: The Middle Ages and the Renaissance:
“Whatever is painted must pass by the eye, which is the nobler sense, and
whatever is poetry must pass through a less noble sense, namely, the ear, to
the understanding. Therefore, let the painting be judged by a man born deaf,
and the poem by one born blind. If in the painting the actions of the
figures are in every case expressive of the purpose in their minds, the beholder,
though born deaf, is sure to understand what is intended, but the listener born
blind will never understand the things the poet describes which reflect honour
on the poem, including such important parts as the indication of gestures, the
compositions of the stories, the description of beautiful and delightful places
with limpid waters through which the green bed of the stream can be seen and
the play of the waves rolling through meadows and over pebbles, mingling with
blades of grass and with playful fishes, and similar subtle detail which may as
well be addressed to a stone as to a man born blind who never in his life has
seen what makes the beauty of the world, namely, light, shade, colour, body,
figure, position, distance, nearness, motion, and the rest—these
ten ornaments of nature” (278).
“And truly it so happens that where reason is not, its place is taken by
clamour. This never occurs when things are certain. Therefore, where
there are quarrels, there true science is not” (276).
“Here no one argues as to whether twice three is more or less than six or
whether the angles of a triangle are less than two right angles. Here all
argument is destroyed by eternal silence and these sciences can be enjoyed
by their devotees in peace” (276).
529.32-33 from Leonardo’s Notebooks: “Here I make a note to demonstrate
the difference there is between man and the horse and in the same
way with other animals. And first I will begin with the bones, and then
will go on to all the muscles which spring from the bones without tendons and
end in them in the same way, and then go on to those which start with a single
tendon at one end.” “I want to know how much a man increases in height
by standing on tip-toe […].”
529.11 Order
without Ordainer: from Thomas Browne, see 531.18-19 and quotation at 531.9.
529.17 borne / with metal letters for all /
nations…: through 529.20 from a 1472 letter believed to be the first
reference to Gutenberg’s invention of printing in the West: “For they say that
not far from the city of Mainz, there was a certain Johann who bore the
surname Gutenberg, who first of all men thought out the art of printing, by
which books are made, not written with a reed as former
books were made, not by pen as we make them, but by metal letters—and
that indeed with speed, elegance and beauty.”
529.37 judges no dust
will / raise men of two mouths…: through at least 530.2 (although quite
possibly the entire passage from 529.34-530.4) concerns Michelangelo
(1475-1564), from Vasari (vol. 4 of the Hinds trans.; see 529.20). LZ is
evidently freely blending or reworking various bits:
529.37-38: “Piero Soderini came to see [the statue of David], and expressed
great pleasure to Michelagnolo who was retouching it, though he said he thought
the nose large. Michelagnolo seeing the gonfaloniere below and knowing that he
could not see properly, mounted the scaffolding and taking his chisel
dexterously let a little dust fall on to the gonfaloniere, without,
however, actually altering his work. Looking down he said, ‘Look now.’ ‘I like
it better,’ said the gonfaloniere, ‘you have given it life.’ Michelagnolo
therefore came down with feelings of pity for those who wish to seem to
understand matters of which they know nothing.”
“When the friar asked that something more might be given him Michelagnolo
readily agreed; but the friar had acted from envy, thinking his request would
not be granted, and when he saw what had been done he was displeased. This was
reported to Michelagnolo, who said that nothing annoyed him more than these
gutter-men, using an architectural metaphor meaning that it is impossible to
deal with those who have two mouths.”
530.1-2: “[Michelagnolo] said much the same to a man who had painted a Pieta,
and had not acquitted himself well, remarking that it was a pitiful sight
(pietà) to see. Learning that Sebastiano of Venice was going to
paint a friar in the chapel of S. Piero a Montorio, he said this would spoil
the work. When asked why, he replied, ‘They [the friars] have spoiled
the great world, so it will be no great matter for them to ruin a little
chapel.’”
530.4 was there ever
time / work did not convene endurer…: though 530.9 concerning Raphael
(1583-1520) from Vasari (vol. 2 of Hinds trans.; see 529.20). LZ is evidently
freely blending or reworking various bits. Vasari repeatedly points out the
exquisite detail and finish of Raphael’s portraiture and landscapes in single
works, particularly of his madonnas (see 530.9):
[Vasari’s fulsome opening to the “Life of Raphael”:] “The liberality with which
Heaven now and again unites in one person the inexhaustible riches of its
treasures and all those graces and rare gifts which are usually shared among
many over a long period is seen in Raphael Sanzio of Urbino, who was as
excellent as gracious, and endowed with a natural modesty and
goodness sometimes seen in those who possess to an unusual degree a humane and
gentle nature adorned with affability and good-fellowship, and he always showed
himself sweet and pleasant with persons of every degree in all circumstances.”
