“A”-8
The bulk of this movement was composed from 5 Aug.
1935-21 Jan. 1937, excluding the concluding ballade (final 26 lines), which was
composed March-14 July 1937. The entire movement revised Oct. 1957 (see Textual
Notes).
43.2 Light lights in air:
see 7.40.17, 8.48.22, 8.104.10f; also 12.136.29 and 18.393.35.
43.5 Labor as creator, /
Labor as creature: a rewriting in Marxist terms of Spinoza’s famous
distinction, “Nature as creator, Nature as created”; see 6.22.28-23.2. The
specific pair of terms “creator” and “creature” may come from Dante, who LZ was
reading intensively during the 1930s. Cf. Purgatorio XVII.91-96, where
Virgil begins an important passage (continued in the following canto) on the
nature of love: “Nor Creator, nor creature, my son, was ever without love,
either natural or rational; and this thou knowest. The natural is always
without error; but the other may err through an evil object, or through too
little or too much vigour” (trans. P.H. Wicksteed).
43.12 To
provide the two Choirs the work demanded…: that is,
for Bach’s St. Matthew Passion first
performed in Leipzig
on Good Friday, 15 April 1729; see 1.1.2. The various details of this performance
through 44.9 are taken with only slight adaptation directly from Sanford Terry,
Bach: A Biography 196-197.
43.18 Thomaskirche:
St. Thomas Church
in Leipzig
where Bach’s St. Matthew Passion was
first performed.
43.23 Thomasschule,
University studiosi, / And
members of Bach’s Collegium Musicum: the attached St. Thomas School, where Bach lived and
worked, provided boys choirs for the major churches of Leipzig, although the St Matthew Passion required further
resources from the University (studiosi:
It. scholars or students, in this case meaning university students) and the
Collegium Musicum or Music Society, whose direction Bach took over in 1729, an
orchestra of students and professional musicians who performed weekly public
concerts.
44.2 High officials and well-born ladies…: through 44.9 from
a report by Christian Gerber, one of Bach’s students, of what Terry assumes to
be the first performance of Bach’s St. Matthew Passion: “Some high
officials and well-born ladies in one of the galleries began to sing the first
Choral with great devotion from their books. But as the theatrical music
proceeded, they were thrown into the greatest wonderment, saying to each other,
‘What does it all mean?’ while one old lady, a widow, exclaimed, ‘God help us!
’tis surely an Opera-comedy!’” (Terry 197). This incident is alluded to in
Bottom 61.
44.10 ‘Natural
that Bach should enjoy himself…: from EP, Antheil and the Treatise on Harmony (1927); see Ezra Pound and Music 280.
44.12 And
out of respect for what he said about Bach…: through 44.21 refers to EP;
see somewhat different version of this passage in EP/LZ 155.
44.24 With impulse to master / music and
related matters: see Terry’s biography of J.S. Bach: “[The biographer André] Pirro observes a parallel between the youthful Bach and his contemporary
Leibniz. Guided by chance along the path of knowledge, each obeyed the
imperative rein of curiosity, the impulse to master the completest
knowledge of the subjects that engaged their interest” (48).
44.26 Others agonizing, inside…: from WCW, A
Voyage to Pagany, describing Bach; see quotation at 1.4.17.
44.31 to hear sounds sweeter than by day:
see Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice V.i: on hearing music from the
house, Portia remarks: “Nothing is good, I see, without respect: / Methinks it
sounds much sweeter than by day.”
45.2 Director Musices:
although Bach’s official title at Leipzig
was Cantor, this was his self-preferred title (Terry 177). Terry describes the
ongoing struggle between Bach and his employers, the Town Council of Leipzig,
as to the proper definition of his responsibilities and powers.
45.3 A short and much-needed statement…:
through 45.23, the full title and brief extracts from a statement Bach
addressed to his employers, the Council of Leipzig, dated 23 August 1730.
Reproduced in full by Terry 201-204. Cf. description of Bach’s resources for
performing the St. Matthew Passion at
43.12-24 and Bach letter at 21.491.33-492.8.
45.24 Friends too tired to see differences:
see 6.22.2.
45.25 Marx
dissociated: / “Equal right . .
presupposes inequality…: through 46.2 from Lenin, State
and Revolution (1918), quoting and commenting in detail on Marx’s remarks
in the Critique of the Gotha Programme
(1875) on the transition to socialism and finally to the realization of the
higher stage of communism and the complete withering away of the state. LZ
quotes the first part of the following passage in a 11 July 1936 letter to EP
as an example of the ethical basis of Marxism (EP/LZ 198-199):
“‘Equal
right (says Marx) we indeed have here; but it is “Bourgeois right,” which,
like every right pre-supposes inequality. Every “right” is an
application of the same measure to different people who, as a matter of
fact, are not similar and are not equal to one another; and,
therefore, “equal right” is really a violation of equality, and an injustice.
In effect, every man having done as much social labor as every other, receives
an equal share of the social products (with the above-mentioned deductions).
Notwithstanding this, different people are not equal to one another. One is
strong, another is weak; one is married, the other is not. One has more
children, another has less and so on.
‘With equal labor (Marx
concludes) and therefore with an equal share in the public stock of articles of
consumption, one will, in reality, receive more than another, will find himself
richer, and so on. To avoid all this, “right,” instead of being equal, should
be unequal.’
[Lenin comments:] The first
phase of Communism, therefore, still cannot produce justice and equality;
differences, and unjust differences, in wealth will still exist, but the
exploitation of one man by many, will have become impossible, because it
will be impossible to seize as private property the means of production, the
factories, machines, land, and so on. [The precise edition LZ used is uncertain
and the phrase “the exploitation of one man by many” looks like a mistake; LZ
has more sensibly, “by one man of many” and other editions simply “of man by
man”].
[…]
Marx
continues: ‘In the higher phase of Communist society, after the subjection to
the principle of division of labor; when together with this, the
opposition between brain and manual work will have disappeared; when labor will
have ceased to be a mere means of supporting life and will itself have
become one of the first necessities of life; when, with the all-round
development of the individual, the productive forces, too, will have grown to
maturity, and all the forces of social wealth will be pouring an uninterrupted
torrent—only then will it be possible wholly to pass beyond the narrow horizon
of bourgeois laws, and only then will Society be able to inscribe on its
banner: “From each according to his ability; to each according to his
needs.”’
Only
now can we appreciate the full justice of Engels’ observations when he
mercilessly ridiculed all the absurdity of combining the words ‘freedom’ and
‘State.’ While the State exists there can be no freedom. When there is freedom
there will be no State.
The
economic basis for the complete withering away of the State is that high stage
of development of Communism when the distinction between brain and manual work
disappears; consequently, when one of the principal sources of modern society
inequalities will have vanished—a source, moreover, which it is impossible to
remove immediately by the mere conversion of the means of production into
public property, by the mere expropriation of the capitalists.”
46.3 Whether it was ‘impossible
for matter to think?’/ Duns Scotus posed…: in The Holy Family (1845), Marx says:
“Materialism is the natural-born son of Great Britain. Already the British
schoolman, Duns Scotus, asked, ‘whether
it was impossible for the matter to think?’” LZ almost certainly found this
passage in the “General Introduction” Engels wrote for the English edition
(1892) of Socialism: Utopian and
Scientific (1880), where Engels gives a historical summary of materialism
and includes a long quotation by Marx from which LZ extracts both this and the
passage below at 46.15-17. LZ repeats this remark about Duns Scotus’
materialism in a 29 Oct. 1933 letter to EP (EP/LZ 154) and a 7 June 1939
letter to Lorine Niedecker (qtd. Ahearn 96-97); in the latter he indicates his
source is Engels’ “General Introduction” as published on its own as a pamphlet,
On Historical Materialism (1892).
46.5 Unbodily substance is an
absurdity / like unbodily body…: from Marx quoted in
Engels’ “General Introduction” to Socialism:
Utopian and Scientific: “Hobbes, as Bacon’s continuator, argues thus: if
all human knowledge is furnished by the senses, then our concepts and ideas are
but the phantoms, divested of their sensual forms, of the real world.
Philosophy can but give names to these phantoms. One name may be applied to
more than one of them. There may even be names of names. It would imply a
contradiction if, on the one hand, we maintained that all ideas had their
origin in the world of sensation, and, on the other, that a word was more than
a word; that, besides the beings known to us by our senses, beings which are
one and all individuals, there existed also beings of a general, not
individual, nature. An unbodily
substance is the same absurdity as an unbodily body. Body, being,
substance, are but different terms for the same reality. It is impossible to separate thought
from matter that thinks. This
matter is the substratum of all changes going on in the world. The word infinite is meaningless, unless it states that our mind is capable
of performing an endless process of addition.”
46.8 “Described,” in Das Kapital, “large-scale industry…:
through 46.14 from Marx letter to Ludwig Kugelmann, 17 March 1868.
46.15 Infinite is a meaningless word…:
from Marx, see quotation at 46.5.
46.24 The mirth of all this land / Browne, Morel and More / (Who speed the
plow in May!)…: these lines
through 47.3 in particular and to some degree the form of the entire lyric from
46.18 are indebted to the anonymous 15th century poem, “I-blessed Be Cristes
Sonde” which is among what are referred to as Plowman writings, that is, works
inspired and imitative of William Langland’s Piers Plowman (14th
century). The phrase “God speed the plow” originates from a song sung for
Plough Monday, the first Monday after the twelve days of Christmas when farmers
went back to work. Brown and Morel are presumably names of plough-oxen, and
“More” is probably LZ’s substitute for the usual “Gore,” which has puzzled
scholars. The following version is from Early English Lyrics, eds.
Edmund K. Chambers and F. Sidgwick (1926):
The merthe of alle this londe
Maketh the gode husbonde,
With eringe plowe.
Iblessed be Cristes sonde,
that hath us sent in honed
Merthe and joye enowe.
The plowe gothe many a gate,
Bothe erly and eke late,
In winter in the clay,
Aboute barly and whete,
That makethe men to swete.
God spede the plowe all day!
Browne Morel and Gore
Drawen the plowe full sore,
All in the morweninge;
Rewarde hem therefore
With a shefe or more
Alle in the eveninge.
Whan men beginne to sowe,
Full well here corne they knowe
In the mounthe of May.
However Janiver blowe
Wether hie or lowe,
God spede the plowe alle way!
Whan men beginnethe to wede
The thistle fro the sede
In somer whan they may,
God lete hem well to spede;
And longe gode life to lede,
Alle that for plowe men pray.
47.5 Betrayed and sold: from the libretto of St.
Matthew Passion by J.S. Bach (see 1.3).
47.6 No thought exists /
Completely abstracted from action…: through 48.3 primarily from Jules Henri
Poincaré (1854-1912), Science and Hypothesis
(1903), the French mathematician and philosopher of science. Although Poincaré’s works on the philosophy of science were accessible to a
general audience and widely read at the time, LZ may have been drawn to
Poincaré by Henry Adams, who in The Education of Henry Adams, Chap.
XXXI: “The Grammar of Science (1903)” discusses Poincaré’s work in relation to
questions of a science of history and quotes the same passage as LZ at
47.20-25; see also 102.22:
47.6-7: “But no system exists which is abstracted from all
external action; every part of the universe is subject, more or less, to
the action of the other parts. The law of the motion of the center of
gravity is only rigorously true when applied to the whole universe” (Chap.
6).
47.8-9: “If, then, there were no solid bodies in nature there
would be no geometry” (Chap. 4).
47.10-12: “But outside the data of sight and touch there are other sensations
which contribute as much and more than they do to the genesis of the concept of
space. They are those which everybody knows, which accompany all our movements,
and which we usually call muscular sensations. The corresponding framework
constitutes what may be called motor space. Each muscle gives rise to a special
sensation which may be increased or diminished so that the aggregate of our
muscular sensations will depend upon as many variable as we have muscles. From
this point of view motor space would have as many dimensions as we have
muscles” (Chap. 4).
47.13-16: this passage apparently adapted from Poincaré’s remarks on
probability and roulette (cf. characterization of American business practices
as a form of “roulette or rough-et-noir” by Adams, qtd. at 78.21): “All the
players know this objective law [that preceding results do not effect that
there is always a 50-50 chance of landing on red or black in any given spin];
but it leads them into a remarkable error, which has often been exposed, but
into which they are always falling. When the red has won, for example, six
times running, they bet on black, thinking that they are playing an absolutely
safe game, because they say it is a very rare thing for the red to win seven
times running. In reality their probability of winning is till 1/2. Observation
shows, it is true, that the series of seven consecutive reds is very rare, but
series of six reds followed by a black are also very rare” (Chap. 11).
47.17-18: “As we cannot give a general definition of energy, the principle of
the conservation of energy simply signifies that there is a something
which remains constant. Whatever fresh notions of the world may be given us
by future experiments, we are certain beforehand that there is something
which remains constant, and which may be called energy. Does
this mean that the principle has no meaning and vanishes into a tautology? Not
at all. It means that the different things to which we give the name of energy
are connected by a true relationship; it affirms between them a real relation”
(Chap. 10).
47.19-25: “No doubt, if our means of investigation became more and
more penetrating, we should discover the simple beneath the complex, and then
the complex from the simple, and then again the simple beneath the complex, and
so on, without ever being able to predict what the last term will be. We
must stop somewhere, and for science to be possible we must stop where we have
found simplicity. That is the only ground on which we can erect the edifice of
our generalisations. But, this simplicity being only apparent, will the ground
be solid enough? That is what we have now to discover” (Chap. 9).
47.26: “The Present State of Physics. — Two opposite tendencies may be
distinguished in the history of the development of physics. On the one hand,
new relations are continually being discovered between objects which seemed
destined to remain forever unconnected; scattered facts cease to be
strangers to each other and tend to be marshaled into an imposing
synthesis. The march of science is towards unity and simplicity. On the other
hand, new phenomena are continually being revealed; it will be long before they
can be assigned their place—sometimes it may happen that to find them a place a
corner of the edifice must be demolished. In the same way, we are continually
perceiving details ever more varied in the phenomena we know, where our crude
senses used to be unable to detect any lack of unity. What we thought to be
simple becomes complex, and the march of science seems to be towards diversity
and complication” (Chap. 10).
47.27-28: “Nowadays, ideas have changed considerably; but those who do not
believe that natural laws must be simple, are still often obliged to act as if
they did believe it. They cannot entirely dispense with this necessity without
making all generalisation, and therefore all science, impossible. It is clear
that any fact can be generalised in an infinite number of ways, and it is a
question of choice. The choice can only be guided by considerations of
simplicity” (Chap. 9).
48.1-3: “In multiplying the fluids, not only did the ancient physicists create
unnecessary entities, but they destroyed real ties. It is not enough for a
theory not to affirm false relations; it must not conceal true relations”
(Chap. 10).
48.8 Two legs stand –
/ Pace them: see 7.40.28-29, also 7.39.8 and 7.41.16.
48.10 Railways
and highways have tied…: the original version of this poem through 49.5 was
published in New Masses (3 May 1938)
as “March Comrades (words for a workers’ chorus from ‘A’-8)” (click here) and appeared in this form in the
original printing of “A”-8 in New Directions 1938; see Scroggins
(155-159) for discussion of the original publication and context of this song.
The final “A”-8 version (revised in Oct. 1957 in preparation for the
publication of “A” 1-12 in 1959) primarily deletes elements, most
substantially cutting the entire first stanza, suppressing specific mention of
May Day and severely pruning the last stanza. See Textual Notes.
48.22 Light lights in air blossom red: for
“light lights” and variants, see 7.40.17, 8.43.2, 9.104.10, 12.136.29 and
18.393.36; and for “blossom red,” see 7.41.27 and 8.105.4.
49.6 To this end, Communists
assembled in London…: through 52.2 consists of nine stanzas of nine
12-syllable lines each. Ahearn claims that LZ worked a mathematically
determined pattern of shifting n and r sounds into this section,
as he does in the final ballade (see
103.30), although Booth says LZ only went back and marked the sound
patterns retrospectively (53); for further details see Ahearn 233-239.
The
source of 49.6-9 is the Preamble and opening of Part I of Marx and Engels’ The
Communist Manifesto (1848):
“A
spectre is haunting Europe—the spectre of communism. All the powers of old
Europe have entered into a holy alliance to exorcise this spectre: Pope and
Tsar, Metternich and Guizot, French Radicals and German police-spies.
Where
is the party in opposition that has not been decried as communistic by its
opponents in power? Where is the opposition that has not hurled back the
branding reproach of communism, against the more advanced opposition parties,
as well as against its reactionary adversaries?
Two
things result form this fact:
I.
Communism is already acknowledged by all European power to be itself a power.
II.
It is high time that Communists should openly, in the face of the whole world,
publish their views, their aims, their tendencies, and meet this nursery tale
of the spectre of communism with a manifesto of the party itself.
To
this end, Communists of various nationalities have assembled in London
and sketched the following manifesto, to be published in the
English, French, German, Italian, Flemish and Danish languages.
Part I: Bourgeois and Proletarians
The
history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles.
Freeman
and slave, patrician and plebian, lord and serf, guild-master and journeyman,
in a word, oppressor and oppressed, stood in constant opposition to one
another, carried on an uninterrupted, now hidden, now open fight,
a fight that each time ended, either in a revolutionary reconstitution of
society at large, or in the common ruin of the contending classes” (trans.
Samuel Moore).
The
phrase “exploiting and exploited” comes from Engels’ later prefaces for both
German (1883) and English (1888) editions, in which he summarizes the above
central point: “The basic thought running through the Manifesto—that
economic production, and the structure of society of every historical epoch
necessarily arising therefrom, constitute the foundation for the political and
intellectual history of that epoch; that consequently (ever since the
dissolution of the primaeval communal ownership of land) all history has
been a history of class struggles, of struggles between exploited and
exploiting, between dominated and dominating classes at various stages of
social evolution; that this struggle, however, has now reached a stage where
the exploited and oppressed class (the proletariat) can no longer emancipate
itself from the class which exploits and oppresses it (the bourgeoisie),
without at the same time forever freeing the whole of society from
exploitation, oppression, class struggles—this basic thought belongs solely and
exclusively to Marx.”
49.9 When in the ice-age / A pipe made of a lion’s tooth played D
and G: from the New York Times for 22 Jan. 1934: “Czech Finds
Ice-Age Musical Instrument; Pipe Held to be Clue to Origin of the Art”: “What
is believed to be the oldest musical instrument in the world has been
discovered on the slopes of the Pollau Mountains in Czechoslovakia. It is a
musical pipe made of a lion’s tooth. It sounds a signal in the notes of D and G,
which can still be played perfectly after some 30,000 years.”
49.11 glass harmonica: or
armonica, was a musical instrument invented by Benjamin Franklin in 1761.
Inspired by a performance of musical glasses, filled with different amounts of
liquid and played by rubbing a finger around their edges, Franklin created an
instrument from a series of different size glasses attached to a horizontal rod
that allowed them to be rotated by means of a foot pedal, which enabled the
glass edges to be easily rubbed with the fingers, including up to ten glasses
at a time. This instrument became extremely popular in the later 18th century
and the likes of Mozart and Beethoven wrote compositions for it, but its
popularity waned and all but disappeared in the early half of the following
century, in large part because of claims of its harmful affects on both players
and listeners. The New York Times for 7 Jan. 1935 had a report on a
glass harmonica concert that LZ may have read or even attended: “Maganini Revives Rare Mozart Work; Glass Harmonica Is Heard in
Restoration of Forgotten Adagio and Rondo,” which mentions that the instrument “had the
look of a small dining-room table” and “yielded an ethereal small tone,
tinkling and remote.” See 50.26.
49.19 (Why does Monsieur P. talk about God):
from Karl Marx letter to P.V. Annenkov, 28 Dec. 1846; LZ mentions and quotes at
length from the following passage in an 11 July 1936 letter to EP (EP/LZ
183): “Why does M. Proudhon talk about God, about universal reason,
about the impersonal reason of humanity which never errs, which remains the
same throughout all the ages and of which one need only have the right
consciousness in order to know truth? Why does he produce feeble Hegelianism to
give himself the appearance of a bold thinker? He himself provides you with the
clue to this enigma. M. Proudhon sees in history a certain series of social
developments; he finds progress realised in history; finally he finds that men,
as individuals, did not know what they were doing and were mistaken about their
own movements, that is to say their social development seems at first glance to
be distinct, separate and independent of their individual development. He
cannot explain these facts, and in a moment the hypothesis of universal reason
revealing itself is produced. Nothing is easier than to invent mystical causes,
that is to say phrases which lack common sense. […]
What
is society, whatever its form may be? The product of men’s reciprocal activity.
Are men free to choose this or that form of society for themselves? By no
means. Assume a particular state of development in the productive forces of man
and you will get a particular form of commerce and consumption. Assume
particular stages of development in production, commerce and consumption and you
will have a corresponding social order, a corresponding organisation of the
family and of the ranks and classes, in a word a corresponding civil society.
Presuppose a particular civil society and you will get particular political
conditions which are only the official expression of society. M. Proudhon will
never understand this because he thinks he is doing something great by
appealing form the State to society—that is to say from the official summary of
society to official society. […] Thus the economic forms in which men produce,
consume exchange are transitory and historical.”
49.22 Light-wave
and quantum, we have good proof both exist…: it is probable that Herbert
Stanley Allen’s Electrons and Waves: An
Introduction to Atomic Physics (1932) is at least one source behind this
passage through 50.2, since LZ includes this as one of his major sources for
the “First Half of ‘A’-9”: “Thus at the present time there are certain
phenomena which can only be explained if we regard light as a wave-motion,
whilst others can be explained only on the bullet theory of radiation. We are
left face to face with the task of reconciling these opposing and apparently
contradictory results” (46). On a number of occasions, LZ mentions an interest
in the then new breakthroughs in quantum mechanics, particularly the dilemma
expressed here that sub-atomic matter can be explained both as particles and as
waves—seemingly contradictory but equally valid theoretical constructs or
angles of explanatory perspective.
