ABC Of Reading
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''ABC of Reading'' is a book by the 20th-century
Imagist Imagism was a movement in early-20th-century poetry that favored precision of imagery and clear, sharp language. It is considered to be the first organized literary modernism, modernist literary movement in the English language. Imagism has bee ...
poet
Ezra Pound Ezra Weston Loomis Pound (30 October 1885 – 1 November 1972) was an List of poets from the United States, American poet and critic, a major figure in the early modernist poetry movement, and a Collaboration with Nazi Germany and Fascist Ita ...
published in 1934. In it, Pound sets out an approach by which one may come to appreciate and understand literature (focusing primarily on poetry). Despite its title the text can be considered as a guide to writing poetry. The work begins with the " Parable of the sunfish", features a collection of English poetry that Pound called ''Exhibits'' and several notable quotations.


Mantras

* "Literature is language charged with meaning: Great literature is simply charged with meaning to the utmost degree" - to be achieved by three main ways: # ''phanopoeia'' – throwing the object (fixed or moving) on to the visual imagination. # ''melopoeia'' – inducing emotional correlations by sound and rhythm of the speech. # '' logopoeia'' – inducing 1 & 2 by stimulating associations with other word/word groups. * "Literature is news that stays news". * "Music rots when it gets too far from the dance. Poetry atrophies when it gets too far from music." * "I've never read half a page of
Homer Homer (; , ; possibly born ) was an Ancient Greece, Ancient Greek poet who is credited as the author of the ''Iliad'' and the ''Odyssey'', two epic poems that are foundational works of ancient Greek literature. Despite doubts about his autho ...
without finding melodic invention." * "Without the foregoing minimum of poetry in other languages you simply will not know where English poetry comes." * "From
Chaucer Geoffrey Chaucer ( ; – 25 October 1400) was an English poet, author, and civil servant best known for '' The Canterbury Tales''. He has been called the "father of English literature", or, alternatively, the "father of English poetry". He ...
you can learn whatever came over into the earliest English that one can read without a dictionary." * "Artists are the antennae of the race." * "Man can learn more about poetry by really knowing and examining a few of the best poems than by meandering about among a great many." * "One of the pleasures of middle age is to find out that one was right, and that one was much righter than one knew at say seventeen or twenty-three." * "The honest critic must be content to find a very little contemporary work worth serious attention; but he must be ready to recognize that little..." * "There are three types of melopoeia, i.e. verse made to sing; to chant/intone; and to speak. The older one gets the more one believes in the first. One reads prose for the subject matter."


Treatise on Metre

The
monograph A monograph is generally a long-form work on one (usually scholarly) subject, or one aspect of a subject, typically created by a single author or artist (or, sometimes, by two or more authors). Traditionally it is in written form and published a ...
ends with an essay on creative development and the poet's relationship to music entitled "''Treatise on Metre''." Featuring three sections, Pound explores the requirements of authentic inspiration and how regulation ncluding "nomenclature" and rhyming schemes">nomenclature.html" ;"title="ncluding "nomenclature">ncluding "nomenclature" and rhyming schemesinhibits the natural process. Using music as a throughline, he argues that rhythm and melody, under the banner of listening, can infuse the process of versification and help instigate more genuine, less didactically-inclined prosody.


See also

* Pound's ideogrammic method">Prosody (linguistics)">prosody.


See also

* Pound's ideogrammic method * Google Books version: https://books.google.it/books/about/ABC_of_Reading.html?id=0GazhoHAYQgC&printsec=frontcover * monoskop version: https://monoskop.org/images/a/a4/Pound_Ezra_ABC_of_Reading.pdf Books of literary criticism 1934 non-fiction books Books by Ezra Pound Books about poetry


References

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