“By these and other works the fame of Raphael spread to France and Flanders.
Albert Dürer, a remarkable German painter and author of some fine copper
engraving, paid him the tribute of his homage and sent him his own portrait,
painted in water-colours, on cambric, so fine that it was transparent, without
the use of white paint, the white material forming the lights of the
picture. […] Marco Antonio then did a number of prints which Raphael afterwards
gave to Il Baviera, his boy, who had the charge of one of his mistresses whom
Raphael loved until his death. He made a beautiful life-like portrait of her
which is now in Florence in the possession of the most noble Botti, a
Florentine merchant […].”
530.9 confronted with /
militia’s tower ancient buildings stand: possibly from Vasari’s “Life of
Michelangelo” (see 529.37): when Florence was under siege, Michelangelo was
given a position in the city militia and put in charge of fortifications, and
at one point he saved “the campanile of S. Miniato, a tower which had caused
much annoyance to the enemy’s camp by its two pieces of artillery. They had
attacked it with heavy cannon, inflicting much damage, and would have destroyed
it. Michelagnolo fortified it with large bales of wool and strong mattresses
and ropes, so that it is still standing.”
530.15 abstracter of /
quintessence: this is the title or designation of the narrator of François
Rabelais (c.1494-1553), Gargantua and Pantagruel: “Maistre
Alcofribas, Abstracteur de Quinte Essence.”
530.20 blind
mole perswaded / any beast can see:
from Edmund Spenser (1552-1599), dedicatory epistle to The Shepheardes Calender (1579); see also 530.23-24: “The second
shame no lesse then the first, that what they so vnderstand not, they straight
way deeme to be sencelesse, and not at al to be vnderstode. Much like to the Mole in Æsopes fable, that being blynd her selfe, would in no wise be perswaded, that any beast could see.”
530.23 mercy no merchandise, / art tracking music:
from Edmund Spenser, The Shepheardes Calender (see 530.20). The
concluding Latin motto of The Shepheardes Calender is: Merce non
mercede (favor not payment; or, grace not wages). From the gloss for
December: “Musick, that is Poetry as Terence sayth Qui artem tractant
musicam, speking of Poetes.”
530.24 loose as / old beachcomber’s gripe—the / folly
. . craving for power . .
circumnavigating: from Luis Vaz de Camões (c.1524-1580), The Lusiads (> loose as),
the Portuguese heroic epic on the voyages of Vasco da Gama around Africa to
India. LZ quotes from the end of Canto 4 when an old man harangues Gama’s fleet
as it departs from Lisbon harbor; he is not described as a “beachcomber,”
although this might be suggested by Camões himself who was shipwrecked at least
twice: “‘Oh, the folly of it, this craving for power, this thirsting after
the vanity we call fame, this fraudulent pleasure known as honour that thrives
on popular esteem! When the vapid soul succumbs to its lure, what a price it
exacts, and how justly, in perils, tempests, torments, death itself! It wrecks
all peace of soul and body, leads men to forsake and betray their loved ones,
subtly yet undeniably consumes estates, kingdoms, empires […]’” (119-120;
trans. William C. Atkinson).
530.27 to read music into plumage—: Cf.
12.128.2-4.
530.28 ‘hungry I / climb’d to eat grass’: from
Shakespeare, Henry VI, Part 2 IV.x:
“Jack Cade: These five days have I hid me in these woods and durst not
peep out, for all the country is laid for me; but now am I so hungry
that, if I might have a lease of my life for a thousand years, I could stay no
longer. Wherefore, on a brick wall have I climb’d into this garden, to
see if I can eat grass or pick a sallet another while, which is not
amiss to cool a man’s stomach this hot weather.”
530.32 wren […] an / architecture honors a
people’s obstinate / valor ages through infinite changes: from Christopher
Wren (1632-1723), Tracts on Architecture: “The obstinate valour of the
Jews, occasioned by the love of their temple, was the cement that held that
people together for many ages through infinite changes.” LZ’s source is quite
possibly W.R. Lethaby, Architecture: An Introduction to the History and
Theory of the Art of Building (2nd rev. 1939) which he owned and quotes in Bottom
183.
530.35 caldron run over, scattered / congregate,
their sanctuary the Land: from Ezekiel 11. Ezekiel refers to Jerusalem as a
caldron several times, e.g. 11:3: “Which say, It is not near let us build
houses: this city is the caldron, and we be the flesh.”
Ezekiel 11:16-17: “Therefore say, Thus saith the Lord God; Although I have cast
them far off among the heathen, and although I have scattered them among
the countries, yet will I be to them as a little sanctuary in the
countries where they shall come. Therefore say, Thus saith the Lord God; I will
even gather you from the people, and assemble you out of the countries
where ye have been scattered, and I will give you the land of
Israel” (see 23.547.34).