50.1 Designate by Ψ that
“something,” changes / In which a trident…: the symbol is the Gk. letter psi used to designate the wave function
that describes the state of a particle in quantum mechanics, or more exactly
the probability of locating the particle, but also playing here on Neptune’s
trident.
50.8 Lollai, lollai, litil
child, Whi wepistou so?: this line, as well as 50.10 and the last three
words of 50.16 are from an anonymous lullaby in Anglo-Irish dialect, which LZ
dates c.1308-1318; see TP 43-44, 102. The various poetic segments that
are blended together in this stanza and the beginning of the following (to
50.18) all appear in LZ’s unpublished A Workers Anthology, finished in 1935, and
most were subsequently included in TP. Probably at the time LZ was
writing this section of “A”-8 he was working with the former anthology, since
it also included the passages from John Donne at 50.11-12 and Emily Dickinson
at 51.30, which did not make it into TP.
50.9 the estates Mentula
had: a Roman equestrian and favorite of Julius Caesar, also known as
Mamurra, whose lavish pretensions and estates are mocked by Catullus in Carmina
114 and 115. LZ included the latter in the prose translation of F.W. Cornish in
both A Workers Anthology and TP 10. Mentula means prick or cock.
See 18.390.21.
50.11 Now drinkes he up seas, and he eates up
flocks: from John Donne, the satirical sequence The Progresse of the
Soule. Infinitati Sacrum (1601), stanza 34; this and the preceding stanza
were included in A Workers Anthology. See 50.12:
Now drinkes he up seas, and he eates up flocks,
He jostles Ilands, and he shakes firme rockes.
Now in a roomefull house this Soule doth float,
And like a Prince she sends her faculties
To all her limbes, distant as Provinces.
The Sunne hath twenty times both crab and goate
Parched, since fist lanch’d forth this living boate,
’Tis greatest now, and to destruction
Nearest; There’s no pause at perfection,
Greatenesse a period hath, but hath no
station.
50.11 He’s
but / A coof for a’ that: coof = fool. From Robert Burns, “For A’ That and
A’ That” (3rd stanza) (qtd.TP 88); see 50.16:
Ye see yon birkie ca’d a lord
Wha
struts an’ stares an’ a’ that
Tho’
hundreds worship at his word
He's but a coof for a’ that
For a’
that, an’ a’ that
His
ribband, star and a’ that
The
man o’ independent mind
He
looks an’ laughs at a’ that
50.12 that guitlesse / Smals must die: from
John Donne, The Progresse of the Soule. Infinitati Sacrum (see 50.11),
stanza 33:
He hunts not fish, but as an officer,
Stayes in his court, at his owne net, and there
All suitors of all sorts themselves enthrall;
So on his backe lyes this whale wantoning,
And in his gulfe-like throat, sucks every thing
That passeth neare. Fish chaseth fish, and all,
Flyer and follower, in this whirlepoole fall;
O might not states of more equality
Consist? and is it of necessity
That thousand guiltlesse
smals, to make one great, must die?
50.13 I
spec it will be all ’fiscated. / De massa run, ha! ha! De darkey stay, ho! ho!:
from Henry Clay Work (1832-1884), “The Year of Jubilee” (1862; also known as
“Kingdom Coming”), qtd. in TP 102 with the note: “Sung by the negro
troops as they entered Richmond, 1865”; further stanzas appear at TP 43.
Work was an abolitionist and active in the underground railroad, as well as a
very popular songwriter.
50.15 So distribution should undo excess:
from Shakespeare, King Lear IV.i (qtd. TP 21):
Gloucester: Here, take this purse, thou whom the heavens’ plagues
Have humbled to all strokes: that I am wretched
Makes thee the happier. Heavens, deal so still
Let the superfluous and lust-dieted man,
That slaves your ordinance, that will not see
Because he doth not feel, feel your power quickly;
So distribution should undo excess,
And each man have enough.
50.15 (chaseth): see quote by Donne at
50.12.
50.16 Shall
brothers be, be a’ that: from the final stanza of Robert Burns, “A Man’s a
Man for All that” (see 50.11; qtd TP 89):
Then let us pray that come it may
(as
come it will for a’ that)
That
Sense and Worth, o’er a’ the earth
Shall
bear the gree an’ a’ that
For a’
that an’ a’ that
It's
coming yet for a’ that
That
man to man, the world o’er
Shall brithers be for a’ that
50.17 When
the sheriffe see gentel Robin wold shoote, held / Up both his hands: from
the anonymous 15th century ballad, “Robin Hood Rescuing Three Squires” (qtd. TP
20).
50.19 Manifesto: The Manifesto of the
Communist Party (1848) by Marx and Engels; see 49.6. The following 6 lines
are from Chapter Two:
“We Communists have been reproached with the desire of abolishing the
right of personally acquiring property as the fruit of a man's own labor, which
property is alleged to be the groundwork of all personal freedom, activity and
independence.
Hard-won, self-acquired, self-earned
property! Do you mean the property of petty artisan and of the small peasant, a
form of property that preceded the bourgeois form? There is no need to abolish
that; the development of industry has to a great
extent already destroyed it, and is still destroying it daily. […]
The average price of wage labor is
the minimum wage, i.e., that quantum of the means of subsistence which
is absolutely requisite to keep the laborer in bare existence as a laborer.
What, therefore, the wage laborer appropriates by means of his labor merely
suffices to prolong and reproduce a bare existence. We by no means intend to
abolish this personal appropriation of the products of labour, an appropriation that is made for the
maintenance and reproduction of human life, and that leaves no surplus wherewith to commend the labour of others. All
that we want to do away with is the miserable character of this appropriation,
under which the laborer lives merely to increase capital, and is allowed to
live only in so far as the interest of the ruling class requires it. […]
You are horrified at our intending
to do away with private property. But in your existing society, private
property is already done away with for nine-tenths
of the population; its existence for the few is solely due to its
non-existence in the hands of those nine-tenths. You reproach us, therefore,
with intending to do away with a form of property, the necessary condition for
whose existence is the non-existence of any property for the immense majority
of society. […]
You
must, therefore, confess that
by ‘individual’ you mean no other person than the bourgeois, than the middle-class owner of property. This
person must, indeed, be swept out of the way, and made impossible” (trans.
Samuel Moore).
50.26 I saw my Lady weep: from an anonymous
song found in John Dowland, Third and Last Book of Songs or Airs (1603);
see 103.22:
I saw my Lady weep,
And Sorrow proud to be advanced so
In those fair eyes where all perfections keep.
Her face was full of woe”
But such a woe (believe me) as wins more heart
than Mirth can so with her enticing parts.
50.26 glass hamonica…: see 49.11.
50.27 society splitting into two camps, two /
Classes: from Marx and Engels, The Communist Manifesto, Chap. I:
“Our epoch, the epoch of the bourgeoisie, possesses, however, this distinct
feature: it has simplified class antagonisms. Society as a whole is more
and more splitting up into two great hostile camps, into two
great classes directly facing each other—bourgeoisie and proletariat.”
50.28 Elberfeld’s
/ Rich gone Communist (Engels): Frederick Engels (1820-1895) grew up in
Barmen and went to school in nearby Elberfeld (now both part of greater Wuppertal
in the Düsseldorf area). He later returned to the area on behalf of the
communists and wrote Marx on 22 Feb. 1845: “Miracles are happening here in
Elberfeld. Yesterday, we held our third communist meeting in the largest hall
and the best restaurant of the city. The first meeting was attended by 40
people, the second by 130 and the third by at least 200. The whole of Elberfeld
and Barmen, from the moneyed aristocracy to the small shopkeepers, was
represented, all except the proletariat.”
50.29 Bach’s
double chorus / Not paid a herring, eight themes spacing eight voices: see 1.1.2; in addition to
the double chorus, J.S. Bach’s St. Matthew Passion had 8 soloists and 8
lyrical or concertato sections. For the herring reference, see note at 104.16.
50.31 labor sold piecemeal, / Masses of
laborers, crowded, factories, slaves / Of class: from Marx and Engels, The
Communist Manifesto, Chap. I: “In proportion as the bourgeoisie, i.e.,
capital, is developed, in the same proportion is the proletariat, the modern
working class, developed—a class of laborers, who live only so long as they
find work, and who find work only so long as their labor increases
capital. These laborers, who must sell themselves piecemeal, are a
commodity, like every other article of commerce, and are consequently exposed
to all the vicissitudes of competition, to all the fluctuations of the market.
[…]
Modern
Industry has converted the little workshop of the patriarchal master into the
great factory of the industrial capitalist. Masses of laborers, crowded
into the factory, are organized like soldiers. As privates of the
industrial army, they are placed under the command of a perfect hierarchy of
officers and sergeants. Not only are they slaves of the bourgeois class,
and of the bourgeois state; they are daily and hourly enslaved by the machine,
by the overlooker, and, above all, in the individual bourgeois manufacturer
himself. The more openly this despotism proclaims gain to be its end and aim,
the more petty, the more hateful and the more embittering it is.”
51.2 Marx Englished, Woodhull
and Claflin’s Weekly: newspaper published by the sisters Tennessee Claflin
and Victoria Woodhull, which campaigned for women’s suffrage and equal rights,
as well as promoted socialism. The newspaper published various communications
from Marx, including the first English translation of the Communist Manifesto in 1871.
51.3 the pit, Marx waiting: from The Education of Henry
Adams, Chap. V: “Berlin (1858-1859)”:
“Then came the journey up to London through Birmingham and the Black District,
another lesson, which needed much more to be rightly felt. The plunge into
darkness lurid with flames; the sense of unknown horror in this weird gloom
which then existed nowhere else, and never had existed before, except in
volcanic craters; the violent contrast between this dense, smoky, impenetrable
darkness, and the soft green charm that one glided into, as one emerged;—the
revelation of an unknown society of the pit,—made a boy uncomfortable,
though he had no idea that Karl Marx was standing there waiting
for him, and that sooner or later the process of education would have to deal
with Karl Marx much more than with Professor Bowen of Harvard College or his
Satanic free-trade majesty John Stuart Mill. The Black District was a practical
education, but it was infinitely far in the distance. The boy ran away from it,
as he ran away from everything he disliked.”
51.3 time to go, said Adams: from the final
paragraph of The Education of Henry Adams:
“There it ended! Shakespeare himself could use no more than the commonplace to
express what is incapable of expression. ‘The rest is silence!’ The few
familiar words, among the simplest in the language, conveying an idea trite
beyond rivalry, served Shakespeare, and, as yet, no one has said more. A few
weeks afterwards, one warm evening in early July, as Adams was strolling down
to dine under the trees at Armenonville, he learned that [John] Hay was dead.
He expected it; on Hay’s account, he was even satisfied to have his friend die,
as we would all die if we could, in full fame, at home and abroad, universally
regretted, and wielding his power to the last. One had seen scores of emperors
and heroes fade into cheap obscurity even when alive; and now, at least, one
had not that to feat for one’s friend. It was not even the suddenness of the
shock, or the sense of void, that threw Adams into the depths of Hamlet’s
Shakespearean silence in the full flare of Paris frivolity in its favorite
haunt where worldly vanity reached its most futile climax in human history; it
was only the quiet summons to follow,—the assent to dismissal. It was time
to go. The three friends had begun life together; and the last of the three
had no motive,—no attraction—to carry it on after the others had gone.
Education had ended for all three, and only beyond some remoter horizon could
its values be fixed or renewed. Perhaps some day—say 1938, their
centenary,—they might be allowed to return together for a holiday, to see
the mistakes of their own lives made clear in the light of the
mistakes of their successors; and perhaps then, for the first time since man
began his education among the carnivores, they would find a world that sensitive
and timid natures could regard without a shudder.”
51.4 thought eighty years…: Henry Adams (1838-1918); 51.6-7
are clearly reworked from the final sentence of The Education of Henry Adams;
see preceding note.
51.8 seventy / Million tons of coal: from The Education of
Henry Adams, Chap. II: “Boston (1848-1854)”: “Even the violent reaction
after 1848, and the return of all Europe to military practices, never for a
moment shook the true faith. No one, except Karl Marx, foresaw radical change.
What announced it? The world was producing sixty or seventy million tons of
coal, and might be using nearly a million steam-horsepower, just beginning
to make itself felt. All experience since the creation of man, all divine
revelation or human science, conspired to deceive and betray a twelve-year-old
boy who took for granted that his ideas, which were alone respectable, would be
alone respected.”
51.10 ash-heaps: see quotation from The
Education of Henry Adams at 51.12. Also there is the famous phrase, “ash-heap
of history,” attributed to Leon Trotsky, who directed it against the rival
revolutionary party to the Bolsheviks, but the phrase became a more generalized
slogan implying the inevitable fall of capitalism.
51.10 Viollet-le-Duc’s
/ Guess: Eugène Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc (1814-1879), French architect
famous for restoring medieval buildings and the most prominent proponent of the
Gothic revival; he adapted modern engineering techniques, such as the use of
cast iron skeletons, rather than strictly recreating authentic Gothic
structures.
51.12 Silver slipped across the / chasm:
from The Education of Henry Adams, Chap. XXII: “Chicago (1893)”: “Once
admitted that the machine must be efficient, society might dispute in what
social interest it should be run, but in any case it must work concentration.
Such great revolutions commonly leave some bitterness behind, but nothing in
politics ever surprised Henry Adams more than the ease with which he and his silver
friends slipped across the chasm, and alighted on the single gold
standard and the capitalistic system with its methods; the protective tariff;
the corporations and trusts; the trades-unions and socialistic paternalism
which necessarily made their complement; the whole mechanical consolidation of
force, which ruthlessly stamped out the life of the class into which Adams was
born, but created monopolies capable of controlling the new energies that
America adored.
Society
rested, after sweeping into the ash-heap these cinders of a misdirected
education. After this vigorous impulse, nothing remained for a historian but to
ask—how long and how far!”
51.15 All one’s best citizens the banks:
from The Education of Henry Adams, Chap. 22: “Chicago (1893)”; this same
passage is selectively quoted in Arise, Arise 22:
”In 1893, the issue came on the single gold standard and the majority at last
declared itself, once for all, in favor of the capitalistic system with all its
necessary machinery. All one’s friends, all one’s best citizens,
reformers, churches, colleges, educated classes, had joined the banks to
force submission to capitalism; a submission long foreseen by the mere law of
mass. Of all forms of society or government, this was the one he liked least,
but his likes or dislikes were as antiquated as the rebel doctrine of State
rights.”
51.15 the first May Day: as a workers’
holiday, May Day has its roots in the struggle for the eight-hour working day,
beginning with the 1886 U.S. general strike starting on May first and
culminating in the Haymarket massacre in Chicago when police opened fire on
demonstrators, killing six, with more deaths resulting from subsequent events.
To commemorate this event, as well as to continue the demand for the eight-hour
day, in 1890 the Second International declared that May first would be a day of
demonstrations, and from that time it gradually became accepted as a day to
celebrate labor.
51.22 Subdivided shops, fire / Hazards:
probably from the New York Times for 21 May 1935 reporting on silk
sweatshops in Paterson, NJ; see quotation at 99.17.
51.30 Revolution
is the pod systems rattle: from Emily Dickinson, poem # 1082, which LZ
originally included in his proposed A Workers Anthology:
Revolution is the pod
Systems rattle from;
When
the Winds of
Will are stirred, Excellent is bloom.
But except its russet
Base
Every
summer be
The
entomber of itself;
So of
liberty.
Left inactive on the
Stalk,
All
its purple fled,
Revolution
shakes it
For
Test
if it be dead
52.2 To each his needs, the
Manifesto: the former phrase is not from The Communist Manifesto, but from Marx, Critique of the Gotha
Programme, which includes the famous slogan expressing fully realized
communism: “From each according to his abilities; to each according to his
needs.” LZ’s source for this phrase is almost certainly Lenin, State and
Revolution; see end of quotation at 45.25.
52.12 170
meters of the wall collapsed: possibly from M. Ilin’s book for school children,
New Russian Primer: The Story of the Five
Year Plan (1930), published in English translation in 1931.
53.2 The cultured growth is scrapped: see 89.9 and 64.17, in
the latter instance the image is suggested by cheese production. LZ uses this
phrase in a 29 Oct. 1933 letter to EP (EP/LZ 155).
53.3 Au nom / de la
République…: Fr. in the name of the Republic you are decorated with the
cross of the Order of Fallen Leaves.
53.8 “Theory is grey, my
friend / But green—…: from Goethe’s Faust
(spoken by Mephistopheles), but evidently a favorite quote of Lenin’s: “Theory
is grey, my friend, but the tree of life is ever green.”
53.9 “Petrov, the shot was an
accident?”…: through 53.21 from two different
lectures by Lenin on the failed 1905 Revolution: “Lessons of the Moscow
Uprising” (1906) written immediately after he events and “Lecture on the 1905
Revolution” delivered in Zurich on the eve of the 1917 Revolution. This and the
following line form an account of the Potemkin incident mentioned in “Lecture
on the 1905 Revolution”; Petrov was one of the mutinous sailors on the
battleship Potemkin.
53.11: Nor advocate ‘waiting’ until the
troops ‘come over’: from Lenin, “Lessons of the Moscow Uprising” (1906):
“The December events confirmed another of Marx’s profound propositions, which
the opportunists have forgotten, namely, that insurrection is an art and
that the principal rule of this art is the waging of a desperately bold and
irrevocably determined offensive. We have not sufficiently assimilated this
truth. We ourselves have not sufficiently learned, nor have we taught the
masses, this art, this rule to attack at all costs. We must make up for this
omission with all our energy. It is not enough to take sides on the question of
political slogans; it is also necessary to take sides on the question of an
armed uprising. Those who are opposed to it, those who do not prepare for it,
must be ruthlessly dismissed from the ranks of the supporters of the
revolution, sent packing to its enemies, to the traitors or cowards; for the
day is approaching when the force of events and the conditions of the struggle
will compel us to distinguish between enemies and friends according to this
principle. It is not passivity that we should preach, not mere ‘waiting’ until the troops ‘come over.’ No! We must
proclaim from the house tops the need for a bold offensive and armed attack,
the necessity at such times of exterminating the persons in command of the
enemy, and of a most energetic fight for the wavering troops.
The
third great lesson taught by Moscow concerns the tactics and organisation of
the forces for an uprising. […] Kautsky was right when he wrote that it is high
time now, after Moscow, to review Engels’s conclusions, and that Moscow had
inaugurated ‘new barricade tactics.’ These tactics are the tactics of guerrilla
warfare. The organisation required for such tactics is that of mobile and
exceedingly small units, units of ten, three or even two persons.”
53.12: “An eight hour day and arms!”: from Lenin, “Lecture on
the 1905 Revolution.”
53.13: The siege of the Aquarium…:
from Lenin, “Lessons of the Moscow Uprising”: “December 7 and 8: a peaceful
strike, peaceful mass demonstrations. Evening of the 8th: the siege of the Aquarium. The morning of the 9th: the crowd in
Strastnaya Square is attacked by the
dragoons. Evening: the Fiedler building is raided. Temper rises. The unorganised street crowds, quite spontaneously and hesitatingly, set up the first barricades. The 10th:
artillery fire is opened on the barricades and the crowds in the streets.
Barricades are set up more deliberately, and no longer in isolated cases, but
on a really mass scale. The whole
population is in the streets; all the main centres of the city are covered
by a network of barricades. For
several days the volunteer fighting units wage a stubborn guerrilla battle
against the troops, which exhausts the troops and compels Dubasov to beg for
reinforcements. Only on December 15 did the superiority of the government
forces become complete, and on December 17 the Semyonovsky Regiment crushed
Presnya District, the last stronghold of the uprising.”
53.20: Ten-, three-, or even two-men detachments: from Lenin, “Lessons
of the Moscow Uprising”; see quotation at 53.11.
53.21: —that rebellion is an art:
from Lenin, “Lessons of the Moscow Uprising”; see quotation at 53.11. The
phrase “insurrection is an art” is originally from Engels’ Germany:
Revolution and Counter-Revolution (1851-52), edited by and published under
Marx’s name.
53.22 Take
it from me, what we need / Is fitness, not suffusion:
53.24 To
drink the stinking source of some French ‘positivists’: from Lenin
letter to A.M. Gorky, 25 Nov. 1908: “Now
the Studies in the Philosophy of Marxism have appeared. I have read all
the articles except Suvorov’s (I am reading it now), and every article made me
furiously indignant. No, no, this is not Marxism! Our empirio-critics,
empirio-monists, and empirio-symbolists are floundering in a bog. To try to
persuade the reader that ‘belief’ in the reality of the external world is ‘mysticism’
(Bazarov); to confuse in the most disgraceful manner materialism with
Kantianism (Bazarov and Bogdanov); to preach a variety of agnosticism
(empirio-criticism) and idealism (empirio-monism); to teach the workers
‘religious atheism’ and ‘worship’ of the higher human potentialities
(Lunacharsky); to declare Engels’s teaching on dialectics to be mysticism
(Berman); to draw from the stinking well
of some French ‘positivists’ or other, of agnostics or metaphysicians, the
devil take them, with their ‘symbolic theory of cognition’ (Yushkevich)! No,
really, it’s too much.”
