Ezra Pound (1885 - 1972)
Ezra Pound is generally considered the poet most responsible for defining and promoting a modernist aesthetic in
poetry. In the early teens of the twentieth century, he opened a seminal exchange of work and ideas between
British and American writers, and was famous for the generosity with which he advanced the work of such major
contemporaries as W. B. Yeats, Robert Frost, William
Carlos Williams, Marianne Moore, H. D., James Joyce, Ernest Hemingway and especially
T. S. Eliot. His own significant contributions to poetry begin with his promulgation of Imagism, a
movement in poetry which derived its technique from classical Chinese and Japanese poetry - stressing clarity,
precision, and economy of language, and foregoing traditional rhyme and meter in order to, in Pound's words,
"compose in the sequence of the musical phrase, not in the sequence of the metronome." His later work, for nearly
fifty years, focused on the encyclopedic epic poem he entitled The Cantos.
Ezra Pound was born in Hailey, Idaho, in 1885. He completed two years of college at the University of Pennsylvania
and earned a degree from Hamilton College in 1905. After teaching at Wabash College for two years, he travelled
abroad to Spain, Italy and London, where, as the literary executor of the scholar Ernest Fenellosa, he became
interested in Japanese and Chinese poetry. He married Dorothy Shakespear in 1914 and became London editor of the
Little Review in 1917. In 1924, he moved to Italy; during this period of voluntary exile, Pound became
involved in Fascist politics, and did not return to the United States until 1945, when he was arrested on charges
of treason for broadcasting Fascist propaganda by radio to the United States during the Second World War. In 1946,
he was acquitted, but declared mentally ill and committed to St. Elizabeth's Hospital in Washington, D.C. During
his confinement, the jury of the Bollingen-Library of Congress Award (which included a number of the most eminent
writers of the time) decided to overlook Pound's political career in the interest of recognizing his poetic
achievements, and awarded him the prize for the Pisan Cantos (1948). After continuous appeals from writers
won his release from the hospital in 1958, Pound returned to Italy and settled in Venice, where he died, a
semi-recluse, in 1972.
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