530.37 the blood’s motion—arteries to / heart:
quoting or paraphrasing William Harvey (1578-1657), who first demonstrated the
circulation of the blood.
531.1 come
at last into / ample fields…: through 531.9 from Robert Burton (1577-1640),
The Anatomy of Melancholy:
531.1-2: “As a long-winged hawk, when he is first whistled off the fist, mounts
aloft, and for his pleasure fetcheth many a circuit in the air, still soaring
higher and higher, till he be come to his full pitch, and in the end when the
game is sprung, comes down amain, and stoops upon a sudden: so will I, having
now come at last into these ample fields of air, wherein I may
freely expatiate and exercise myself for my recreation, awhile rove, wander
round about the world, mount aloft to those ethereal orbs and celestial
spheres, and so descend to my former elements again.”
531.2: “Something I have done, though by my profession a divine, yet turbine
raptus ingenii, as he said, out of a running wit, an unconstant, unsettled
mind, I had a great desire (not able to attain to a superficial skill in any)
to have some smattering in all, to be aliquis in omnibus, nullus in singulis,
which Plato commends, out of him Lipsius approves and furthers, ‘as fit to be
imprinted in all curious wits, not to be a slave of one science, or swell
altogether in one subject, as most do, but to rove abroad, centum puer
atrium, to have an oar in every man’s boat, to taste of every dish, and sip
of every cup,’ which, saith Montaigne, was well performed by Aristotle,
and his learned countryman Adrain Trunebus.”
531.3: “Amongst so many thousand authors you shall scarce find one, by reading
of whom you shall be any whit better, but rather much worse, quibus
inficitur potius, quam perficitur, by which he is rather infected than any
way perfected.—Qui talia legit, Quid
didicit tandem, quid scit nisi somnia, nugas? So that oftentimes it falls
out (which Callimachus taxed of old) a
great book is a great mischief.”
531.4-5: “Though there were many giants of old in physic and philosophy, yet I
say with Didacus Stella, A dwarf
standing on the shoulders of a giant
may see farther than a giant himself;
I may likely add, alter, and see farther than my predecessors; and it is no
greater prejudice for me to indite after others, than for Aelianus Montaltus,
that famous physician, to write de morbis capitis after Jason Pratensis,
Heurnius, Hildesheim, &c., many horses
to run in a race, one logician, one
rhetorician, after another.”
531.6-9: “If the patron be precise, so must his chaplain be; if he be
papistical, his clerk must be so too, or else be turned out. These are those
clerks which serve the turn, whom they commonly entertain, and present to
church livings, whilst in the meantime we that are University men, like so many
hidebound calves in a pasture, tarry out our time, wither
away as a flower ungathered in a garden, and are never used; or as so many
candles, illuminate ourselves alone, obscuring one another’s light, and are not
discerned here at all, the least of which, translated to a dark room, or to
some country benefice, where it might shine apart, would give a fair light, and
be seen over all. Whilst we lie waiting here as those sick men did at the Pool
of Bethesda, till the Angel stirred the water, expecting a good hour, they step
between, and beguile us of our preferment. I have not yet said, if after long
expectation, much expense, travel, earnest suit of ourselves and friends, we
obtain a small benefice at last; our misery begins afresh, we are suddenly
encountered with the flesh, world, and devil, with a new onset; we change a quiet life for an ocean of troubles,
we come to a ruinous house, which before it be habitable, must be necessarily
to our great damage repaired […].”
531.7 poet
living tomb of his / games: Sir Thomas Browne (1605-1682), whose Hydriotaphia, or Urn Burial was
originally published with The Garden of
Cyrus (see 531.9), from which LZ primarily draws in the following.
531.9 the emphatical decussation / quincunx…:
through 531.16, from Sir Thomas Browne, The
Garden of Cyrus; or The Quincuncial Lozenge, or Net-work Plantations of the
Ancients, Artifically, Naturally, Mystically, Considered (1658); a quincunx
is an arrangement of things by fives in a square or a rectangle, one being
placed at each corner and one in the middle; especially such an arrangement of
trees repeated indefinitely, so as to form a regular group with rows running in
various directions (see 533.16 and 29).
531.9-10: “Which we shall take for granted as being accordingly rendered by the
most elegant of the Latins; and by no made term, but in use before
by Varro. That is, the rows and orders so handsomely disposed, or five
trees so set together, that a regular angularity, and thorough prospect, was
left on every side. Owing this name not only unto the quintuple number of
trees, but the figure declaring that number, which being double at the angle,
makes up the letter X, that is the emphatical decussation, or fundamental figure” (Chap. I).