54.1 You’re right there on
the spot . . / I do not know the nature of A.M. ch’s writing…: from Lenin
letter to A.V. Lunacharsky, 13 Feb. 1908, concerning A.M. Gorky:
“Your plan for a section of belles-lettres in Proletary and for having A. M. run it is an excellent one, and
pleases me exceedingly. I have in fact been dreaming of making the literature and criticism section a
permanent feature in Proletary and
having A. M. to run it. But I was afraid,
terribly afraid of making the proposal outright, as I do not know the nature of
A. M.’s work (and his work-bent).
If a man is busy with an important work,
and if this work would suffer from him being torn away for minor things, such as a newspaper, and journalism, then it would be
foolish and criminal to disturb
and interrupt him! That is something I very well understand and feel.
Being on the spot, you will know best,
dear An. Vas. If you consider that A. M.’s work will not suffer by his being harnessed to regular Party work
(and the Party work will gain a great deal from this!), then try to arrange
it.”
54.9 The every-day exchange
relation need not be directly / Identical…: from Marx
letter to Ludwig Kugelmann, 11 July 1868 (this letter also quoted at 103.13): “The
vulgar economist has not the faintest idea that the actual everyday exchange
relations need not be directly identical with the magnitudes of value. The
point of bourgeois society consists precisely in this, that a priori
there is no conscious, social regulation of production. The reasonable and the
necessary in nature asserts itself only as a blindly working average. And then
the vulgar economist thinks he has made a great discovery when, as against the
disclosures of the inner connection, he proudly claims that in appearance
things look different. In fact, he is boasting that he holds fast to the
appearance and takes it for the last word. Why then any science at all?”
54.11 The
exchequer of the poor: from Shakespeare, Richard II, II.iii:
Lord Ross: Your presence makes us
rich, most noble lord.
Lord Willoughby: And far surmounts
our labour to attain it.
Henry Bolingbroke: Evermore thanks, the exchequer of the poor;
Which, till my infant fortune comes to years,
Stands for my bounty. But who comes here?
54.12 Of
all the arts the wind can blow: from Robert Burns, “I Love My Jean”: “Of a'
the airts the wind can blaw, / I dearly like the west, / For there the bonnie
lassie lives, / The lassie I lo'e best”—although in Scots, “airts” does not
mean arts but directions (from which the winds blow).
54.13 The
most important, in my opinion, is the cinema: from Lenin, who remarked in
Feb 1922 to his Education Commissar, A.V. Lunacharsky, that “You must remember
always that of all the arts the most important for us is the cinema” (Ladlec
312). LZ included this quotation, explicitly attributed to Lenin, in the
original typescript of “Modern Times.”
54.14 Sorry we have to have strikes…: this
stanza concerns evidence given at the Congressional hearings of the La Follette
Civil Liberties Committee (1936-1941), which investigated the violation or
workers’ rights by employers, particularly their rights to collective
bargaining, and uncovered wide-spread industrial espionage and collusion. For more on the conflict with “bootleg” miners in Pennsylvania,
see 85.21-86.2 and note.
The speaker LZ quotes is A.S. Ailes, Vice President of the Lake
Erie Chemical Co. on being questioned by the committee, as quoted in the New
York Times for 25 Sept. 1936: “Planned Gas War on Bootleg Miners; Coal
Operators Bought 7,500 Bombs to Drop Into Shafts, Witnesses Testify. Law
Officers Assailed La Follette Inquiry Reveals Other Big Industries Secretly
Bought Gas Supply”: “A plan to fill with tear and nauseating gases the mines
operating by ‘bootleg’ miners in the anthracite fields of Southern Pennsylvania
was brought to light today by the La Follette subcommittee investigating
charges of violations of civil liberties. […] Ailes said that the company
constantly experimented on its own people. ‘We don’t want anybody to get
hurt if we can help it,’ he said. ‘The whole theory of the use of gas is
that it makes it unnecessary to use bullets. I am sorry we have to have
strikes. I am sorry we have to have Communists in the country.’ When
[Congressman] Thomas asked him if he was familiar with the effect of the gases
his company sells, Mr. Ailes answered that he had been gassed himself at
least 1000 times.”
54.20 first
motion picture in America, /Made in 1870, it was called “Diaphanous”…: this was actually a series of oil
paintings by John Stevens put onto a single strip of canvas that was unreeled
on a wooden frame with a light behind it—it depicted scenes of the Minnesota
Massacre (see next note), current events, prominent people and scenic
landscapes. LZ is quoting from the New York Times for 4 Oct. 1935:
“First Motion Picture Offered as ‘Antique,’ Made in 1879, It Will Be Shown
Again Next Week—Once Made Spectators ‘Softly Weep’”: “What is said to be the
first motion picture made in American will be shown at the Antiques Exposition
opening next Monday evening at the Hotel Commodore.”
54.23 Minnesota
Massacre: an uprising by Sioux, who had been forced onto reservations, in
August 1862 that killed over 450 settlers before eventually being put down by
local troops. See preceding note.
55.3 Fly Market: located
in Lower Manhattan near the East River on Maiden Lane; existed from the Revolutionary
period into the early 19th century.
55.4 No. 151 Water St.:
in Lower Manhattan, Water Street runs parallel to the East River.
55.14 Choose
a firm cloud…: from Alexander Pope (1688-1744) slightly misquoted from “An
Epistle to a Lady” (Moral Essays ii),
lines 19-20: “Choose a firm cloud before it fall, and in it / Catch, ere she change, the
Cynthia of this minute.”
55.17 The 300 year banishment of Roger Williams / from Massachusetts ended officially…:
Roger Williams (1603?-1683) advocated religious tolerance, which led to his
banishment from the Puritan dominated colony of Massachusetts in 1636, so he
went into the wilderness and established Rhode Island. LZ is quoting from the New
York Times for 1 May 1936: “Exile of Roger Williams Ended by Massachusetts.”
The governor of Massachusetts at the time was James M. Curley, a notoriously
corrupt politician, many time elected mayor of Boston.
55.26 Woosbsx struck me much like a
steam-engine / In trousers…: this quip originally made by the English wit and
essayist, Sydney Smith (1771-1845), about Daniel Webster, but recycled to refer
to other hyper-active politicians—Theodore Roosevelt in particular.
55.28 So dry the sloughs and water holes when
the rain came…: through 56.12 describes the dust bowl, from two articles in
the New York Times:
13 July 1936: “Rains in Montana Largely Wasted; Long-Awaited Moisture Drains
Off From Fields Almost Denuded by Drought”: “So dry were the sloughs and
water holes when the rain came that it did little more than moisten their
bottoms.”
9 July 1936: “Wide Grain Areas Burned to a Crisp, Montana and Dakota Farms
Brown and Black—Corn Only a Foot High. Cattle Are Being Moved Grasshoppers Are
Completing the Ruin—Nebraska Also Feeling the Drought”: “The largest part of
the spring wheat area of the United States has been burned to a crisp. Montana
and Dakota farms and many of those in Minnesota that earned for these States
their composite title are now a picture of desolation that lifetime tillers of
their soils say has never been witnessed before. […] The traveler by
automobile will be seen to stop along the road to scrape [the
grasshoppers’] battered bodies from the windshield and radiator. Sweet
clover planted over broad acres to resuscitate the soil stands like trees
without leaves in the wake of the creeping, flying, plague of pests.
[…] But for a little fresh grass around the few remaining waterfilled sloughs
and conservation dams, the only green that meets the eye for hundreds of
miles is from the Russian thistle [tumble weed]. But to be of use it
must be cut while green. As yet it is too short for cutting. Rains are
needed to being it to the proper height and the farmers are afraid that rain,
if it comes, will make the plant irresistible to the grasshoppers. […] The
range country, some of it never put to a plow, seems to be covered with a
tan moss so close to the ground that hungry cattle cannot reach it […].
Overall farmers and ranchers crowd the offices of the country agents and
welfare boards, […].”
56.13 Process:
notion about which the researches cluster…: through 57.5
from Thorstein Veblen (1857-1929), “The Evolution of the Scientific Point of
View” in The Place of Science in Modern
Civilization and Other Essays (1919); also mentioned in the preface to An
“Objectivists” Anthology (Prep+ 16) and qtd. 12.257.7f. LZ selects
from throughout the first few pages of the essay; and as Ahearn points out, the
mid-sentence break at the end of 56.18 is due to the fact that in the edition
of Veblen LZ was using, this marks a page break in the long first end note:
“The sciences which are in any
peculiar sense modern take as an (unavowed) postulate the fact of consecutive
change. Their inquiry always centers upon some manner of process. This notion of process about which the
researches of modern science cluster,
is a notion of a sequence, or complex, of consecutive change in which the nexus
of the sequence, that by virtue of which the change inquired into is
consecutive, is the relation of cause and effect” (32).
“That is to say, science and the
scientific point of view will vary characteristically in response to those
variations in the prevalent habits of thought which constitute the sequence of
cultural development; the current science and the current scientific point of
view, the knowledge sought and the
manner of seeking it, are a product of the cultural growth. Perhaps it
would all be better characterised as a by-product of the cultured growth” (38).
[from Note 1] “And yet the great
achievements of physics are due to the initiative of men animated with this
anthropomorphic repugnance to the notion of concomitant variation at a
distance. All the generalisations on
undulatory motion and translation belong here. The latter-day researches
in light, electrical transmission, the theory of ions, together with what is known of the obscure and late-found
radiations and emanations, are to be credited to the same metaphysical
preconception, which is never absent in any ‘scientific’ inquiry in the field
of physical science” (35-36).
[Continuing from first paragraph
quoted above] “The consecution, moreover, runs in terms of persistence of
quantity or of force. In so far as the
science is of a modern complexion, in so far as it is not of the nature of
taxonomy simply, the inquiry converges upon a matter of process; and it comes
to rest, provisionally, when it has disposed of its facts in terms of process” (32-33).
[from Note 1] “The concept of
causation is recognized to be a metaphysical postulate, a matter of imputation,
not of observation; whereas it is
claimed that scientific inquiry neither does nor can legitimately, nor, indeed,
currently, make use of a postulate more metaphysical than the concept of an
idle concomitance of variation, such as is adequately expressed in terms of
mathematical function” (33).
[from Note 1] “Consistently adhered to, the principle of ‘function’ or concomitant
variation precludes recourse to experiment, hypotheses or inquiry—indeed, it
precludes ‘recourse’ to anything whatever. Its notation does not comprise anything
so anthropomorphic” (35).
57.6 I am now working like a
horse…: from Marx letter to Engels, 20 May 1865 (continued at 57.26): “I
am now working like a horse, as I must use the time in which it is possible to
work and the carbuncles are still there, though now they only disturb me
locally and not in the brainpan. Between whiles, as one cannot always be
writing, I am doing some Differential Calculus dx/dy. I have no patience to
read anything else. Any other reading always drives me back to my
writing-desk.”
57.17 Then
there is still the fourth book…: from Marx to Engels, 31 July 1865, about Capital:
“Now as to my work I will tell you the unvarnished truth. There are still three
chapters to write in order to complete the theoretical part (the first three
books). Then there is still the fourth
book, the historico-literary one, to
write, which is relatively the
easiest part to me as all the problems have been solved in the first
three books and this last is therefore more of a repetition in historical form. But I cannot bring myself to send anything off
until I have the whole thing in front of me. Whatever shortcomings they may
have, the merits of my writings is that they are an artistic whole, and this
can only be attained by my method of never having things printed until I have
them before me as a whole. This is
impossible with Jacob Grimm’s method,
which is in general more suited to works
not dialectically constructed.”
57.22 . .
damnable iteration . . art able to
corrupt a saint: from Shakespeare, King
Henry IV, Part I I.ii:
Prince Henry: Thou didst well; for
wisdom cries out in the streets, and no man regards it.
Falstaff: O, thou hast damnable iteration and art
indeed able to corrupt a saint. Thou hast done much harm upon me, Hal; God
forgive thee for it!
57.23 —repetition.
I cannot bring myself…: see quotation at 57.17.
57.25 As to
this “dammed” book: from Marx letter to Engels, 13 Feb. 1866; both referred
to Capital in such terms several
times in their correspondence.
57.26 This
evening a special session of the International…: continuation of above 20
May 1865 letter to Engels (see 57.6): “This
evening a special session of the International. A good old fellow, an old
Owenist, Weston (carpenter) has
put forward the two following propositions, which he is continually defending in the Beehive: (1) That a general rise in the rate of wages would be of no use to the
workers; (2) That therefore, etc.,
the trade unions have a harmful effect. If these two propositions, in which he
alone in our society believes, were accepted, we should be turned into a joke
(so wären wir Kladderadatsch) both on
account of the trade unions here and of the infection of strikes
which now prevails on the Continent. On this occasion—as
non-members may be admitted to this meeting—he will be supported by a born
Englishman, who has written a pamphlet to the same effect. I am of course
expected to supply the refutation. I
ought really therefore to have
worked out my reply for this evening, but
thought it more important to write on at my book and so shall have to depend
upon improvisation.” Marx’s reply to Weston was the lecture “Value, Price
and Profit,” originally delivered to the International in Sept. 1865 and used
by LZ as one of his sources in “The First Half of ‘A’-9.”
58.10 The
Jacob Grimm method…: see quotation at 57.17.
58.14 “does
not need any philosophy standing above the other sciences”: through 58.18
from Engels, Anti-Duhring (1877), but
here and through 58.18 quoting from Lenin, “Karl Marx” (1914), an article
originally written for an encyclopedia; LZ knew it as “The Teachings of Karl
Marx”:
“This revolutionary side of Hegel’s philosophy was adopted and developed by
Marx. Dialectical materialism ‘does not need any philosophy towering above
the other sciences’ [Anti-Düring]. Of former philosophies
there remain ‘the science of thinking and its laws—formal logic and dialectics’
[Ibid.]. Dialectics, as the term is used by Marx in conformity with
Hegel, includes what is now called the theory of cognition, or epistemology, or
gnoseology, a science that must contemplate its subject matter in the same
way—historically, studying and generalising the origin and development of
cognition, the transition from non-consciousness to consciousness. In
our times, the idea of development, of evolution, has almost fully penetrated
social consciousness, but it has done so in other ways, not through Hegel’s
philosophy. Still, the same idea, as formulated by Marx and Engels on the basis
of Hegel’s philosophy, is much more comprehensive, much more abundant in
content than the current theory of evolution. A development that repeats, as it
were, the stages already passed, but repeats them in a different way, on a
higher plane (‘negation of negation’); a development, so to speak, in spirals,
not in a straight line; a development in leaps and bounds, catastrophes,
revolutions; ‘intervals of gradualness’; transformation of quantity
into quality; inner impulses for development, imparted by the
contradiction, the conflict of different forces and tendencies reacting on a
given body or inside a given phenomenon or within a given society;
interdependence, and the closest, indissoluble connection between all
sides of every phenomenon (history disclosing ever new sides), a connection
that provide the one world-process of motion proceeding according to law—such
are some of the features of dialectics as a doctrine of evolution more full of
meaning than the current one.
Realising
the inconsistency, the incompleteness, the one-sidedness of the old
materialism, Marx became convinced that it was necessary ‘to harmonise the
science of society with the materialist basis, and to reconstruct it in
accordance with the basis’ [Ludwig Feuerbach]. If, speaking generally,
materialism explains consciousness as the outcome of existence, and not
conversely, then, applied to the social life of mankind, materialism must
explain social consciousness as the outcome of social existence.
‘Technology,’ writes Marx in the first volume of Capital,
‘reveals man’s dealings with nature, discloses the direct productive activities
of his life, thus throwing light upon social relations and the resultant
mental conceptions.’”
58.20 A full number of things in a very few
words: from LZ’s review of “Ezra Pound’s XXX Cantos,” published in Front
4 (June 1931): “Yet a comparison of [The Cantos and Ulysses] is
not implied. For beyond an aptitude for saying a full number of things
at a time in a very few words—an attribute which might be called modern
if it were not for the fact that Dante in his Commedia said at least
three things at a time as he explained in a well known letter—comparison is
inconsequential” (364).
58.21 To be
sure . . so thoroughly aware of merits…: from Henry Adams, 13 Nov. 1871
letter to Charles Milnes Gaskell: “To be sure, when a man is so thoroughly
aware of his own merits as I trust we are and always shall be,
public applause or criticism must be equally indifferent to us, but still there
is a certain prickly sensation about it still, which is not without elements of
amusement” (Letters of Henry Adams (1858-1891), ed. Worthington Chauncey
Ford, 1930: 218).
58.23 “To
sponge in a brook / before sunrise…: from Henry Adams, 2 Oct. 1871 letter
to Charles Milnes Gaskell, writing of his experiences in the Uintah Mountains
in Utah (Letters of Henry Adams (1858-1891), ed. Worthington Chauncey
Ford, 1930: 215).
59.5 If I Should Tell My Love My Pen Would Burn: the New
York Times for 20 Nov. 1935: “Underground Retreat Built 400 Years Ago Found
by Workers Digging Moscow Subway”: “An underground retreat built by Russia’s
Czars 400 years ago, containing a supply of cannonballs, was discovered today
by workers digging an extension of the Moscow subway. […] Another find of the
excavators was an ancient Persian stone seal bearing the inscription, ‘If I
Should Relate My Love, My Pen Would Burn.’”
59.12 Der Lenin hat anders getan: Ger. Lenin did (it) differently.
59.26 NEP:
New Economic Policy of the Soviet Union from 1921-1928, prior to Stalin’s
launching of the Five Year Plans.
59.30 Second
/ Five Year Plan: from 1933-1937.
60.7 He (Lenin) came to this earth, to drive / out Kuchak, Tajiks!…: the New York Times for 22 Jan. 1935: “Moscow in Black
for Lenin Rites; Tens of Thousands File Into Tomb on 11th Anniversary of the
Founder’s Death”: “Thus, according to Soviet ethnologists, there is a story
among the Tajiks, true Aryans who live on the borders of Afghanistan, of
Lenin’s coming to earth as the avenger of the people’s wrongs and driving
out the evil, Kuchak (Adam) who held them in thrall. In other myths
of Eastern peoples of the Soviet Union Lenin is depicted as a knight slaying
foul monsters, like St. George and the dragon; as a hero with golden
arms, born of the moon and stars, and even as a participant in the
creation of the world.”
60.20 And the veins of the earth: see
48.15.
60.25 If
you know all the qualities of a thing…: from Engels, “General Introduction”
to Socialism: Utopian and Scientific
(see 46.3):
“But then come the Neo-Kantian agnostics and say: We may correctly perceive the
qualities of a thing, but we cannot by any sensible or mental process grasp the
thing-in-itself. This ‘thing-in-itself’ is beyond our ken. To this Hegel, long
since, has replied: If you know all the
qualities of a thing, you know the thing itself; nothing remains but the fact
that the said thing exists without us;
and, when your senses have taught you that fact, you have grasped the last
remnant of the thing-in-itself, Kant’s celebrated unknowable Ding
an sich.”
61.4 “What I did” said Marx…:
from 5 March 1852 letter to Joseph Weydemeyer; Lenin quotes this passage in State
and Revolution, where LZ may have found it: “And now as to myself, no
credit is due to me for discovering the existence of classes in modern society
nor yet the struggle between them. Long before me bourgeois historians had
described the historical development of this class struggle and bourgeois
economists the economic anatomy of the classes. What I did that was new was
to prove: (1) that the existence
of classes is only bound up with particular,
historic phases in
the development of production; (2) that the class struggle necessarily leads to the dictatorship of
the proletariat; (3) that this
dictatorship itself only constitutes the transition to the abolition
of all classes and to a classless society.”
61.12 But the labor process…:
through 62.12 mostly from Marx, Capital,
Chap. 7 on “The Labour Process and the Process of Producing Surplus Value.”
This passage through 63.5 was read by LZ on WOR radio on 6 June 1937 and published
in the New Masses (27 July 1937) as “The Labor Process”:
“In the first instance,
therefore, we must consider the labour
process apart from the particular form it may assume under particular social conditions. Primarily, labour is a process
going on between man and nature, a process in which man, through his own
activity, initiates, regulates, and controls the material reactions between
himself and nature. He confronts nature as one of her own forces, setting in
motion arms and legs, head and hands, in order to appropriate nature’s
production in a form suitable to his own wants. By thus acting on the external
world and changing it, he at the same time changes his own nature. He develops
the potentialities that slumber within him, and subjects these inner forces to
his own control. We are not here concerned with those primitive and instinctive
forms of labour which we share with other animals. A huge interval of time
separates the days when human labour was still purely instinctive, from the
days when the worker appears in the commodity market as seller of his own
labour power. We have to consider labour in a form peculiar to the human
species. A spider carries on operations resembling those of the weaver; and
many a human architect is put to shame by the skill with which a bee constructs
her cell. But what from the very
first distinguishes the most incompetent
architect from the best of bees, is
that the architect has built a cell in his head before he constructs it in wax.
The labour process ends in the creation
of something which, when the process began, already existed in the worker’s
imagination, already existed in an ideal form. What happens is, not merely
that the worker brings about a change of form in natural objects; at the same
time, in the nature that exists apart from himself, he realizes his own purpose, the purpose which give the law to his
activities, the purpose to which he has
to subordinate his own will. Nor is
this subordination a momentary act. Apart from the exertion of his bodily
organs, his purposive will, manifesting itself as attention, must be operative
throughout the whole duration of the labour. Nay more. The less attractive he finds the work in itself, the less congenial
the method of work, the less he enjoys
it as something which gives scope to his bodily and mental powers—the more
closely must he devote his attention to his task” (169-170).
[Footnote] “No doubt it seems
somewhat paradoxical to describe a fish which as yet is uncaught as a means of
production in the fishing industry. Still, no
one has yet discovered how to catch the fish in waters where there are none”
(173).
“A machine which does not
serve the purposes of labour is useless. Besides, it falls a prey to the
destructive working of natural forces. Iron rusts. Wood rots. Cotton yarn which
is not used either for weaving or
for making stockinette, is cotton wasted.
Living labour must seize on these
things, must rouse them from their death-like sleep, must change them from
potential use-values into real and kinetic use-values. Bathed in the fire of labour, appropriated as embodied labour, and,
as it were, animated for their
functions in the labour process, they are, indeed, consumed, but they are consumed
for a purpose, as formative elements of new use-values, new products, which
are ready to enter into the process of individual consumption as means of
subsistence, or to enter into a new labour process as means of production”
(176).
“The
labour process, resolved into its simple elementary factors, is, as we have seen,
purposive activity carried on for the production of use-values, for the fitting
of natural substances to human wants; it is the general condition requisite for
effecting an exchange of matter between man and nature; it is the condition
perennially imposed by nature upon human life, and is therefore independent of
the forms of social life—or, rather, is common to all social forms. It was
superfluous, therefore, to represent the worker as existing in relation to
other workers. It was enough to describe man and his work on one side, nature
and her materials on the other. When we eat bread, its taste does not tell us
who grew the wheat. So, likewise, when we study the labour process, it does not
itself tell us under what conditions the process is carried on: whether under
the lash of the overseer of slaves, or under the sharp eyes of the capitalist; whether a Cincinnatus is conducting the
labour process by tilling his little farm, or whether a savage is
slaughtering a wild beast with stones” (177; trans. Eden and Cedar Paul).
62.11 Cincinnatus:
5th century B.C. Roman patriot who was twice called from his farm to defend
Rome.
62.16 In bad form the surfaces and planes / all
come to an end: a remark by the sculptor Constantin Brancusi (1876-1957):
In bad form … the surfaces and planes all come to an end. They finish
themselves within the mass. I think the true form ought to suggest infinity.”
63.5 SOCONY: Standard Oil Company of New York; early petroleum company
that evolved into Mobil Oil Company (see 63.12).
63.6 Treeless . . sight,
sight . . labor’s imaginable house…:
63.12 I-was-early-taught-to-work-as-well-as-play…:
jingle composed by John D. Rockefeller, Sr. (1839-1937), supposedly on his 86th
birthday. Rockefeller was one of the founders of Standard Oil in 1862, which
through dubious practices virtually monopolized oil production in the US by
1890 and made Rockefeller the richest man in the world. Eventually Standard Oil
was forced to breakup by the Supreme Court in 1911, resulting in various
smaller companies, such as SOCONY (see 63.5).
63.17 The
history of a chair . . old, blue eyes…:
63.19 Proof that . . a . . ancestor of Mickey
Mouse…: the New York Times for 3 April 1935: “Egypt of 2,000 B.C.
Had Mickey Mouse; Antics of Dancing Animal on Backs of Nile Described by Prof.
Capart”: “Proof that an ancestor of Mickey Mouse danced through the land
of Egypt 3,000 years ago was offered last night by Professor Jean Capart,
director of the Royal Museum of Art and History, Brussels, Belgium, at a
lecture in the Brooklyn Museum on Eastern Parkway. […] ‘Very little direct
information exists, but we can catch enough reflections from formal documents
to paint our study of the common people. […] Cats and mice sketched in papyrus,
manuscripts reveal the existence in Egypt of comic cartoons and fables,’ he
said. ‘What would you say if I told of finding a drawing on a fragment of
limestone showing a child walking through a land inhabited by educated
animals?’ […] Illustrations from the 11,000 slides at his disposal in Brussels
were used by Professor Capart to show Egyptian children riding
‘piggyback,’ sitting in the dining room watching their parents eating,
singing together, studying and loafing in the sun under shade trees.”
63.23 J.D.: John D. Rockefeller; see note
at 63.12.
63.25 even-before-you-begin- /
To-prepare-to-start-to- / Consider-it: the New York Times for 27
Sept. 1935: “Johnson Attacks WPA as Wasteful; But He Warns Ad Club Relief Must
Go On to Avert Rebellion Until Employment Revives”: [General Hugh S. Johnson, WPA
(Works Progress Administration) administrator remarked:] “‘and, if you are
wise, you will not wait for some such sudden catastrophe as an exhaustion of
funds or a failure of appropriation before you begin to prepare to start to
commence to consider it.’”
63.29 what we eat actually is radiation / Of
various wave-lengths…: through 64.5 quoted from the New York Times
for 20 April 1934: “Lightning Held Creator of Life; Dr. Crile Links It With
Earth Electricity and Soil Bacteria as Source of Protoplasm. Detonating of
Dynamite Cleveland Clinic Head Tells Philosophers of Rays Setting Off Nitrogen
‘Explosions.’”
64.8 When industry brought with it / The factories in the valleys…:
see note at 65.8.
64.27 Bosch:
Hieronymus Bosch (c.1450-1516), Flemish painter, one of several copies of his
“Adoration of the Magi” is in the Metropolitan Museum in NYC; see 67.8.
65.8 The blood-purifying
properties of this cheese…: this passage and probably that on the preceding
page (64.6-20), describes the production of Sapsago, a hard, light-green
colored cheese originally made by monks in the Canton of Glarus, Switzerland
that is pressed into small cone shaped moulds.
65.23 Lady
Greensleeves: traditional English song, to which
there are many different lyrics. Those by Henry VIII are in part as follows:
Alas my love you do me wrong
To
cast me off discourteously;
And I
have loved you oh so long
Delighting
in your company.
Greensleeves was my delight,
Greensleeves
was my heart of gold
Greensleeves
was my heart of joy
And
who but my Lady Greensleeves.
65.24 Who lived so long / And loved so long, so
long ago: Cf. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807-1882), “Vittoria Colonna,”
which depicts the 16th century poet’s faithfulness to her dead husband:
Upon its terrace-walk I see
A phantom gliding to and fro;
It is Colonna,—it is she
Who lived and loved so long ago.
65.29 Re-furbelowing
La Fontaine’s Fables: famous
collection of versified moral fables by the French poet Jean de la Fontaine
(1621-1695). Furbelow means to decorate with a ruffle or flounce (AHD).
65.30 Blue
Ontario’s Shore…: “As I Sat Alone by the Blue Ontario’s Shore” by Walt
Whitman is a major statement on the idea of America and the poet’s role; in
fact the following passage was adapted from Whitman’s 1855 Preface to the first
edition of Leaves of Grass. LZ quotes from section 13, which is also
qtd. at 81.18, Prep+ 142, Bottom 252:
He masters whose spirit masters—he tastes sweetest who results sweetest in the
long run;
The
blood of the brawn beloved of time is unconstraint;
In the
need of poems, philosophy, politics, manners, engineering, an
appropriate native grand-opera, shipcraft, any craft, he or she is greatest who
contributes the greatest original practical example.
66.5 Hosea approached a
Jerusalem of whores: see Hosea 1:2: “And the Lord said to Hosea, Go, take
unto thee a wife of whoredoms and children of whoredoms: for the land hath
committed great whoredom, departing from the Lord.”
66.6 Yes, if people could only read: from Engels
letter to Conrad Schmidt, 1 July 1891: “’Yes, if people could only read!’ as
Marx used to exclaim at criticisms of this kind.”
66.15 Breughel’s
Harvesters:
famous painting by the Flemish painter Pieter Breughel the Elder (c.1525-1569)
in the Metropolitan Museum, NYC; see 13.287.2, 17.377.19.
66.22 Cranach:
Lucas Cranach the Elder (1472-1553), German Renaissance painter. A version of
“The Judgment of Paris” is the primary work by Cranach in the Metropolitan
Museum, NYC.
66.22 Quentin
Matsys: or Massys (1465-1530), Flemish painter; there is an “Adoration of
the Magi” in the Metropolitan Museum, NYC.
66.23 Hieronymus
Bosch—a round of horses, / “Garden of Terrestrial Lust”: triptych by the
Flemish painter Hieronymus Bosch (c.1450-1516) in the Prado, Madrid, Spain. In
the middle of the central panel is a pool, around which circles a parade of
horses (or strictly speaking an array of horses, donkeys, unicorns, camels,
etc.) with nude figures.
66.26 Pitting / Greater passion against
relentless fury…: through 67.6 primarily from Joseph
Stalin, “Address to the Graduates from the Red Army Academy,” 4 May 1935. LZ’s
source is probably the New York Times for 7 May 1935: “Stalin Says Fears
Made Soviet Rise: Explains to Red Army Cadets That Industrialization Was Vital
as Defense”:
”Joseph Stalin, Soviet dictator, has at last explained why the Bolshevist
regime has driven the Russian people into industrialization and collectivized
agriculture regardless of privation and hardship and despite protests within
the country against the punishing pace. […] ‘There were comrades who were
frightened and called to the party to retreat. […] Obviously,’ he continued,
‘they counted on frightening us to retreat from the path laid down by Lenin.
Apparently they forgot we Bolsheviks are a people of a special makeup. They
forgot that the greater the fury of our enemies and the panic of
opponents within the party the greater is the Bolshevik’s passion to
march onward to new struggles. We pressed on all the more firmly, eliminating
all obstacles in our way. True, in so doing we had to treat some of our
comrades roughly and I must admit I, too, had a part in this. […] It
is time to understand that the most valuable of all capital in the world
is the people.’ […] The dictator created a new slogan, ‘Personnel is
everything’ to replace the now outworn ‘Technique is everything.’
[…] ‘The art of valuing machinery and reporting about our technique has been
learned,’ he went on, ‘There was no other way to wipe out our technical
poverty.’”
67.2 So that the brush will not be a mere / means of feeding
brains: apparently the reference to painters is LZ’s interpolation into
Stalin’s remarks (see above), but the final phrase echoes Marx at both 46.1 and 70.18.
67.8 “Adoration of the Kings”:
the painting LZ describes very precisely through 67.23 is by Hieronymus Bosch,
which is in the Metropolitan Museum, NYC (see image); also mentioned at 64.27.
67.25 Bluesleeves / Is my heart of gold:
this latter phrase from the song “Lady Greensleeves”; see 65.23. The
Madonna typically is depicted as wearing a blue robe as the symbol of hope.
67.27 while
40 streets down hung Vincent’s / Miners…: the Metropolitan Museum is at
82nd Street and Fifth Avenue, so 40 streets down would be at the New York
Public Library at 42nd Street, but LZ is probably being a bit loose and has in
mind the Museum of Modern Art at 53rd Street, where a major Van Gogh exhibition
opened in Nov. 1935. Early in his career, in the years 1878-79, Vincent Van
Gogh (1853-1890) spent time as a missionary among the coal miners of the
Borinage district of Belgium and produced bleak etchings of their poverty
stricken lives, and later used some of these subjects in paintings. “Miners” is
an 1880 drawing that depicts nine down-trodden looking figures apparently on
their way to or from work.
67.30 Eight
kings followed by Banquo’s ghost: see Macbeth
IV.i where Macbeth sees a series of apparitions culmination in this vision;
Banquo is a Scottish nobleman Macbeth has had murdered.
67.31 Borinage:
see 67.27
67.32 miners in Pecs, 1000 feet down in the
pits…: a number of desperate strikes took place in 1934-1935 in the Pecs
region of SW Hungary, a major coal producing area. The New York Times
for 15 Oct. 1934: “1,156 Stay in Mine in Suicidal Strike; 44 Hungarian Workmen
Are Brought to Surface in Critical Condition. Entombed Men Furious Angrily
Reject Government’s Ultimatum and Seize Five Emissaries as Hostages”:
“Forty-four out of 1,200 striking coal miners, who for three days and three
nights have been entombed by their own choice 1,000 feet underground,
threatening mass suicide, were brought to the surface late today in a critical
condition. The rest remained below, some of them dying, still threatening to cut
off the air pumps and suffocate in the coal mind pits. […] ‘Rather
than suffer the slow pangs of death by starvation we will commit suicide by
smothering ourselves.’ Miners’ wages amount to about $2 weekly. They demand
$3.50, about 58 cents a day.”
68.15 Nineteen
kilometers in the stratosphere…: through 69.24 primarily from the New
York Times for 2 Oct. 1933: “Russians Thrilled by 2 New Records; Hail Feat
of 22 Soviet-Built Motor Cars in Completing Test Run of 5,721 Miles. Proud of
Balloon Flight Half of Moscow Turns Out to Greet Auto Caravan and Watch the
Stratostat”: “Under the proud headline, ‘Two World Records,’ the newspaper
Pravda, in its leading editorial today, waxes lyrical over ‘the glorious day in
Soviet history’ which simultaneously witnessed the record breaking stratosphere
flight and the return of twenty-two trucks and automobiles from a great
endurance test over a route that included the Central Asian desert. Like the
balloon, Stratostat, the automobiles are of Soviet construction […]. It
was, indeed, a day of joy and enthusiasm. It was the weekly holiday, there was
perfect weather, and half of Moscow, it seems, turned out to greet the
returning automobiles, which, technically, finished their tour ten miles
outside of the city, near Podolsk, whence they started eighty-six days
ago on their journey of 5721 miles. From Podolsk the motor cars
continued to Moscow and passed through a dense mass of cheering people,
while far away, like a tiny silver globule, the Stratostat shone
high in the southern sky. The people’s faces literally beamed with childish
delight as they pointed to the distant balloon or waved their caps to
welcome the heavy, dusty trucks and the automobiles which blazed with
red banners and flowers. ‘It is ours,’ they said, ‘our balloon,
our automobiles, our records, our proof that we no longer are behind
Western industry and technique.’ The writer heard a man say to his little
son perched on his shoulder as he indicated the great balloon that
looked so far away and so small. ‘The last radio message said the balloon was nineteen
kilometers [11.799 miles] high, further than Podolsk is from Moscow and
three kilometers [1.86 miles] above the record they made in Europe.’
And the child said: ‘Three kilometers above Europe—we have caught up with
and passed them this time.’ That child’s words will be echoed by
millions, which is precisely what the Kremlin wants […].”
69.13 In the stratosphere the color of the sky…:
through 69.24 continues quoting form the New York Times article on the Stratostat
(see 68.15), giving the scientific results of the flight form which LZ quotes.
70.1 “foe of mankind,” England: apparently refers to Voltaire,
Candide, the beginning of Chap. 23 when Candide and Martin stop briefly
at Portsmouth, England and see an admiral being executed: “‘What the devil is
all this for?’ said Candide, ‘and what demon, or foe of mankind, lords it thus
tyrannically over the world?’” This phrase appears, also alluding to England,
in the Cyclops chapter of James Joyce’s Ulysses by: “the citizen”
remarks: “Where are the Greek merchants that came through the pillars of
Hercules, the Gibraltar now grabbed by the foe of mankind, with gold and Tyrian
purple to sell in Wexford at the fair of Carmen?”
70.5 the wealth of nations’…: echoing the title of the
classic work of political economy, An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of
the Wealth of Nations (1776) by Adam Smith (1723-1790), which defends free
market capitalism.
70.7 If the historian cares for his truths, / He is certain to
falsify his facts: from The Education of Henry Adams, Chap. XXXI:
“The Grammar of Science (1903)”:
“The historian must not try to know what is truth, if he values his
honesty; for, if he cares for his truths, he is certain to falsify his facts.
The laws of history only repeat the lines of force or thought. Yet though his
will be iron, he cannot help now and then resuming his humanity or simianity in
face of a fear. The motion of thought had the same value as the motion of a
cannon-ball seen approaching the observer on a direct line through the air. One
could watch its curve for five thousand years. Its first violent acceleration
in historical times had ended in the catastrophe of 310. The next swerve of
direction occurred towards 1500. Galileo and Bacon gave a still newer curve to
it, which altered its values; but all these changes had never altered the
continuity. Only in 1900, the continuity snapped.”
70.9 Rapprochement with an aggressor is / Like rapprochement of
the lobster…: remark by Maxim Litvinoff
(1876-1951), Commissar for Foreign Affairs of the USSR from 1930-1939, when he
was replaced during the negotiations leading to the Hitler-Stalin Pact of 1939.
From the New York Times for 11 Nov. 1936: “Litvinoff Honored with Lenin
Order; Soviet, Striking at Rumors of Ill Will on Part of Kremlin, Confers
Highest Decoration. Stalin at the Ceremony Foreign Committee, Outlining His
Policies, Repeats Offer of General Disarmament”: “The way of so-called
rapprochement with an aggressor is like the rapprochement of a lobster with a
shark, the lobster hoping that the shark will not eat all of it, but only one
claw.” See 89.2 for further remarks by Litvinoff from the same article.
70.16 vis inertia: L. force of inertia.
Also the title of Chap. XXX of The Education of Henry Adams.
70.17 till when labor will have ceased…:
from Marx, see 46.1 and quotation at 45.25.
70.19 People:
the most valuable of all capital: from Joseph Stalin, “Address to the
Graduates from the Red Army Academy,” see quotation at 66.26
70.20 1648:
New York in Dutch times / Wages of Indians…: this and the following dated
entry (a third was included in the original printed version of “A”-8; see
Textual Notes) are evidently taken from “Historical Minutes of the Times of the
Dutch,” a somewhat haphazard collection of dated facts and events from old
documents included in Manual of the Corporation of the City of New York
for 1860 by D.T. Valentine, a large compilation of historical documents and
records. Apparently LZ was doing research into the Dutch period of New York
history at this time and numerous other quotations from early historical
records appear in Arise, Arise (1936); probably this research was
carried out in connection with his WPA work.
70.23 1655:
All Jews are ordered to depart…: the governor of New Netherlands, Peter
Stuyvesant, attempted to prevent Jews from settling in the colony in 1655,
although he was overruled by the directors of the Dutch West Indies Company.
70.26 Rules of this Tavern…: this notice
through 71.6 can be found in various publication on the early history of NYC.
71.10 Hollow
Way of General Washington’s time: Hollow Way is what is now West 125th
Street, where on 16 Sept. 1776 the Battle of Harlem Heights took place.
71.13 Workingmen
in Boston and New York…: in 1774 organized workers in Boston refused
British efforts to help with building fortifications, supported by workers in
New York. They also forcefully prevented workers from being imported to do the
work. The Committees of Mechanics were early labor organizations; mechanics in
this case meaning manual laborers.
71.17 “Don’t
Tread on Me”: famous defiant motto on one of several flags used during the
American war of independence.
71.18 Tom
Jefferson defender of the Shaysites: Shays’s Rebellion was an armed protest
in 1786-87 against the state government by debt-ridden farmers in western
Massachusetts over the loss of their farms. In a 30 Jan. 1787 letter to James
Madison, Thomas Jefferson commented sympathetically on this insurrection,
adding: “I hold it that a little rebellion now and then is a good thing, and as
necessary in the political world as storms in the physical.”
71.19 Washington
to the Jewish congregation…: from George Washington letter to the Jewish
Congregation of Newport, Rhode Island 19 Aug. 1790. It is likely LZ found this
in the New York Times for 26 May 1933: “Fish Awaits Test of Jewish
Opinion; Will Press for Protest to the Reich by Roosevelt if It Receives United
Support. Resolution in Committee Representative, as Friend of the German
People, Appeals to Its Sense of Fair Play,” in which the sentence LZ quotes is
given in the resolution: “Our traditional American policy towards our citizens
of Jewish origin is best expressed in the words of George Washington to the
Jewish congregation at Newport, in 1790: ‘May
the children of the stock of Abraham
who dwell in this land continue to merit and enjoy the good-will of the other
Inhabitants; while every one shall
sit in safety under his own vine and
fig tree, and there shall be none to
make him afraid.’”
71.26 Constructive centralization . . not indeed precisely / At the point at
which Washington left it: this and much of the following pages through
80.27are quoted from Brooks Adams, “The Heritage of Henry Adams,” the long
introductory essay (pages 13-122) to Henry Adams, The Degradation of the Democratic Dogma (1919), which collects his
major late essays that attempt the application of scientific laws to historical
interpretation. A major thesis of Brooks in “The Heritage of Henry Adams” is
the significance of John Quincy Adams as a precursor to Henry Adams’
“scientific” propensities. The essay begins by describing George Washington’s
vision that a “consolidated community which should have the energy to cohere
must be the product of a social system resting on converging highways […]” (Degradation of the Democratic Dogma 14),
which however was left unrealized at his death, “And it was then that John
Quincy Adams took up the theory of constructive
centralization, not indeed precisely at the point at which Washington had left it, but with the expansion due to
the operation upon the problem of a profound scientific mind” (20).
71.28: “Light-houses of the skies”…:
this was John Quincy Adams’ poetic designation for observatories, of which he
was an enthusiastic supporter (61).
72.1: something / Of awful enjoyment…:
through 72.10 quoted from John Quincy Adams in “The Heritage of Henry Adams”: “‘To me, the observation of the
sun, moon, and stars has been for a great portion of my life a pleasure of
gratified curiosity, of ever returning wonder, and of reverence for the Creator
and mover of these unnumbered worlds. There is something of awful enjoyment
in observing the rising and setting of the sun. That flashing beam of
his first appearance upon the horizon; that sinking of the last ray beneath it;
that perpetual revolution of the Great and Little Bear round the pole;
that rising of the whole constellation of Orion from the horizontal
to the perpendicular position, and his ride through the heavens,
with his belt, his nebulous sword, and his four corner stars of the first
magnitude, are sources of delight to me which never tire…. There is, indeed,
intermingled with all this a painful desire to know more of this stupendous
system; of sorrow in reflecting how little we can ever know of it; and of
almost desponding hope that we may know more to it hereafter’” (60).