531.11-13:
“To enlarge this contemplation unto all the mysteries and secrets accommodable
unto this number, were inexcusable Pythagorism, yet cannot omit the ancient
conceit of five surnamed the number of justice; as justly dividing between the
digits, and hanging in the centre of nine, described by square numeration,
which angularly divided will make the decussated number; and so agreeable unto
the quincuncial ordination, and rows divided by equality, and just decorum, in the whole com-plantation; and might be the original of that
common game among us, wherein the fifth place is sovereign, and carrieth the
chief intention;—the ancients wisely instructing youth, even in their recreations
unto virtue, that is, early to drive at the middle point and central seat of
justice.
Nor can we omit how agreeable unto
this number an handsome division is made in trees and plants, since Plutarch, and the ancients have named it the divisive number: justly
dividing the entities of the world, many remarkable things in it, and also
comprehending the general division of vegetables. And he that considers how
most blossoms of trees, and greatest
number of flowers, consist of five
leaves, and therein doth rest the settled rule of nature;—so that in those
which exceed, there is often found, or easily made, a variety;—may readily
discover how nature rests in this number, which is indeed the first rest and
pause of numeration in the fingers, the natural organs thereof. Nor in the
division of the feet of perfect animals doth nature exceed this account. And
even in the joints of feet, which in birds are most multiplied, surpasseth not
this number; so progressionally making them out in many, that from five in the
fore-claw she descendeth unto two in the hindmost; and so in four feet makes up
the number of joints, in the five
fingers or toes of man” (Chap. V).
531.13: “Quincuncial forms and ordinations are also observable in animal
figurations. For to omit the hyoides or throat bone of animals, the furcula or merry-thought in birds [see 512.21], which supporteth the scapulæ, affording a passage for the
wind-pipe and the gullet, the wings of flies, and disposure of their legs in
their first formation from maggots, and the position of their horns, wings and
legs, in their aurelian cases and swaddling clouts […]” (Chap.
III).
531.14:
“He that forgets not how antiquity named this the conjugal or wedding number, and made it the emblem of the most
remarkable conjunction, will conceive it duly appliable unto this handsome
economy, and vegetable combination: and may hence apprehend the allegorical
sense of that obscure expression of Hesiod, and afford no improbable reason why Plato admitted his nuptial guests by
fives, in the kindred of the married couple” (Chap. V).
531.14-16: “Night, which Pagan theology could make the daughter of Chaos, affords no advantage to the description of order; although no
lower then that mass can we derive its genealogy. All things began in order, so shall they end, and so shall they begin
again; according to the ordainer of order and mystical mathematicks of the
city of heaven” (Chap. V).
531.18 make
their worst use of / time’s shortness: from Jean de La Bruyère (1645-1696),
Les Caractères de Théophraste, traduits
du Grec, avec les caractères et les moeurs de ce siècle (1688-1696): “Those
who make the worst use of time are the first to complain of its shortness.”
531.19 conceding the fletcher’s / mark—our ballads
care little / who makes the laws: this is a well-known remark by Andrew
Fletcher (1655-1716), Scottish statesman, that exists in a number of versions.
However, LZ’s source is Herbert Giles, A
History of Chinese Literature (see 515.10), who seems to have slightly improved on
the original: [speaking of the Book of
Odes] “Confucius may indeed be said to have anticipated the apophthegm
attributed by Fletcher of Saltown to a ‘very wise man,’ namely, that he who
should be allowed to make a nation’s ‘ballads need care little who
made its laws’” (13). A fletcher is an arrow-maker.
531.21 the / higher geometry dividing a circle…:
through 531.24 from Sir Thomas Browne, The Garden of Cyrus (see 531.9):
“Besides, a large number of leaves have five divisions, and may be
circumscribed by a pentagon or figure of five angles, made by right lines from
the extremity of their leaves, as in maple, vine, fig-tree; but five-leaved
flowers are commonly disposed circularly about the stylus, according to the
higher geometry of nature, dividing a circle by five radii, which concur
not to make diameters, as in quadrilateral and sexangular intersections.”
531.24 not / necessary that the things a / sceptic
proposes be consonant…: through 531.30 from Robert Boyle (1627-1691), The
Sceptical Chymist (1661): “And if there should appear any disagreement
betwixt the things he delivers in divers passages, he hopes it will be
considered, that it is not necessary that all the things a sceptic
proposes should be consonant; since it being his work to suggest
doubts against the opinion he questions, it is allowable for him to propose two
or more several hypotheses about the same thing […]. And lastly, Carneades
hopes he shall do the ingenious this piece of service, that by having thus
drawn the chymists’ doctrine out of their dark and smokie laboratories, and
both brought it into the open light, and shewn the weakness of their proofs,
that have hitherto been wont to be brought for it, either judicious men shall
henceforth be allowed calmly and after due information to disbelieve it, or
those abler chymists, that are zealous for the reputation of it will be
obliged to speak plainer than hitherto has been done, and maintain it by
better experiments and arguments than those Carneades hath examined […].” “The water
in its own form boiling and hissing at the ends of the burning
wood betrays itself to more than one of our senses; and the ashes by their
weight, their firiness, and their dryness, put it past doubt that they belong
to the element of earth.”
531.33 pleasing Justice— / a meridian decides:
from Blaise Pascal (1623-1662), originally from Pensées V.294, but here clearly taken from Henry Adams, Mont-Saint-Michel
and Chartres (1913), Chap. 16: “[…] as Pascal says, ‘three degrees of polar
elevation upset all jurisprudence; a meridian decides truth; fundamental
laws change; rights have epochs. Pleasing Justice! bounded by a river or
a mountain! truths of this side the Pyrenees! errors beyond!’”
531.34 To guard / the glories of a face…:
through 531.38 from John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester (1647-1680); LZ uses
Rochester’s “Ode to Nothing” in TP 30:
531.34-35: from “A Pastoral Dialogue between Alexis and Strephon”:
The gods no sooner give a Grace,
But fond of their own Art,
Severely jealous, ever place
To guard the Glories of a Face
A Dragon in the Heart.
531.36-38: from “A Satyr against Reason and Mankind” (lines 8-9).
532.1 still the same as each / other without
loss of truth: from Gottfried Leibnitz (1646-1716) on logical identity:
“Things are the same, of which one can be substituted for the other without
loss of truth.”
532.3 Health’s one Thing, / moving the Earth . . a proposal…: through 532.8 from Jonathan Swift
(1667-1745), A Tale of a Tub (1710); see also 23.561.29-35:
532.3: from the Preface: “There is a Problem in an ancient Author, why
Dedications, and other Bundles of Flattery run all upon stale musty Topicks,
without the smallest Tincture of anything New; not only to the torment and
nauseating of the Christian Reader, but (if not suddenly prevented) to
the universal spreading of that pestilent Disease, the Lethargy, in this
Island: Whereas, there is very little Satyr which has not something in it
untouch’d before. The Defects of the former are usually imputed to the want of
Invention among those who are Dealers in that kind: But, I think, with a great
deal of Injustice; the Solution being easie and natural. For, the Materials of
panegyrick being very few in Number, have been long since exhausted: For, as Health
is but one Thing, and has been always the same, whereas Diseases are
by thousands, besides new and daily Additions: So, all the Virtues that have
been ever in Mankind, are to be counted upon a few Fingers, but his Follies and
Vices are innumerable, and Time adds hourly to the Heap.”
532.4: from Section I: “I am informed, Our two Rivals have lately made an Offer to enter into the Lists with
united Forces, and Challenge us to a Comparison of Books, both as to Weight and Number. In Return to which, (with License from our President) I humbly offer two Answers:
First, We say, the proposal is like
that which Archimedes made upon a smaller Affair [Swift’s footnote: Viz.
About moving the Earth], including
an impossibility in the Practice; For where can they find Scales of Capacity enough for the first, or an
Arithmetician of Capacity enough for
the Second? Secondly, We are ready to accept the Challenge, but with this
Condition, that a third indifferent Person be assigned, to whose impartial
Judgment it shall be left to decide, which Society each Book, Treatise or
Pamphlet do most properly belong to.”
532.5-6: from “An Apology For the, &c.”: “The dull, unwieldy, ill-shaped Ox would needs put on the Furniture of a
Horse, not considering he was born to Labour, to plow the Ground for the
Sake of superior Beings, and that he has neither the Shape, Mettle, nor Speed,
of that nobler Animal he would affect to personate.”
532.7-8: Section XI: “Jack had not only calculated the first revolutions of his
brain so prudently, as to give rise to that epidemic sect of Æolists, but
succeeding also into a new and strange variety of conceptions, the fruitfulness
of his imagination led him into certain notions, which, although in appearance
very unaccountable, were not without their mysteries and their meanings, nor wanted
followers to countenance and improve them. I shall therefore be extremely
careful and exact in recounting such material passages of this nature as I have
been able to collect, either from undoubted tradition, or indefatigable
reading; and shall describe them as graphically as it is possible, and as far
as notions of that height and latitude can be brought within the compass of a
pen. Nor do I at all question, but they will furnish plenty of noble matter for
such, whose converting imaginations dispose them to reduce all things into
types; who can make shadows, no thanks to the sun, and then mould
them into substances, no thanks to philosophy; whose peculiar talent lies in
fixing tropes and allegories to the letter, and refining what is literal into
figure and mystery.”
532.11 No, one cannot play / everything at
first sight: from an anecdote on J.S. Bach found in A Bach Reader:
Bach once remarked that “he really believed he could play anything without
hesitating at the first sight,” but a friend discretely laid out a challenging
piece music over which Bach stumbled and he admitted, “‘one cannot play
everything at first sight; it is not possible’” (from J.N. Forke’s early
biography of Bach).