72.11: As cold as Nova Zembla…:
through 72.18 from “The Heritage of
Henry Adams” describing a journey John Quincy Adams took to Cincinnati
in Nov. 1843 at age 77 to give a speech at the dedication of a new observatory,
in which he used the phrase “light-houses of the skies,” much to the derisive
amusement of his detractors. Nova Zembla is a group of Russian islands in the
Arctic Ocean: “At Springfield the weather turned cold. In crossing the river at
Albany ‘I felt as it I were incrusted in a bed of snow.’ In the
morning he was awakened by the hail. The train was frozen to the rails,
and could not be broken free for an hour. At Buffalo his accommodation
was wretched, and on Lake Erie he met a fierce snow storm, and was wind-bound
for a day and a half, ‘as cold as Nova Zembla.’ [Continuing by boat on
the Ohio canal:] He lay in a compartment ‘with an iron stove in the centre, and
side settees, on which four of us slept, feet to feet,’ next to ‘a bulging
stable’ for the horses. Moving at about two miles and a half an hour,
bumping into all the innumerable locks, until the boat ‘staggers along
like a stumbling nag,’ Mr. Adams sometimes tried to write amidst babel,
and sometimes played euchre, of which he had never heard before” (68-69).
72.19 The
Schleswig-Holsteiners…: from Engels letter to Friedrich Adolf Sorge, 8 Feb.
1890: “The Schleswig-Holsteiners
[Anglo-Saxons] and their descendants
in England and America are not to be converted by lecturing, this
pig-headed and conceited lot have got to
experience it on their own bodies. And this they are doing more and more
every year, but they are born conservatives—just because America is so purely bourgeois, so entirely without a
feudal past and therefore proud of its purely bourgeois organization—and so
they will only get quit of the old traditional mental rubbish by practical
experience. Hence the trade unions, etc., are the thing to begin with if there
is to be a mass movement, and every further step must be forced upon them by a
defeat. But once the first step
beyond the bourgeois point of view has
been taken things will move quickly, like
everything in America, where, driven by natural necessity, the growing
speed of the movement sets some
requisite fire going under the
backsides of the Schleswig-Holstein
Anglo-Saxons, who are usually so slow; and then too the foreign elements in the
nation will assert themselves by greater mobility.”
73.1 Democracy would not
permit…: through 73.8 from Brooks Adams, “The Heritage of Henry Adams” (Degradation of the Democratic Dogma 121).
73.9: Destroying everything of which I
had planted the germ…: through 73.13 quoting John Quincy Adams referring to
the Andrew Jackson administration (53).
73.11: A forest of live-oak near Pensacola…: one of John Quincy Adams’
pet projects, which was subsequently abandoned by the Jackson administration
(52-53).
73.14 1828.
American Workingmen’s Party…:
73.22 QUIET / is requested…: this sign
through 73.26 was commonly used on Pullman sleeper cars at night.
74.1 Cardanus, for example…:
through 75.3 excerpted and somewhat rearranged from Marx letter to Engel, 28
Jan. 1863:
“You may or may not know, for
in itself the question does not matter, that there is great dispute as to what
distinguishes a machine from a tool. English (mathematical) mechanics,
in their crude way, call a tool a simple machine and a machine a complicated
tool. English technologists, however, who pay rather more attention to
economics (and who are followed by many, by most, of the English economists)
base the distinction between the two on the fact that in one case the motive
power is derived from human beings, in the other from a natural force. The German asses, who are great at these small things, have
therefore concluded that, for
instance, a plough is a machine,
while the most complicated spinning-jenny, etc., in so far as it is worked by hand, is not.
But now if we look round at the elementary
forms of the machine there is no question at all that the industrial revolution
starts, not from the motive power but
from that section of machinery which the English call the working machine. Thus, for instance, the revolution was not due to
the substitution of water or steam for the action of the foot in turning the
spinning-wheel, but to the transformation of the immediate process of spinning
itself and to the displacement of that portion of human labour which was not
merely the ‘exertion of power’ (as in working the treadle of the wheel) but was
directly applied to the working up of the raw material. On the other hand, it
is equally certain that when it is a question, not of the historical development of machinery but of machinery on the basis
of the present method of production, the working
machine (for instance, the sewing-machine) is the only determining factor;
for as soon as this process has been mechanized everyone nowadays knows that
the thing can be moved by hand, water-power or a stream-engine according to its
size.
To pure mathematicians these
questions are indifferent, but they become very important when it is a case of
proving the connection between the social relations of human beings and the
development of these material methods of production.
The re-reading of my
technical-historical extracts has led me to the opinion that, apart from the
discoveries of gunpowder, the compass and printing—those necessary
pre-requisites of bourgeois development—the two material bases on which the
preparations for machine industry were organized within manufacture during the
period from the sixteenth to the middle of the eighteenth century (the period
in which manufacture was developing from handicraft into actual large-scale
industry) were the clock and the mill
(at first the corn mill, that is, a
water mill). Both were inherited from the ancients. (The water-mill was
introduced into Rome from Asia Minor in the time of Julius Caesar.) The clock
is the first automatic machine applied to practical purposes; the whole theory
of the production of regular motion
developed through it. Its nature is such that it is based on a combination of
half-artistic handicraft and direct theory. Cardanus, for instance, wrote about (and gave practical formulae
for) the construction of clocks.
German authors of the sixteenth century called clock-making ‘learned
handicraft’ (i.e., not of the guilds) and it
would be possible to show from the development of the clock how entirely
different the relation between theoretical learning and practice was on the
basis of the handicraft from what it is, for instance, in large-scale industry. There is also no doubt that in the
eighteenth century the idea of applying
automatic devices (moved by springs) to production was first suggested by the clock. It can be proved
historically that Vaucanson’s
experiments on these lines had a tremendous influence on the imagination of the
English inventors.
The
mill, on the other hand, from the very beginning, as soon as the
water-mill was produced, supplies the
essential distinctions in the organism
of a machine: the mechanical driving power—prime motor—on which it depends;
the transmitting mechanism; and,
finally, the working machine, which
deals with the material—each with an
existence independent of the others. The theory of friction, and with it
the investigation into the mathematical forms of wheel-work, cogs, etc., were
all developed at the mill; here first ditto the theory of measurement of the
degree of motive power, of the best way of employing it, etc. Almost all the great mathematicians after the middle of the seventeenth century, so far as they occupied themselves with
practical mechanics and its theoretical side, started from the simple
corn-grinding water-mill. And indeed this was why the name mill came to be applied during the
manufacturing period to all mechanical forms of motive power adapted to
practical purposes.
But with the mill, as with the
press, the forge, the plough, etc., the
actual work of beating, crushing,
grinding, pulverization, etc., from
the very first without human labour,
even though the moving force was human or animal. This kind of machinery is therefore very ancient, at least in its origins,
and actual mechanical propulsion was formerly applied to it. Hence it is also
practically the only machinery found in the manufacturing period. The industrial revolution begins as soon as
mechanism is employed where from ancient times onwards the final result has
always required human labour; not, that is to say, where, as with the tools
just mentioned, the actual material to be dealt with has never, from the beginning,
been dealt with by the human hand, but where, from the nature of the thing, man
has not from the very first merely acted as power. If one is to follow the
German asses in calling the use of
animal power (which is just as much voluntary movement as human power) machinery, then the use of this kind of
locomotive is at any rate much older than the simplest handicraft tool.”
75.2 Jacques de Vaucanson:
(1709-1782) French inventor who created several famous automatons, including
The Flute Player and a hissing snake used in a play about Cleopatra. In 1741
Cardinal Fleury, chief minister of Louis XV, appointed him inspector of the
silk industry where he made many improvements in the machinery, including
creating the first fully automated loom. The information in parenthesis at
75.4-10 is not in Marx, but from a note to the passage quoted in the preceding
in the edition of the Marx-Engels: Selected Correspondence LZ used.
75.12 The
way the North is conducting the war…: from Marx to Engels, 10 Sept. 1862,
commenting on the American Civil War: “As for the Yankees, I am as certain as
ever in my opinion that the North will win in the end. . . . The way in which the North is conducting the war is only what might have been expected from a bourgeois
republic, where fraud has been
enthroned king so long. The South, an oligarchy, is better adapted
to it, especially an oligarchy where
the whole productive work falls on
the niggers and the four millions of ‘white trash’ are professional
filibusters. All the same I would bet my
head that these fellows get the
worst of it, in spite of ‘Stonewall Jackson.’ It is possible, of course,
that before this things may come to a sort of revolution in the North itself.”
75.21 All
Lincoln’s Acts…: from Marx to Engels, 29 Oct. 1862, continuing about the
Civil War: “The fury with which the Southerners have received Lincoln’s Acts
proves their importance. All Lincoln’s
Acts appear like the mean pettifogging conditions
which one lawyer puts to his opposing
lawyer. But this does not alter
their historic content, and indeed
it amuses me when I compare them with the drapery in which the Frenchman
envelops even the most unimportant point.”
75.29 Parisian
gentlemen…: from Marx to Ludwig Kugelmann, 9 Oct. 1866: “I had great fears
for the first Congress at Geneva. […] The
Parisian gentlemen had their heads full of the emptiest Proudhonist
phrases. They babble about science and know nothing. They scorn all revolutionary action, i.e., action arising out of the class
struggle itself, all concentrated social movements, and therefore all those which can be carried through by political means (e.g., the legal
limitation of the working day). […] I
was very pleased with the American Workers’ Congress at Baltimore which
took place at the same time. The slogan there was organization for the struggle
against capital, and curiously enough
most of the demands which I drew up for Geneva were also put forward by the
correct instinct of the workers.”
76.9 1869: A Chapter of Erie…: “A Chapter of Erie” is an essay from Chapters of Erie and Other Essays by Charles Francis Adams and
Henry Adams (1871), from which most through 78.31 is taken. This essay
describes the highly complicated economic manipulations concerning the Erie
Railroad that took place in 1868, involving systematic legal and political
corruption.
76.10: Ten o’clock the astonished police…:
from “A Chapter of Erie”: “The morning of the 11th [March 1869] found the Erie
leaders still transacting business at the office of the corporation in West
Street. It would seem that these gentlemen, in spite of the glaring contempt
for the process of the courts of which they had been guilty, had made no
arrangements for an orderly retreat beyond the jurisdiction of the tribunals
they had set at defiance. They were speedily roused from their real or affected
tranquility by trustworthy intelligence that processes for contempt were
already issued against them, and that their only chance of escape from
incarceration lay in precipitate flight. At ten o’clock the astonished police saw a throng of panic-stricken railway directors—looking
more like a frightened gang of thieves, disturbed in the division of their
plunder, than like the wealthy representatives of a great corporation—rush
headlong from the doors of the Erie office, and dash off in the direction of the Jersey ferry. In their hands were packages and files of papers, and their
pockets were crammed with assets and securities. One individual bore away with him in a hackney-coach bales containing six millions of dollars in
greenbacks. Other members of the board followed under cover of the night;
some of them, not daring to expose themselves to the publicity of a ferry, attempted to cross in open boats concealed by the darkness and a March fog. Two
directors, who lingered, were arrested; but a majority of the Executive Committee collected at the Erie Station in
Jersey City, and there, free from any apprehension of Judge Barnard’s
pursuing wrath, proceeded to the
transaction of business.”
76.21 (Ribbed
Gothic and grilled iron): this curious detail is an
interpolated personal image referring to the Erie railroad station in Jersey
City, N.J.; for its association with WCW see 15.374.6.
76.23 Doll
said: “A captain!…: through 77.2 from C.F. and Henry Adams, “A Chapter of
Erie” (see 76.9):
76.23-76.26: “Meanwhile the conquerors—the men
whose names had been made notorious through the whole land in all these
infamous proceedings—were at last undisputed masters of the situation, and no
man questioned the firmness of their grasp on the Erie Railway. They walked
erect and proud of their infamy through the streets of our great cities; they
voluntarily subjected themselves to that to which other depredators are
compelled to submit, and, by exposing their portraits in public conveyances,
converted noble steamers into branch galleries of a police-office; nay, more,
they bedizened their persons with gold lace, and assumed honored titles, until
those who witnessed in silent contempt their strange antics were disposed to
exclaim in the language of poor Doll
Tearsheet: ‘An Admiral! God’s light,
these villains will make the word as
odious as the word “occupy,” which was an excellent good word before
it was ill sorted; therefore, Admirals had need look to ’t.’” This last
quotation from Shakespeare, Henry IV,
Part 2, II.iv: Doll Tearsheet is a prostitute and part of the disreputable
crowd that hangs out with Falstaff.
76.27: The old maxim of the common law…:
through 78.2 from the concluding two paragraphs of “A Chapter of Erie” (see
76.9):
“One
leading feature of these developments, however, is, from its political aspect,
especially worthy of the attention of the American people. Modern society has
created a class of artificial beings who bid fair soon to be the masters of
their creator. It is but a very few years since the existence of a corporation
controlling a few millions of dollars was regarded as a subject of grave
apprehension, and now this country already contains single organizations which
wield a power represented by hundreds of millions. These bodies are the
creatures of single States; but in New York, in Pennsylvania, in Maryland, in
New Jersey, and not in those States alone, they are already establishing
despotisms which no spasmodic popular effort will be able to shake off.
Everywhere, and at all times, however, they illustrate the truth of the old maxim of the common law, that
corporations have no souls. Only in New York has any intimation yet been
given of what the future may have in store for us should these great powers
become mere tools in the hands of ambitious, reckless men. The system of corporate life and corporate power, as
applied to industrial development, is yet
in its infancy. It tends always to development, —always to consolidation,
—it is ever grasping new powers, or insidiously exercising covert influence. Even now the system threatens the central government. The
Erie Railway represents a weak combination compared to those which day by day
are consolidating under the unsuspecting eyes of the community. A very few
years more, and we shall see corporations as much exceeding the Erie and the
New York Central in both ability and will for corruption as they will exceed
those roads in wealth and in length of iron track. We shall see these great
corporations spanning the continent from ocean to ocean, —single, consolidated
lines, not connecting Albany with Buffalo, or Lake Erie with the Hudson, but
uniting the Atlantic and the Pacific, and bringing New York nearer to San
Francisco than Albany once was to Buffalo. Already the disconnected members of
these future leviathans have built up States in the wilderness, and chosen
their attorneys senators of the United States. Now their power is in its
infancy; in a very few years they will re-enact, on a larger theatre and on a
grander scale, with every feature magnified, the scenes which were lately witnessed
on the narrow stage of a single State. The public corruption is the foundation
on which corporations always depend for their political power. There is a
natural tendency to coalition between them and the lowest strata of political
intelligence and morality; for their agents must obey, not question. They exact
success, and do not cultivate political morality. The lobby is their home, and
the lobby thrives as political virtue decays. The ring is their symbol of
power, and the ring is the natural enemy of political purity and independence.
All this was abundantly illustrated in the events which have just been
narrated. The existing coalition between the Erie Railway and the Tammany ring
is a natural one, for the former needs votes, the latter money. This
combination now controls the legislature and courts of New York; that it
controls also the Executive of the State, as well as that of the city, was
proved when Governor Hoffman recorded his reasons for signing the infamous Erie
Directors’ Bill. It is a new power, for
which our language contains no name. We know what aristocracy, autocracy,
democracy are; but we have no word to express government by moneyed
corporations. Yet the people already
instinctively seek protection against it,
and look for such protection,
significantly enough, not to their own legislatures,
but to the single autocratic feature retained in our system of government, —the veto by the Executive. In this there is something more
imperial than republican. The people have lost faith in themselves when
they cease to have any faith in those whom they uniformly elect to represent
them. The change that has taken place in this respect of late years in America
has been startling in its rapidity. Legislation is more and more falling into
contempt, and this not so much on account of the extreme ignorance manifested
in it as because of the corrupt motives which are believed habitually to
actuate it. Thus the influence of corporations and of class interests is
steadily destroying that belief in singleness of purpose which alone enables a
representative government to exist, and the community is slowly accustoming
itself to look for protection, not to public opinion, but to some man in high
place and armed with great executive powers. Him they now think they can hold to some accountability. It remains to be seen what the next phase in this
process of gradual development will be. History
never quite repeats itself, and, as was suggested in the first pages of
this narrative, the old familiar enemies may even now confront us, though
arrayed in such a modern garb that no suspicion is excited. Americans are apt
pupils, and among them there are probably some who have not observed Fisk and
Vanderbilt and Hoffman without a thought of bettering their instructions. No successful military leader will repeat
in America the threadbare experiences of Europe; —the executive power is not
likely to be seized while the legislative is suppressed. The indications would now seem rather to point towards the corruption
of the legislative and a quiet assumption of the executive through some
combination in one vigorous hand of those influences which throughout this
narrative have been seen only in conflict. As the Erie ring represents the
combination of the corporation and the hired proletariat of a great city; as
Vanderbilt embodies the autocratic power of Cæsarism introduced into corporate
life, and as neither alone can obtain complete control of the government of the
State, it, perhaps, only remains for the
coming man to carry the combination of elements one step in advance, and put
Cæsarism at once in control of the corporation and of the proletariat, to bring our vaunted institutions within
the rule of all historic precedent.”
It
is not pleasant to take such views of the future; yet they are irresistibly
suggested by the events which have been narrated. They seem to be in the nature
of direct inferences. The only remedy lies in a renovated public opinion; but
no indication of this has as yet been elicited. People did indeed, at one time,
watch these Erie developments with interest, but the feeling excited was rather
one of amazement than of indignation. Even where a real indignation was
excited, it led to no sign of any persistent effort at reform; it betrayed
itself only in aimless denunciation or in sad forebodings. The danger, however,
is day by day increasing, and the period during which the work of regeneration
should begin grows always shorter. It is true that evils ever work their own
cure, but the cure for the evils of Roman civilization was worked out
through ten centuries of barbarism. It remains to be seen whether this
people retains that moral vigor which can alone awaken a sleeping public
opinion to healthy and persistent activity, or whether to us also will apply these
words of the latest and best historian of the Roman republic [Theodor Mommsen]:
‘What Demosthenes said of his Athenians was justly applied to the Romans of
this period; that people were very zealous for action so long as they stood
round the platform and listened to proposals of reform; but, when they went
home, no one thought further of what he had heard in the market-place. However
those reformers might stir the fire, it was to no purpose, for the inflammable
material was wanting.’”
77.18 hymn to—Latinity: latinity means the
manner in which Latin is used in speaking or writing; or can refer to Latin
literature generally. However, in the present context, LZ is undoubtedly
associating the term with Mussolini and Italian fascism, who incessantly evoked
the glory of the Roman Empire to promote their brand of nationalism. In My
Autobiography (1928), Mussolini remarks: “I am desperately Italian. I
believe in the function of Latinity.”
78.3 1871. Henry Adams. My
book is out…: from 2 Oct. 1871 letter to Charles Milnes Gaskell (see 58.23)
referring to Chapters of Erie (see 76.9) written with
his older brother, Charles Francis Adams: “My book is out, and you will
receive a copy in due course. My own share in the volume is as you will
see, less than half and nothing new. Of course the thing was not
expected to make a noise, being a mere re-print, and although of course few
works except possibly some few of Aristotle and Bacon contain anything to
compare with the wisdom of this, still I am aware that it is vain to
expect proper appreciation in this world and I have my doubts whether I shall
fare much better in any other. You however will support me, I am
sure, in my indifference to vulgar opinion” ( 215-216).
78.13 As
one cannot doubt foreign press dispatches…: in 1936 it was rumored that
Stalin was ill or even dead, so the AP Moscow bureau chief, Charles P. Nutter,
wrote directly to Stalin for the facts and received the letter LZ quotes, which
was reported in the New York Times for 1 Nov. 1936: “I know from the
reports of the foreign press that I long ago abandoned this sinful world and
moved into the other world. As one cannot doubt such foreign press
dispatches unless he wants to be expelled from the list of civilized people,
I request you to believe them and don’t disturb me in the calm of the
other world.”
78.19 By
means of this simple and smooth machinery…: through 78.31 from “The New
York Gold Conspiracy” in Chapters of Erie
(see 76.9). The
opening paragraph:
“The civil war in America, with its enormous issues of depreciating currency,
and its reckless waste of money and credit by the government, created a
speculative mania such as the United States, with all its experience in this
respect, had never before known. Not only in Broad Street, the centre of New
York speculation, but far and wide throughout the Northern States, almost every
man who had money at all employed a part of his capital in the purchase of
stocks or of gold, of copper, of petroleum, or of domestic produce, in the hope
of a rise in prices, or staked money on the expectation of a fall. To use the
jargon of the street, every farmer and every shopkeeper in the country seemed
to be engaged in ‘carrying’ some favorite security ‘on a margin.’ Whoever could
obtain five pounds sent it to a broker with orders to buy fifty pounds’ worth
of stocks, or whatever amount the broker would consent to purchase. If the
stock rose, the speculator prospered; if it fell until the five pounds of deposit
or margin were lost, the broker demanded a new deposit, or sold the stock to
protect himself. By means of this simple
and smooth machinery, which differs in no essential respect from the
processes of roulette or rouge-et-noir,
the whole nation flung itself into the Stock Exchange, until the ‘outsiders,’
as they were called, in opposition to the regular brokers of Broad Street,
represented nothing less than the entire population of the American Republic.
Every one speculated, and for a time every one speculated successfully.”
78.22: I went down to the neighborhood of Wall Street…: through 78.31
conflates two episodes of meetings with the financier James Fisk recounted by
Abel Rathbone Corbin. Primarily LZ quotes Fisk’s first meeting with President
Grant, arranged through Corbin, who was married to the president’s sister; the
Adams’ essay describes how Fisk and his partner Jay Gould subsequently worked
to influence Grant’s economic policies to their advantage.