532.12 (Old / Peruke—Sir, a piper?):
from two Bach anecdotes. Bach’s son Johann Christian Bach apparently referred
to his father as “that old peruke”; a peruke or periwig is that type of wig
worn by men in the 17th and 18th centuries. In her diary, Fanny Burney recorded
a remark by Samuel Johnson in response to a question about J.C. Bach who was
performing in London: “And pray, Sir, who is Bach? Is he a piper?”
532.14 I prefer / people say ‘it isn’t so /
crazy as you might think— / we’re different species’: from Denis
Diderot (1713-1784), Rameau’s Nephew and Other Works, translated by
Jacques Barzun and Ralph H. Bowen. LZ is quoting from the introductory sections
of this edition an 11 Sept. 1769 letter to Sophie Volland speaking about D’Alembert’s
Dream: “It was, I think, a neat trick to put my ideas in the mouth of a man
who is dreaming—one must often dress wisdom up as foolishness in order to
procure it an entrée. I much prefer to have people
say, ‘All the same, it isn’t so crazy as you might think,’ than ‘Pay
attention to these words of wisdom I am about to utter.’” On Rameau’s Nephew:
“For this we have confirmation from the best source—Rameau himself, whom
Diderot represents as saying in divers ways: ‘My mode of life would not suit
you, yours would not suit me. We belong to different species.’”
532.17 An
historian’s / vindication: minute particulars of little / moment…: through
532.17 from Edward Gibbon (1737-1794), A
Vindication of Some Passages in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Chapters of the
History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (1779); see LZ’s
extended use of the latter work at 15.370.17-373.32, see also 18.392.36-37 and Prep+ 42.
532.18: “I exhort, I solicit him to run his eye down the columns of Notes, and
to count how many of the quotations are minute and particular,
how few are vague and general” (Chap. I).
532.18-19:
“The Public may not, perhaps, be very eager to assist Mr. Davis in his
favourite amusement of depluming me.
They may think, that if the materials which compose my two last chapters are
curious and valuable, it is of little
moment to whom they properly belong.
If my readers are satisfied with the form, the colours, the new arrangement
which I have given to the labours of my predecessors, they may perhaps consider
me not as a contemptible Thief, but as an honest and industrious Manufacturer,
who has fairly procured the raw materials, and worked them up with a laudable
degree of skill and success” (Chap. XVII).
532.20-21:
“In the consideration of any extensive subject, none will pretend to have read all that has been written, or to recollect all
that they have read: nor is there any disgrace in recurring to the writers who
have professionally treated any questions, which, in the course of a long
narrative, we are called upon to mention in a slight and incidental manner”
(Chap. XVII).
532.21-23:
“Under these circumstances, it is the duty of an impartial judge to be counsel
for the prisoner, who is incapable of making any defence for himself; and it is
the first office of a counsel to examine with distrust and suspicion, the interested evidence of the accuser. Reason justifies
the suspicion, and it is confirmed by the constant experience of modern
History, in almost every instance where we have an opportunity of comparing the
mutual complaints and apologies of the religious factions, who have disturbed
each other’s happiness in this world,
for the sake of securing it in the
next” (Chap. XX).
532.23-24:
“The spirit of resentment, and every other lively sensation, have long since
been extinguished; and the pen would long since have dropped from my weary
hand, had I not been supported in the execution of this ungrateful task, by the
consciousness, or at least by the opinion, that I was discharging a debt of
honour to the Public and to myself. I am impatient to dismiss, and to dismiss
FOR EVER, this odious controversy, with the success of which I cannot surely be
elated; and I have only to request,
that, as soon as my Readers are convinced of my innocence, they would forget my
Vindication” (Chap. XX).
532.25 study affinity: apparently from
Charles Darwin (1809-1882), a remark among stray notes of 1837-38 found in an
edition of the Autobiography (see 532.21 and 23.562.32), edited by Nora
Barlow (1958): “range and geological general works—systematize and study
affinities.”
532.26 the angel philosophizes / paths bordered
with nevergreen: from Georg Christoph Lichentberg (1742-1799), Aphorisms;
line 532.27 quotes a complete aphorism, while the preceding phase is probably
from: “If an angel were to tell us about his philosophy, I believe many of his
statements might well sound like ‘2 x 2 = 13’” (trans. Franz H. Mautner &
Henry Hatfield).
532.30 whale has its louse: from Johann
Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832), probably via Charles Darwin, Autobiography
(1887); see 23.562.32. In response to a virulent review of Darwin’s edition of
work by his grandfather, Erasmus Darwin, “Huxley consoled me by quoting some
German lines from Goethe, who had been attacked by some one, to the effect
‘that every Whale has its Louse.’”
532.31 tragic multiplies farce: from Karl Marx
(1818-1883), the famous opening to The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis
Bonaparte (1852); see also 532.23: “Hegel remarks somewhere that all great,
historical facts and personages occur, as it were, twice. He forgot to add: the
first time as tragedy, the second as farce.” From A Handbook of Marxism,
ed. Emile Burns.
532.32 heartened in water crystallizing / pure
crystal: from John Tyndall, Faraday as a Discoverer (1868); Tyndall
(1820-1893) was a major physicist in his own right: “[Faraday] loved to show
that water in crystallizing excluded all foreign ingredients, however
intimately they might be mixed with it. Out of acids, alkalis, or saline
solutions, the crystal came sweet and pure. By some such natural
process in the formation of this man, beauty and nobleness coalesced, to the
exclusion of everything vulgar and low. He did not learn his gentleness in the
world, for he withdrew himself from its culture; and still this land of England
contained no truer gentleman than he. Not half his greatness was incorporate in
his science, for science could not reveal the bravery and delicacy of his heart.”
523.33 cóntent beyond phase: from Karl Marx, The
Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte (see 523.21): “The social revolution
of the nineteenth century cannot draw its poetry from the past, but only from
the future. It cannot make a beginning until it has stripped off all
superstition of the past. Earlier revolutions required world-historical
recollections in order to drug themselves concerning their own content. In
order to arrive at its own content, the revolution of the nineteenth century
must let the dead bury their dead. There the phrase went beyond the content;
here the content goes beyond the phrase.”
523.23 value is / simple: presumably this has
Marx in mind as well; cf. “A”-12.207.25-32.
532.34 Between
grape bay and hungry / bay wind song and sea / foam…: Grape Bay and Hungry
Bay are in the Paget area along the south shore of Bermuda where the Zukofskys
spent a vacation in Jan. 1972, details from which appear throughout the
following pages through 534.20. Apparently they stayed in a beach cottage called
Sea Foam, next to another called Wind Song (Leggott 299). LZ notes indicate
they visited the botanical gardens. While on this trip they received news that
LZ’s sister Fanny Wand (b. 1888) had died on 15 Jan., which accounts for the
tears at 533.6 and grief at 534.13 (Leggott 121).
533.9 all eyes: from Shakespeare, The
Tempest IV.i.59: “No tongue! All eyes! Be silent,” which appears
ubiquitously throughout Bottom, see note at 38.
533.9 pageant
/ bay inlet…: see 532.34.
533.12 sorrows dissolve—human: this is
apparently worked from a phrase in a 30 Dec. 1968 letter LZ wrote to Cid Corman
responding to the recent deaths of both Corman’s father and Thomas Merton; the
relevant sentence is quoted in Leggott 391, also Scroggins Bio 407).
533.16 quincunx:
see 531.9.
533.17 in town: Hamilton, the major city and
port of Bermuda, a short distance from Paget.
533.21 lily-turf
(snakebeard…: a grass-like form of evergreen that grows in clumps; common
names include mondo grass, lily-turf and snakebeard.
533.26 discount / banking…: Bermuda has a long
history of off-shore banking and as a tax haven.
533.28 extinct volcanic island: although
famous as a coral reef atoll, Bermuda is actually formed from a long extinct
volcano.
534.15 sister:
see 532.34.
534.15 . . beyond the laboratory brain . . :
this is the final phrase of an essay by Henry James, “Is There a Life After
Death?” (1910), from which LZ also quotes at 13.265.13-20: “If I am talking, at
all events, of what I ‘like’ to think I may, in short, say all: I like to think
it open to me to establish speculative and imaginative connections, to take up
conceived presumptions and pledges, that have for me all the air of not being
decently able to escape redeeming themselves. And when once such a mental
relation to the question as that begins to hover and settle, who shall say over
what fields of experience, past and current, and what immensities of perception
and yearning, it shall not spread the protection of its wings? No, no,
no—I reach beyond the laboratory-brain.” Originally published in Harper’s
Bazaar and then collected with essays by various prominent writers on the
question of the future life in In After Days: Thoughts on the Future Life
(1910). It is perhaps worth noting that almost all the quotations from Henry
James scattered throughout LZ’s works refer to stories that deal in one way or
another with the persistence of the dead among or in the living.
534.21 Mist,
summit disembodied lake…: at this point the scene shifts from Bermuda to
Bellagio, Italy, situated on the promontory (535.5) at the point where Lake
Como divides into two branches (535.3). The Zukofskys spent 9 Nov.-14 Dec. 1972
on a Rockefeller Foundation fellowship at the Villa Serballoni in Bellagio
(Leggott 9, 403).