79.1 The Romans, after the
Battle of Magnesia…: through 79.5 from the Encyclopedia Britannica, 11th ed., Vol. 19, page 910, on “Greek
Coins”: “On Alexander’s conquest autonomy is granted to the much-enduring
Hellenic communities, and is again interrupted, but only partially, by the rule
of his successors, for there was no time at which Asia Minor was wholly
parceled out among the kings, Greek or native. The Romans, after the battle of Magnesia (190 B.C.), repeated
Alexander’s policy so far as the cities
of the western coast were concerned, and there is a fresh outburst of coinage, which, in remembrance, follows the
well-known types of Alexander. When the province of Asia was constituted
and the neighbouring states fell one by one under Roman rule, the autonomy of
the great cities was generally reduced to a shadow.”
79.6 1893. Brooks Adams /
Henry, like the good brother he was…:
through 79.18 from Brooks Adams, “The Heritage of Henry Adams” in Degradation of the Democratic Dogma
90-92 (see 71.26). Ahearn points out that the jump from 1871 at 78.3 to 1893 at
79.6 mirrors an identical gap in The
Education of Henry Adams during which Adams felt his “education” lapsed.
This passage, as well as those at 80.5-12, are from Brooks Adams’ account of
the panic of 1893, which precipitated several years of economic depression and
threatened the Adamses with complete bankruptcy. The quoted remarks at 79.11-18
concern the manuscript of Brooks Adams’ The Law of Civilization and Decay
(1895), which he asked Henry to read, who responded with the quoted warning.
79.19 It
will be remarked that these are matters…: through 80.4 from Thorstein
Veblen. The Vested Interests and the
State of the Industrial Arts (1919): “A vested interest is a marketable right to get something for
nothing. This does not mean that the vested interests cost nothing. They may even come high. Particularly
may their cost seem high if the cost to
the community is taken into account, as well as the expenditure incurred by
their owners for their production and up-keep.
Vested interests are immaterial wealth,
intangible assets. As regards their nature
and origin, they are the outgrowth
of three main lines of businesslike
management: (a) Limitation of
supply, with a view to profitable sales; (b) Obstruction of traffic, with a view to profitable sales; and (c) Meretricious publicity, with a view to
profitable sales. It will be
remarked that these are matters of business, in the strict sense. They are
devices of salesmanship, not of workmanship; they are ways and means of driving
a bargain, not ways and means of producing goods or services. The residue which
stands over as a product of these endeavors is in the nature of an intangible
asset, an article of immaterial wealth; not an increase of the tangible
equipment or the material resources in hand. The enterprising owners of the
concern may be richer by that much, and so perhaps may the business community
as a whole—though that is a precariously dubious point—but the community at
large is no better off in any material respect.”
80.5 “It is now full four
generations …: through 80.27 from Brooks Adams, “The Heritage of Henry Adams” in Degradation of the Democratic Dogma (see 71.26); this remark by Brooks Adams qtd. 93.
80.10: Hot August . . and talked
endlessly…: “If I live forever, I shall never forget that summer.
Henry and I sat in the hot August evenings and talked endlessly of the
panic [of 1893] and of our hopes and fears, and of my historical and
economic theories, and so the season wore away amidst an excitement verging on
revolution” (94).
80.13: 1895. “Dear Brooks: / “The nations, after a display of dreadful /
Bad manners…: qtd. from a letter by Henry Adams: “’As far as I can see, the
scrimmage is over. The nations, after a display of dreadful bad manners, are
settling down, afraid to fight. The gold-bugs have resumed their sway,
with their nerves a good deal shaken, but their tempers or their sense
unimproved.
Cleveland
and Olney have relapsed into their normal hog-like attitudes of indifference,
and Congress is disorganized, stupid and childlike as ever. Once more we
are under the whip of the bankers. Even on Cuba, where popular
feeling was far stronger than on Venezuela, we are beaten and hopeless.
. . .
My
turn will come next, and I am all ready and glad to get through it. The last
six weeks have given me much to think about. Were we on the edge of a
new and last great centralization, or of a first great movement of
disintegration? There are facts on both sides; but my conclusion rather is—and
this is what satiates my instinct for life—that our so-called civilization
has shown its movement, even at the centre, arrested. It has failed to
concentrate further. Its next effort may succeed, but it is more
likely to be one of disintegration, with Russia for the eccentric on
the one side and American on the other. . . .’” (98).
80.29 Active,
vibrating, mostly unconscious…: through 82.10 primarily from The Education of Henry Adams (1918),
Chap. 27: “Teufelsdröckh (1901)”: “Thus the
student of Hegel prepared himself for a visit to Russia in order to enlarge his
‘synthesis’—and much he needed it! In America all were conservative Christian
anarchists; the faith was national, racial, geographic. The true American had
never seen such supreme virtue in any of the innumerable shades between social
anarchy and social order as to mark it for exclusively human and his own. He
never had known a complete union either in Church or State or thought, and had
never seen any need for it. The freedom gave him courage to meet any contradiction,
and intelligence enough to ignore it. Exactly the opposite condition had marked
Russian growth. The Czar’s empire was a phase of conservative Christian anarchy
more interesting to history than all the complex variety of American
newspapers, schools, trusts, sects, frauds, and Congressmen. These were
Nature—pure and anarchic as the conservative Christian anarchist saw Nature—active, vibrating, mostly unconscious, and
quickly reacting on force; but, from
the first glimpse one caught from the sleeping-car window, in the early
morning, of the Polish Jew at the accidental railway station, in all his
weird horror, to the last vision of the Russian peasant, lighting his candle
and kissing his ikon before the railway Virgin in the station at St. Petersburg,
all was logical, conservative, Christian and anarchic. Russia had nothing in common
with any ancient or modern world
that history knew; she had been the oldest source of all civilization in Europe, and had kept none
for herself; neither Europe nor Asia had ever known such a phase, which
seemed to fall into no line of evolution whatever, and was as wonderful to the
student of Gothic architecture in the twelfth century, as to the student of the
dynamo in the twentieth. Studied in the dry light of conservative Christian
anarchy, Russia became luminous like
the salt of radium; but with a negative luminosity as though she were a substance whose energies had
been sucked out—an inert
residuum—with movement of pure inertia. From the car window one seemed to
float past undulations of nomad life—herders
deserted by their leaders and herds—wandering waves stopped in their
wanderings—waiting for their winds or warriors to return and lead them westward;
tribes that had camped, like Khirgis,
for the season, and had lost the
means of motion without acquiring the habit of permanence. They waited and
suffered. As they stood they were out of place, and could never have been
normal. Their country acted as a sink of energy like the Caspian Sea, and its surface kept the uniformity of ice and
snow. One Russian peasant kissing an ikon on a saint’s day, in the Kremlin,
served for a hundred million. The student had no need to study Wallace, or
re-read Tolstoy or Tourguenieff or Dostoiewski to refresh his memory of the
most poignant analysis of human inertia ever put in words; Gorky was more than
enough: Kropotkin answered every purpose.”
81.1 (Brooks: men work
unconsciously . . / perform an act…: from Brooks
Adams, “The Heritage of Henry Adams”: “Mostly men work unconsciously,
and perform an act, before they can explain why often centuries before.
Throughout the ages it had been the favorite device of the creditor class first
to work a contraction of the currency, which bankrupted the debtors, and then
to cause an inflation which created a rise when they sold the property which
they had impounded” (Degradation of the Democratic Dogma 95).
81.18 Rhymes
and rhymers pass away . . : from Walt Whitman,
“As I Sat Alone by Blue Ontario’s Shore,” section 13; see 65.33:
Rhymes and rhymers pass away—poems
distill’d from foreign poems pass away,
The swarms of reflectors and the polite pass, and leave ashes,
Admirers, importers, obedient persons, make but the soul of literature;
America justifies itself, give it time—no disguise can deceive it, or conceal
from it—it is impassive enough,
Only toward the likes of itself will it advance to meet them,
If its poets appear it will in due time advance to meet them, there is no fear
of mistake,
(The proof of a poet shall be sternly deferr’d, till his country absorbs him as
affectionately as he has absorb’d it.)
82.11 Dreary
forests of Russia…: through 82.31 continuing from The Education of Henry Adams, Chap. 27
(see 80.29):
“The tourist-student, having
duly reflected, asked the Senator whether he should allow three generations, or
more, to swing the Russian people into the Western movement. The Senator seemed
disposed to ask for more. The student had nothing
to say. For him, all opinion founded on fact must be error, because the facts
can never be complete, and their relations must be always infinite. Very
likely, Russia would instantly become the most brilliant constellation of
human progress through all the ordered stages of good; but meanwhile one might
give a value as movement of inertia to the mass, and assume a slow acceleration
that would, at the end of a generation, leave the gap between east and west
relatively the same. […]
The
Germans, Scandinavians, Poles and Hungarians, energetic as they were, had never
held their own against the heterogeneous mass of inertia called Russia, and
trembled with terror whenever Russia moved. From Stockholm one looked back on
it as though it were an ice-sheet, and so had Stockholm watched it for
centuries. In contrast with the dreary
forests of Russia and the stern streets of St. Petersburg, Stockholm seemed a southern vision, and
Sweden lured the tourist on. Through a
cheerful New England landscape and
bright autumn, he rambled northwards till he found himself at Trondhjem and
discovered Norway. Education crowded
upon him in immense masses as he triangulated
these vast surfaces of history about
which he had lectured and read for a life-time. When the historian fully
realizes his ignorance—which sometimes happens to Americans—he becomes even
more tiresome to himself than to others, because his naïveté is
irrepressible. Adams could not get over his astonishment, though he had
preached the Norse doctrine all his life
against the stupid and beer-swilling
Saxon boors whom Freeman loved, and who, to the despair of science,
produced Shakespeare. Mere contact with Norway started voyages of thought, and,
under their illusions, he took the mail steamer to the north, and on September
14, reached Hammerfest.
Frivolous amusement was hardly
what one saw, through the equinoctial twilight, peering at the flying tourist, down the deep fiords, from dim patches of
snow, where the last Laps and reindeer were watching the mail-steamer thread
the intricate channels outside, as their ancestors had watched the first Norse
fishermen learn them in the succession of time; but it was not the Laps, or the
snow, or the arctic gloom, that impressed the tourist, so much as the lights of an electro-magnetic
civilization and the stupefying contrast with Russia, which more and more
insisted on taking the first place in historical interest. Nowhere had the new
forces so vigorously corrected the errors of the old, or so effectively
redressed the balance of the ecliptic. As one approached the end—the spot
where, seventy years before, a futile Carlylean Teufelsdröckh had stopped to ask futile questions of the silent infinite—the infinite seemed to have become
loquacious, not to say familiar, chattering gossip in one’s ear. An installation of electric lighting and
telephones led tourists close up to the polar ice-cap, beyond the level of the magnetic pole; and there the newer
Teufelsdröckh sat dumb with surprise, and glared at the
permanent electric lights of Hammerfest. […]
No such strange chance had
ever happened to a historian before, and it upset for the moment his whole
philosophy of conservative anarchy. The acceleration was marvelous, and wholly
in the lines of unity. To recover his grasp of chaos, he must look back across the gulf to Russia,
and the gap seemed to have suddenly become an abyss. Russia was infinitely
distant. Yet the nightmare of the
glacial ice-cap still pressed down on him from the hills, in full vision,
and no one could look out on the dusky
and oily sea that lapped these spectral islands without consciousness that
only a day’s steaming to the northward would bring him to the ice-barrier,
ready at any moment to advance, which obliged tourists to stop where Laps and
reindeer and Norse fishermen had stopped so long ago that memory of their very
origin was lost. Adams had never before met a ne plus ultra, and knew
not what to make of it; but he felt at least the emotion of his Norwegian
fishermen ancestors, doubtless numbering hundreds of thousands, jammed with
their faces to the sea, the ice on the north, the ice-cap of Russian inertia pressing from behind, and the ice a
trifling danger compared with the inertia. From the day they first followed the
retreating ice-cap round the North Cape, down to the present moment, their
problem was the same.”
82.32 Then
feed, and be fat…: from Shakespeare, Henry
IV, Part 2 II.iv:
Pistol: Then feed, and be fat, my fair Calipolis.
Come, give ’s some sack.
“Si fortune me tormente, sperato me contento.”
Fear we broadsides? No, let the fiend give fire:
Give me some sack: and, sweetheart, lie thou there.
[Laying down his sword.]
Come we to full points here, and are etceteras nothing?
83.2 Arrived mostly with
bedding in a sheet…: this passage almost certainly records the arrival of
LZ’s father, Pinchos (c. 1860-1950), in America from Russia in 1898; see 12.151.10.
83.7 railroad flat: an apartment in which the rooms are
connected in a line (AHD), which would have been a typical arrangement in the
narrow tenements of the Lower East Side. In the 1920s, Zukofsky’s family moved
uptown to East 111th Street.
83.24 Grasso
in “Scuro”…: probably the renown Sicilian actor, Giovanni Grasso
(1873-1930), not to be confused with his younger cousin with the same name who
was a successful film actor (1888-1963). Grasso performed frequently in the
lower East Side in its heyday as a theater district and was particularly known
for performing Sicilian dialect plays. “Scuro,” which means dark or darkness,
is not definitely identified but might refer to Othello, which Grasso performed with considerable success.
83.25 His
older brother took him (the baby) / to the theatre…: Cf.
LZ’s Autobiography: “My first
exposure to letters at the age of four was thru the Yiddish theater, most
memorably the Thalia on the Bowery. By the age of nine I had seen a good deal
of Shakespeare, Ibsen, Strindberg and Tolstoy performed—all in Yiddish”
(33).The older brother was Morris Ephraim Zukowsky, co-dedicatee of “A”-21,
where this passage is partially echoed in the first Epilogue (21.507.11-13). LZ
was the youngest sibling and the only one born in America.
83.30 Let me tell you about the
state of Pennsylvania / said Bob: Bob, who is also
mentioned at 86.3 and presumably is the source of some of what is related on
the following pages, is Robert Allison Evans (c.1885-1943), a mining engineer
and poet who LZ met in the mid-1930s and whose work he tried to promote (see
also next note). LZ remarks in an 18 Jan. 1936 letter to EP that Evans “worked
in Pennsylvania mines for a quarter of a century, wuz a mining executive at
$10,000 a month till he set about telling the operators & distributors like
Burns brothers [major coal supplier in NYC] how the shits shdn’t run their
business … and wuz canned” (qtd. WCW/LZ 226). LZ was responsible for the
appearance of a set of Evans’ poems in New Masses (4 Feb. 1936) under
the title, “From the Anthracite” (Scroggins Bio 149). See LZ’s 1943
tribute to Evans, “R.A.E.” (CSP 120).
83.32 Below the Grass Roots…: this is the
title of an unpublished volume of poetry by Robert Allison Evans (see preceding
note), including a poem entitled “The Patch” (see 84.1). Evans’ poetry deals
realistically and satirically with the lives of Pennsylvannia coal miners in
traditional poetic forms. In a 10 March 1943 letter to WCW, LZ mentions both Below
the Grass Roots and a novel on miners; quite possibly much of what follows
is taken from these works (WCW/LZ 323). “Patch” evidently refers to the
rough shanty town built by the mine owners; “culm” is the waste materials—coal
dust, dirt, etc.—from anthracite coal mines, but also can mean the stem of
grass or similar plants.
85.6 Wherever I sit / Is the head of the table: often
attributed to H.L. Mencken, although variations on this quip are wide-spread.
In the original publication of “A”-8 in New Directions 1938, LZ
attributes this to “Morris Raphael Fable,” probably referring to his brother
Morris Ephraim (see 83.25).
85.7 Not too / Near Spinoza refusing a new coat…: from Anton
Reiser, Albert Einstein: A Biographical Portrait, whose English version
was translated by LZ and published 1930: “Nothing is more foreign to [Einstein]
than elegance: or ceremonial garb. In this he agrees with Spinoza, who refused
a new coat with these words, ‘Will that make me a different man? It would be a
bad situation if the bag were better than the meat that’s in it’” (194).
85.11 Said
Albert—where?—in infinite diapers…: Albert Einstein, who is quoted in the
following lines through 85.2. The source is Portraits and Self-Portraits
by the artist George Schreiber (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1936), a compilation
of sketches of famous people accompanied by brief autobiographical statements.
LZ’s source is probably a review of this book by Robert Van Gelder in the New
York Times for 26 Nov. 1936, which gives this Einstein quote that LZ
reproduces almost exactly, although he substitutes “singleness” for Einstein’s
“solitude.”
85.21 1935.
Eight thousand / Men, operators, / Set themselves above the law…: despite the date LZ gives, through 85.30 is almost certainly
from the New York Times for 21 Nov. 1936: “Raiders Defend Seizures of
Coal; Creator Put it in Ground and the ‘Greedy Rich’ Stole It, ‘Bootleggers’
Contend. Constitution Is Drafted Preamble States the Right to Fight to Add to
Their ‘Measly Income’”: “Pottsville, Pa., Nov. 20—Declaring that the Creator
put coal in the mountains of Pennsylvania for all to share, and charging that
it was stolen from them originally by ‘the greedy rich class,’ the coal
bootleggers have banded together in the Independent Anthracite Miners
Association to defend their ‘rights’ by ‘organized strength.’ Through this
organization, which claims a membership of 8000 men, the outlaw miners
have resorted to mass violence and sabotage on numerous occasions to force the
big companies, which own nearly all the hard coal land in the Western
Hemisphere, to maintain a handsoff policy toward their illegal operations. As a
strong voting unit, the association has openly entered politics to prevent
interference by local authorities, frightening office holders with threats of
reprisals at the polls and pledging its solid support to candidates who have
helped or help them in their effort to set themselves above the law. […]
The preamble to the ‘constitution’ which these leaders wrote for the bootleggers
to bring a semblance of order to their once chaotic industry reads as follows:
‘Realizing the reason why we must resort to the present form of digging coal is
due to the fact that we, as workers and coal miners, are hit by this terrific
unemployment and depression, and that the amount of relief given us by the
State agencies is not enough to keep our families in sufficient food,
clothing and shelter; We must dig the coal out of these mountains as a
means of our measly income that we receive in the form of relief, in order to
keep the wolf away from our doorsteps; Knowing that the coal
which is in these mountains was put here by our Creator and that this mineral
wealth was stolen away from us by the greedy rich class, the coal
operators and the bankers; We, as the workers and members of this association,
do hereby agree that we will uphold our interests as workers and will
use our organized strength, jointly and collectively, to fight and
maintain the right for us to dig this coal and make that lot of
our members more bearable.’”
86.3 Go splintered rondel…: in a note to Lorine Niedecker,
who apparently was the main typist of “A”-8, LZ explained that he was adopting
the form of Villon’s caustic rondeau, “Repose eternal, donne a cil” (part
of Le Testament) for the following segment but using “modern technique”
rather than conventional rhyme and therefore “splintered” (note copied into one
of the typescripts of “A”-8; see HRC 2.6).
86.6 Like the present governor of that State, / Hasn’t he said: /
I wasn’t their candidate…: through 86.23 quotes George H. Earle,
Governor of Pennsylvania from 1935-1939; from the New York Times for 18
Nov. 1936: “Gov. Earle Asserts Socialization May End the Bootleg Coal War;
Federal Government Will Have to Take Over Anthracite Mines Unless Owners Reopen
Enough Pits to Give Jobs to Idle Diggers, He Says—Situation in Fields Now
Amounts to Anarchy.” For further references to the “bootleg” miners of
Pennsylvania see 54.14 and 85.21.
86.25 Police Sergeant Jasper McKinney…: the
New York Times for 11 Nov. 1936: “Three Homes Bombed in Akron Rubber
Row; No One Is Injured, Though Windows Are Shattered—Warning Notes Found”: “Notes
warning them to ‘lay off our union’ were found in mail boxes at the
Childs and Gualt homes, police said. None was left at Hoffman’s. Police
Sergeant Jasper McKinney commented: ‘I believe this was the work of anti-union
men who left the notes to throw us off the track.’” For more on corporate
espionage, see 54.14.
87.4 Go where (not alive on the running-board)— / Trappings rise—
/ No bridges, no breeches, not after midnight: these lines certainty, as
well as probably the various lines further down the page associated with the
seaside, evoke Ricky Chambers from the early movements (see 3.9.3). For the
specific images in these lines, see 6.26.13, 3.10.6-10 and 3.9.15-17
respectively (the original printed version of “A”-3 also included another
mention of “running-board”; see Textual Notes).
87.8 Araucanian Indians’
sacred tree Canelo…: the
Araucanians are indigenous people living in an area covering parts of Chile and
Argentina, to whom the canelo tree is sacred as well as having medicinal
properties. Through 87.15, LZ is paraphrasing from the New York Times
for 10 Dec. 1936: “A Tale of Flowers in Spring, Tra-La; Chilean Consul Here
Unfolds an Epic of Flora That Will Never Bloom in U.S. Strangled by Red Tape
Rare Specimens, Brought Here for Show, Die of Old Age Before Permit Is
Granted.”
87.18 Spring rain on his face—…: see note
at 87.4; for this image and the “dark hair” at 87.20, see 3.10.1 and 3.10.11
(the “dark hair” is more explicit in the original printing of “A”-3; see
Textual Notes).
87.26 a voice craves perfection: Cf.
6.24.20-23.
88.1 our most valuable capital: see Stalin quotation at 66.26 and 70.19
where the subject is “people.”
88.4 Enlevez-moi quelques
kilometers d’ici: Fr. take me a few kilometers from here.