534.23 these
our actors . . Ayre . .: from
Shakespeare, The Tempest IV.1:
Prospero: Our
Reuels now are ended: These our actors,
(As I foretold you) were all Spirits, and
Are melted into Ayre, into thin
Ayre,
And like the baselesse fabricke of this vision
The Clowd-capt Towres, the gorgeous Pallaces,
The solemne Temples, the great Globe it selfe,
Yea, all which it inherit, shall dissolue,
And like this insubstantiall Pageant faded
Leaue not a racke behinde: we are such stuffe
As dreames are made on; and our little life
Is rounded with a sleepe:
534.24 ‘if I / met that voice I’d die / of fear’:
from remark by Gustave Flaubert (1821-1880) in correspondence speaking of
Shakespeare: “If I were to see Shakespeare in person, I should die of fear!” (Si je voyais Shakespeare en personne, je crèverais de
peur!).
534.30 Leo’d hear again 100 forearms /
perpendicularly fuming milk noise down: from the Notebooks of
Leonardo da Vinci (see 529.20f); a brief entry describing Bellagio on Lake Como
where the Zukofskys were staying in late 1972 (see note at 534.21): “Opposite
the castle Bellaggio there is the river Latte, which falls from a height
of more than 100 braccia from the source whence it springs, perpendicularly,
into the lake with an inconceivable roar and noise.” It. braccia
= arms; It. latte = milk; fuming is probably suggested by It. fiume
(from Fiume Latte) = river.
534.32 ride horses look straight between / their
ears…: through at least 535.5 from Stendhal (1783-1842), The
Charterhouse of Parma; the connection here is that Stendhal’s protagonist,
Fabrizio del Dongo, grew up on Lake Como (see note at 534.21), and the novel
includes descriptive details that have been worked into this and the following
stanza.
534.32-535.2: “[Fabrizio] remembered most opportunely a favourite saying of his
mother’s coachman: ‘When you’ve been lifting your elbow, look straight
between your horse’s ears, and do what the man next you does’”
(Chap. 3).
535.3-5: “The Contessa set out to revisit, with Fabrizio, all those enchanting
spots in the neighbourhood of Grianta, which travellers have made so famous:
the Villa Melzi on the other shore of the lake, opposite the castle, and
commanding a fine view of it; higher up, the sacred wood of the
Sfrondata, and the bold promontory which divides the two arms
of the lake, that of Como, so voluptuous, which the most famous site in the
world, the Bay of Naples, may equal, but does not surpass” (Chap. 2).
“But there was a spectacle which spoke with a more living voice to Fabrizio’s
soul: from the campanile his gaze shot down to the two branches of the lake,
at a distance of several leagues, and this sublime view soon made him forget
all the others; it awakened in him the most lofty sentiments. All the memories
of his childhood came crowding to besiege his mind; and this day which he spent
imprisoned in a belfry was perhaps one of the happiest days of his life” (Chap.
9; trans. C.K. Scott-Moncrieff).
535.8 black
hellebore…: a plant of the
genus Helleborus, of the natural
order Ranunculaceae, particularly H. niger, the black hellebore or
Christmas rose, a native of southwestern Europe (CD). LZ gives in the following
lines a perfectly factual description of the flower, which is in fact white but
called black because most species are poisonous; is an evergreen, has short
stems, flowers in the middle of winter, and although the flowers resemble wild
roses, botanically they are not.
535.13 a peasant
gardener’s attention…: according to Leggott (300, 403), this is a gardener,
Mario Ferrario, at the Villa Serbelloni (see 534.21), which has famous and
extensive gardens.
535.15 iberis:
a genus of cruciferous plants, consisting of annual, perennial, and shrubby
species, distinguished by having the two outer petals larger then the others;
most species are native to the Mediterranean and believed to have medicinal
properties against rheumatism, gout and other diseases; probably from L. Iberia, Spain (CD).
535.15 evonymous:
a shrub.
535.23 cento:
a patchwork; in music and literature a composition made up of a selection from
the work of various authors or composers, a pasticcio, a medley (CD; Ahearn
188).
535.27 still-vext Bermoothes . . where / once thou
call’dst me up…: from Shakespeare, The
Tempest I.ii (Shakespeare used a contemporary account of Bermuda as partial
inspiration for this play):
Ariel: Safely in harbour
Is the
king’s ship; in the deep nook, where
once
Thou call’dst me up at midnight to fetch dew
From
the still-vex’d Bermoothes, there she’s hid:
The
mariners all under hatches stow’d;
Who,
with a charm join’d to their suffer’d labour,
I have
left asleep […]
535.30 an arm embraces: Leggott suggests, no
doubt correctly, that this arm suggests a C and therefore CZ (66); see in
particular the repeated phrase “with seas [Cs] in arms of landscape” that
appears three times at “A”-12.183.2, 187.8 and 213.26.