88.5 “Ulysses”: James
Joyce’s Ulysses (1922). In the
mid-1930s, LZ was involved in writing and unsuccessfully attempting to market a
film script of Ulysses with his friend Jerry Reisman; it is unclear the
extent of LZ’s hand in the writing of this screenplay (see Slate and Reisman).
88.11 The
Great Boot, fathers of Italia, pinches: the boot is a common reference to
the Italian peninsula, which here also refers to the brutal tactics of
Mussolini and his black shirts.
88.14 Fascisti:
It. Facists.
88.16 Herr
Führer and Heiland…: Ger. Leader and Savior [with play on heil suggesting “healer”], presumably
referring to Adolf Hitler. The following German expressions are colloquial
idioms that are obviously anti-Semitic in origin. Es jüdelt der Judenbaum! (It’s jewing the Jewtree!), the meaning of this
is uncertain. Es geht hier her wie in einer Judenschule in Deutschland
(Around here it’s like a Jew school (i.e. synogogue) in Germany), meaning as LZ
indicates that it’s like a madhouse here. Haust du meinen Juden, hau’ ich
deinen Juden (You hit my jew, I’ll hit your jew), meaning tit for tat.
88.23 Thou
’rt an Emperor…: through 89.1 from Shakespeare, Merry Wives of Windsor, I.iii (scattered excerpts throughout
scene):
Falstaff: I sit at ten pounds a week.
Host: Thou’rt an emperor-Caesar, Keiser, and Pheazar. I will entertain
Bardolph; he shall draw, he shall tap; said I well, bully Hector?
Falstaff: Do so, good mine host.
Host: I have spoke; let him follow. [To Bardolph] Let me see thee froth and lime. I am at a word; follow.
Exit Host.
Falstaff: Bardolph, follow him. A
tapster is a good trade; an old cloak makes a new jerkin; a wither’d
serving-man a fresh tapster. Go; adieu.
Bardolph: It is a life that I have
desir’d; I will thrive.
Pistol: O base Hungarian wight! Wilt thou the spigot wield?
[…]
Falstaff: Which of you know Ford of this town?
Pistol: I ken the wight; he is of
substance good.
Falstaff: My honest lads, I will tell
you what I am about.
Pistol: Two yards, and more.
Falstaff: No quips now, Pistol.
Indeed, I am in the waist two yards about; but I am now about no waste; I am
about thrift. Briefly, I do mean to make love to Ford’s wife; I spy
entertainment in her; she discourses, she carves, she gives the leer of
invitation; I can construe the action of her familiar style; and the hardest
voice of her behaviour, to be English’d rightly, is “I am Sir John Falstaff’s.”
Pistol: He hath studied her well, and
translated her will out of honesty into English.
Nym: The anchor is deep; will that
humour pass?
Falstaff: Now, the report goes she
has all the rule of her husband’s purse; he
hath a legion of angels.
Pistol: As many devils entertain;
and “To her, boy,” say I.
Nym: The humour rises; it is good;
humour me the angels.
Falstaff: I have writ me here a
letter to her; and here another to Page’s wife, who even now gave me good eyes
too, examin’d my parts with most judicious oeillades; sometimes the beam of her
view gilded my foot, sometimes my portly belly.
Pistol: Then did the sun on dunghill shine.
Nym: I thank thee for that humour.
[…]
Exeunt Falstaff and Robin
Pistol: Let vultures gripe thy guts! For gourd and fullam holds, And high
and low beguiles the rich and poor; Tester I’ll have in pouch when thou shalt
lack, Base Phrygian Turk!
Nym: I have operations in my head
which be humours of revenge.
Pistol: Wilt thou revenge?
Nym: By welkin and her star!
Pistol: With wit or steel?
Nym: With both the humours, I. I
will discuss the humour of this love to Page.
89.2 We offered peace to the nations / At a time when our offer…:
in the original 1938 printing of “A”-8, LZ included a few further lines to this
stanza and identified it as a statement by the “Commissar for the Workers” (see
Textual Notes). LZ is likely quoting from the New York Times for 11 Nov.
1936 (also quoted at 70.9): “Litvinoff Honored with Lenin Order; Soviet,
Striking at Rumors of Ill Will on Part of Kremlin, Confers Highest Decoration.
Stalin at the Ceremony Foreign Committee, Outlining His policies, Repeats Offer
of General Disarmament.” Maxim Litvinoff (1876-1951) was Minister or Commissar
for Foreign Affairs of the USSR from 1930-1939, when he was replaced during the
negotiations leading to the Hitler-Stalin Pact of 1939 by Vyacheslav Molotov,
largely because he was Jewish, but also he was a proponent of closer relations
with the West. The New York Times article quotes Litvinoff: “‘We offered
peace to the nations at a time when that proposal could be interpreted as a
weakness,’ the Foreign Commissar said. ‘We have repeated it at every
opportunity and we repeat it now, despite the fact that the growth of our armed
forces, of our military industry and of our military potentialities gives us
supremacy over any possible enemy or even a possible combination of enemies. We
arm not for the purpose of matching with any one, but to prevent others from
cherishing a hope of matching strength with us with impunity.’”
89.8 For labor who will sing—: see 46.21.
89.9 the cultured growth is scrapped : referring, in the
first instance, to cheese production; see 53.2 and 64.17.
89.17 the shape-up: a method of hiring
longshoremen by the day; applicants gather around a union boss who selects
those to be hired.
89.18 Preventitives
for this ease? / Friends, let two fingers salute…: the phrase “two fingers
salute” echoes 44.14 and therefore obliquely identifies this passage as from
EP. In an 8 March 1937 letter to EP, LZ indicates that this passage is in
response to a passage in Canto 46, which deals extensively with EP’s obsessive
focus on the root of financial injustice as the banks’ irresponsible issuance
of money irregardless of its relation to production (EP/LZ 192; see also
191). In particular LZ has in mind the following passage:
The bank makes it [money] ex nihil
[out of nothing]
Denied by five thousand professors, will any
Jury convict ‘um? This case, and with it
The first part, draws to a conclusion,
Of the first phase of this opus [The Cantos],
Mr Marx, Karl, did not
Foresee this conclusion, you have seen a good deal of
The evidence, not knowing it evidence, is monumentum (233-234).
89.25 By
what name you call your people…: through 90.2 from the Autobiography of Thomas Jefferson paraphrasing John Adams’ views on
the question of whether or not slaves should be taxable as inhabitants: “Mr.
John Adams observed that the numbers of people were taken by this article as an
index of the wealth of the state, & not as subjects of taxation, that as to
this matter it was of no consequence by
what name you called your people, whether by that of freemen or of slaves. That in some countries the labouring poor
were called freemen, in others they were called slaves; but that the difference as to the state was imaginary only.
What matters it whether a landlord employing ten labourers in his farm, gives
them annually as much money as will buy them the necessaries of life, or gives
them those necessaries at short hand. The ten labourers add as much wealth
annually to the state, increase it’s exports as much in the one case as the
other. […] It is the number of labourers which produce the surplus for
taxation, and numbers therefore indiscriminately, are the fair index of
wealth.” Sherwood notes that this same idea is echoed in LZ’s WPA work on the Index
of American Design (see A Useful Art 26, 165).
90.6 It is not by the consolidation / Or concentration…:
through 90.9 quoted directly from the Autobiography of Thomas Jefferson,
except for the parenthetical addition.
90.10 Nor
should we wonder at . . pressure…: from the Autobiography of Thomas
Jefferson on the situation in France on the eve of the French Revolution:
“Nor should we wonder at this pressure when we consider the monstrous
abuses of power under which this
people were ground to powder, when
we pass in review the weight of their taxes, and inequality of their
distribution; the oppressions of the tythes, of the tailles, the corvees, the
gabelles, the farms & barriers; the shackles on Commerce by monopolies; on
Industry by gilds & corporations; on the freedom of conscience, of thought,
and of speech; on the Press by the Censure; and of person by letters de Cachet;
the cruelty of the criminal code generally, the atrocities of the Rack, the
venality of judges, and their partialities to the rich; the Monopoly of
Military honors by the Noblesse; the enormous expenses of the Queen, the
princes & the Court; the prodigalities of pensions; & the riches,
luxury, indolence & immorality of the clergy. Surely under such a mass of
misrule and oppression, a people might justly press for a thoro’ reformation,
and might even dismount their rough-shod riders, & leave them to walk on
their own legs.”
90.19 I thought of workers and peasants…: through 92.12 form Lenin as quoted by Clara Zetkin, Reminiscences
of Lenin (1924, trans. 1929). Zetkin (1857-1933) was a prominent German
communist and colleague of Rosa Luxemburg, who published her widely read and
hagiographic memoir, which consists primarily of Lenin’s remarks to her in
conversations and interviews, immediately after Lenin’s death in Jan. 1924—this
work incorporates the material separately published as “Lenin on the Women’s
Question”:
“‘I
[Zetkin] know only one counterpart to your way of speaking. It is Tolstoy’s
great art. Like him, you have the broad, unified, firm line, the sense of
inexorable truth. That is beauty. Perhaps it is a peculiarly Slav
characteristic?’
‘I
don’t know,’ Lenin replied. ‘I only know that when I “became a speaker” I
always thought of the workers and peasants rather than of my
audience. Wherever a Communist speaks he must think of the masses, must speak
for them. But it’s good that nobody heard your national psychological
hypothesis, or they might say: “look, look, the old man lets himself get
caught by compliments”’” (37-38).
“‘I
know! Many people are honestly convinced that the difficulties and dangers of
the moment can be overcome by ‘bread and circuses.’ Bread—certainly!
Circuses—all right! But we must not forget that the circus is not a great, true
art, but a more or less pretty entertainment. Do not let us forget that our workers
and peasants are no Roman mob. They are not maintained by the State, they
maintain the State by their work. They ‘made’ the revolution and defended
their work with unexampled sacrifices, with streams of blood. Our workers and
peasants truly deserve more than circuses. They have the right to true, great
art’” (17).
“‘Things
move forward so slowly. World history does not seem to hurry, but the
discontented workers think that your Party leaders don’t want it to hurry. They
make them responsible for the rate of the world revolution, cavil and curse. I
understand all that. But what I don’t understand is a leadership of the “left
opposition” such as I listened to.’ With biting sarcasm Lenin gave his views as
to the ‘better half’ of the ‘left’ delegation. He considered her a ‘personal
accident,’ politically unstable and uncertain, concluding animatedly: ‘No, such
opposition, such leadership, does not impress me. But I tell you frankly
that I am just as little impressed by your “centre” which does not
understand, which hasn’t the energy to have done with such petty demagogues.
Surely it is an easy thing to replace such people, to withdraw the
revolutionary-minded workers from them and educate them politically’” (45).
“‘The
first war of the world revolution has subsided. The second has not yet arisen,’
[Lenin] declared. ‘It would be dangerous for us to have any illusions about
that. We are not Xerxes, who had the sea scourged with chains. But to
determine and pay attention to the facts does not mean to be
inactive, to give up the struggle. Not at all! Learn, learn, learn!
Act, act, act! Be prepared, well and completely prepared, in order to be
able to make full use, consciously and with all our forces, of
the next revolutionary wave. That is our job. Untiring Party
agitation and Party propaganda, culminating in Party action, but Party
action free from the illusion that it can take the place of mass action’”
(30). Xerxes was a 5th century BC King of Persia. As part of Xerxes’ plan to
subdue Greece, he built two bridges across the Hellespont, but when they were
destroyed by a storm, he was so enraged he ordered that the sea be beaten with
300 strokes of the scourge. The classic account is found in Herodotus.
“I
gave an account of the state of affairs, finishing it with the statement that
the ‘Berlin Opposition’ had assigned to the Fourth International Congress the
task of revising the position of its predecessor and annulling it. Their slogan
was ‘Back to the Second Congress.’
Lenin
was amused at this ‘unexampled naïveté,’ as he called it. ‘The “left”
comrades really think that the Communist International is a
faithful Penelope,’ he laughed. ‘But our international does not weave
during the day in order to undo its work during the night. It cannot
afford the luxury of taking a step forward and then taking one back. Can’t
those comrades see what is happening? What has changed in the world situation
to make the winning of the masses no longer our foremost task?’” (43-44).
“‘But
thanks for such Marxism which directly and immediately attributes all
phenomena and changes in the ideological superstructure of society to its
economic basis. Matters aren’t quite so simple as that. A certain Frederick
Engels pointed that out long time ago with regard to historical materialism’”
(58).
“‘The
extension on Freudian hypotheses seems “educated,” even scientific, but it is
ignorant, bungling. Freudian theory is the modern fashion. I mistrust the
sexual theories of the articles, dissertations, pamphlets, etc., in
short, of that particular kind of literature which flourishes
luxuriantly in the dirty soil of bourgeois society. I mistrust
those who are always contemplating the several questions. Like the Indian saint
his navel. It seems to me that these flourishing sexual theories which are
mainly hypothetical, and often quite arbitrary hypotheses, arise from
the personal need to justify personal abnormality or hypertrophy in
sexual life before bourgeois morality, and to entreat its patience. This
masked respect for bourgeois morality seems to me just as repulsive as poking
about in sexual matters. However wild and revolutionary the behaviour may be,
it is still really quite bourgeois. It is, mainly, a hobby of the intellectuals
and of the sections nearest them. There is no place for it in the Party, in the
class-conscious, fighting proletariat’” (52).
“‘Last
and not least. Even the wise Solomon said that everything has its time.
I ask you: Is now the time to amuse proletarian women with discussions on how
one loves and is loved, how one marries and is married? Of course, in the past,
present and future, and among different nations—what is proudly called historical
materialism! Now all the thoughts of women comrades, of the women of the
working people, must be directed towards the proletarian revolution. It creates
the basis for a real renovation in marriage and sexual relations. At the
moment other problems are more urgent than the marriage forms of Maoris or incest
in olden times. The question of Soviets is still on the agenda for the German
proletariat. The Versailles Treaty and its effect on the life of the working
woman—unemployment, falling wages, taxes, and a great deal more. In short, I
maintain that this kind of political, social education for proletarian women is
false, quite, quite false. How could you be silent about it. You must use your
authority against it’” (54-55).
“‘I
know, I know,’ he said. ‘I have also been accused by many people of
philistinism in this matter, although that is repulsive to me. There is so much
hypocrisy and narrow-mindedness in it. Well, I’m bearing it calmly! The
little yellow-beaked birds who have just broken from the egg of bourgeois ideas
are always frightfully clever. We shall have to let that go’” (55).
92.16 The pulse of
light be timed to / The speed of the film…: through 92.22 primarily from
the New York Times for 23 Nov. 1933: “Super-Eye Camera Gives New Vision;
Scientists ‘See’ Aerodynamics of Fly’s Flight in Photos at 6,000 a Second”:
“The latest model of a superspeed motion-picture camera, which takes up
to 6,000 pictures a second, with exposures of about one-millionth of a second,
was described here today before the closing sessions of the Autumn meeting of
the National Academy of Sciences. […] For making motion pictures the pulse
of light is synchronized with the speed of the film, which moves past
the aperture of the lens at velocities up to 200 miles an hour. […] The
pictures reveal an aerodynamic mechanism enabling the fly to flap its wings
at the rate of 200 times a second. A drop of milk, when dispersed in falling
on a glass surface, is shown as transformed into a perfect crown.”
93.2 Standard Oil:
see 63.5.
93.5 This water you almost got killed for, / Said David…:
from 2 Samuel 23:15-17: “And David longed, and said, Oh that one would give me
drink of the water of the well of Bethlehem, which is by the gate! And the three
mighty men brake through the host of the Philistines, and drew water out of the
well of Bethlehem, that was by the gate, and took it, and brought it to David:
nevertheless he would not drink thereof, but poured it out unto the Lord. And
he said, Be it far from me, O Lord, that I should do this: is not this the
blood of the men that went in jeopardy of their lives? Therefore he would not
drink it. These things did these three mighty men.” Sherwood points out that LZ
recounts this incident in one of his Index of American Design broadcasts
(A Useful Art 161-162); see also CSP 147.
93.7 Marx to his daughter Jenny: / It is dull since you went away…: Marx to his daughter Jenny
Longuet, 11 April 1881: “It is dull
since you went away—without you and Johnny and Harra! And Mr. ‘Tea.’ […] The day before yesterday the Dogberry Club
was here; yesterday, in addition to the two Maitland girls—and for a moment
Lankester and Dr. Donkin—an invasion from Hyndman and spouse, who both have too
much staying power. I don’t dislike the
wife, for she has a brusque,
unconventional and decided way of thinking and speaking, but it is funny to see
how admiringly her eyes fasten upon the lips of her self-satisfied garrulous
husband. Mother was so tired (it was nearly 10.30 p.m.) that she withdrew.
But she was amused by some byplay. For Tussey has discovered a new Wunderkind among the Dogberries, a
certain Radford; this youth is already a barrister at law, but despises the jus [law] and is working in the same
line as Waldhorn. He looks well, a cross between Irving and the late Lassalle
(though he has nothing in common with the cynically oily, obtrusive, ducal
manners of the latter) an intelligent and somewhat promising boy. Well this is
the point of the story—Dolly Maitland pays fearful court to him so that mother
and Tussy are signaling to each other all through supper. Finally Mr. Maitland
arrived as well, fairly sober, and also had a wordy duel with his instructive
table companion—Hyndman— about Gladstone, in whom the spiritualist Maitland
believes. I—rather annoyed by a bad throat—felt glad when the whole lot
vanished. It is a strange thing that one cannot
well live altogether without company, and that when you get it, you try hard to
rid yourself of itself.”
93.23 This
matter is the substratum…: from Marx quoted in Engels’ “General
Introduction” to Socialism: Utopian and
Scientific; see quotation at 46.5.
94.9 He asked, “The Future of
Literature: / Will It Be A Sport?...: the title of an essay by Paul Valéry
(1871-1945), that appeared in the New
York Herald Tribune Book Section (22 April 1928): 1, 6; revised as “The
Future of Literature” (Quartermain 216). The following lines 94.11-14 quote
from the essay, which continues: “[…] and not on language as a means of
transmitting realities. Everything which makes a language more precise,
everything which emphasizes its practical character, all the changes which it
undergoes in the interests of a more rapid transmission and an easier
diffusion, are contrary to its function as a poetic instrument.” And the essay
concludes: “Sometimes I think that there will be a place in the future of
literature the nature of which will singularly resemble that of a sport.”
94.20 Who reviewed whose tiny metal warriors? /
Général Gene Gem: the New York
Times for 8 June 1935: “Tin Soldiers Are on Review”: “The Society of the
Collectors of Tin Soldiers mobilized a parade of 80,000 tiny metal warriors
today. It was reviewed at the Invalides by General Eugene Mariaux. The membership
in the society includes Frank B. Kellogg, former Secretary of State of the
United States.” Cf. note on General Martinet Gem who appears in the poem “Motet” (CSP 209).
94.29 (AP): Associate Press, major American
news agency started in 1848.
94.30 China,
the one place it could happen…:
95.21 Toba harbor, Japan, Oct. 1936.— / Kokichi Mikimoto…: the New York Times for 31 Oct. 1936: “Japan’s Pearl King
Holds Rites for Oysters’ Souls”: LZ quotes directly from the article. Kokichi
Mikimoto (1858-1954) pioneer pearl farmer from Toba, Japan.
96.7 November of F.D.R.’s
second election: Franklin D. Roosevelt’s first reelection in Nov. 1936.
96.9 village of West Farms…:
located in the south Bronx, as is 1229 Washington Ave. in the township of
Morrisania, originally part of West Farms.
96.12 Thomas Hicks, General Blacksmith and Tool
Maker…: this episode through 98.1 describes LZ doing research for the Index of American Design during the
1930s, part of the Federal Art Project of the City of New York under the WPA
(Works Progress Administration).
96.31 Lady Greensleeves: see 65.23; here,
however, LZ appears to be alluding to the versions of songs and/or fables in
which Lady Greensleeves is a type of fairy or nature spirit.
96.32 fayërye:
ME fairy.
97.17 the
researchist in old gardens / (for $23.86 a week…: the “researchist” is LZ
himself, who Ahearn reports was in fact doing research on gardens and paid this
amount for his work with the WPA (“Marxism and American Handicraft” 81-82). Telemachus is Odysseus’ son in
Homer’s Odyssey.
98.4 Woodlawn Cemetery:
located in the Bronx.
98.17 Jerome
Racetrack: racetrack built in the Bronx in the mid-19th century where now
the Jerome Reservoir Park is located.
98.21 New
Deal: F.D.R.’s series of programs and policies to promote economic recovery
and social reform during the 1930s.
98.27 invested
Ambassador to Maine: only the states of Maine and Vermont voted against
F.D.R.’s landslide reelection in 1936, thus prompting F.D.R.’s witticism about
Maine as a foreign country (Ahearn 138). Evidently there were a good many jokes
about Maine and Vermont as foreign turf in the aftermath of this election.
99.12 in
Shanghai…: some of the following images are possibly from a Soviet
documentary film A Shanghai Document,
directed by Jakob Blakh (Bliokh); the film uses montage to sharply juxtapose
the lives of Westerners living in the foreign concessions of Shanghai with
those of working class Chinese, and climaxing with the Communists’ failed 1927
March Revolution in Shanghai (the subject of André Malraux’s novel La Condition humaine (Man’s Fate), 1933). LZ enthused to WCW
about this film in a letter dated 22 Oct. 1928 (WCW/LZ 19-20) and also
mentioned in Prep+ 62; see also
Kadlec 307-313.
99.17 Behind chicken coops, / Looms so close
together, operators / Could barely stand up to work between them: from the New York Times for 21 May 1935 (see 51.22):
“Silk Sweatshops Found in Paterson; Report to Roosevelt Holds Conditions Are
Demoralizing Industry’s Mills”: “Disclosing extreme sweatshop conditions among
the ‘family’ silk weaving shops of Paterson, N.J., with entire groups working
long hours weekly for a mere pittance, the Silk Textile Work Assignment Board
reported today that only by the creation of a Rayon and Silk Adjustment Board
would it be possible to cope with the conditions in these shops which were held
to be demoralizing the reputable silk and rayon mills of the nation. […] The
report emphasized fire hazards and charged virtual imprisonment of
workers behind chickenwire in subdivided shops where means of
egress were difficult and where looms were so close together that
operators could barely stand up in the narrow space between them
and work.”
99.21 Marked
Tree…: a town in east Arkansas; lines 99.20-24 refer to a contemporary
account related to the organizing of the interracial Southern Tenant Farmers’
Union (STFU) of landless farmers, share croppers and laborers in the Marked
Tree area during the mid-1930s, which eventually included 35,000 members and
provoked violent reactions from white land owners that received national
attention. “Night-riders” is a more generic term for groups, such as the Ku
Klux Klan, who carried out acts of violent terror in disguise, primarily
against blacks and their sympathizers. At least one of LZ’s sources is the New
York Times for 20 April 1935: “‘Run Off Farms,’ Tenants Declare;
Dispossession Is Laid to Link with Union by Arkansas Share-Croppers,” which
includes the detail of “Negroes and white men together, in a small cabin, the
doors of which are stoutly barred and the road to which is guarded against
night-riders.”
99.26 “turkey
in the straw”: early American minstrel song; see 17.382.10.
99.31 Nazis lured by super Nazis— /
“Become super-Nazis” in order…: the New York Times for 28 Oct. 1935
reported: “Nazi Purge Threat Is Made by Goering; Air Minister in Breslau Speech
Warns Radicals That Hitler Alone Decides Issues. Trade Pinch Is a Factor,
Another Is Strategy of Reds in National Socialist Ranks to Force Showdown,” in
which Goering apparently claims that Communists attempted to infiltrate the
Nazi Party, becoming “super-nazis the more quickly to destroy the regime by its
own excesses.”
100.3 “I have led my ragamuffins where they are
peppered”: from Shakespeare, Henry IV, Part 1, V.s; spoken by
Falstaff defending his cowardice on the battlefield: “I am as hot as moulten
lead, and as heavy too: God keep lead out of me! I need no more weight than
mine own bowels. I have led my ragamuffins where they are peppered: there’s not
three of my hundred and fifty left alive; and they are for the town’s end, to
beg during life.”
100.4 1937.
“White Moors”—Germans—against Germans…: during this year
the Spanish Civil War hung in the balance; Franco’s fascist forces, supported
by Germany and Italy, tried unsuccessfully to take Madrid—a famous slogan of
the Republican defenders is quoted at 100.8. Franco did take Malaga in the south
with a force that included substantial numbers of Moors (Moroccans), who made
up a significant part of his forces from the time he first provoked the civil
war. The United Front was the designation for the coalition of left and
republican forces fighting against Franco, which in the event was never very
united.
100.7 More than one civil war…: the
following through 100.17 primarily from reports by Herbert L Matthew (a
classmate of LZ at Columbia) on the Spanish Civil War in the New York Times.
9 Dec. 1936: “Madrid Is Safe Unless Rebels Get More Foreign Aid, Observer
Holds; Insurgent Army Now Faces Formidable Defenses, Tour of the Front Lines
Reveals—People’s Morale Is Stiffened by Air Raids—Loyalist Move Up Guns From
Abroad Rebels Need Help to Crush Madrid”: Matthews gives details about the
“Garibaldi Battalion,” Italians who joined the International Column or Brigades
in support of the Republican cause against Franco, including the commanders,
“Col. Randolfo Pacciardi, a former lawyer and republican [who] had a
fine World War record and later formed a war veterans’ association, Italia
Libera, which was anti-Fascist, and this resulted in his having to flee
Italy,” and “His aide is Captain Umberto Galliani, one of the directors
of the Stampa Libera, New York anti-Fascist newspaper. He left New York
on Oct. 1 to enlist in the international column. […] We all had lunch together
at headquarters, where Pietro Nenni, Socialist and former close
friend of Il Duce [It. The Leader, i.e. Benito Mussolini (1883-1945), Fascist
dictator of Italy from 1922-1943], joined me. Mr. Nenni is acting as a sort of
political chief of the International Column. […] Their lines were
heavily bombed by planes, which used flares for visibility. In the
morning a number of disks used in the flares were picked up. They bore the
address, ‘4 Via Dante, Milan.’ Earlier in the evening a voice shouted in
perfect Italian: ‘Come on, you pigs of Italians! Come on!’ Which is merely
another indication that more than one civil war is being fought on Spanish
soil. Former Friend of Duce There!”
100.14 Randolfo
Pacciardi and Umberto Galliani, and Pietro / Nenni: see quotation at 100.7.
100.14 Kiss all the little ones for me . . / So
cold…: from two letters by Thomas Jefferson to his son-in-law Thomas Mann Randolph
(1768-1828) dated 4 March 1800 (first line) and 28 Nov. 1796 respectively; from
the latter: “It is so cold that the freezing of the ink on the
point of my pen renders it difficult to write. We have had the
thermometer at 12 degrees. My works are arrested in a state entirely
unfinished, and I fear we shall not be able to resume them.”
100.21 The Batture at New Orleans…: through
101.1 the full title of a brief written and published by Thomas Jefferson on a
celebrated case involving the private appropriation of public land and water;
batture is a raised river or sea bed, in this case a beach. Lines 101.4-8 quote
Edward Livingston in his own defense immediately followed (101.9-14) by
Jefferson’s retort. 101.15-19 further quotes from Jefferson’s argument:
“Indeed, without all this appeal to such learned authorities, does not common sense, the foundation of all
authorities, of the laws themselves,
and of their construction, declare it impossible that Mr. Livingston, a single
individual, should have a lawful right to drown the city of New Orleans, or to
injure, or change, of his own authority, the course or current of a river which
is to give outlet to the productions of two-thirds of the whole area of the
United States?” And finally Jefferson quotes from a Latin Imperial Edict on
similar misuse of the Nile: “Let him be
consumed by the flames in that spot in which he violated the reverence of
antiquity, and the safety of the empire, let his accessories and accomplices be
cut off by deportation from the possibility of supplicating forgiveness, or of
being restored to country, dignity and possessions.”
101.20 1821 .
. for my own more ready reference…: from the opening sentence of Thomas
Jefferson, Autobiography: “At the age
of 77, I begin to make some memoranda and state some recollections of dates & facts concerning myself, for my own more ready reference & for the information of my family.”
101.24 the
destinies of my life…: through 102.21 mostly from the Autobiography of Thomas Jefferson: “It was my great good fortune,
and what probably fixed the destinies of
my life that Dr. Wm. Small of Scotland was then professor of Mathematics, a
man profound in most of the useful branches of science, with a happy talent of
communication, correct and gentlemanly manners, & an enlarged & liberal
mind. He, most happily for me, became soon attached to me & made me his
daily companion when not engaged in the school; and from his conversation I got
my first views of the expansion of science
& of the system of things in which we are placed.”
101.27: . . interested in considering
British claims…: through 102.21, with the exception of the passage from
Cadwallader Colden (see 102.19), mostly quotes from Jefferson’s Autobiography, concerning events leading up to the American Revolution and
specifically with matters of organizing sentiment and resistance to the British:
“Nothing
of particular excitement occurring for a considerable time our countrymen
seemed to fall into a state of insensibility to our situation. The duty on tea
not yet repealed & the Declaratory act of a right in the British parl to
bind us by their laws in all cases whatsoever, still suspended over us. But a
court of inquiry held in R. Island in 1762, with a power to send persons to
England to be tried for offences committed here was considered at our session
of the spring of 1773 as demanding attention. Not thinking our old &
leading members up to the point of forwardness & zeal which the times
required, Mr. Henry, R. H. Lee, Francis L. Lee, Mr. Carr & myself agreed to
meet in the evening in a private room of the Raleigh to consult on the state of
things. There may have been a member or two more whom I do not recollect. We
were all sensible that the most urgent of all measures was that of coming to an
understanding with all the other colonies to
consider the British claims as a common cause to all, & to produce an unity of action: and for this purpose that a
committee of correspondence in each colony would be the best instrument for
intercommunication: and that their first measure would probably be to propose a
meeting of deputies from every colony at some central place, who should be
charged with the direction of the measures which should be taken by all. We
therefore drew up the resolutions which may be seen in Wirt pa 87. […]
The
next event which excited our sympathies for Massachusetts was the Boston port
bill, by which that port was to be shut up on the 1st of June, 1774. This
arrived while we were in session in the spring of that year. The lead in the
house on these subjects being no longer left to the old members, Mr. Henry, R.
H. Lee, Fr. L. Lee, 3. or 4. other members, whom I do not recollect, and
myself, agreeing that we must boldly take an unequivocal stand in the line with
Massachusetts, determined to meet and consult on the proper measure in the
council chamber, for the benefit of the library in that room. We were under
conviction of the necessity of arousing our people from the lethargy into which
they had fallen as to passing events; and thought that the appointment of a day
of general fasting & prayer would be most likely to call up & alarm
their attention. No example of such a solemnity had existed since the days of
our distresses in the war of 55. since which a new generation had grown up. With the help therefore of Rushworth [John Rushworth (c.1612-1690), closely involved in Cromwell’s
government, he compiled a history of the English Civil Wars, which became an
important resource for Jefferson],
whom we rummaged over for the revolutionary precedents & forms of the
Puritans of that day, preserved by him, we cooked up a resolution, somewhat
modernizing their phrases, for appointing the 1st day of June, on which the
Port bill was to commence, for a day of fasting, humiliation & prayer, to implore heaven to avert from us the evils of civil war, to
inspire us with firmness in support
of our rights, and to turn the hearts of the King & parliament to
moderation & justice. To give greater emphasis to our proposition, we
agreed to wait the next morning on Mr. Nicholas, whose grave & religious
character was more in unison with the tone of our resolution and to solicit him
to move it. We accordingly went to him in the morning. He moved it the same
day; the 1st of June was proposed and it passed without opposition. The
Governor dissolved us as usual. We retired to the Apollo as before, agreed to
an association, and instructed the commee of correspdce to propose to the
corresponding commees of the other colonies to appoint deputies to meet in
Congress at such place, annually, as
should be convenient to direct, from time to time, the measures required by the
general interest: and we declared that an attack on any one colony should be
considered as an attack on the whole. This
was in May [1774]. We further recommended to the several counties to elect
deputies to meet at Wmsbg the 1st of Aug ensuing, to consider the state of the
colony, & particularly to appoint delegates to a general Congress, should
that measure be acceded to by the commees of correspdce generally. It was acceded
to, Philadelphia was appointed for the place, and the 5th of Sep. for the time
of meeting. We returned home, and in our several counties invited the clergy to
meet assemblies of the people on the 1st of June, to perform the ceremonies of
the day, & to address to them discourses suited to the occasion. The people
met generally, with anxiety & alarm in their countenances, and the effect of the day thro’ the
whole colony was like a shock of
electricity, arousing every man & placing him erect &
solidly on his centre. They chose universally delegates for the
convention. Being elected one for my own county I prepared a draught of
instructions [“A Summary View of the Rights of British America”] to be given to
the delegates whom we should send to the Congress, and which I meant to propose
at our meeting. In this I took the ground which, from the beginning I had
thought the only one orthodox or tenable, which was that the relation between
Gr. Br. and these colonies was exactly the same as that of England & Scotland
after the accession of James & until the Union, and the same as her present
relations with Hanover, having the same Executive chief but no other necessary
political connection; and that our emigration from England to this country gave
her no more rights over us, than the emigrations of the Danes and Saxons gave
to the present authorities of the mother country over England.”
102.8 (Like Bloody Sunday in St. Petersburg!): on 22 Jan. 1905 in St. Petersburg,
Russian Imperial Guards shot large numbers of peaceful demonstrators seeking to
petition Czar Nicholas II. A major incident leading to the failed Revolution of
1905; see Lenin quotations on latter event at 53.9-20.
102.9 But a half page further…: continuing
from Thomas Jefferson, Autobiography, see quotation at 101.27.
102.19 Cadwallader
Colden: American colonial governor and scientist
(1688-1776), a frequent correspondent with Benjamin Franklin and Linnaeus on
scientific matters; see 12.256.24. The quotation at 102.13-18 is from a letter
to Franklin; apparently only an undated copy survives but it is from 1752. This
is part of his extensive discussions on the nature of electricity, in the
period leading up to Franklin’s famous kite experiment with lightning in the
same year, although here Colden is speculating on the nature of the atmosphere
as a medium that would explain lightning.
102.20 . . arousing every man . . …:
continuing from Thomas Jefferson, Autobiography, see quotation at
101.27.
102.22 bringing together facts which appearances
separate…: this stanza is from Henri Poincaré, The Value of Science
(1905; see 47.6): “Now what is science? […] it is before all a classification,
a manner of bringing together facts which appearances separate, though
they were bound together by some natural and hidden kinship. Science, in other
words, is a system of relations. Now as we have just said, it is in relations
alone that objectivity must be sought; it would be vain to seek it in beings
considered as isolated from one another” (qtd. Prep+ 164). Poincaré discusses at some length the nature of a “fact” and concludes:
“In sum, all the scientist creates in a fact is the
language in which he enunciates it. If he predicts a fact, he
will employ this language, and for all those who can speak and understand it,
his prediction is free from ambiguity. […] An isolated fact has by itself no
interest; it becomes interesting if one has reason to think that it may aid in
the prediction of other facts; or better, if, having been predicted, its
verification is the confirmation of a law. […] In sum, facts are facts, and if
it happens that they satisfy a prediction, this is not an effect of our free
activity.”
102.29 “The
houses and trees stand where they did…: through 103.10 from Thomas Jefferson,
26 May 1811 letter to his granddaughter, Anne Cary Bankhead, writing from
Monticello.
103.11 . .
moving matter, bodies…: from Marx to Engels, 30 May 1873: “The subject of
natural science—moving matter, bodies. Bodies cannot be
separated from motion, their forms and kinds can only be known through motion,
of bodies apart from motion, apart from any relation to other bodies, nothing
can be asserted. Only in motion does a body reveal what it is. Natural science
therefore knows bodies by considering them in their relation to one another, in
motion. The knowledge of the different forms of motion is the knowledge of
bodies. The investigation of these different forms of motion is therefore the
chief subject of natural science.”
103.13 when
workers and even manufacturers…: from Marx to Ludwig
Kugelmann, 11 July 1868 (this letter also qtd. at 54.9): “In any case it shows what these priests
of the bourgeoisie have come to, when
workers and even manufacturers and merchants understand my book [Capital] and find their way about in it,
while these ‘scribes’ (!) complain that I make excessive demands on their
understanding.”
103.22 “So
made that all the parts together…: a book of songs by
the lutanist John Dowland (1563-1626): First
Booke of Songes or Ayres of foure partes with Tableture for the Lute: So made
that all the parts together, or either of them severally may be song to the
Lute, Orpherian [a species of cittern, tuned like a lute] or Viol de Gambo (1597).
103.24 Simone
Molinare / (Miller)…: Simone
Molinaro (c.1565-c.1634), Italian composer, as well as a connoisseur and editor
of madrigals. “Molinare” is a printing error, since the name is spelled
correctly in both the typescript and original publication of “A”-8 in New
Directions 1938. Through 103.29 LZ is quoting from an elaborate dedication
by Molinaro to one of his editions of madrigals by Carlo Gesuado (1560-1613),
Prince of Venosa (in the Kingdom of Naples), an important composer of
madrigals. Although LZ’s precise source is not certain, judging from the
parenthetical interpolation in order to render the pun on Molinaro’s name (It.
mulino = mill), it is likely he is using the translation found in Cecil Gray
and Peter Warlock (Philip Heseltine), Carlo Gesualdo, Prince of Venosa:
Musician and Murderer (1926):
To the Concordant Fame
of the Nobility, Immense, Infinite,
Incomparable of pure lovers
Of Harmony,
Limpid crystals of immaculate genius,
Humble in themselves
Glorying in Others,
Celestial, of transparent verity,
Simone Molinaro (Miller)
To the discomfiture of the Mill of time,
the invincible destroyer
Of terrestrial hopes,
dedicates these canorous pearls Dis-
tilled in the conch of eternal beauty in the
Union of the Graces, and Sun of
Musical virtues
103.30 A pretty
May note, / Singing Bach as they dug…: in the following
stanzas (104.1 to end), LZ adopts a ballade form most commonly associated with
late medieval poets such as Guido Cavalcanti and Villon, which typically
deploys a complex rhyme scheme and repeats the same final line in each stanza
as well as the envoy. LZ’s ballade not only repeats the rhyme scheme but the
same rhymes in each stanza: ababbccdcd, with the envoy ccdccd. This ballade
picks up many words and phrases from throughout “A”-8 but particularly words
and images associated with the May Day song (48.10-49.5) and J.S. Bach.
Furthermore, as at 49.6-52.2, LZ worked in mathematical ratios of n and r sounds (see Ahearn 239 and manuscript notes in Booth 53). In
musical terms LZ undoubtedly has in mind a stretto, the overlapping of subjects
or motifs in a fugue creating increased density of texture and usually forming
the conclusion to a work.
104.1 Isenacum en musica:
L. Eisenach, here find music. J.S. Bach was born in Eisenach, Germany in 1685.
This Latin epigram was composed by the town historian, Christianus Franciscus Paullinus,
in Annales Isenacenses (1698). See 14.338.4 (Terry
18).
104.2 March / Day of equal night: Michael
Fournier points out that Bach was born on 21 March (old style calendar),
therefore the spring equinox (personal communication).
104.3 Bach’s
chorus primus...: see 43.13-14.
104.7 he
said I worked hard: from Terry biography of Bach: “‘I worked hard,’ he
replied to one who asked the secret of his mastership in later days; ‘if you
are as industrious as I was, you will be no less successful’” (54).
104.9 clatter
of a water-mill: describing Bach at Cöthen: “A tradition that Bach was
disturbed by the clatter of a water-mill has suggested that he lived beyond the
Schloss garden, near the Orangery” (Terry 123). Cf. passage of Veit Bach and
mill at 4.15.12.
104.19 Labor, light lights in air, on earth…:
see 43.2; also
7.40.17, 8.48.22, 12.136.29 and 18.393.35.
104.12 Silence supports my pretension . . […] /
My contention . . that the slight disregards / My costs: from a long
letter J.S. Bach wrote as part of a dispute with the University at Leipzig over
his pay in 1725 that Terry quotes in full: “Its [the University’s] silence
supports my praetension and affords proof of the justice of my
contention…. Moreover, it disregards my contention in its dutiful
reply to your Majesty, and so tacite accepts my facts, which it fails to
controvert in a single particular” (186).
104.12 the parts / Ascend a tone, repeating:
in a footnote referring to a canon by Johann Gottfried Walther that he
exchanged with Bach, Terry remarks: “The parts ascend a tone at each
repetition” (90).
104.16 Fa […] Fa Mi et Mi Fa . . tota Musica: L. Fa Mi and Mi Fa (are) the sum of
music. Bach inserted this phrase into his Canon
super Fa Mi (dated 1 March 1749), which has a complicated set of meanings,
including an acrostic for the name Bach in the sequence of notes: F (H), A, B,
E.
104.16 as what wind blew / Tossed coins in
herrings heads: a Bach anecdote from Terry: “Friedrich
Wilhelm Marpurg published in 1786 a story which Bach himself found it pleasant
to repeat: returning with empty pockets from Hamburg at a later afternoon hour
along an inhospitable road, he sat down outside a tavern and hungrily sniffed
the savours from the kitchen. Above him a window opened and at his feet fell
the heads of two herrings, sea-fish much prized in inland Thuringia. Picking
them up eagerly, he found in each a Danish ducat, which satisfied his present
hunger and aided a future visit to Reiken” (48).
104.21 tonus / Contrarius: L. contrary tone, that is, conflicting with the
melody. The young Bach at his first job as organist at Arnstadt was reprimanded
by his superior in a document Terry reproduces: “Complaints have been made to
the Consistorium that you now accompany the hymns with surprising variations
and irrelevant ornaments, which obliterate the melody and confuse the
congregation. If you desire to introduce a theme against the melody, you must
go on with it and not immediately fly off to another. And in no circumstances
must you introduce a tonus contrarius”
(Terry 70); qtd. Bottom 94.
104.23 contrapunctus;
/ Plays till four notes give out their names: “contrapunctus” was Bach’s
designation for the individual fugues and canons that make up The Art of the Fugue (1750), the last of
which famously introduces the notes of his own name then breaks off incomplete.
See 12.127.23.
104.24 old
Bach’s / Here: blind: Bach was all but blind at the end of his life and
died in part due to complications of an eye operation.
104.25 Son . . […] has two boys: from a
letter by the elderly Bach in 1748 remarking that “My Berlin son now has two
boys” (Terry 256).
104.26 Where orchards were: Cf. 7.40.24.
104.29 Men of
Madrid…: alluding to the Spanish Civil War (see 100.4); presumably the “attacker dogs” of the
next line refer to the Fascists.
105.2 burden:
in music, the chorus or refrain of a composition, or (archaic) the bass
accompaniment to a song (AHD).
105.4 May
is red blossom: see 48.22 and 7.41.27.
105.5 times’ mill: see 103.26.
105.6 Luteclavicembalo:
an instrument Bach invented around 1740 that combines the qualities of the lute
and the harpsichord; mentioned by Terry who calls it Lautenclavicembalo (247).